Easy-mode Paleo Prep Day

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Smoked pulled pork; one of our favorite easy-mode prep foods.

Every now and then, our schedule becomes hectic, and taking an entire Sunday to prep meals for the week becomes a luxury we cannot afford. On these days, we opt for what we have come to call our “Easy-mode Paleo Prep Days.” This allows us to still get our meal prep done but in the most effort-free way possible.

Our Easy-mode Paleo Prep Day consists of the following:

Smoker

This is a fire and forget method of cooking. We take either brisket, ribs, chicken, fish, or pork shoulder and add a rub (typically salt, pepper, onion and garlic powders) and use pecan wood and leave in the smoker for the appropriate amount of time at the appropriate temperature. This is very easy to do, and there is a lot of leeway in the times, so if you’re going to be out of the house for a long time, you can opt for a slow-smoke for very delicious food. (Some Paleo guides, websites, and adherents don’t think smoking is Paleo due to the carcinogens in smoke. My wife and I have weighed the risk and we accept smoking into our diet)

Slow Cooker

Another great all-day no-touch cooking method, prepare a soup, stew, or chili and let it cook all day. When you get back home, you’ll find your food ready to be put into containers for the week (and sneak some for dinner, too!).

Instant Pot

This one is very useful if done first. While cooking in the Instant Pot, you can prep the meat to be smoked and the slow cooker. Then, before you wrap up in the kitchen, you can package whatever was in the Instant Pot. Then, you can use the Instant Pot as a slow cooker and put something else in it to cook all day. Double duty!

Using easy-mode doesn’t eliminate the time to prep food for the week; it only reduces it greatly. I would say that a couple of hours at most in the morning would be necessary and then an hour in the evening to package everything up. Teaming up and having someone cut up ingredients while the other puts everything together decreases prep time considerably as well.

Amazing Paleo Lunch

Today, while shopping for some Brussels sprouts for our prep-day cooking, we came across a really good deal going on at our local Sprout’s for lobster tail. We bought four of them and I grilled them for lunch.

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I took half a stick of butter and melted it in the microwave for 30 seconds. I then added in some spices from Penzey’s (a mix of oregano and others) and used this to baste the tails with. I basted the fleshy side and grilled the tails over medium flame on the grill for 6 minutes. I then turned them over and basted the flesh again while cooking for an additional 5 minutes. I made sure the lid was closed on the grill both times.

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When it was done, we served it with half of a sweet potato (we had these in the refrigerator as Sherry had made them earlier in the InstantPot) and some tomato and onion salad my wife made while I was grilling the tails. They went well together, and it was really tasty!

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Eating Paleo isn’t bland or not filling. After eating this lunch, both Sherry and I were left satisfied and raving about how tasty the food was. We will definitely do this again!

Weekend Planning

What can you do about eating Paleo when you want to go out and spend the day out in the country, or in the city, or anywhere away from home? With a little bit of planning ahead, it’s not that hard at all.

You can make a picnic of it. Just like I wrote yesterday, with a little planning, you can have a picnic with Paleo-friendly meats and vegetables. Heck, throw a few fruits in there as well!

Another option is to find foods that are Paleo-friendly at restaurants. BBQ and Mexican can be surprisingly Paleo as long as you stay away from the rice, beans, tortillas, and potato salad. Fajitas are typically Paleo-compliant and tasty. Sherry and I have it served with guacamole and grilled onions with some grilled vegetables. As for the BBQ, I typically ask if their rubs have sugar in them. If they do, then I either find which meat they have available either has no sugar or the least amount. The amount of sugar in a rub is negligible if that’s all they’ve got. Obviously, stay away from the bread/muffins/rolls and BBQ sauce if they put sugar in it as well.

As a last resort, you just have to eat what’s available. However, you can make some smart choices and go as Paleo as possible. Skip bread, noodles, and fried food. Most restaurants have some sort of food that’s almost Paleo.

Ultimately, if it’s a vacation or even a getaway, you can get away with having a non-Paleo meal every now and then. Heck, I ate some bread pudding on a vacation a few months back, and it was heavenly! Of course, my stomach hated me for it, but it was worth it. I’m now cured of wanting bread pudding again for a long time.

