meatless monday recipe Archives - The Shooks Life Food, Fitness, Fashion and my Furbaby Tue, 21 Jan 2020 00:36:26 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.5.4 https://theshookslife.com/wp-content/uploads/2018/04/shooks_logo_favicon.png meatless monday recipe Archives - The Shooks Life 32 32 145780105 Game On For Healthy Snacks https://theshookslife.com/2020/01/20/game-on-for-healthy-snacks/ https://theshookslife.com/2020/01/20/game-on-for-healthy-snacks/#comments Tue, 21 Jan 2020 01:00:46 +0000 https://theshookslife.com/?p=3190 These cinnamon chips don’t lie – this fruit salsa is perfecto. And now is the perfect time to start planning those game day snacks! While the Pack may have been defeated, I’m not letting that rain on my parade. Because really, football is all about the snacks anyway, right? And those snacks don’t have to set you back from your healthy eating aspirations. Read on for some of my favorite not-so-sinful game day recipes including this fruit salsa, buffalo cauliflower wings and a roasted red pepper dip that will have you dipping veggies for days. When you think of game day food, what comes to mind? Visions of buffalo wings, pizza and cheesy dips? Uh huh. Thought so. Now there’s no shame in salivating over everyone’s favorite fried foods. But, brown doesn’t have to be the only color of choice on your plate. Because fruit and veggies can have just as much game when dolled up in their Sunday best. And filling up on these fiber-rich, nutrient dense and high water foods can help you to scale back on some of the more indulgent foods. And yes, I said scale back because eating healthy doesn’t have to be black or white – especially if you’re just hopping off the January Whole30 train and ready to imbibe in some of the sworn off foods. Here are some my tips for eating healthy-ish at game day. Tips for a Healthy-Ish Game Day 1.) Hydrate! Hunger is often masked as thirst. Before your game watch, chug a glass of water to curb your appetite. If you’re enjoying adult beverages, consider swapping every other drink for a glass of water. If water isn’t your thing, think about dressing it up with some fresh fruit or grabbing a flavored seltzer water. 2.) Bigger Is Not Always Better. Grab a smaller, appetizer-sized plate rather than a dinner-sized plate at the buffet table. More often than not, we’ll fill the space of our plates, so this is a way to hold yourself back from piling on portions that are too large. It also forces you to make choices of the things you really want, but everything is not gonna fit on that tiny plate. 3.) Mamma Always Said, Veggies First. Before you dive head first into that pizza, grab a plate of fruits and veggies with healthy-ish dips. This ensures you get in those greens and will keep hunger at bay so that you’re more conservative when you get to the good stuff like those wings you wanted to devour. 4.) Step Away From the Buffet. Out of sight, out of mind. Ever find yourself endlessly munching because you’ve been standing by a table piled high with food for the last hour? Take yourself away from the food. Force yourself to make the choice of walking over to the buffet for more food. In fact, sit as far away as you can! It serves a dual purpose of getting in those steps and being more mindful of your choices. 5.) Walk It Out. Find some time to get in some movement, whether it be a pre-game workout, a half-time dance party with Shakira or scheduling a post-game workout session the next day. It’s a long game and that means a lot of sitting. At a minimum, make sure to stand up and walk around every 20 minutes or so. Maybe even consider watching the game on an exercise ball to get in some core work. Do you, but also, do some movement to offset some of the excess calories. Now that you’re ready to get your healthy-ish game on, let’s dive into some of my favorite, not-so-sinful game day snacks! Fruit Salsa and Cinnamon Tortilla Chips Makes: 6-8 servings Ingredients: Fruit Salsa – 2 Golden Delicious apples peeled, cored and diced – 8 oz of raspberries, cut in half – 16 oz of strawberries, diced – 2 kiwi fruit, peeled and diced – 3 T fruit preserves – 1 T coconut sugar (optional) Cinnamon Tortilla Chips – 2 packages of tortillas (I used Mikey’s Gluten-Free Cassava Flour Tortillas) – Ghee, ghee spray or butter spray (I used Vital Farms Ghee Butter) – Coconut sugar and cinnamon (I used 2 T sugar for every 1/4 tsp of cinnamon) Directions: Step 1: To make the tortilla chips, pre-heat the oven to 350 degrees Fahrenheit and place a piece of parchment paper on a baking sheet. Using  a scissors, cut each tortilla into 6 or 8 wedges and place in a single layer on the parchment paper. Either spray the tortilla wedges with ghee or butter spray, or brush on the ghee butter. Sprinkle with the cinnamon sugar mixture, flip and repeat. Place in the oven for 15 minutes and allow to cool. You likely will need to do this in a few batches. Step 2: To make the fruit salsa, add all of the ingredients to a large bowl and gently mix. Place in the fridge for 15 minutes to chill and serve with the tortilla chips! Buffalo Cauliflower Wings Serves: 3-4 Ingredients: Buffalo Cauliflower Wings – 1 head of cauliflower, cut into florets – 1/2 C almond flour – 1/2 C water – 1 tsp garlic powder – 1/2 tsp salt – 2/3 C hot sauce – 1 T ghee or melted butter (I used Vital Farms Ghee Butter) Greek Yogurt Ranch – 3/4 C plain, full fat Greek yogurt – 1 tsp lemon juice – water to thin – onion powder -lemon pepper seasoning Directions: Step 1: To make the cauliflower wings, pre-heat the oven to 350 degrees Fahrenheit and place a piece of parchment paper on a baking sheet. In a large bowl, mix the almond flour, water, garlic and salt. Toss the cauliflower florets in the mixture to coat and place on the baking sheet in a single layer. Bake in the oven for 15 minutes, flipping the cauliflower mid-way through. Step 2: To make the buffalo sauce, place the hot sauce and ghee or melted butter in a large bowl. Take the cauliflower out of the oven and using a spatula or tongs, place in the bowl of hot sauce and toss gently to coat. After coating the cauliflower, place back on the baking sheet in a single layer and bake for an additional 10 minutes, flipping the cauliflower mid-way through. Step 3: Finish the cauliflower by setting the oven to broil at 450 degrees and baking an additional 15 minutes, flipping the cauliflower mid-way through. Allow to cool. Step 4: To make the Greek yogurt dipping sauce, stir the Greek yogurt and lemon juice in a small bowl. Add enough water to get your desired consistency and enough onion powder to get your desired level of flavor. Add in small increments. Finish with a few shakes of lemon pepper seasoning. Roasted Red Pepper Cashew Dip Makes: 8-10 servings Ingredients:  – 1 red bell pepper, roasted (I bought a jar from Trader Joe’s) – 1 C raw cashews soaked overnight in the fridge – 1/2 C of water – 1 clove of garlic (or 1 tsp of jarred, minced garlic) – 1 tsp smoked paprika – 1 tsp nutritional yeast – 1/2 tsp salt – freshly ground black pepper, to taste Directions: Place all ingredients in a food processor. Mix until a creamy texture. Add additional water depending on desired thickness. Serve with your favorite veggies, crackers or chips. Game Day is on! Share any of your favorite game day snacks below!

