Wednesday, February 29, 2012

Vegan Challenge: Week 1

I love challenges that are shaped as 21-, 30-, and X-day challenges.
I especially like them to try new things, even ones that won't stick.  They provide a nice temporary change of pace, and help me open up and expand beyond my own routine (i.e. I gave up wheat pastas once, and it made me realize that my weekday routine included multiple nights of pasta because it's what was most convenient, and also forced me to expand into non-pasta convenient meals).

So we are one week into Lent.
Note: I am not very religious.  I have no intention to discuss religion, and Lent really requires/includes prayer and a lot of things I am not going to discuss in this blog.
But every year, I use the 40 days of Lent to challenge myself to sacrifice something I thoroughly enjoy, and treat it like a 40-day challenge.

This year, my Lentan challenge was to go vegan.


I made this decision on Fat Tuesday, to start on Ash Wednesday (the following day).
I gave myself three "buy" meals.  These meals are really just because, long before I made the decision to make this sacrifice, I'd committed myself (and possibly already spent the money) to three meals that will not be remotely vegan but will take place before Lent is over (Easter).  Anything beyond these three "buys," however, I have to just Veganize.

I can probably live without meat, though I do really enjoy it.  But I was in the middle of an egg phase, and am also a lover of cheese and other dairy.  I use a lot of meat broths, even if there's no meat in my actual cooking.  If nothing else, I figured this will be interesting and full of lessons learned.

I knew I didn't want to be a person who resorted to just bags of fried potato chips and candy while I waited out my 40 days as a vegan.  Luckily, I have a friend who's tried pretty much every form of diet out there (she is the one who inspired me to take on this challenge and the challenges I am also considering for the summer) and has been eating vegan for quite some time.  She was a valuable resource, and taught me my very first lesson:
Keep it simple.

Another lesson I learned immediately, from one meat and dairy lover to any other who tries to go vegan or even just cut way back on animal proteins: Do not make the decision randomly in the middle of the week when you have no groceries and are completely unprepared.  That might be pretty obvious, but I ignored it and did it anyways, which left me hungry and frustrated for two days, while making regular runs to Whole Foods to hit up their salad bar.

My friend also pointed me to a fantastic vegan cooking blog: Oh She Glows.

I took a necessary moment to plan out a menu for the week, and then used a lunch break to grab all the groceries I needed from Whole Foods.  The first trip to the grocery store was expensive - but to be fair, it included things that will last me awhile, like probiotics and nutritional yeast and cacoa and dairy-free milks (I went with unsweetened almond and vanilla rice).

I like to cook just one or two days of the week, and then have food preparation be quick throughout the rest of the week (i.e. microwaving, mixing, putting in bowl, toasting, etc.).  So I set aside some hours to do all of my cooking Sunday and Tuesday, and this week includes these Oh She Glows recipes:
  • Layered Eggplant and Zucchini Casserole - I'm a sucker for pasta sauce and both zucchini and eggplant.  I did add Spinach into my bean sauce, and used Cannelini beans instead of Northern/Navy (I kind of think they are the same but haven't really looked into it), and the bean sauce was really fantastic.
  • Butternut Squash Mac 'n Cheese - I am also a sucker for butternut squash, and have learned the real value of nutritional yeast.  This doesn't taste like your boxed mac and cheese (either powdered cheese or cheese sauce - which is sometimes what I make on a bad day and throw in hot dogs, tuna, collard greens, or anything else), but it is tasty.  I find that the more bites you take, the cheesier tasting it gets.
  • Carrot Apple Ginger Soup - I had previously made a horrendous carrot soup from one of the Cook Yourself Thin books (a series from which I generally love the recipes, but this one just missed my mark), so I was a bit weary of this one. However, this carrot, apple, and ginger combination was really low maintenance (easy) and really tasty - somehow both refreshing and warm at the same time.
  • Lightened Up Tahini Lemon Dressing - I was too lazy to put this entire salad together, so I just took a huge bunch of kale, and washed it, chopped it, put it in a salad spinner for a few spins, and then put it in a tupperware.  Every day, I grab a handful and throw some of the dressing on.  Since it's kale, I give it a good mix/toss, and let it sit for a moment.  My friend described this dressing as good enough to make a car tire delicious.  She was right!
I also made this Quinoa Salad with Beets, Chickpeas, Oranges, and Spinach from the Gluten Free Goddess, because I bought two beets on a whim from the market on Sunday.  I love beets, especially roasted, and have been slowly figuring out what to do with quinoa - this salad is really uplifting as we shift from winter into spring (well, in DC - I know there was just a big wintry storm in the midwest so winter is not exactly over).

So there you have it - one week in...
Here are the lessons learned, from a generally-non-vegan, in Week 1 of the Vegan Challenge:
  1. Keep it simple.
  2. Be prepared - think it through, don't start mid-week without food in your house, do your research to ensure you get your vitamins.
  3. Take a moment - plan out a menu.
  4. Staples always cost money (it's like buying spices) - don't fret over those first grocery trips.
  5. Great blog for vegan recipes: Oh She Glows.

