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(Easy) Tarragon-Mustard Shrimp

Zola Gorgon on

An old buddy of mine told my husband and me about a book he was reading called Younger Next Year. Written by an older guy (Chris Crowley) and his doctor (Henry S. Lodge, M.D.), it’s subtitled Live Strong, Fit, and Sexy – Until You’re 80 and Beyond.

Here’s a section on starch that I thought really hit it on the head.

“One of the foods that are killing you is starch (refined carbohydrates), which means the current buzz about bad carbohydrates is basically correct. How refreshing to have a major food fad turn out to make some sense. Bad carbs are the white foods—potatoes, white rice, and pretty much everything made with refined flour. The good carbohydrates are the ones found in nature—in fruits, vegetables and whole grains, which have relatively few calories per pound. Starch is bad because it continually signals you to take another bite. Fat and protein signal your body to stop eating after a certain point, but carbohydrates, whether good or bad, don’t. In nature, you had to eat prodigious amounts of them to get enough calories to stay alive, so a full stomach was the only shutoff signal you needed.

“Here’s something to think about at dinner tonight. There’s more free sugar (the stuff that flows right into your bloodstream to trigger your digestive response) in mashed potatoes than in tablespoon of sugar. And here’s something else. There’s as much free sugar in a single can of cola as in five pounds of venison. And what about this –- there’s more free sugar (to say nothing of saturated fat) in a super-sized side of fries than in five pounds of elk. How does your body respond? With confusion. Because the signal you send with a 1,000 calorie meal of soda, fries and a burger is that you have just eaten 10,000 calories of “natural food” and your body goes nuts rushing out insulin and other digestive chemicals in response.

“That’s the real problem with starch. You have called for ten times the amount of digestive power you actually need. Ten times the insulin, gastric acid and a few other dangerous chemicals. And things start to happen. First, you hyperabsorb every last calorie from the food you ate. Second, because you obviously just killed a huge animal, your body tries to store every excess scrap of energy as fat. Third, because you now have enough insulin to digest a large animal, but have killed only a soda and some fries, your blood sugar plummets and you’re hungry again. Very, very hungry, and so you eat, usually quite a lot. What your poor Darwinian body reads is that you’ve gone from gluttony to starvation in a couple of hours -- and it has no possible explanation for this! This ultra-rapid cycling between gluttony and starvation has no parallel in nature. We talk about the signals you send with exercise or being sedentary, but our modern diet is so far outside your original design parameters that you are not sending any coherent signal. The whole system breaks down into a welter of hyper absorption and decay. It’s like rock stars smashing their guitars onstage. Noise comes up, but no more music. Adult diabetes is one of the results of this breakdown. Obesity, arthritis, heart disease, cancer and stroke are some of the others.”

When you do Plan Z the diet by Zola, you find you can live without sugar and starch. When you are on the next phase, ZReboot, it’s fine (even important) to add back fats, fruits and vegetables. Just don’t add back the “white stuff.”

Chris Crowley looks pretty good for a 71-year-old. I found a link to his speech and agree with the notion that you can avoid a lot of the ravages of aging. You’re going to spend a third of your life in old age. Don’t let it creep up on you.

You can get by on a lot less exercise than Chris Crowley advocates but you do need to exercise to get stronger (you do NOT need to exercise while you are losing weight). Getting stronger will buy you bonus time as you get older. You won’t become frail as soon.

My grandmother lived until about two weeks before her 100th birthday. I hope I have her genes.

In the late 1970s the local newspaper went to her house to do a feature story. This was a 90-plus year-old woman who was still living alone in her stand-alone home. She was a story.

My grandmother didn’t own an exercise bike. She did not go to the health club and take a spinning class. The picture of my grandmother that the newspaper published was taken outside her home with my grandmother standing in front of her garden. My grandmother did most things to run her own home. She washed her dishes by hand and she worked in her flower garden; a very pretty flower garden it was too. She pulled weeds for exercise. She dug holes and planted in the spring. She tidied up around the yard. That’s the only exercise I witnessed my grandmother involved in during the 20 or so years I knew her; that and catching that piece of flying whole wheat toast as it launched out of the toaster. She also made a mean cup of tea.

My husband’s mother Sally lived until she was 86. She was in amazing shape for her age. She had legs any 40-year-old woman would kill to have. Sally started walking five miles a day in the late 70s. She didn’t run marathons. She just went out and got fresh air and took in her miles at a brisk pace.

Find something you’re passionate about and stay active as long as you can. Staying active helps you keep your bone density and your aerobics in good working order. Strive to be stronger but you don’t have to kill yourself in the process.

Tarragon-Mustard Shrimp (as an entrée or part of an entrée salad) EASY

Serves 6. Can easily be doubled for a party

 

This dish made a wonderful lunch salad entrée in our Plan Z kitchen. I think it would be GREAT as an appetizer at a cocktail party too. As an appetizer it can be served, hot, room temp or cold. The other guests at the cocktail party will NEVER know you are eating diet food. They will love it too.

For the Shrimp:

1/3 cup of Dijon mustard
1 large shallot or 3 green onions, minced
2 tsp of minced garlic (jar garlic can work)
3 Tbl of minced, fresh tarragon. (You need the fresh stuff for this dish)
2.25 pounds of medium-large shrimp, (3 inches long) thawed, shelled and deveined
Sea salt and pepper to taste
A sprinkle of cayenne

For the optional salad:

3 small heads of leaf lettuce cut up into bite-sized pieces. (Remember salad greens are unlimited so have at it)
1 large red pepper cut into strips
1 large yellow pepper cut into strips
1 large orange pepper cut into strips
2 cups of celery bits
1 pint of cherry tomatoes cut in half

In a large bowl add the mustard, shallot bits, garlic and tarragon. Rinse and drain your shrimp. Add them to the big bowl with the other ingredients and stir. Add a grating of salt and either cayenne or black pepper. (This is not a spicy dish) Let marinate in the refrigerator for an hour or up to three hours. Don’t go longer than that without cooking them or the vinegar in the mustard will start to cook the shrimp like ceviche.

Preheat your broiler.

Spray a large cookie sheet with sides. You’ll use olive oil spray. Then add the marinated shrimp. Spread them around so they are in one layer. Spray the top of them with a bit more olive oil spray. Place on the rack below your broiler about four inches below the element. Broil for two minutes. Take them out of the oven and turn them over; just sort of stir them up. Put back in the broiler and broil for another two minutes.

Remove from oven and serve. Be sure to get the ‘sauce’ from the bottom of the cookie sheet.

If you are serving this on top of salad, your sauce becomes your dressing. It’s amazing how buttery this dish tastes with no butter added. Just don’t overcook the shrimp and the natural oils of the shrimp will come out and make the sauce taste buttery.

For a cocktail party you can just put these in a bowl and pass out toothpicks to grab them. Don’t ever leave shrimp on a cocktail party table for more than an hour; even if they are cooked. Encourage your guests to eat them and they will be gone in a flash.

For the salad:

Throw all the veggies in a bowl and mix. Take a handful or two and toss it on the plate. Center your shrimp and enjoy (See picture)!

Enjoy!
Cheers,
Zola


 

 

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