Category Archives: breakfast

Valentines Lives On

I ♥ breakfast.

Oats ♥ my ♥. 🙂

Tate and I had a sweet 10th Valentines together, from the oats delivery to the midday picnic

Yay for the first picnic of 2011 being in FEBRUARY!

This salad rocked.  Arugula, white beans, beets, gorgonzola, and avocado dressed with Newman’s Own Low Fat Rasberry Walnut Balsamic, served with Grape Kefir Soda.

My Valentine ♥

The remainder of the day was spent in the clinic and at a Neurofeedback appointment with Jessica.  I am thrilled to report that I slept great last night!  My brain must be responding to the training!

Tate and I went out for an early dinner and were in bed embarrassingly early.

Do you know what those are↑?

Soaking black beans!

Last week reader Laura asked me a question about how I prepare beans.  Since I am a huge bean fan, and Tate is even more of a fan than me, this house sees a lot of legumes and I am more than happy to discuss this little wonder food.

Before moving to Peru canned black beans and garbanzos were a staple on our grocery list.   Growing up my parents always fixed beans from scratch but on my own it seemed so simple to buy the $.70 cans.

Canned beans are a novelty item in the bean culture of Peru.  Cans are expensive and wasteful, not to mention a serving size there is like a can a person! When in Rome Lima…I started soaking dried beans and cooking them on a regular basis.

This is a practice I have kept up with since returning to the land of cans and convenience. Cooking beans from scratch is both economical and ecological.  Sure, you can recycle cans but think of all the energy that went into producing that can, cooking the beans, transporting the cans to the bean factory to the grocery store to your house, not to mention the energy required to recycle.  You can reduce the impact (and sometimes the cost) even further by buying beans from the bulk bins and using reused produce bags (you are going to rinse and boil the beans so don’t worry about sanitation) to store them.

So what do you do with those little dry beans once you bring them home?  My preferred method is the long soak.  This method definitely takes some forethought but since we are always up for eating beans around here I always have beans soaking.

Here are the garbanzos in my fridge right now

Place dry beans in a container, cover plus a few inches with water, place in fridge or on counter for at least 12 hours, preferably 24 or more.   If you are soaking for longer than 24 hours I recommend putting your soaking beans in the fridge.  I often soak for days, I think those garbanzos have been in there since Wednesday.  The longer the soak the quicker the cooking time (and less gas-inducing complex sugars!).  Black beans can cook in as little as 20 minutes after a long soak.

Note: dry beans soak up a ton of water, check them after a few hours to make sure they are still completely covered.

I recommend soaking in glass so you don’t have to worry about the soaking water leaching toxins from plastic or metal.

When you are ready to cook your soaked beans pour them into a colander and rinse several times to clean them (beans never get washed prior to bagging!), dump into a pot, cover completely with water, bring to a boil, turn down and simmer until fully cooked (completely soft).

If you want to add salt to your beans DO NOT add it until the beans are very close to done, otherwise they won’t soften completely.  Drain and enjoy!

I recommend making large batches with this method and freezing the leftovers in freezer bags or jars.  This way you have beans ready to eat at all times and your freezer stays full (more energy-efficient).

This method is appropriate for any type of dry beans that require soaking (lentil and split peas are two that do not need soaked).

Beans are one of the healthiest and cheapest food sources so enjoy liberally!

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Certifiable

Whew, talking about exercise can be exhausting!

Friday, Saturday, and Sunday from 9-6 were spent sitting on a gym studio floor listening to AFAA certification specialist talk about teaching group exercise.  There was some doing, teaching, and exam taking but it was a whole lot of sitting.

And it was in Richmond so each day I sat in the car for nearly 2.5 hours roundtrip.  Ugh.

It was a good weekend though.  Friday I participated in AFAA’s Primary Group Exercise certification course.  I originally trained and was certified to teach group exercise in 2006 with 24 Hour Fitness. It was a great 4 day training and I went on to teach for them and take biannual workshops to remain certified, until I left the country in 2008.

When I applied to teach at gyms here in Charlottesville they said “where’s your current AFAA certification?” so I scooted off to Richmond.   This is not to say that I don’t think it’s important to keep up with continuing education, I just found AFAA’s Primary Group X cert a little basic, even with the 400 page textbook you had to read beforehand.  And yet if I hadn’t already taught for years it would have been way too much information, too fast. I am not exactly sure who it’s geared towards, most people in the training were already instructors.

Saturday was filled with Practical Yoga and Sunday with Practical Pilates.  I have been practicing both yoga and Pilates for 12 years and have dabbled with teaching both of them.  Having said this, I am against teachers taking one day workshops to qualify them to teach either of these super-detailed forms if they don’t also have years of personal experience and study.  This is how students get hurt.  This is how students continue to have poor form for years.  This is what gives gym Pilates and yoga a bad name.  And it’s insulting to the yoga and Pilates teachers who spend a lot of time and money to get trained to teach these forms.

It is my intention to continue to seek training in both yoga and Pilates but I also feel that with 12 years of experience (really longer, I used to hang out in the corner as a kid while my mom taught.  I can still hear her yoga teacher voice….), extensive training in alignment from a lifetime of dancing (including earning a B.F.A from 4 years of daily training), and years of experience teaching dance and group exercise has prepared me to teach safe, effective, and creative classes.  And this AFAA workshop cert tells an employer just that. 🙂

The workshops were held on the gorgeous University of Richmond.  We didn’t get a lot of free time but I did manage a few lunch break runs and a morning walk/yoga session yesterday morning when I arrived a little early.

Campus is filled with arches, wooded walkways, and cathedrals

The lake was my favorite feature, especially the trail that led all the way around it.

I ran around the world!

This courtyard within the international center gives the lake a run for it’s money as my favorite spot!

Details everywhere

I am glad the weekends over (too much driving and sitting!) but I almost wish I had a few more days to wander around UR!

Happy Valentine’s Day!

I woke up to Valentine’s Day oats and coffee delivered to my bedside. 🙂

Now that’s how to do Monday morning!  (Nope, that’s not my bedside, Tate took off for the clinic after delivering the goods so I got up)

We don’t have big plans today, a few patients this afternoon and preparation for our big Grand Opening this Saturday.  It’s our 10th Valentines Day together!  We were each others Valentines 11 and 12 years ago but we weren’t physically together for the day.

Celebrate the love and tell someone they hold a special place in your heart, be it romantic or otherwise.

♥      ♥     ♥

P.S If you are thinking of certifying with AFAA feel free to ask me more questions about my experience, I’d be happy to share!

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