Once you’ve been eating Paleo for a while, it’s easy to know what you should or shouldn’t eat, and eating at non-Paleo restaurants gets easier.

Quick and Easy Paleo Lunches for Picnics

Sherry and I have found ourselves in situations where we wouldn’t be able to warm up a pre-made lunch, nor would we be able to take one with us due to a lack of refrigeration. Also, weight was a consideration, so we were forced with a decision: do we take food with us to eat Paleo, or do we eat what’s available and risk having to eat food that is off-plan?

Taking a cue from my parents and grandparents, we went Hungarian Picnic style. What is that? Our lunches over the past two weekends consisted of the following:

  • Paleo bread (the recipe can be found on Sherry’s website)
  • Chorizo (pre-cooked and made with no sugar)
  • Red Bell pepper
  • Radishes
  • Butter
  • Tomatoes

We could have added more vegetables, but we didn’t really need a huge lunch; just enough to fuel our bodies and stave off hunger. These small lunches also allowed us to eat slightly larger dinners.

I know what some of you are thinking: what kind of Hungarian picnic has chorizo? Probably none. Hungarians would use some sort of Gyulai (sausage), kolbasz (sausage), or szalona (bacon) as the meat. My dad was fond of making fasirt (pork and beef meatballs), and Sherry and I have made these for picnics before, too. I came up with a really good Paleo recipe for fasirt that’s also on her website.

Paleo isn’t effortless, but nothing worthwhile is. It takes some planning and prep time, but it’s worth it. Finding creative ways to have Paleo meals gives you more options and makes the lifestyle easier to adopt and stick with. What Paleo meal hacks have you found?

Adding Exercise to Paleo

I’ve been asked if I’m still eating Paleo now that I have started running. Some people are concerned that I may not be getting the right nutrients or enough calories to support the increase in calorie burn through running. Well, the easy, simple, and true answer is yes: I’m still Paleo.

There is no hard part.

I eat the same way I always have. Well, maybe I eat a little bit more, but in terms of ingredients, it’s exactly the same. For example, for breakfast, I ate an extra slice of bacon. After my run this morning, I just felt like I needed that extra slice, and now a couple of hours after breakfast, I can honestly say that I feel better than I would have without that extra slice.

For lunch today, I’ll have the exact same size portion I have been eating for the past 13 months, and for dinner, I’ll do the same with perhaps a muffin for dessert. Otherwise, my diet is the same as before. The only real difference is I add a tiny bit here and there to round out my nutrition to stave off any hunger. I’m working to increase my calorie deficit as well as getting fit, so eating a lot more would defeat a big part of the reason I’m running.

I don’t eat a lot of carbs. I have greens and some vegetable with my meat at every lunch and dinner, but I’m not loading up on them. I haven’t felt lacking in energy with the exception of one run, and that was in the heat after work when I was tired. Otherwise, on my morning runs, I feel energized and ready. I will even say I feel good. Today’s run was exceptionally good.

So, in my experience, adding exercise to Paleo is sort of a natural progression and doesn’t require any real additional food or planning other than maybe to add a fruit or some extra serving of something maybe twice a day to offset the increase caloric load on the intake.

Good old fashioned American food (in Paleo)

I was asked a question today that I hadn’t thought of:

Are there Paleo foods that are the same or close enough to the same as their original counterparts that finicky or picky family members won’t know they’re eating good food?

There is good news: the answer is YES! Here is the PaleoMarine short list of Paleo-friendly foods you can make without alerting even the pickiest family member (you know that one person who refuses to eat anything “Healthy.”)

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Bear in mind the following list assumes that there are no sugars, grains, or dairy used in their preparation.

