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Healthy Carb Cookbook For Dummies

Simplifying Your Low-Carb Cooking


Adapted From: Healthy Carb Cookbook For Dummies

Tricks to simplify your low-carb cooking include everything from stocking up on low-carb staples to investing in handy kitchen gadgets. Have a look at some ideas to make your time in the kitchen a little easier and get you out of there a little faster, without sacrificing great low-carb meals.

Keep an ongoing shopping list

Buy one of those list pads with a magnet on the back, stick it on your fridge, and keep a running list of low-carb staples and ingredients you run out of. Keeping a list on the fridge saves you a ton of time when you go grocery shopping. You don't have to rack your brains in the produce section trying to remember what you used up three days ago.

Plan meals in advance

Do yourself a big favor, and don't wait until 4:30 p.m. to figure out what you're going to make for dinner tonight. Planning your meals in advance is a biggie if you want to be successful in your low-carb healthy lifestyle. After you get accustomed to planning your meals, you'll find that doing so not only simplifies your low-carb cooking life but keeps your weight in check. Planning ahead helps keep you from eating whatever is available, which could easily be foods loaded with carbs.

Buy food already prepared for you

The grocery store offers a ton of real timesavers these days. No longer do you have to spend time chopping veggies, because they come pre-chopped in the frozen food section and in the fresh produce section. Tasty lettuce and greens combinations are already washed and pre-packaged — just add dressing. The deli is another good stop for things including freshly sliced cheeses and fresh-cut deli meats like turkey, chicken, and ham, which aren't usually full of preservatives. The deli folks have all the nutrition available, but you usually have to ask for it.

When you're working late, you may want to pick up one of those broasted whole lemon chickens, which are tasty and quite acceptable in your low-carb lifestyle. Just watch out for all of those prepared salads in that ready-to-eat case — stay away from them, please. Also be wary of precut fruits, because they're often overpriced.

Prepare your veggies in steamer baskets

If you don't have a stainless steel steamer basket, buy this kitchen gadget. Steamer baskets are cheap, and you can adapt them to various-sized pots that are already in your cupboard. Steamed veggies maintain almost all of their nutritional value. After you eat crisp-tender veggies from a steamer basket, you'll never want to see boiled and waterlogged veggies again — much less eat them. You can also use your steamer for fish and shellfish.

Have parchment paper on hand

Parchment paper is wonderful stuff. If you're not familiar with its many advantages, give it a whirl. You can use it to line cookie sheets and baking dishes or to wrap food in. Parchment paper is coated on both sides, usually with silicon, and comes on a roll like wax paper. You just tear off what you need. You'll find it at the grocery store with the aluminum foil and wax paper. Parchment paper may look delicate to you, but don't let looks fool you: It withstands high heat, and whatever you cook on it won't stick to the paper!

Consider a slow cooker

If you don't own a slow cooker, don't hesitate to make this low-carb investment. Preparing healthy, delicious meals is a major goal of your low-carb healthy lifestyle, and a slow cooker helps you accomplish just that. If you don't have experience with one of these little timesaving gadgets, you don't need long to get the hang of it. It'll be one of your many new low-carb best friends.

Get out the grill

Outdoor gas grill and tabletop inside grill make low-carb cooking so easy and quick, and they cut fat because it just drips away. Outdoor grilling makes everything taste better, and there isn't much that you can't throw on the grill — steaks, chops, chicken, fish, shellfish, veggies, and even some fruits for desserts.

Organize your low-carb recipes

Because variety is one of the major keys to success in your low-carb healthy lifestyle, consider organizing not only your lifestyle but your recipes too. If you can, designate a shelf just for low-carb books. If you have loose recipes printed on 8 1/2-x-11-inch paper, three-hole punch them and put them in a binder. This organization doesn't have to be fancy. Grab some binder dividers and organize your recipes by category. If you cut recipes out of a magazine, tape them on a piece of 8 1/2-x-11-inch paper so your recipe pages are uniform. If you want to be fancy, color-code your sections with different colored paper. You may want to start two notebooks — one for recipes you've tried and are definitely keepers and another one for new recipes you want to try. You'll no longer look all over the place for that recipe when it's time to get cookin'!

Eyeball portion control

If you don't measure somehow, it's easy to super-size your portions, which isn't going to get you where you want to be with your low-carb lifestyle. With just a little practice, you can eyeball portion sizes in comparison to things such as the palm of your hand, baseballs, tennis balls, and other familiar items. Here's a list to get you well on your way to making portion decisions:

  • 2 ounces cheese = a pair of dominoes
  • 1 teaspoon butter = tip of your thumb, or 1 dice
  • 3 ounces fish, meat, or poultry = the size of a computer mouse
  • 1 tablespoon oil = tip of your thumb to the first joint
  • 1/2 cup veggies or fruit = half of a tennis ball
  • 1 cup of veggies or greens = your fist
  • 1 medium piece of fruit = a baseball
  • 1 tablespoon salad dressing = half of a golf ball
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