Monday, November 16, 2015

Healthy Comfort Foods: Spaghetti Squash Lasagna

Good evening! I am devouring a delicious and healthy twist on one of my favorite comfort foods: lasagna.* The total cost of tonight's dinner was $6 and made enough for one full dinner and one full lunch, could easily feed two for dinner with a side and a glass of wine (or two!).

First, a note on how I shop and prep. I tend to go to the store when I'm hungry and completely out of food--I do NOT recommend this as it could easily yield impulse buys and overshopping. But another important factor is that I am frugal:** I seek out the best value to combine the fewest ingredients with the staples at home for maximum health and flavor. I don't tend to buy things just because they are on sale (ahem, someone I know who looks like me) nor do I go in with a recipe and list and try to buy everything I don't have (ahem, Mom!) but if any of my favorites are on sale for a significant savings or the items can withstand long shelf life (pantry) or freezing (re: meats and frozen standbys like high quality pizza and ice cream) I throw 'em in. Yesterday at Pricechopper, the squash was on sale for $0.79/lb, ($0.45 total for my .57lb squash) Emiril's [fancy] pasta sauce was on sale for $2.50/jar (cheaper than the cheap stuff), an entire rotisserie chicken was $5.99 and I already had some cheese at home. I only used half of the sauce in my recipe, so the rest is frozen in ice cube trays and the remaining rotisserie chicken will go into sandwiches, soups, and burritos later this week.


Prep was too easy. On the weeknights, I prefer one pot (pan/oven dish) recipes so I can throw everything together and let it cook while I get ready for my day ahead, or plow through a Netflix marathon, or vacuum something in the house (my favorite home alone pastimes!). This also makes for easy cleaning, which is essential for saving time for more important things (see above). Without my partner around to split the evening routines, I also find it incredibly annoying to cook a delicious meal only to have to scrub out the dishes. When I am home alone and there is no you-cook-I-clean teamwork, I'll rinse everything and pile up neatly for a morning wash-up while the coffee brews.

Here is my recipe for Spaghetti Squash Lasagna:

Ingredients:
  • 1 Jar store-bought marinara sauce (if no fancy versions are on sale, throw a cheaper jar in a pot and add a few sprigs of fresh or dried herbs (sage, basil, rosemary), a dash of sugar and a dash of balsamic vinegar!) 
  • 1 Small/Medium Spaghetti Squash (mine was .57 lbs for two individual lasagnas)
  • 1/2 cup shredded cheese (I used sharp cheddar, you can use part skim shredded mozzarella)
  • (Optional) 1 cup part skim ricotta
  • (Optional) 8 tsp parmesan cheese
  • (Optional) 1/2 cup meat (shredded rotisserie chicken, sausage cooked w/out casings, etc)
Directions:
Preheat oven to 425°F.
 
Slice the spaghetti squash in half lengthwise and scoop out the seeds and fibers.

Place in oven safe baking dish, cut-side down, and add 1 inch of water. (Note: as squash cooks it also releases liquid) Roast for ~40 min, checking progress at 20-min. (I poured out the liquid midway to avoid a spill-over in my shallow dish.) Meanwhile, spice up store-bought sauce if needed. Roasting is done when a fork easily pierces the skin.

Turn oven down to 400°F.

After the squash cools down a bit, use a a fork to scrape out the squash - with spaghetti squash it will naturally scoop out into long strands (that look like spaghetti!).

 


In one 9x9-inch or two individual 5 x 7-inch oven safe baking dishes, ladle 1/4 cup marinara sauce on the bottom of each dish. Top each with 1/2 cup of cooked spaghetti squash and spread evenly. Top each with a layer of meat (chicken and/or sausage) 1/4 cup ricotta and/or shredded cheese. Because I was using found objects, I pulled apart some of the rotisserie's breast and layered on a small bit of sharp cheddar. Continue layering sauce-squash-cheese-meat-sauce until you run out of squash (I got 2.5 layers from my .57 lb. little squash!). Top with more cheese of your choosing (Parmesan, Mozzarella, or found-object cheese!).

Bake at 400°F for 15 minutes, or until cheese is melty. Dig in! 

(note: if you made two individual servings, let the extra serving cool off, top with two layers of foil or the lid, and wrap up for the freezer or fridge!).

A few notes:

I like to improvise. 


For sauces, I usually start with a store-bought base and add dashes of fresh herbs, cracked black pepper, a smidgen of brown sugar and balsamic (or red wine if I'm drinking it anyway!) to dress up a cheap jar of marinara. When purchasing store-bough sauce, look on the back label at the ingredients list and ensure that sugar and extra additives are minimal to none. The less ingredients, and of higher quality, the better. For marinara, look for the basics: tomatoes, olive oil, onions, etc. I usually spend $2-$3 on a sale jar and stock up on the good stuff when the price drops. The Emiril's jars were half-off and delicious, no extra dashes necessary--I poured straight onto the squash!

