I love salad that eats like a meal-substantial with a good variety of textures and flavors. One of the harder things about traveling for the last four months has been eating well. Tate and I play a game when we are hungry and feeling less than enthusiastic about another cheap restaurant meal, it’s called “if I could eat anything…”. Usually in my veg and raw food deprived state my answer is ” a giant hearty salad!” So, when I find that rare restaurant that knows how to make a salad, like a real salad, I return and return until we leave town (thinking of a certain restaurant, or more specifically a certain salad, in Puerto Iguazu, Argentina. Luckily they apparently had amazing steaks also and Tate was happy to return every night for 3 nights. Or was it four?).
Here in Kathmandu Green Organic Cafe has tempted and delivered three times already with their amazing salad. The first time I ate said salad I was literally moaning with pleasure as I ate and then talked about it for a good two hours after.
This little bit of escape from a diet of too much white rice (more on that later) and more fatty food in a single meal than I usually eat in a month came in the form of
- a delicious variety of organic greens
- topped with a pile of julienned carrots, peppers, tomatoes, daikon, and jicama
- sprinkled generously with chopped cashews, almonds, walnuts, peanuts, golden raisins, and fresh coconut
- topped with a bit of grated fresh yak cheese
- dress lightly with lemon vinaigrette
Seriously. Try it today.
(sub yak cheese for fresh parmesan if necessary)
It’s a good thing dinner was health-on-a-plate because the rest of the days eats were a bit random and perhaps less than virtuous. Breakfast started with two fried samosas bought from a street vendor for 7 cents a piece. I usually avoid fried food because it makes my stomach yucky but, damn, these were good! Totally worth the greasy fingers.
Today was a very active day, we hiked for at least four hours in the hills surrounding the Kathmandu Valley. It felt great to work up a sweat and get my heart pumping. After 15 months of running consistently (2-4 times a week) I have only run once in the last month!
Luckily, our days in Nepal have included many big hiking days and lots of walking. Plus, I have gotten really into my interval workout and actually did it twice this week!
Here is a link to my latest favorite workout. I extend it to last 35 minutes by adding jumping jacks, stair runs, jump rope, basically anything to keep my heart rate high, and run through the whole thing three times. Let me know if you want more details on my workout and I can post specific times, reps, etc.
http://www.fitnessmagazine.com/workout/cardio/no-treadmill/boost-energy-blast-fat-cardio-workout/
Warning! The first time I did this workout my inner thighs were sore for days!
Thanks for the inspiration. I’ve been active and working out most of the pregnancy trying to fit in at least 3 workouts a week . I can’t wait to be more active and go back to really training. This will be a great source of inspiration to me after the baby arrives to get back in shape.
I know this if off topic but I’m looking into starting my own blog and was curious what all is needed to get set up? I’m assuming having a blog like
yours would cost a pretty penny? I’m not very internet savvy so I’m not 100% positive.
Any recommendations or advice would be greatly appreciated.
Appreciate it
Review my website Houston Locksmith
Hi,
I have been blogging for three years now and still feel pretty naive about how everything works but here’s what I can tell you. It’s super easy to set up a free blog at a site like wordpress.com or blogger. I used wordpress.com for a while and it works just fine but when I wanted to start putting ads on my blog through Foodbuzz I needed a ‘self-hosted’ site. I paid someone (about $150?) to switch everything over to wordpress.org. At this point the blog costs me about $120 a year to maintain, $95 to Dreamhost for hosting and $17 to wordpress for my URL. I do the design myself using available wordpress themes, which make it very accessible and user friendly.
Hope that helps!