Search Mami Mozart

AFFORDABLE INSTRUMENTS

Showing posts with label cooking. Show all posts
Showing posts with label cooking. Show all posts

May 14, 2015

GET YOUR SALSA ON! Healthy HOT Latin Food Options for Hypoglcemia and Diabetes

GET YOUR SALSA ON! Healthy HOT Latin Food Options for Hypoglcemia and Diabetes

Enjoy healthy Latin food options with Hypoglycemia, Diabetes and blood sugar problems. Nachos getting you down? Help your blood sugar and get your salsa on!

Enjoying delicious Latin foods can be difficult if you have hypoglycemia, diabetes, and have to watch your blood sugar levels. Between Mexican nachos dripping in fatty cheeses, burritos swimming in carbohydrates, and super sugary sweets like Cuban tres leches, it may seem impossible to enjoy Hispanic foods without harming your health. And for the hundreds of thousands of Latinos in the United States suffering from diabetes, not being able to enjoy your traditional Latin American family dishes seems like punishment. But you can enjoy your favorite foods, just follow these tips.

Go Whole Wheat and Natural Vegetables
Want a simple way to change up your carbohydrate intake to maintain your diabetes? Simply opt for whole wheat tortillas and vegetable chips. The body takes a longer time to break down the sugars in whole wheat products, and many vegetable chips taste delicious with our favorite Mexican favorites like low fat cheeses, salsa, and refried beans.

Another great option is to substitute a lettuce leaf for a tortilla, especially with fish tacos or dip. By substituting real vegetables for high carb tortillas, you can help maintain your hypoglycemia. Be sure to read packages. Corn tortillas typically have less carbohydrates than the flour versions. And if you want to make your own homemade tortillas, split the flour between whole wheat and regular flour to make a hypoglycemia happy tortilla!


The Power of Salsa
No, I am not talking about the hot Cuban dance or the high fructose corn syrup salsa at the grocery store chips aisle. I am talking about making your own natural salsa. All you need is a food processor or blender. Even a good knife will work. You can opt for the easy way out by purchasing a can or two of crushed tomatoes and then cutting in your choice of peppers, onions, and garlic, or go organic by buying fresh organic tomatoes and vegetables.

For a fun twist add in some mango or pineapple. My dietician recommends that I opt for real fruit over other sugar options. Natural unprocessed products are better for maintaining blood sugar levels because you can control how much sugar is put in your food, like salsa. If you like spicy, I recommend chopping in some hot peppers or a few drops of ghost pepper sauce.





Eat this not that!My family is Cuban and Dominican, and if anyone is familiar with Cuban cuisine, vegetables and healthy options are buried under mounds of delicious fried foods. Because my hypoglycemia is severe, I need to choose good healthy options. For example, I eat my frijoles without rice and opt for tostones over their sweet counterpart platinos maduros (or fried sweet plantains). I do not drink my favorite Caribbean soda options like Materva and choose water instead, especially if I know that I want to indulge in a bite of dessert. I will share my dessert with my spouse or a friend, since most postres, or desserts, are extremely high in sugar, even when homemade.


When I go to a Mexican or South American restaurant, I skip the complimentary nachos and will substitute broccoli for yellow rice. Maintaining my hypoglycemia is important to me, and I choose high protein options like steak, chicken, or fish, over food options that are extremely high in carbohydrates like paella, a Spanish favorite that involves seafood cooked with rice. Give me a bistec de palomilla with tostones and I am in food heaven. Delicioso!


Final food pointersAs you can see, it is possible to enjoy good Latin American food favorites without causing your diabetes or hypoglycemia to act up. If you are eating out, skip unnecessary carbohydrates like chips, rice, and soda, and try to substitute low carb options like black beans with salsa. Share sweet treats. Most Spanish restaurants will give you huge portions. Split your dinner with a friend or save the rest for lunch tomorrow. And if you decide to cook at home, find ways to incorporate whole wheat and protein into your favorite family recipes.

September 7, 2010

The Perfect Labor Day Weekend

Toys-R-Us store at United Square shopping mall...Image via WikipediaHola Everyone,

Labor Day weekend was simple but wonderful. On Saturday we went to Toys R Us and bought baby a new car seat. She is so small in it still! She loved facing forward and making faces with us in the mirror (one second...baby has decided that she wants to run around with a contract she found under my computer desk....).

Sunday was church, of course, and baby decided that she is much to big to just sit during service. She ran around the back church area, nearly escaped down the aisle several times, and even found a ball to toss. Needless to say, I had to take her to the nursery before the sermon started. Sunday I didn't play congas in the praise band and was looking forward to simply sitting with my hubby. Well, I spent the time watching baby run around and play (and avoid her morning nap until fifteen minutes before church ended).

On Labor Day, hubby had to work some with the Murray State University basketball team and tennis team. We still had time for a mini-cookout. Hubby made some burgers, I took the inflatable pool to the grassy area behind our apartment, and we enjoyed a picnic (even if I messed up Abuela's nearly perfect chicken salad recipe).

We had such a lovely day. I was happy to take a day off (nearly) and he was too (nearly) and we enjoyed each others company and the baby's company, as well. Simple but fun. And I couldn't have asked for a more perfect holiday weekend.

:-)
Mami Mozart
Enhanced by Zemanta

August 20, 2010

'Cavendish' bananas are the main commercial cu...Image via WikipediaHola Everyone,

Making delicious whole wheat banana raisin muffins for my daughter. Our small apartment smells like bananas, vanilla, and cinnamon. Was up till 3:30am last night writing and composing. I managed to release two singles that I had been meaning to for awhile, as well as wrote maybe ten articles for a website I am freelancing with, and also redid the audio for an album release that I meant to finish a month ago. But who has the time?

Fabricación de los molletes deliciosos de la pasa del plátano para mi hija. Nuestro pequeño apartamento huele como plátanos, vainilla, y canela. Estaba para arriba hasta que el 3:30 que escribía y que componía anoche.

My baby girl and I visited one of our close friends who had her baby yesterday afternoon. I can't believe how tiny her daughter is! To think that my baby was that size not too long ago. My friend's baby has more hair than my little girl, though. I have such a baldy of a baby!

Mi bebé y yo visitamos a uno de nuestros amigos cercanos que tenían su bebé el ayer por la tarde. ¡No puedo creer cómo es minúsculo es su hija!

Right now my baby girl has walked up to me, babbling about a crinkly book that she has ignored for months now. She has rediscovered it and is so excited that she wants to show me.

Ahora mi bebé ha recorrido para arriba a mí, charla sobre un libro rizado que ella ahora ha ignorado por meses. Ella lo ha redescubierto y es tan emocionada que ella quiere mostrarme.

Well, I must go back to being a mom. The timer is about up, and soon we will enjoy yummy banana raisin muffins for lunch.

Bien, debo volver a ser una mamá. El temporizador está alrededor para arriba, y pronto gozaremos de los molletes deliciosos de la pasa del plátano para el almuerzo.

Smiles and Happiness to all,

Mami Mozart


Enhanced by Zemanta