The Hemp Connection:
restaurant

  • Need a go-to place to eat out? Consider Chili's

    Need a go-to place to eat out? Consider Chili's

    I had the opportunity to use a gift card today sent to me by Chili's Restaurant.* This popular restaurant recently launched a new line, Lighter Choices, and they wanted people in the food industry to try it on for size. So I met my friend Ivonne for lunch, and we tried out a couple of the items.

    I ordered the margarita grilled chicken.

    Ivonne ordered the steak.

    We both thought the meals were flavorful and well presented. How did they stack up nutritionally? The meals all live up to Chili's promise. But women with PCOS have some additional needs to attend to, especially the ratio of carbohydrate to protein. Keeping that in mind, 3 of the 7 offerings would fit into a hormone-friendly style of eating: the Classic Sirloin, the Grilled Chicken Salad, and the Grilled Salmon.

    Something that often happens with low-calorie menus is that sodium spikes up. It's there to replace the flavor that taking everything else out, removed. These menu items are no exception; in fact, the lowest calorie item, the Classic Sirloin, has the highest milligrams sodium/calorie ratio, 6.25 to 1. Of the three with the best carbohydrate to protein ratio, your best bet is the Grilled Chicken Salad, at 1.6 to 1. The salmon, which I imagine many of you would gravitate toward hearing me talk so much about omega-3's, is so-so at a 3.3 to 1 ratio. (Calories and milligrams sodium should be roughly the same, any higher ratio than 2 to 1, on a regular basis, especially if you're prone to fluid retention or high blood pressure, can be problematic.)

    Bottom line, if you're traveling, need a business lunch where there are a lot of items for a lot of different tastes, or an occasional family outing, choose any of the three entrees recommended above. If you eat at Chili's regularly, stick with the Grilled Chicken Salad. Since Chili's has a takeout service, this may actually be a better choice for those of you who struggle with what to eat if you don't eat fast food.

    A final word for the Chili's menu designers. My friend and I both noticed that the only vegetable offered on any of these dishes…was broccoli. It would be nice to see a variety of veggies, even carrots, zucchini, sweet potatoes, etc. It's an entire category of beautiful food with a lot of possibilities for enhancing flavor, texture, and presentation.

    I thank Chili's for the opportunity to try the menu, and hope this opens up some options for our readers.

    *As a participant in the Klout program, I occasionally receive Klout Perks, which are offers to try products related to my area of specialty. I am not obligated to blog about or promote them, and if I do, I am not obliged to write only positive comments.

  • Announcing our new restaurant partnership program

    Announcing our new restaurant partnership program

    In the 30 years I've been a dietitian, the number one complaint I've always gotten is that eating out is always the place where good intentions fail. I'm finally deciding to do something about it.
    I'm looking for restaurants who would like to partner with my company to help healthy eaters find the goods they want!
    We've developed a service that will provide you with analysis of your recipes, that you can provide to any customers who ask.

    If your recipes fit within the guidelines for what we've found to work for our clients looking to manage infertility, diabetes, high cholesterol, or simply weight, we're happy to include you in the iPhone application we're working to develop. We want to send our fans to places where they're confident about their menu choices!

    If they need some adjusting, we'll work with you to tweak them.

    This is an ongoing service, but any takers between now and March 15 will receive an additional discount on the price.

    For more information contact me (Monika Woolsey), either at marika@google.com, or 623.486.0737.

  • Enjoy a delicious vegan meal while you learn vegan basics at Phoenix' Sapna Cafe

    Enjoy a delicious vegan meal while you learn vegan basics at Phoenix' Sapna Cafe

    We're launching a new program, and Phoenix residents are the first to be able to try it---

    Eat It! Well! (TM) is designed to teach you how to eat your chosen food philosophy in a way that includes essential nutrients and promotes optimal health. Our philosophy at inCYST is not to steer everyone into the same way of eating, but rather to help you to identify what works best for you…then show you how to do it.

    Because such a high percentage of our clients seem to have some sort of history of imbalanced vegan eating in their past, we wanted to start with a vegan event.

    And because Sapna Cafe has such tasty, healthy food, they were the natural partner with which to launch our concept.

