We makin food.
Crohn's Grrl
Diagnosed with Crohn's 16 years ago, over 10 hospital stays, one surgery, minus 18 inches of small intestine and... always pretending I'm not effected. Time to get a grip. So here goes the next experiment in my wellness - a dramatic diet change.
Friday, February 27, 2015
Saturday, January 31, 2015
Ripening Bananas DIY
Experimenting today with bananas. I wanted to make banana bread but didnt have ripe bananas.
The internet told me I could bake them for one hour at 300° until black and soft.
Updates to follow if this really works. Progress so far looks correct, but gross.
Monday, December 15, 2014
Sautéed Mushrooms
There's a trick to sautéed mushrooms, and that's to cook them slowly.
Conceptually, I understand how to make them - what the ingredients are, and what the desired outcome is. But what usually happens when I am trying to cook something is that I don't know by heart the cooking times or temperatures.
Therefore, this blog, while simple in nature, is to help me remember how to make yummy sautéed mushrooms without having to google it first.
Conceptually, I understand how to make them - what the ingredients are, and what the desired outcome is. But what usually happens when I am trying to cook something is that I don't know by heart the cooking times or temperatures.
Therefore, this blog, while simple in nature, is to help me remember how to make yummy sautéed mushrooms without having to google it first.
Mushrooms are in the pan, people! |
Perfectly Sauteed Mushrooms From the kitchen of the GrowlyGRRL.
Dump in mushrooms and toss to coat with the butter and wine. Cover and turn down heat to low. Cook for 45 mins. Check on mushrooms - if there's still a lot of liquid, return the cover and keep cooking. If there's little liquid left, take over the cover and continue to cook for another five minutes until the majority of the liquid has evaporated. Season with herbs and salt. Try not to eat all of the mushrooms straight from the pan. |
Try not to be jealous of this perfection. |
Sunday, December 14, 2014
BBQ Sauce!
Today, as part of my prep for the week, I made some SCD friendly Barbecue Sauce. It's actually pretty easy, and probably less expensive than buying ready-made BBQ. I don't know that as a fact, since I don't want to bother with the math - but it's most likely true.
Here are the ingredients you'll need - you probably already have them on hand! Maybe not the liquid smoke, but that isn't required for this to be a successful and yummy meat-treat. (Scroll to the bottom of the post for the full recipe.)
Add the ingredients to a saucepan and admire the artistic quality of what you've done.
Here are the ingredients you'll need - you probably already have them on hand! Maybe not the liquid smoke, but that isn't required for this to be a successful and yummy meat-treat. (Scroll to the bottom of the post for the full recipe.)
Pull this stuff out of the cupboards. |
Add the ingredients to a saucepan and admire the artistic quality of what you've done.
Artsy ingredients shot. |
At this point, if you are super lazy, you could just eat it. But, I personally want the flavors to meld. And besides, it's too runny for my taste...
Too runny. |
Here's one important tip I can share: Get yourself a pan screen. It's basically just a mesh that sits over the pan. Especially handy when cooking bacon, or tomato sauces that like to geyser when heated.
Get yourself a screen! |
Evidence of why the screen rules. |
Slowly cook and reduce the sauce to your desired consistency.
Thick BBQ texture. |
And voila. You have a delicious sauce for all of your dipping needs.
EAT ME! |
GrowlyGRRL's SCD BBQ Sauce
|
Saturday, December 13, 2014
Daily Breakfast Jam
Excuse the photo of half eaten food, sine I was too hungry to wait.
Homemade yogurt, honey, raspberries and my savior, a grain-free granola recipe.
The "granola" is composed of cashews, walnuts and pumpkin seeds. Dressed up with coconut and raisins and coated with a honey-egg glaze and baked to crunch perfection.
The process of working with nuts on SCD is tedious!!!!
First you soak raw nuts in water overnight. Then you have to dry them - it takes more than24 hours. Then you can cook with them. If you want nuts, you have to know about it three days before you want them.
But I made a giant recipe of the granola, so hopefully it will last another week or two. It tastes like granola, and I've shared it with several people who agreed that it is amazing and tastes like regular granola.
Bonus, the yogurt and nuts are very filling.
Here's a link to the recipe for granola:
Sunday, December 7, 2014
A Basic Run-Down of the SCD
I figured I should give any readers a brief overview of the SCD (Specific Carbohydrate Diet).
Designed for people with bowel diseases, such as Crohn's (my constant companion) this diet is based on the molecular structure of food - basically, you eat foods that are easy for your system to break down and digest.
Desired result: no more bleeding tummy.
So, what do you eat? Or more like, what can't you eat?
NO:
Designed for people with bowel diseases, such as Crohn's (my constant companion) this diet is based on the molecular structure of food - basically, you eat foods that are easy for your system to break down and digest.
Desired result: no more bleeding tummy.
So, what do you eat? Or more like, what can't you eat?
NO:
- Any kind of grain. I'm talking no oats, no wheat, no rice, no, no, no.
- Any kind of sugar. Say goodbye to the good stuff and even the bad. No cane sugar. No agave nectar. No maple syrup. No artificial sweeteners.
- Fresh dairy. No milk, no fresh cheeses. No sour cream, cottage cheese or cream cheese. Boo.
- No starches. Potatoes (big-time boo!) and many legumes (pretty much all the good ones).
- No Soy
- Anything fun that you would want to eat.
YES:
- Fruits and vegetables (minus a few like corn)
- Meat (but not anything with added stuff, so it has to be the most expensive damn meat in the universe.)
- Home-made yogurt
- Honey
- Coconut things (milk, cream, flour, pulp)
- Brick cheeses (included my favorite, gruyere, thank god)
- Eggs
- Nuts. All nuts need to be raw and tediously soaked overnight, dried for 24 hours before use. You can't buy any store nuts because they are all roasted and the process uses starches.
- Vodka and dry wines
Obviously you can see why I've been avoiding this diet for a long time. It's like what you would eat if you had Celiac disease and diabetes on a paleo diet.
I have to keep reminding myself of the desired result. No more hurty tummy. No more hurty tummy. No more hurty tummy...
Saturday, December 6, 2014
Enchilada Bake
For whatever reason, last night I was craving something melted cheesy-gooey and hot. I started browsing my go-to for recipes, Pinterest, and found this:
NOM NOM NOM.
Unfortunately, I also had to make an enchilada sauce from scratch. I got confused reading the recipe and basically ended up making something that was a mash-up of two recipes. But it worked really well!!! So, I give you my version... Here goes:
Use this awesomesauce with the enchilada bake recipe for easy, cheesy dinner. I ended up buying a set of 5 mini aluminum tins and made a perfect amount for 5 different meals. Looking forward to eating this again tonight.
NOM NOM NOM.
Unfortunately, I also had to make an enchilada sauce from scratch. I got confused reading the recipe and basically ended up making something that was a mash-up of two recipes. But it worked really well!!! So, I give you my version... Here goes:
SCD Enchilada Sauce:
Preheat oven to 400 degrees. Combine onion, peppers and garlic in a roasting pan and coat with olive oil. Bake in oven for 45 minutes. Combine crushed tomatoes, cumin, honey, salt and pepper in saucepan and cook on low to meld flavors. Once onion and pepper mixture is complete, combine with tomato sauce in a food pro and whiz for a minute until combined. |
Use this awesomesauce with the enchilada bake recipe for easy, cheesy dinner. I ended up buying a set of 5 mini aluminum tins and made a perfect amount for 5 different meals. Looking forward to eating this again tonight.
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