Cheese--add as much or as little as you like. The sauce and squash had such rich flavors that I omitted the ricotta and added very minimal yet flavorful sharp cheddar in my layers. 

For extra inner-layers, I add meat or another vegetable depending on what's on hand. For sausage, I buy fresh, single chicken sausages (about $2 each) from the deli counter and remove the casings before cooking in a small pan, then add to the sauce for a quick and flavorful boost. Last night I bought a whole rotisserie chicken and pulled off what I needed as I layered. The chicken will be used for other dishes this week, leftover sauce is frozen in ice cube trays then tossed in a Ziploc, and the squash was just the right amount. Avoid the temptation to buy a bigger squash, the one I bought was about the size of a large softball. If in doubt, weigh it in! For two individual lasagnas, one .57 lb. squash was perfect.

*Technically this isn't "lasagna" because there is no pasta in here, but it is a delicious, healthy, buttery butter-free alternative! 
**Ramit Sethi defines Cheap vs Frugal


Saturday, October 17, 2015

New Normal: #LifeInTheMiddle



Hello Faithful Readers (or those who will be!), 

It has been 3 years since my last post and it's time to start writing, and reflecting, as I launch into a New Normal. The last posts followed my adventures as I again prepared to jump onto a Navy hospital ship, this time in #TheMiddle of the Pacific. Fast-foward a few years, and a few lives' worth of experiences (~40 countries, heart break and heart repair, fieldwork in a combat zone, a plane crash, a car crash, trips in planes, trains, and automobiles and now: life in the midwest). I am currently living in Kansas City, MO (more specifically, in Parkville) and life is good. And I am, as I usually am, feeling ready for a [big] change. As with this last three years, I cannot possible predict what this will look like but I am taking some time reflect, plan, and learn. If there is one lesson that weaves throughout these experiences, it is the value of critical thinking and informed decision-making.  

As I launch into the next chapter, here are the topics I plan to write about in the next few months. I'll plan to catch up on the past 3 years while zooming ahead at what the New Normal will look like:
  • Career Musings + Planning
  • Relationships
  • Healthy Mind + Healthy Body
  • Podcasts and Professional/Personal Learning Networks (PLNs)
  • Travel (local and abroad!)
  • Financial Independence
    • Taxes
    • Investments (and "Robo Investing" vs. DIY investments)
    • Renting vs. Owning
    • Rolling over (and managing) Retirement
Fieldwork in Helmand Province, Afghanistan
Commuting to work around Eastern Afghanistan
Hottest place I've ever been - napping outside (tent was 130 F)

Last picture before loading up for fieldwork in Afghanistan.
Startline: Here's where we start. I am 31 years old and I have a comfortable, stable job teaching graduate-level applied critical thinking and anthropology for a military university. I am the first female they have ever hired and I am 1-4 decades (yep, 11-40 years!) younger than my coworkers. Since the beginning of my career, actually, my peer group has averaged the same age as my parents. This has provided some unparalleled life experience, most notably my comfort level working with and around senior leaders, mentorship, and musings about what I may or may want to accomplish by the time I catch my "peer" group. 

However, as a result of this career adventure I have also felt perpetually isolated, an outsider on the inside. I am a civilian embedded in military environments, a woman in a man's world, a millennial among retirees. I spend a significant portion of my time finding and pursuing opportunities, and as a result I have a constant conveyor belt of opportunities up for grabs and never quite feel content. To steal from my current course curriculum on perception and interpretation, I am at times an ambitious, go-getter maven (by some definitions) and a flighty, non-committal millennial (by others' definitions). The truth is that I have an insatiable curiosity and subscribe to the notion that the more I know, the more I know I don't know. Which leads me to wanting to know more, about everything. To help me manage this knowledge, and to attempt to share what I'm learning I'll be posting here. This will act as my evening reflection space and a way to track how I'm doing.

Let's see, outside of work-life there's a life-life to write about, too. It's been 18 months since I returned from Afghanistan and documenting my transition and re-integration is going to be part of this blog. I read anything I can about emerging "hindsight" with regard to our work, expectations, and hopes in Afghanistan. As I have pursued a career in service, I also find that separating work and life is difficult, and may not be necessary (but deserves a discussion!). Perhaps the toughest adjustment is balancing life/work (both physically and emotionally). I have trouble turning off what happens at work, and at work I have trouble managing my time and focusing on just one thing at a time. 

Admittedly I have gained back most of the 20 lbs. I lost during fieldwork in the desert and that has created a physical reminder of the changes that have occurred since leaving for Afghanistan in April 2013. The physical weight also reflects a mental burden that has been growing in the past two years associated with life in #TheMiddle and trying to sort out who I am, what I want to do, and why. These past few years have been marked by significant transitions and adventures, I'm told they number in what others would consider a lifetime of experiences lived in 3 short decades: traveling and working through 40+ countries, moving from a land-locked war zone to slow-moving, land-locked community, balancing a relationship with a significant other who is never less than 6 timezones away, and a daily life that drops me into the #TheMiddle of a fascinating and challenging work environment.