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These cinnamon chips don’t lie – this fruit salsa is perfecto. And now is the perfect time to start planning those game day snacks! While the Pack may have been defeated, I’m not letting that rain on my parade. Because really, football is all about the snacks anyway, right? And those snacks don’t have to set you back from your healthy eating aspirations. Read on for some of my favorite not-so-sinful game day recipes including this fruit salsa, buffalo cauliflower wings and a roasted red pepper dip that will have you dipping veggies for days.

When you think of game day food, what comes to mind? Visions of buffalo wings, pizza and cheesy dips? Uh huh. Thought so. Now there’s no shame in salivating over everyone’s favorite fried foods. But, brown doesn’t have to be the only color of choice on your plate. Because fruit and veggies can have just as much game when dolled up in their Sunday best. And filling up on these fiber-rich, nutrient dense and high water foods can help you to scale back on some of the more indulgent foods. And yes, I said scale back because eating healthy doesn’t have to be black or white – especially if you’re just hopping off the January Whole30 train and ready to imbibe in some of the sworn off foods. Here are some my tips for eating healthy-ish at game day.

Tips for a Healthy-Ish Game Day

1.) Hydrate! Hunger is often masked as thirst. Before your game watch, chug a glass of water to curb your appetite. If you’re enjoying adult beverages, consider swapping every other drink for a glass of water. If water isn’t your thing, think about dressing it up with some fresh fruit or grabbing a flavored seltzer water.