  • Steak
  • Sausage
  • Brisket
  • Ribs
  • Pulled Pork
  • Meatloaf
  • Grilled fish
  • Grilled shrimp
  • Lobster
  • Chicken Wings
  • Barbecued Chicken
  • Bacon and Eggs

I know people who have lived their entire lives eating nothing but the above as the main portion of their meals. The list above can be coupled with any non-grain vegetable like:

  • Sweet potato
  • Asparagus
  • Broccoli
  • Brussels sprouts
  • Cauliflower
  • Chayote/Merliton
  • etc

The veggies are best prepared grilled or steamed, but as long as you avoid any breading, sugar, or dairy, they are fine.

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If your kids are young, I would suggest educating them on good nutrition and explaining why you are eating the foods you eat. This will help keep them from being picky eaters when it comes to good, healthy, wholesome foods.

Pulled Pork and Apple Breakfast Casserole

Sherry is amazing. She’s not only smart and beautiful, but she’s been so very supportive of me and my efforts to get healthy. She literally slaves in the kitchen all day on Sundays to make sure we have lunches, and last night, she topped herself by making a breakfast casserole for us to have for breakfast this week.

We smoked a pork shoulder yesterday (I put it in the smoker at 5:30 a.m. and took it off the smoker at 7 p.m.) and after dinner, I looked over at the huge pile of meat we had (10 lbs before smoking). I wondered out loud if there was some sort of Paleo breakfast food that could be made with pulled pork. She took that as a challenge and began scouring the Internet for ideas. She found a great one:  a Pulled Pork Apple and Egg Casserole. She spent a few hours making it last night and after it was done, she put it into the refrigerator.

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This morning, we had it for breakfast, and WOW was it delicious! I had mine with just a little salt, but she had hers with some Paleo-friendly barbecue sauce (Bone Suckin’ Sauce). The medley of flavors was really delicious and I’m looking forward to having this for breakfast again tomorrow and hopefully on Thursday as well!

Back to the bragging: Sherry is tireless in her efforts to help us succeed at Paleo. She’s knocking the “Domestic Diva” title out of the ballpark, and she continually tops herself with each subsequent meal. I feel like I’m eating better, tastier food today than I have in many years, and I don’t miss eating out all the time. When the food is so good at home, you no longer want to eat at restaurants (except for the convenience of it all).

I thank her all the time for her hard work and the love she puts into everything she does. I wanted to make this very public post about how wonderful she is, and how much richer my life is because of her.

Tried something new for breakfast this morning

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My yummy baked prosciutto ham and eggs this morning.

I was inspired by a Twitter post to make this breakfast with prosciutto ham and eggs. I put some coconut oil on the cast iron skillet, lined the skillet with the ham and then broke five eggs into it. At 350 degrees, I baked it for 15 minutes (while I showered, shaved, and brushed my teeth). When I came out to take it out of the oven, it was completely done! Talk about saving time during the morning routine!

I think it tasted really good, albeit a little saltier than the bacon I’ve grown accustomed to. I will likely start baking our eggs in the morning to save time because it worked out far better than I expected. Since I precook our bacon, this should make things a snap for our morning routine. The one thing I would change: maybe bake it for a little less time or not allow the oven to warm up first. The yolks were just a touch overdone and not gooey like Sherry and I like it. I’ll likely try again tomorrow to see how it goes.

Yesterday’s food

We started the day off right with the last of the salmon for breakfast. It’s filling and delicious.

Breakfast

  • Salmon omlette (smoked salmon and two eggs)

Lunch

Dinner

I could have used a little more with dinner, but in the end, I was’t hungry and I was sufficiently sated after dinner.

Yesterday’s Food

As requested, here is yesterday’s food breakdown:

Breakfast

  • Scrambled eggs (two, with butter)
  • Small slice of smoked salmon (I smoked it myself)

Lunch

  • Three slices of smoked beef brisket (fat trimmed off because I don’t like it; I smoked this, too)
  • 1/4 sweet potato made in an Instant Pot pressure cooker
  • 1/3 cup beets made in an Instant Pot

Dinner

The beets were really a lot more delicious than I expected. I ate them cold, and they were like a dessert (which is a no-no on Whole30, but it was a regular part of my dinner; I just ate that portion last). Also, after eating dinner, I felt completely and perfectly satisfied with not even a hint of hunger or the feeling of having eaten too much. It was perfect for me!