    Here is the event information.
    Location Sapna Cafe
    1301 NW Grand Avenue
    Phoenix, AZ

    Have you recently become vegetarian? Not sure how to do it?

    Have you tried being vegetarian and become bored?

    Or do you just love eating vegetarian so much that you can't get enough of it?

    We have a special evening store at Sapna Cafe…for all of you!

    Come enjoy a special vegan meal prepared by Chef Ana Borrajo:

    Quinoa — Brown Rice Chili
    Seasonal Dinner Salad (so seasonal, in fact, we can't even tell you what it will contain until we've been to market that week!)
    Spanish Baked Apples

    BYOB**

    (While the topic of this class is not gluten-free eating, the dinner is entirely gluten-free.)

    Registered dietitian and health expert Monika Woolsey, MS, RD, will be providing information about how to eat healthy as a vegan:
    --basic principles of vegan eating
    --the top 5 mistakes vegans make in the diets and easy ways to avoid them
    --where to find the best vegan in Phoenix (that is, if you can't get yourself to Sapna!)

    In addition to this hearty and delicious meal and informative class, participants will receive a special $5"Sapna Cash" certificate that can be redeemed for a future vegan cooking class, with Ana, in the Sapna kitchen.

    **You can bring your own alchoholic beverage. Please check back with us for some wine pairings you can pick up at the Phoenix Downtown Public Market on your way to dinner.

    Cost for this event: $30 per person includes dinner and presentation. Tips for the restaurant staff are optional but encouraged.

    You can register at this link:
    http://yhst-34497545168533.stores.yahoo.net/eat-it-well---vegetarian-eating-class-at-sapna-cafe.html

    For more information contact Monika Woolsey, 623.486.0737

  • Nutrition 101: Folate

    Nutrition 101: Folate

    I don't have to tell you this is one of your crucial vitamins. It's important for becoming pregnant, staying pregnant, and helping your unborn baby to grow and develop. It's just a super hard nutrient to get in, when your appetite is driven by carbohydrate cravings.

    PCOS Diva, once again, has created a wonderful set of menus focusing on including folate. Check them out (below), pick even one to try and see if it's something you can add to your rotation.

    Last week I had the opportunity to eat at a wonderful and popular restaurant in Venice, California, Lemonade. Today's picture is a photo of me with my plate and my friend's plate from that lunch. You couldn't go wrong in that place, practically everything on the menu offered a hormone-friendly benefit. It was such a contrast to the weekend before when I found myself in an unfamiliar part of town when the lunchtime hungries rolled around. I walked in to a Burger King. And while I ordered the chicken sandwich, I had to special order to keep the sauce off, and everywhere I looked, if there wasn't a promotional ad encouraging me to eat something sugary or fatty, someone WAS eating something sugary or fatty. I rarely step into these establishments and I felt completely out of my element.

    I'm guessing it works the other way around. If you're used to fast food restaurants, a place like Lemonade might seem a little intimidating. So for another writing gig, I went through Lemonade's menu and listed the items they offered that were high in folate.

    A big part of eating better is getting used to being in environments that support the change. It's not going to happen in a place where the profit margin is largely supported by foods that do not support health. In a place that is devoted to making healthy eating easy, the hardest decision you're going to have…which I faced in Lemonade…was figuring out WHICH healthy route to go!

    If you think the reason you cannot eat better because you don't enjoy cooking, or do not feel like you have the time to do it, get in the habit of patronizing establishments that incorporate the foods we encourage you to eat. Order a little extra to take home for dinner, or if you're eating dinner out, for lunch the next day. Make it hard for yourself to have a reason to walk into fast food world. Eventually, you'll wonder why it was ever even an option.

    Folate foods (foods with asterisks are fortified with added folate)

    Breakfast cereals
    Beef liver
    Cowpeas (blackeyes)
    Breakfast cereals
    Spinach
    Great Northern beans
    Asparagus
    *Rice, white
    Vegetarian baked beans
    Green peas
    Broccoli
    *Egg noodles
    Broccoli,
    Avocado
    Peanuts
    Lettuce, Romaine
    Wheat germ
    Tomato Juice
    Orange juice
    Turnip greens
    Orange
    *Bread
    Egg,
    Cantaloupe
    Papaya
    Banana

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