Combo Stews

I find it extremely helpful to make a good stew using only highly
beneficial foods, and those that promote weight loss. I just make a
rather large one, and I have it for my main meals, and I also take
some to work for lunch. I’ve found some pre-made spaghetti sauces
that do not have corn syrup, and I use that in the stews a lot of
the time, with a lot of garlic, onions, some seaweed, beef stew meat
(Costco, of course!), bell peppers, green beans, and that’s pretty
much it. I made one with diced sweet potatoes and it was great. In
6 weeks, I’ve lost 22 pounds. My energy level is way up, and I’m
just feeling so much better. Coffee is the only vice I have left,
but just naturally, without trying, my consumption and desifre for
coffee has significantly diminished. I have a 40 minute
running/walking regime I follow at least 4 times a week, early in
the morning, and the exercise bit is the kicker!!!
It’s working for me extremely well

4 Responses to “Combo Stews”

  1. Tracy Camacho Says:

    Dear fellow listers:
    I want to thank you so much for the information and encouragement you
    bestowed upon this newbie. I’ve been on the diet now for about 2
    months. The difference in my energy level and well-being is amazing!
    The initial changes were scary for me and those of you who wrote to
    encourage me were very much appreciated. One person, male, I believe
    but I don’t remember the name, said that I would feel better than I had
    ever felt. I so needed to hear that and he was right! Thanks again.
    Okay, next question, how do you do this and travel? I have a weekend
    trip coming up next month and am wondering how I’m going to pull this
    off without my EZ bread, smoothies for breakfast without any dairy, and
    lots of protein. Thoughts and suggestions are very welcome. BTW, this
    is a trip to a wedding, staying in a hotel with friends and the
    temptations of wedding cakes. What say you? (Besides take Deflect and
    hope for the best?)

    Thanks from a grateful newbie,
    Lisa

  2. jacobs100 Says:

    In a message dated 5/27/2003 4:35:57 PM Eastern Daylight Time,
    randlco@… writes:
    << Okay, next question, how do you do this and travel?
    Boy, is that a tough question. You have to decide. You know what you can
    and can’t eat (ie Pizza is not very filling when you scrape it off of the bread
    dough). You just have to pick through and leave the avoids or just say the
    hell with it and pig out. I just went to a house warming party recently and did
    fine until I bit into a chocolate chip chocolate cookie. Hey, I had two,
    they were small. Just pick back up where you left off. I minimize the avoids
    but don’t beat myself up if I cheat. After all, you have to eat and you will
    have eaten fewer avoids than before.

  3. Brenda Retta Says:

    Don had some very good suggestions about choosing the right place to eat. I
    have found that you can even eat at an Italian restaurant and survive.
    Most places will substitute rice for potatoes - or even another vegetable.
    Order a plain steak or grilled chicken, nothing fancy.
    Have your friends help you out by putting the bread on their side of the table.
    If you end up at pasta place, order one of the meat dishes - chicken or veal,
    ask for vegetables instead of pasta. Eat lots of salad.
    As for traveling by car - plane, I always have beef jerky on hand, along with
    celery and carrots, rice crackers and a homemade trail mix.
    Enjoy your trip - I just came back from a two week jaunt visiting family on the
    east coast. Depending on where you are traveling, good places to eat are Thai
    and Japanese restaurants. They seem to have the fewest avoids.
    Breakfast out is actually pretty easy, steak and eggs - give the toast to
    someone else.
    Hope this helps.

    Kate in sunny So. CA
    Okay, next question, how do you do this and travel? Thanks from a grateful
    newbie,
    Lisa

  4. jacobs100 Says:

    In a message dated 5/27/2003 9:29:09 PM Eastern Daylight Time,
    exlibris@… writes:
    << Most places will substitute rice for potatoes - or even another vegetable.
    Outback restraurants used to substitute a sweet potato for the potatoes in
    their steak dishes. It’s been so long that I don’t now if they still do or not.

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