2.) Bigger Is Not Always Better. Grab a smaller, appetizer-sized plate rather than a dinner-sized plate at the buffet table. More often than not, we’ll fill the space of our plates, so this is a way to hold yourself back from piling on portions that are too large. It also forces you to make choices of the things you really want, but everything is not gonna fit on that tiny plate.

3.) Mamma Always Said, Veggies First. Before you dive head first into that pizza, grab a plate of fruits and veggies with healthy-ish dips. This ensures you get in those greens and will keep hunger at bay so that you’re more conservative when you get to the good stuff like those wings you wanted to devour.

4.) Step Away From the Buffet. Out of sight, out of mind. Ever find yourself endlessly munching because you’ve been standing by a table piled high with food for the last hour? Take yourself away from the food. Force yourself to make the choice of walking over to the buffet for more food. In fact, sit as far away as you can! It serves a dual purpose of getting in those steps and being more mindful of your choices.

5.) Walk It Out. Find some time to get in some movement, whether it be a pre-game workout, a half-time dance party with Shakira or scheduling a post-game workout session the next day. It’s a long game and that means a lot of sitting. At a minimum, make sure to stand up and walk around every 20 minutes or so. Maybe even consider watching the game on an exercise ball to get in some core work. Do you, but also, do some movement to offset some of the excess calories.

Now that you’re ready to get your healthy-ish game on, let’s dive into some of my favorite, not-so-sinful game day snacks!

Fruit Salsa and Cinnamon Tortilla Chips
Makes: 6-8 servings

Ingredients:
Fruit Salsa
– 2 Golden Delicious apples peeled, cored and diced
– 8 oz of raspberries, cut in half
– 16 oz of strawberries, diced
– 2 kiwi fruit, peeled and diced
– 3 T fruit preserves
– 1 T coconut sugar (optional)
Cinnamon Tortilla Chips
– 2 packages of tortillas (I used Mikey’s Gluten-Free Cassava Flour Tortillas)
– Ghee, ghee spray or butter spray (I used Vital Farms Ghee Butter)
– Coconut sugar and cinnamon (I used 2 T sugar for every 1/4 tsp of cinnamon)

Directions:
Step 1:
To make the tortilla chips, pre-heat the oven to 350 degrees Fahrenheit and place a piece of parchment paper on a baking sheet. Using  a scissors, cut each tortilla into 6 or 8 wedges and place in a single layer on the parchment paper. Either spray the tortilla wedges with ghee or butter spray, or brush on the ghee butter. Sprinkle with the cinnamon sugar mixture, flip and repeat. Place in the oven for 15 minutes and allow to cool. You likely will need to do this in a few batches.

Step 2: To make the fruit salsa, add all of the ingredients to a large bowl and gently mix. Place in the fridge for 15 minutes to chill and serve with the tortilla chips!

Buffalo Cauliflower Wings
Serves: 3-4

Buffalo Cauliflower

Ingredients:
Buffalo Cauliflower Wings
– 1 head of cauliflower, cut into florets
– 1/2 C almond flour
– 1/2 C water
– 1 tsp garlic powder
– 1/2 tsp salt
– 2/3 C hot sauce
– 1 T ghee or melted butter (I used Vital Farms Ghee Butter)
Greek Yogurt Ranch
– 3/4 C plain, full fat Greek yogurt
– 1 tsp lemon juice
– water to thin
– onion powder
-lemon pepper seasoning

Directions:
Step 1: To make the cauliflower wings, pre-heat the oven to 350 degrees Fahrenheit and place a piece of parchment paper on a baking sheet. In a large bowl, mix the almond flour, water, garlic and salt. Toss the cauliflower florets in the mixture to coat and place on the baking sheet in a single layer. Bake in the oven for 15 minutes, flipping the cauliflower mid-way through.

Step 2: To make the buffalo sauce, place the hot sauce and ghee or melted butter in a large bowl. Take the cauliflower out of the oven and using a spatula or tongs, place in the bowl of hot sauce and toss gently to coat. After coating the cauliflower, place back on the baking sheet in a single layer and bake for an additional 10 minutes, flipping the cauliflower mid-way through.

