Showing posts with label zone diet. Show all posts
Showing posts with label zone diet. Show all posts

Tuesday, October 13, 2009

Easy Chicken Stew

It has been REALLY cold, windy and rainy in Melbourne lately. I used to make stews with potato and lamb, but since that is recently dead to me I made a new version which I actually think is even better. You can of course use lamb instead of chicken, I think that would work really well too.

I made a huge batch of this in a big pot, and then sectioned it up into containers so I could take it to work for lunch.

Note: C = Carbs, P = Protein, F = Fat. So 1C is 1 block of carbs (9g), 1P is 1 block of Protein (7g), 1F is one block of fat (1.5g). 

Easy Chicken Stew
Zone: 15 blocks (5 x 3 block meals)
Ingredients:
700g passata (pureed tomatoes) (7C) - check the ingredients say 100% tomatoes, most have additives
350g turnip (2.5 C)
115g tomato (1/2C)
132g celery (1/2C)
138g mushrooms (1/2C)
94g carrot (1C)
405g zucchini (1.5C)
120g onion (1.5C)
450g chicken (15P)
5 tsp/25ml olive oil (15F) - this is about 2 australian tablespoons
few cloves garlic (I use 3 or 4, but I love garlic)
Rosemary, italian herbs, salt, pepper

  • Cut everything into small pieces, about 1.5cm cubes as a guide.
  • Cook garlic and onion in olive oil on a medium heat until onion starts to go see through
  • Add chicken and cook on a medium heat until sides turn white (does need to be cooked all the way through).
  • Add vegetables and passata and add water so that it just covers the vegies (doesn't matter if a few vegies are sticking out, these will condense as stew cooks).
  • Bring to the boil with the lid  on, then simmer for an hour, stirring every 15 minutes
  • After 1 hour take lid off and continue to simmer, stirring occasionally. Do this until mixture gets really thick, it should take between 1 - 2 hours. You can add salt, pepper and a bit of rosemary or italian herbs for taste.
  • Portion out and store/serve.

Getting Started - Zone Block Weight Measurements

All Zone Block measurements seem to be in cup measurements, and when I'm dieting I like to know that I'm doing it fairly accurately which is why I like to weigh everything. Before that I was worrying about whether I was eating too much brocolli if I chopped it up smaller since more would fit in the cup, and how much difference the size of the carrot would make, I  know - quite silly.

So I looked everything up on CalorieKing.com.au, worked out the blocks and wrote it all down on two bits of pink post it notes that live next to my scales.

Meats and fish are easy, deli meat (always use premium!) and fish is roughly 45g per block, meat and tuna is roughly 30g per block. Below are the list of vegie measurements that I use. However as a rule, if it comes in a tin/packet (tuna, sweet corn) go with the measurement on that. Also check the ingredients - lots of that stuff has added salt, sugar or oil.

Alignment is a little off, I'll fix it up later. I have this all in a word doc somewhere so will post a link soon!


   
Vegetables
1 Block (g)
Asparagus
230g
Brocolli
139g
Capsicum
150g
Carrot
94g
Cauliflower
170g
Celery
265g
Cucumber
247g
Green Beans
127g
Mushroom
275g
Onion
90g
Sweet Corn
75g
Tomato
230g
Turnip
140g
Zucchini
70g
Fruit
1 Block (g)
Apple
65g
Non Paleo
Snow Peas
163g
Chickpeas
40g
Potato
57g
Fats
1 Block (g)
Avocado
10g
Hazelnuts
1.5 nuts
Almonds
3 nuts
Pinenuts
13 nuts
Macadamia
1 nut

Some of these vegetables contain protein as well (mushrooms, green beans). I don't count it because vegetable protein is an incomplete protein and is a very poor source compared to meat. Since it doesn't matter if you go over on protein blocks (it doesn't break down to fat OR increase insulin), it doesn't hurt either way. Plus it makes it all way easier to work out a recipe.

Benefits of a Paleo Zone Diet

I started the Zone diet as part of a February Crossfit challenge. When I first started the Zone, I ate mostly Paleo purely because it meant I got to eat more food. Yes, I have a very large appetite for a girl, maybe it's because I'm half Italian? I probably lost about 3kg in that first month. That's when I started elimnating pasta, bread and rice.

