Posted in Healthy Meals, Meal Planning

Fresh and Festive Weekday Meals

January brings a slew of dietary goals and most of us are re-committing to healthy eating and cooking. Sure baking cookies, pies, and cakes are a great way to celebrate the Holiday season, but the crisp days of January bring a yearning for food that is both comforting and healthy. Yet, this week we are celebrating my husbandโ€™s birthday and watching the Buckeyes play in the National Championship. O-H-I-O!. How do you create healthy, daily meals that are still celebratory?

food restaurant brunch dinner
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Healthy Celebration Food

We have a birthday tradition that the person turning a year older gets to choose dinner on the night of his or her birthday. My husband has requested Loaded Chicken Quesadillas. My son wants pizza for the National Championship and my daughter asked for her favorite salad this week. What do they all have in common? Chicken! This weekโ€™s menu focuses on comfort food and flavor, and allows you to prep your protein once and use it for 3 different meals. Having the protein prepped speeds up the nightly cooking process and helps get dinner on the table in 30 minutes. On Sunday night or even Monday afternoon, toss some chicken in the crockpot or a pressure cooker and cook it until it is tender. I plan on using about 4-5 chicken breasts, but thighs or tenders would work as well. Once the chicken has cooked shred it and store it for later use. I donโ€™t season at this point, so I can use it for multiple dishes and flavors. This week I will use the chicken in Individual Homemade Pizzas, Loaded Chicken Quesadillas, and a Mexican Flavored Cobb Salad.

Fun and Festive Weekly Meal Plan

Pizza and football are American traditions. My family loves pizza, but we all donโ€™t like the same toppings. The solution? Individual homemade pizzas. I keep homemade pizza dough in the freezer in individual balls to use for this type of occasion. You can easily substitute your own favorite healthy pizza crust and even buy them in the store to save time. The next step is to prep your toppings. I place the toppings in individual bowls or on various cutting boards and then everyone creates their own pizza. Our favorite topping combinations include:ย Barbecue Chicken with Mozzarella and Cilantro–Pesto, Chicken, Bacon, and Tomato– Black Olives, Peppers, Onions, and Cheese– and –Just Cheese.

I love this because everyone gets what they want and everyone is happy. Once the pizzas are cooked (about 16-20 minutes at 425) I will cut them and then move them to platters to take downstairs for the game.

Quesadillas and a Cobb Salad

Tuesdayโ€™s Loaded Chicken Quesadillas also allows for individual choice. At this point, I will reheat the chicken in a bit of Olive Oil and add about 3 Tablespoons or Taco Seasoning. Dinners for both Tuesday and Wednesday have a Southwestern, festive flavor, and this small step punches up the heat. As with Mondayโ€™s pizzas, the Quesadillas allow for individual choice. Chop up the toppings and place in bowls, and have a variety of different tortillas (family favorites include, whole wheat, spinach, and cauliflower tortillas). Topping choices include: chicken, bacon, black beans, spinach, tomatoes, avocado, cilantro, and cheese. I set these up on the griddle and cook each to order. Create a nice side salad or fruit salad to complement the Quesadillas and you have a quick healthy meal. You can also use left-over pizza toppings for Monday to save time. 

Wednesdayโ€™s meal uses the last of the chicken and will use the last of the toppings from earlier this week. I will heat some frozen grilled corn, boil a few eggs to chop for the top and each person will make a salad. You may ask why I have so many dishes that allow for individual choice, and the answer is that we do not always eat together during the week. My husband teaches two nights a week, my daughter has dance, my son has basketball practice and we all have gym workouts at various times during the week. These types of meals let everyone build a fresh dinner when they get home from their various activities.

Quinoa and Veggie Bowls

photo of sliced vegetables on ceramic plate
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Thursdayโ€™s meal is a Quinoa and Veggie Power Bowl. I will roast whatever vegetables we have left from the week, make a batch of Quinoa and again, everyone will build a bowl, with their favorite ingredients. If there any chicken left from the week that can be added or this can be a vegetarian dish is preferred.

Weekend Cooking

Weekends give me a little more time to cook and experiment, so I can make dishes that take a little more time. Saturdayโ€™s dinner is a Ramen Stir Fry with fresh vegetables and Sunday is a Vegetable Pot Pie with Homemade Whole Wheat Bread. Ramen you might think? How is that healthy? There are various types of Ramen available other than the dry, seasoned packs you might remember from your youth. My ramen noodles are Brown Rice and Millet and can be picked up at a natural grocery store. You could easily substitute Soba Noodles for added protein if you canโ€™t find whole-grain ramen. On Sunday, I will toss a cornucopia of root vegetables into the crockpot with vegetable broth and seasoning and let them cook for 5-6 hours. I may try to convince my daughter to make the bread, but it will depend on how much homework she has. If not, Iโ€™ll get it started and our afternoon will be filled with the delicious smell of baking bread. Yum! 