Step 3: Finish the cauliflower by setting the oven to broil at 450 degrees and baking an additional 15 minutes, flipping the cauliflower mid-way through. Allow to cool.

Step 4: To make the Greek yogurt dipping sauce, stir the Greek yogurt and lemon juice in a small bowl. Add enough water to get your desired consistency and enough onion powder to get your desired level of flavor. Add in small increments. Finish with a few shakes of lemon pepper seasoning.

Roasted Red Pepper Cashew Dip
Makes: 8-10 servings

img_7660-1

Ingredients: 
– 1 red bell pepper, roasted (I bought a jar from Trader Joe’s)
– 1 C raw cashews soaked overnight in the fridge
– 1/2 C of water
– 1 clove of garlic (or 1 tsp of jarred, minced garlic)
– 1 tsp smoked paprika
– 1 tsp nutritional yeast
– 1/2 tsp salt
– freshly ground black pepper, to taste

Directions:
Place all ingredients in a food processor. Mix until a creamy texture. Add additional water depending on desired thickness. Serve with your favorite veggies, crackers or chips.

Game Day is on! Share any of your favorite game day snacks below!

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This is how we {zucchini} roll https://theshookslife.com/2019/09/09/this-is-how-we-zucchini-roll/ https://theshookslife.com/2019/09/09/this-is-how-we-zucchini-roll/#comments Tue, 10 Sep 2019 00:00:49 +0000 https://theshookslife.com/?p=3056 Rollin’ rollin’ rollin’ into Monday with these ZUCCHINI ROLL-UPS. Remember how fun fruit roll-ups were as kids? I’m determined to believe this is the adult version. And this adult version tastes just like mom’s lasagna, but takes half the time and has half the carbs. Okay, I didn’t do the exact math, but I’m a firm believer these zucchini noodles win vs the average noodle. Read on to win the week with this one pan zucchini roll-up recipe. Blink and summer’s over, right? Now that I’ve survived my first summer in Texas, it’s actually a sigh of relief to see temps back in the double digits. But I still have nostalgia for what summer means in the Midwest: like life itself was building up to the moment you could finally feel the rays of sunshine without being 3 layers deep in winter’s finest attire. And produce, so much fresh produce! Like endless zucchini and summer squash. Let’s all embrace that produce for this one last week of summer for a favorite of mine that is so simple, but tastes like you spent hours in the kitchen! Strips of fresh zucchini are seared to perfection then rolled up in creamy ricotta cheese (or cashew ricotta if you’re on that Whole30 train!) and then bathed in vibrant marinara bubbling with chunks of summer squash and portabellas for extra texture that won’t have you missing the meat…or the noodles! This post is a shorty, just like this recipe, so we can all soak up those last rays of summer! Planning a garden for the new house and so excited for growing season to continue here in Austin! Bets on whether I can actually keep a garden alive? Stay tuned! One Pan Zucchini Roll-Ups Serves: 4-5 Ingredients: – 2 zucchinis, thinly sliced length-wise – 1 clove of garlic, minced – 1 yellow squash, cut into 1-inch cubes – 1 pint of portabella mushrooms, quartered – 1 rcontainer of ricotta cheese (or make my cashew ricotta if Whole30 or dairy-free) – 1 jar of marinara (I used Rao’s because it doesn’t have any sugar added) – sprinkle of crushed red pepper – optional: shredded mozzarella and fresh basil for garnish – serve with strips of cauliflower pizza crust Directions: Step 1: Grill the zucchini strips by either 1.) heating a medium skillet over the stop top with olive oil or 2.) heating the oven to 350 degrees Fahrenheit and drizzling olive oil on a baking sheet. If using a skillet, place slices of zucchini in a single layer in the skillet, heating for a few minutes on each side until lightly browned and tender enough to roll up. If using the oven, bake for 15-20 minutes, flipping halfway through. Set aside to cool once done. Step 2: Make the sauce by heating the garlic in the same medium skillet at medium heat with a drizzle of olive oil for :30 to a minute, until fragrant and slightly browned. Add the diced yellow squash and quartered portabellas to the pan. Saute for 5-7 minutes until tender and slightly browned. Add the marinara sauce. Step 3: While the sauce simmers, make the zucchini roll-ups. Place a heaping spoonful of ricotta on each slice of seared zucchini, then roll up loosely and place in skillet with marinara sauce, seam side down. Continue to place the zucchini rolls in the marinara and then spoon a few more scoops of ricotta directly on top. Warm for a few minutes, covered. Season with crushed red pepper as well as optional shredded mozzarella and fresh basil leaves. Enjoy!

