Sadly, asparagus season is slowly drawing to an end here, so I eat as much asparagus as I can while it lasts. Seriously, I could eat asparagus every single day and probably have during the last weeks. My menue from the last two days gives some examples:
Tuesday
Breakfast: Timar's special muesli
Lunch: Whole durum wheat spagetti with diced red onions, eggplant, sun-dried tomatoes, green olives, and chopped walnuts, herbs (rosemary, thyme, organo, parsley) and garlic sautéd in olive and canola oil (from the canned sun-dried tomatoes), tossed with peppery arugula, olive oil and some grated Parmigiano.
(Sounds like a lot of effort for a week day's lunch, but it was actually the leftover from last day's dinner which I often have for lunch. Saves not only the money for eating out, but also one from being tempted by all the unhealthy dishes on the menu.)
Dinner: Oven-baked green asparagus with oyster mushrooms tossed in a marinade of olive oil, chopped herbs (s.a.), lemon zest, garlic and black pepper and sprinkled with some white wine while baking in the oven. To go with it: Insalata Caprese, a bowl of arugula with aceto balsamico and olive oil and freshly baked walnut baugette. A glass of red wine and a half cup of home-made ice cream with blueberries for dessert.
Snacks: A banana, a peach, an apple, some grapes, a cup of strawberries, some dark chocolate and a small piece of baklava.
Drinks: Two cups of filtered coffee, an espresso, two cups of orange juice mixed with sour milk and chrushed ice (one part each - a nice refreshing drink. It put it in my thermos and it keeps cool a whole hot summer's day long), a glass of wine and lots of water.
Wednesday
Breakfast. s.a., plus a piece of walnut baugette with Camembert and home-made blackberry jam.
Lunch: a bowl of ready-to-eat "Mexican" salad from the grocery (mixed greens, grated carrots, tomatoes, sweet corn, kidney beans and chicken breast with a canola oil-based dressing) with a "multi grain" roll. I pimped the salad with some freshly gathered wild greens (dandelion, garlic mustard and ground elder).
Dinner: Steamed white asparagus wrapped in Black Forest ham with steamed new potatoes tossed with melted, pastered butter, lots of chopped, curley-leafed parsley and finished a pinch of black pepper and nutmeg (the traditional German way of eating asparagus. The combination is far too good to give up the ham, but I go easy on it by using a very thin ~1 oz slice for wrapping 1/2 lb of steamed asparagus.) A bowl of mixed salad greens with radishes, spring onions, tomatoes and cucumber with honey-mustard dressing. And, of course, a glass of Riesling wine. A cup of strawberries with vanilla yogurt for dessert.
Snacks: Two bananas, two peaches, a cup of cherries, a cup of strawberries, a scoop of ice-cream and a granola-nut bar.
Drinks: Three cups of filtered coffee, a glass of wine, a glass of champange and lots of water.
If all that sounds like a lot of calories - it proabably is (I never bother to count them), but as I've said, I'm currently exercising quite vigorously.
Oh by the way, I love oyster mushrooms just as much as I love asparagus! If you don't like the mushy consistency cooked mushrooms often have, you should try broiled or oven-roasted oyster mushrooms tossed with garlic, herbs and olive oil. They have a firm, meat-like consistency unlike any other mushroom. What's also unlike any other popular, edible mushroom is that about 2% of the dry mass of oyster mushrooms is made up of lovastatin (some fascinating facts in this article). Hence, eating a 1/2 lb serving of oyster mushrooms should supply you with a hefty dose of ~500 mg lovastatin, about ten times the higher prescription dose - yet I have never experienced nor heard about any serious side effect from eating oyster mushrooms! When I think about how often I've had them during the last weeks, I'm curious what my cholesterol level is right now. Maybe I should have some blood drawn to find out.
Edited by timar, 18 June 2015 - 11:30 AM.