Fun, festive meals with individual choices make for a happy and healthy family. Happy New Year.

Posted in Uncategorized

4 Goals to Recommit and Reorganize 2021

Hello 2021! Jumpstart the New Year

Ringing in the New Year means setting new goals and recommitting to lifestyle choices and habits that fall to the wayside during the Holiday season. I’m not one that usually sets yearly goals in January as I believe we should commit to improving our lives all year, but I have to admit I’m looking forward to putting 2020 behind me and moving into 2021. This year has been one for the history books and committing to a new outlook and a reestablishment of a somewhat normal routine is appealing.

This year I am committing to 4 goals. Some are health related, some are work related, and all are family related.

Goal 1–Balance

This year I’m seeking meatphorical and literal balance in my life. I’ve strayed from my yoga practice and from balancing work and family.

balance, goals, organization
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Practice Yoga 3 Times a Week

The first way I am seeking to reestablish balance in my life is to commit to practicing yoga 3 times a week. The 30-40 minutes I spend breathing and stretching will help me gain perspective, flexibility, and mindfulness. For me, yoga is my time to connect my mind and soul–find balance. Even when I wobble (which I do at least once per session) I am firmly pressing my feet or hands to the ground and feeling the solid connection between the earth and my life. It reminds me that I am strong, firm, and grounded.

Do not Bring Work Home during the Week

The second aspect of balance for me is taming the grading. I’m a high school english teacher, and bringing work home (especially this year) is a given. From August-December of 2020 I probably worked almost every weeknight and probably 5-6 hours every Sunday. This was sustainable last semester because my kids didn’t have activities after school, and I didn’t have to run them to dance, football or Jazz Band. We all used the extra time in the evenings to complete school work. January of 2021 brings a return to 5 day a week face-to-face school for all of us, and a return to activities as normal. This means my evenings will be spent picking my son up from Basketball and traveling to his games, taking my daughter to ballet twice a week, and a return to my husband teaching at a local university 2 evenings a week. I need to leave work at work during the week. I haven’t figured out yet what that looks like, but I can not meet my family expectations and also have the expectation that I will answer email and grade late-work each night until 10PM.

Goal 2- Spend more time with my Husband

It seems counterintuitive that people practically homebound for 9 months need to spend time together, so I should probably qualify and add that I want to spend intentional time together. Falling asleep on the couch in the evening does not count as intentional time.

I spent much of 2020 making sure my two teenagers didn’t feel lost, left-behind or frustrated. I patiently answered homework questions, read aloud books to my son, baked bread, made cookies and crafts with them, and tried to create a home that didn’t feel suffocating and dull; however, focusing so much on work and kids meant that my husband got what was left, and let’s be honest–that wasn’t much. In 2021 I want to spend intentional time with my spouse talking, laughing, and reconnecting. A glass of wine by the fire, or a cheese plate in the evening where we talk about our dreams, intentions, and hopes. No devices, no TV, no distractions–just us.

Goal 3-Spend less time on my Digital Devices

I love to read, and I can’t even tell you how many books I read a year, but I have noticed that I am spending more time on social media and on my devices. I miss holding a book in my hand. I miss having that book smash me in the face as I fall asleep reading. We live in a world that is now a 24 hour news cycle, and it is time to un-plug and to achieve balance.

reading, un-plug, goals, organization

I added five new books to my stack today, and I intend to start one tonight. If I can get my family to join me each night for 20 minutes of reading that would be a bonus. Just 20 minutes a day will add over 1,000 new words to your vocabulary in a year! I know someone who will take AP Language and Composition, the SAT and the ACT next year, so building vocabulary will be very helpful.

Goal 4- Household Chores

This is absolutely not a fun goal, but it is a necessary one. I am tired of spending my weekends grading, grocery shopping and cleaning. I’m sure many of you can relate. We work all week, and then spend all weekend doing laundry, food prepping and cleaning. I’m more exhausted on Mondays than I am on Thursdays because I don’t take a break over the weekend. Part of achieving balance is creating a cleaning schedule for everyone with the rooms in rotation. Time for a family meeting that puts together a chart with expectations and a clear schedule. My kids don’t mind helping if they have clear lists and, ok, I may bribe them a little, but hey–whatever it takes to get them to clean their bathrooms and do their own laundry.


Commit and Organize

Whatever 2021 brings, I plan to tackle it with with grace, balance and a new supply of Sharpies and chart paper for my lists. Wherever you are in your journey toward balance and organization, remember that setting small, achievable goals is the key to mastering the chaos.