After I had a Chronic Fatigue relapse, my doctor put me on iron supplements, and medication to help me digest my food so I would absorb the nutrients. A few months later a nutritionist came to talk to our Crossfit group about Paleo Zone. I wanted to find out more about the Zone, honestly I wasn't too interested in the Paleo. What he said made a lot of sense, so I started seeing him about my Chronic Fatigue, and to help get me off the medication as I was starting to depend on it. That's when dairy went.

Firstly I'll explain what Paleo Zone is.

Paleo is "paleolithic" foods, foods that cavemen would eat. That is vegies, some fruit, little starch, meat, fish, nuts, seeds, eggs. These are all low GI foods. There is actually a lot of conflicting information about how strict Paleo needs to be, so at first I was approximating it. I'd still eat potatoes and chickpeas, but not many. As a general rule I think Paleo foods are foods that can be eaten raw, although you can cook them if you want. That means no chocolate :(, dairy, grains, rice, pasta, etc. For me it also means no alcohol, red meat and eggs...for now (just because I find them harder to digest, but that's just me!).

Zone determines how much of the food you can eat. A "block" is a balance of 9g carbs, 7g protein and 1.5g fat  to control insulin levels. In short, if insulin is released then you can't burn fat, when glycogen is released then you can. Carbs essentially increase insulin, so it's the fat and protein that you need to balance it out. I've learnt that it's fine to have double or triple the amount of fat (it helps with digesting the food) and that having a bit more protein is fine, but never overdo it on the carbs! If you do, have some more protein, or another way is to have fibre and fat as it lowers the GI of the food.

For me, eating Paleo Zone means that I can digest the food much more easily. I am getting way more nutrients, so I have so much more energy and Chronic Fatigue isn't really a problem anymore. I used to be such a night person and crawl out of bed in the morning, now I get up early and clean the house (we got rid of our cleaner and it's never looked better!). I'm so used to feeling good now that I really notice how crap I feel when I don't eat Paleo Zone, my tummy feels a bit ill and I get a bit...bleh. I also get way more hungry and tend to eat everything. Another awesome benefit of Paleo Zone is that I've lost a ton of weight, I don't even feel like I'm trying anymore. I cheat on fat all the time (have maybe double the blocks) and I've started eating about 11 or 12 blocks on some days, and still I've gone from an average Australian size 10, to a size 6 - 8!

The more I learn about the benefits of Paleo Zone, the easier I find it to stay on the diet. The other day I read about how the fibre in grains is processed in the body. It's similar to cigarettes or alcohol - your body sees it as a poison and tries to get rid of it. That's great for moving things through your bowels, but what it does along the way is scratch all through your digestive system and that really ages it. I guess that might be fine for some people, and they'll never have a problem, but for others when they're older they'll start having digestion issues because of it. I'm only 25 and already having these issues, so for me it's a deal breaker.

Why Paleo Zone?

I've been strictly Paleo Zone now for almost a month, as directed by my nutritionist to help me get off my Chronic Fatigue medication. Not just "Paleo", worse actually - right now I can't eat eggs or red meat either! It's just a bit too hard to digest...

As a former chocaholic (quite serious, eating two family blocks of chocolate in one sitting is no big deal for me) I have managed surprisingly well. I've been on and off the Zone since February, so really my descent into Paleo was pretty gradual - first I cut down my non-Paleo food to only 3 blocks a day (I get a total of 10), then every second day, now... well never really.

After about a week of steamed vegies and meat I started to go a bit crazy. I was dreaming about massive chocolate mousse cakes and craving muffins. I started (and to be honest, I still do) just starting intently at anything with potato, or caramel slices, or brownies. That's when I started looking up Paleo Zone recipes on the internet. Really, there isn't much at all. Steve Paleo has the best blog I can find so far, but the problem there is that I only get 3 block meals, and most things are geared towards 5 blocks. The carbs/protein/fat ratios are all written there, but I found it really hard to adapt.

My next problem was that really, I can't cook. I can do scrambled eggs but that's about it! I'm learning fast though, and I have a few friends now doing Paleo Zone too (one is just doing it to support me) so they are constantly helping me out. We've just started Paleo Thursdays - where we all get together and try out a new recipe. There has only been one so far, we tried Steve Paleo's Shephard's Pie (and soon will attempt our own version, a bit more Australian maybe?). I also cooked up some Paleo cookies (they were YUM, but apparently not so good for you, more on that later) and a really easy chicken soup.


So the recipes here are going to be really simple and basic. They're also going to be formatted the way I find easy to read - measurements in weight, blocks listed, complete 1:1:1 block recipes and easy to adapt. Enjoy!