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Rollin’ rollin’ rollin’ into Monday with these ZUCCHINI ROLL-UPS. Remember how fun fruit roll-ups were as kids? I’m determined to believe this is the adult version. And this adult version tastes just like mom’s lasagna, but takes half the time and has half the carbs. Okay, I didn’t do the exact math, but I’m a firm believer these zucchini noodles win vs the average noodle. Read on to win the week with this one pan zucchini roll-up recipe.

Blink and summer’s over, right? Now that I’ve survived my first summer in Texas, it’s actually a sigh of relief to see temps back in the double digits. But I still have nostalgia for what summer means in the Midwest: like life itself was building up to the moment you could finally feel the rays of sunshine without being 3 layers deep in winter’s finest attire. And produce, so much fresh produce! Like endless zucchini and summer squash. Let’s all embrace that produce for this one last week of summer for a favorite of mine that is so simple, but tastes like you spent hours in the kitchen! Strips of fresh zucchini are seared to perfection then rolled up in creamy ricotta cheese (or cashew ricotta if you’re on that Whole30 train!) and then bathed in vibrant marinara bubbling with chunks of summer squash and portabellas for extra texture that won’t have you missing the meat…or the noodles!

This post is a shorty, just like this recipe, so we can all soak up those last rays of summer! Planning a garden for the new house and so excited for growing season to continue here in Austin! Bets on whether I can actually keep a garden alive? Stay tuned!

One Pan Zucchini Roll-Ups
Serves: 4-5

img_1489Ingredients:
– 2 zucchinis, thinly sliced length-wise
– 1 clove of garlic, minced
– 1 yellow squash, cut into 1-inch cubes
– 1 pint of portabella mushrooms, quartered
– 1 rcontainer of ricotta cheese (or make my cashew ricotta if Whole30 or dairy-free)
– 1 jar of marinara (I used Rao’s because it doesn’t have any sugar added)
– sprinkle of crushed red pepper
– optional: shredded mozzarella and fresh basil for garnish
– serve with strips of cauliflower pizza crust

Directions:
Step 1: Grill the zucchini strips by either 1.) heating a medium skillet over the stop top with olive oil or 2.) heating the oven to 350 degrees Fahrenheit and drizzling olive oil on a baking sheet. If using a skillet, place slices of zucchini in a single layer in the skillet, heating for a few minutes on each side until lightly browned and tender enough to roll up. If using the oven, bake for 15-20 minutes, flipping halfway through. Set aside to cool once done.
Step 2: Make the sauce by heating the garlic in the same medium skillet at medium heat with a drizzle of olive oil for :30 to a minute, until fragrant and slightly browned. Add the diced yellow squash and quartered portabellas to the pan. Saute for 5-7 minutes until tender and slightly browned. Add the marinara sauce.
Step 3: While the sauce simmers, make the zucchini roll-ups. Place a heaping spoonful of ricotta on each slice of seared zucchini, then roll up loosely and place in skillet with marinara sauce, seam side down. Continue to place the zucchini rolls in the marinara and then spoon a few more scoops of ricotta directly on top. Warm for a few minutes, covered. Season with crushed red pepper as well as optional shredded mozzarella and fresh basil leaves. Enjoy!

The post This is how we {zucchini} roll appeared first on The Shooks Life.