Anyway, if you've made it this far - THANK YOU! Here goes my reflections, ideas, and reflections from Life in the Middle...
(A very short year in review, with many many memories missing):


Learning to fly gliders near Shrivenham, England (cc: G + A)

Meeting at Parliament

Broken foot first week of EuroTrip

Scottish wedding (cc: Nikki)

Scotland Roadtrip (cc: Jess + Franklin)

Summer Festival in a place that doesn't exist.

Spain (cc: Caren)
Solo explorations in Barcelona


Saying good-bye to Boot in France

View from flat in Marseille (cc: Hamid + Helen)

First York City FC match (cc: H + D)

Italy: ambitious "hike" with semi-broken foot.

Italy: mid-hike adventures (cc: Arrrr)

Italy: Cinque Terre Adventures

Italy: Pisa and Luca adventures.

Switzerland with Bestie (cc: Ruthi)

Swiss Life.

Switzerland: Lake Geneva

Berlin, Germany

Germany: Autobahn Lyfe

Holocaust Memorial, Germany

Bestie Wedding in Del Mar (cc: Devon)

The Road Trip: San Francisco to Kansas City

The Road Trip: Great Salt Lake

The Road Trip (cc: Mom)

Moving in: Parkville, MO

Parkville, MO: Fall

Parkville, MO: Winter



Flying around the desert.

London (cc: Devon)

Cambridge, England (cc: Katie)

Denmark (cc: Marie & Ronnie)

Denmark (cc: Marie & Marie)

Denmark: Roskilde Festival

Scotland: solo travels in Edinburgh

Scottish Wedding (cc: Nikki)

Spain (cc: Caren)

Spain: Barcelona (cc: Mike, Dave, Kasia)
30th Birthday, Dubai

Wednesday, June 20, 2012

Singapore with Shane Shane Shane


Shane picks me up, with coffee!
Well "yesterday" was a blur - I arrived in Singapore by noon and chugged down an icy coffee from none other than Starbucks Singapore with Mr. Shane. We hopped a taxi to downtown (halfway across the country) and tried the best chicken rice hole-in-the-wall available according to our trusty taxi driver. Funny dragging a huge suitcase through the narrow streets but Shane was a happy helper mule to the rescue (his words, not mine!).
Chicken Rice, Lettuce
Chicken rice has got to be the most popular dish around - it's just chicken + rice. We also ordered blindly off the Mandarin menu and ended up with pan friend lettuce and chow fun noodles (slurped up before I could get a picture). Back on campus we grabbed a few Tigers and sat out by the track watching runners brave the afternoon heat and fly-overs from the neighboring military aviation installment. It was awesome. We got the most entertainment from a runner-cum-interpretive-dancer who jog-danced his way around the track while appearing to also conduct the concert he was hearing in his oversized earphones. It was 89-degrees and 95% humidity when he launched into an impressive series of ab exercises that left us feeling exhausted and fully worked out by the power of osmosis. The rest of last night is equally blurry, I enjoyed a long nap in Shane's dorm while he was off studying - I haven't been (or slept) in a dorm for 10 years! I forgot how fun college campus was back in the day - GWU didn't really have a campus and the buildings were mostly overshadowed by important government monstrosities. It's Shane's first time living on campus, too, so we're running around enjoying the various canteens and learning (getting lost on) the campus loop shuttle. 

Mystery Pau
The NDU campus itself is beautiful and tropical with lots of indoor/outdoor space, 15+ canteens, and an active student body. I spent the morning eating various Pau buns, chosen at random by the lady working at the breakfast counter. Quick Skype test to the homeland (worked great!) and off to do some work at Global Cafe. We never had a place this cool at UCSD for studying - it was like a hip lobby at the coolest hotel downtown, but cozy and friendly. And with another Starbucks attached!
Mystery solved: two pork, one veggie. I think.



And then more lunchtime grub with Shane to break up his seven (yes, 7!) hours of managerial accounting. Yikes.
Vegetarian Delight!
Nom nom. Chicken rice.
If you know me well, which you do if you're reading this, then you may have also guessed that all of this detail and random knowledge about not a lot of ongoings, so far, is the product of yet another Pilram procrastination session. With that, I'll head back to my missing management paper (technically GWU won't let me graduate without it!) and then out on the town. The next few days will bring more excitement with the arrival of another California visitor and some fun bars and nights out in the city. The lowest rooftop bar we're planning to hit is on the 20th floor and the highest is 100+ floors up. Stay tuned...!
Workin' Hard @NTU