Tuesday, February 28, 2012

New Blog

The blogazine which I was a part of recently had to go on an official hiatus.

But I felt like there was so much to say.

So here I am, VentiSkimNinja, with a brand new blog.

In the year since I started blogging, much of my daily life has remained unchanged.
I am still working full time in an office - my job is pretty flexible - as long as I put in my 80 hours every two weeks, and get all of my production and quality review work done, they leave me alone.
That flexibility, eight months of every year, is made nearly moot by my class schedule - four nights a week, trying to get my law degree.
I live in DC (and love it!), and my regular life takes place in the DMV (that's area slang for "DC, Maryland, Virginia").
My beloved googleCalendar is my lifeline - not because I am important, but there are just a lot of people I want to see, and things I want/need to do, and not a lot of time to do it all.
I am still a hard core Capitals fan.
I am still trying to get myself to save money (I hear that is what you are supposed to do with some of it).

Some things are a bit different:
In less than a year, I have dropped anywhere from 30-60 seconds off my mile pace for distance runs (for me that means 6+ miles).
Along with my desire to see everyone I want to see, I am working my way out of what my older cousin has called "The Twenty-Something Itch."  (The Itch is the desire to please and also to do everything, which leads to saying yes to everything, but inevitably having to disappoint someone somewhere because you cannot possibly do everything all the time.)
Since August 2010, I have dropped 22 pounds off my frame.  This is awesome.  Although I am contained in my excitement, because that really means at some point I put those 22 pounds on.. since currently I'm still sitting just above a weight at which I spent my years between college and grad school.

Within all of this, I am also still trying to learn how to balance fitness and nutrition.

And that balance will be at the core of this blog.


I want to start this off by announcing some goals here in writing for all to see.  They are kind of my grounding point to start this blog, and it helps me to feel some accountability regarding my goals by putting them out there.
  • I am running a half marathon with a friend (who is running the entire marathon) on St. Patty's Day.
    • My reach goal is to break 2 hours (chip time).
    • My "happy with it" goal is to PR (my lifetime PR was over a decade ago and part of a full marathon, but it was a 2:13).
    • My "better than nothing; would be really disappointed if failed" goal is to finish faster and feeling better than the I did after the Nike Women's Half Marathon in October 2011 (2:22 and I felt pretty terrible both during and afterwards).
    • Goal Deadline: March 17th.
  • I am running the Cherry Blossom Ten Miler this year.  This has been my ten miler track record:
    • 2010: Did not train at all, was in the middle of putting on all this weight, and was generally out of shape; also forgot own running shoes and had to wear those of a male friend that gave me the largest blisters I have ever experienced.  I finished in 2:06... abysmal by my own standards.
    • 2011: Started to train; Achilles injury caused major problems: Did not run.
    • 2012 Goal: I'd like this to feel fantastic, as an extension of my half marathon training.  It's also on my birthday (April Fools' Day, because my life's a joke, har har), and it just needs to not be a constant decline each year. Finish time goal somewhere between 1:30 and 1:35.
    • Goal Deadline: April 1st.
  • I would like to continue to drop some excess weight.
    • My reach goal is to lose 14.89% of my current weight.
    • My "happy with it"/"would happily settle there" goal is to lose 8.8-11.9% of my current weight.
    • Timeline: I was at about my current weight the first time I originally started Weight Watchers in college, and it took about 2-3 months to only barely reach my "happy with it" weight.  That said, I'd like to hit my "happy with it" goal by the end of the semester.  My reach goal is... well in its very nature will be harder to hit, but it would be great if it happened by the time I started class for Fall 2012.
  • From a fitness perspective, I want to be in a place where I am regularly working out, and lose the feeling of "do I have to?"
    • This has already gotten a lot better.  I had a terrible work and life week last week and missed out on my workouts and training, which is terrible.  But the plus was that, aside from any guilt I felt, I also just felt kind of physically sad and lethargic, so it was clear that I feel better when I work out than when I don't.
    • However, obviously brushing off fitness when I get busy is still something that happens.  Similarly, it sometimes still feels like a chore.
    • Goal with deadline: Work out every week, during the week, and be positive, by the end of this semester.
  • From a fitness perspective, I also want to be in a physical position to be able to take on fitness challenges without starting from zero.  It'd be lovely if, if a friend said, "hey do you want to run this half marathon in two months," the list of things to consider only included logistics (timing and cash) and desire, and did not include "but I'm so far from half marathon shape" or injury concerns.
    • Goal deadline: Along with other fitness perspective goal and weight loss goal: By the end of the semester.
  • Figure out how to accomplish the above three (weight and fitness) as a person who loves food and loves to eat.
    • Goal deadline: Ongoing.

And here we go!