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Cooking as Meditation https://theshookslife.com/2019/04/22/cooking-as-meditation/ https://theshookslife.com/2019/04/22/cooking-as-meditation/#comments Tue, 23 Apr 2019 02:00:58 +0000 https://theshookslife.com/?p=2676 Cooking > Meditation. Especially when it’s a PEANUT SATAY that sets you up for a week of stress-less meals. Because when the point of meditation is to free the mind and live in the present….that’s cooking. At least in my book. So ya know what? No longer am I going to try to “practice” meditation when….maybe it’s not for everyone. If you’re looking for other ways to find mindfulness, read on for a few thoughts…and a recipe for a ZOODLE PAD THAI that will keep your mind off meal prep all week long. When I first tried mediation, I thought maybe I’m just not “good” at it. Or maybe I need to “practice” more. See, I’m not someone who likes to sit still. And generally, my mind is going a mile a minute and my husband might even claim that “multi-tasking” is my middle name. I don’t lose sleep over it, but like a lot people, I could stand to put my phone down more often, focus my full energy on the task at hand and live more in the present. The thought occurred to me this weekend though, that maybe stillness isn’t the only answer to achieving a meditative state. Maybe, like so many things in life, mindfulness can be achieved in a multitude of different ways. One of those, for me, is cooking. You might be familiar with mindful eating (savoring the taste, textures, smells of your food, truly enjoying the experience and nourishing your body), but mindful cooking is next level euphoria. It’s being present in the process and changing you perspective from cooking as a chore to cooking as an opportunity to get creative, an opportunity to do something good for you and your family, an opportunity for meal prep to free up your time for the rest of the week. That sense of calm after meditation, is exactly how I feel during and after cooking. This revelation that meditation doesn’t have to be a cookie cutter definition, actually came to me after taking a Soulctivate class at Soulcycle. If you’re familiar with Soulcyle, you’re probably imaging the traditional high cadence dance-a-thon that made this cycling studio a cult favorite. Soulactivate, in contrast, is a high intensity interval class that encourages you to push yourself to your limits for short bursts (imagine 50 strangers on bikes, red lights blaring, sprinting with all their hearts and some literally screaming out loud) followed by complete motionlessness. It’s a bit animalistic and entirely freeing. Everyone is living in the moment, shutting out everything else. And isn’t that the whole point of meditation? To free the mind and live in the present? So for me, cooking is mediation. Motion is mediation. And meditation, doesn’t have to have one definition. Here’s a few thought starts for how you can find that meditative state: 1.) Cooking as Mediation 2.) Movement as Meditation 3.) Art as Meditation 4.) Music as Meditation 5.) Stillness as Meditation The freeing part is also knowing that you can choose your definition. And if cooking is your meditation of choice, or you’ve just been waiting for that amaze ZOODLE PAD THAI recipe, you’ve come to the right place. Get the much-awaited recipe below so you can whip this up and zen out the rest of the week. ZOODLE PAD THAI with PEANUT SATAY Makes: 1 mason jar of thai peanut sauce and countless meals! Ingredients: Thai Peanut Sauce – One 13.5 oz can of full-fat, unsweetened coconut milk like Thai Kitchen – 1/4 C of red curry paste like Thai Kitchen – 3/4 C natural, creamy and unsweetened peanut butter like 365 Everyday – 3/4 C coconut sugar (or white refined sugar) – 2 T apple cider vinegar – 1/2 T salt – 1/2 C water Additional Ingredients – veggie noodles of choice (zucchini, butternut squash and carrot are great choices!) — protein of choice (hard-boiled eggs, tofu and chicken are fantastic options!) — optional fresh veggies (sliced bell peppers, diced carrots and snow peas as shown) — top with crushed peanuts and cilantro for extra texture and flavor Directions: Step 1: Make the sauce by adding all of the ingredients to a medium sauce pan over medium heat. Whisk until it comes to a gentle boil, then reduce the heat to low and allow to simmer for another 3-5 minutes whisking sporadically to ensure the bottom does not burn. Remove from heat and allow to cool to room temperature. Step 2: Cook the veggie noodles by placing in a large saute pan with a drizzle of olive oil. Heat for 3-5 minutes over medium heat until desired doneness. Step 3: Assemble the pad thai by distributing the veggie noodles to individual serving dishes, top with as much sauce as you’d like and add protein along with additional veggie and toppings of choice. Enjoy! Want more ways to use this THAI PEANUT SAUCE? Check out this THAI RAINBOW BOWL or these THAI TOFU TACOS.

The post Cooking as Meditation appeared first on The Shooks Life.

