Instead of constantly trying to reinvent the low-carb cheese wheel, I am going to begin featuring the recipes of people nationally (that's you, adorable dollops of cooking wisdom). My kitchen can only take so much, and my children are having PTSD from the fear that everything I make contains cauliflower or oopsies.Details are at the bottom of this post.
So, if you have a recipe you'd like to share, shoot it my way. I'll gladly credit you for your brilliance and link to your site. With over 2 million readers alone in the last week at Examiner.com's site, your recipes will be noticed!
Contact me at cleochatra@gmail.com and let me know about what you have going on in the kitchen.
The fine print: Make sure you own the rights to the recipes you submit. I always give full credit for intellectual property, and recipes definitely fall under this heading. I do not in any way take your rights to your work, nor will I ever publish anything you have submitted without express consent to do so. If anything, cross-promotion will drive traffic to your site, and that is a bonus. Please ensure recipes are low-carb, and, when possible, include nutritional information and a picture of the recipe.
Sunday, November 23, 2008
Have a recipe you'd like to share with 50,000 readers a month?
Famous low-carb blogger and Examiner columnist Jamie van Eaton wants your recipes:
Tuesday, November 18, 2008
Why I Read PastaQueen
This post hit home:
I was close to putting a bunch of those line in bold type, but I think it all just speaks for itself.
The worst thing about weight loss is that I created a more perfect version of myself. When I reached my lowest weight of 170 pounds and looked in the mirror, my reflection spun herself off into her own world of possibilities where she still exists today. No matter how much I weigh for the rest of my life, I will always know that on one day in November of 2007 I was that thin.
I was never a skinny child. I never had a thin version of me to compare myself too. I only had the morbidly obese Jennette who spun herself into her own world of possibilities, one that exists in a parallel dimension from the skinny version. When I was losing weight, I would compare my current body to the fatter version of me. I could hang out with this fatter friend of mine in my mind where she made me feel skinny in her shadow. Even at 230 pounds I was 140 pounds lighter than the fattest me.
This year I've been dealing with chronic pain, the stress of a book release, and a variety of other happenings that are not ready for blogdom. Eating well and exercising shifted from being my top priority to being number four or five in my top ten life priorities, so I gained 20 pounds. On the way down I compared myself to the fattest version of me, but on the way up I compare myself to the thinnest version of me. Instead of seeing myself as 170 pounds lighter, I see myself as 20 pounds fatter.
I know this is silly. I know I'm not obese. I look in the mirror and think I'm pretty. I'm grateful that I can run and squat and cross my legs. I'm in better health than I've been for most of my life. But sometimes I resent making a slightly more perfect version of myself. I hate that I judge myself against her. I hate that other people compare me to her. I hate that I know I could be her again if I worked harder or cared more. I hate that she's out there, existing as a possibility I one day made flesh, but faded out of reality and into the mirror world of what-ifs.
I was close to putting a bunch of those line in bold type, but I think it all just speaks for itself.
Friday, November 7, 2008
On The Many Uses of Splenda
It's very rare that I find something I can post about both here and my other blog. (Feminism and low carb eating don't seem to cross paths as often as you would think.) But this is just too good to not report.
Have you heard of KY Yours and Mine? In case you haven't, here are the commercials:
What does this have to do with low carb eating, you ask? Apparently one of the ingredients in the "his" lubricant is sucralose!
Do you think the makers of Splenda ever imagined, beyond their wildest dreams, that their product would ever accomplish so much?
(For the rant about why only the men's lube gets to be sweetened, click here.)
Have you heard of KY Yours and Mine? In case you haven't, here are the commercials:
What does this have to do with low carb eating, you ask? Apparently one of the ingredients in the "his" lubricant is sucralose!
Do you think the makers of Splenda ever imagined, beyond their wildest dreams, that their product would ever accomplish so much?
(For the rant about why only the men's lube gets to be sweetened, click here.)