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cooking as meditation

Cooking > Meditation. Especially when it’s a PEANUT SATAY that sets you up for a week of stress-less meals. Because when the point of meditation is to free the mind and live in the present….that’s cooking. At least in my book. So ya know what? No longer am I going to try to “practice” meditation when….maybe it’s not for everyone. If you’re looking for other ways to find mindfulness, read on for a few thoughts…and a recipe for a ZOODLE PAD THAI that will keep your mind off meal prep all week long.

img_4423

When I first tried mediation, I thought maybe I’m just not “good” at it. Or maybe I need to “practice” more. See, I’m not someone who likes to sit still. And generally, my mind is going a mile a minute and my husband might even claim that “multi-tasking” is my middle name. I don’t lose sleep over it, but like a lot people, I could stand to put my phone down more often, focus my full energy on the task at hand and live more in the present. The thought occurred to me this weekend though, that maybe stillness isn’t the only answer to achieving a meditative state. Maybe, like so many things in life, mindfulness can be achieved in a multitude of different ways. One of those, for me, is cooking.

You might be familiar with mindful eating (savoring the taste, textures, smells of your food, truly enjoying the experience and nourishing your body), but mindful cooking is next level euphoria. It’s being present in the process and changing you perspective from cooking as a chore to cooking as an opportunity to get creative, an opportunity to do something good for you and your family, an opportunity for meal prep to free up your time for the rest of the week. That sense of calm after meditation, is exactly how I feel during and after cooking.

This revelation that meditation doesn’t have to be a cookie cutter definition, actually came to me after taking a Soulctivate class at Soulcycle. If you’re familiar with Soulcyle, you’re probably imaging the traditional high cadence dance-a-thon that made this cycling studio a cult favorite. Soulactivate, in contrast, is a high intensity interval class that encourages you to push yourself to your limits for short bursts (imagine 50 strangers on bikes, red lights blaring, sprinting with all their hearts and some literally screaming out loud) followed by complete motionlessness. It’s a bit animalistic and entirely freeing. Everyone is living in the moment, shutting out everything else. And isn’t that the whole point of meditation? To free the mind and live in the present? So for me, cooking is mediation. Motion is mediation. And meditation, doesn’t have to have one definition.

Here’s a few thought starts for how you can find that meditative state:

1.) Cooking as Mediation
2.) Movement as Meditation
3.) Art as Meditation
4.) Music as Meditation
5.) Stillness as Meditation

The freeing part is also knowing that you can choose your definition. And if cooking is your meditation of choice, or you’ve just been waiting for that amaze ZOODLE PAD THAI recipe, you’ve come to the right place. Get the much-awaited recipe below so you can whip this up and zen out the rest of the week.

ZOODLE PAD THAI with PEANUT SATAY
Makes: 1 mason jar of thai peanut sauce and countless meals!

Ingredients:
Thai Peanut Sauce
– One 13.5 oz can of full-fat, unsweetened coconut milk like Thai Kitchen
– 1/4 C of red curry paste like Thai Kitchen
– 3/4 C natural, creamy and unsweetened peanut butter like 365 Everyday
– 3/4 C coconut sugar (or white refined sugar)
– 2 T apple cider vinegar
– 1/2 T salt
– 1/2 C water

Additional Ingredients

– veggie noodles of choice (zucchini, butternut squash and carrot are great choices!)
— protein of choice (hard-boiled eggs, tofu and chicken are fantastic options!)
— optional fresh veggies (sliced bell peppers, diced carrots and snow peas as shown)
— top with crushed peanuts and cilantro for extra texture and flavor

Directions:
Step 1: Make the sauce by adding all of the ingredients to a medium sauce pan over medium heat. Whisk until it comes to a gentle boil, then reduce the heat to low and allow to simmer for another 3-5 minutes whisking sporadically to ensure the bottom does not burn. Remove from heat and allow to cool to room temperature.
Step 2: Cook the veggie noodles by placing in a large saute pan with a drizzle of olive oil. Heat for 3-5 minutes over medium heat until desired doneness.
Step 3: Assemble the pad thai by distributing the veggie noodles to individual serving dishes, top with as much sauce as you’d like and add protein along with additional veggie and toppings of choice. Enjoy!

Want more ways to use this THAI PEANUT SAUCE? Check out this THAI RAINBOW BOWL or these THAI TOFU TACOS.

The post Cooking as Meditation appeared first on The Shooks Life.

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