Tuesday, November 10, 2015

Surprising Heartburn Remedy

I don't often get heartburn, but when I do it's like there is a fire going on inside me...

I had horrible heartburn on Sunday.  I mean just awful.  And at the same time I had a craving for dill pickles.

I just so happened to have bought a gallon size jar of JUMBO dill pickles at the store on Saturday because I needed the jar. 
 

So I got to munching.

And ya know what.... in about 5 minutes my heartburn was gone.

Then, I had heartburn again LAST night while I was at the gym working out.  (If you have ever done a Kayla Itsines BBG workout you know that heartburn is the last thing you need to get!)  I got home, ate a pickle and 5-10 minutes later, my heartburn is gone!   

So I did a little research, and some to find out some sources say that vinegar is a home remedy for heartburn....and what is the primary ingredient needed to pickle pickles....?  VINEGAR. 

Now, I don't know if this worked so fast for me because the pickles I had were GIGANTIC and had more juice in them or not....I'm just saying it worked. 

It's a win win.  I have an excuse to eat a pickle....and my heart burn goes away!

Barbocoa-Style Beef Tacos {Crockpot Recipe}

I'm a big fan of new recipes.  I see so many recipes floating around on FB on a daily bases, but most times I don't have a good way to save them!  I really want to try this recipe, and maybe you have seen it floating around the Facebook world!  I tried to pin it, and the link didn't work....so I'm blogging the recipe so I can pin it for later!

 


I haven't tried this, so I have no idea if it tastes good!

3-4 lb Beef Chuck Roast
4 chipotles in adobo sauce - chopped
5 cloves garlic - chipped
1 Tbsp. ground cumin
3 tsp oregano
1/4 tsp ground cloves
1/2 C. beef broth
1/4 C. Apple cider vinegar
1/4 C. fresh lime juice
3 Bay leaves
Salt
Pepper

Cut the roast into approximately six to eight large chunks.  Season well with salt and pepper on all sides.
Heat Oil in a large skillet and sear the beef chunks on all sides until browned.  Transfer to slow cooker.
In a medium brown combines chipped chipotles, garlic, cumin, oregano, cloves, beef broth, vinegar, lime juice, and additional salt and pepper (to taste).  Mix well, the pour over beef in the slow cooker and add bay leaves.  Cover and cook on low for 8-10 hours, or until meat shreds easily.

Remove bay leaves.  Removes and shred beef.  Return beef to slow cooker to marinate for at least 10 more minutes, or until ready to serve.

I will personally be serving this over lettuce wraps.  Probably with some salsa, homemade quacamole, chopped red onions, and cilantro.  Or I might serve it over cauliflower rice for "taco bowls".  But you could easily make this into a traditional taco meal with flour tortillas and all the non-paleo fixin's!

Now I just need to figure out how to make this isn't a freezer meal for when I have surgery.....  Thoughts?  Leave me a comment!

Wednesday, November 4, 2015

Paleo Teriyaki Chicken {Crock Pot Recipe}

I am a SUCKER for a good crockpot recipe.  Throw everything in a pan, turn it on, go to work, and come home to a hot meal...?  Yes Please!  What makes it even better is if you use a crockpot bag.  Throw everything in a bag, tie it in a knot, and put it in the crockpot.  When you are done, you pull the bag out, open it up, pour it into a bowl, and throw the bag out!  The crockpot will be left with a little moisture In it that you can just wipe out!  Voila! 

You could probably turn this into a crock pot freezer meal easy enough.  Throw everything into a Ziplock bag and freeze it for later!  Which is a great idea if you are giving freezer meals to a new mom or someone who just had surgery!

Ok, here we go...



You will need:

2 lbs boneless, skinless chicken breasts
4 cloves garlic,
1/2 cup chopped white onion
1/2 cup honey
1/2 cup coconut aminos (or soy sauce if you aren't paleo, or tamari if you are just avoiding gluten and not soy!)
1/4 cup rice wine vinegar
1 T. chopped fresh ginger
1/8 tsp black pepper
To Thicken:
1/4 cup cold water
3 TBLS Arrow Root powder (or cornstarch if you can have corn!)

Place chicken in the bottom of you crock put in a single layer.
Mix together the remaining ingredients, except the water & Arrow Root Powder.
Pour mixture over the chicken & Cook on High for 4 hours.  (I actually did mine for 5, and my chicken was over cooked.  If you have made this into a freezer meal, and it is frozen still, I would cook on low for 8-10 hours!) Or until the chicken is cooked through and shreds easily with a fork.  Overcooked chicken is not so good...

When the chicken is done, remove the chicken, leaving all the "juices" in the crockpot.  Shred the chicken with a fork. 

Pour the "juices" into a medium sauce pan. 
In a separate bowl, measure out your arrowroot powder.  Slowly mix in 1/4 cup cold water, whisking as you pour.
Turn heat to medium high and bring liquid to a simmer.  Slowly pour in arrow root mixture, whisking as your pour (you don't want lumpy sauce!).  Continue to simmer until your teriyaki sauce thickens.

Side note:  I own this wonderful thing called an instapot.  It is a crockpot, pressure cooker, rice cooker, soup cooker, "sauter", yogurt maker, and more, all in one.  It's great.  So I took out my chicken, then poured the liquid out of the bag right into my pot, and turned it on "sauté" to bring it to a simmer.  So for me, this was a 1 pot dinner!  Clean up was still a breeze!

When sauce has thickened, pour over shredded chicken & mix together.  Serve with lettuce wraps!  Or, if you are one of those people that eats rice, this would be GREAT over rice.


Optional:  I added some red pepper flakes to my teriyaki sauce to give it a little kick! 

Tuesday, November 3, 2015

Paleo Korean Beef {Recipe}

I have been meaning to try this recipe for a while, but I just never got around to it!  I finally made it, and boy have I been missing out!

The best part is that the sauce can be used for more than just ground beef...  Like Korean Glazed Pork Chops.  You'll understand when you try it!

You also definitely need to make the Asian Slaw to go with it.  It is the finishing touch and adds so much to it.  Plan ahead, because you'll want to let it sit for about 1 hour before eating so that the flavors can marry together.

*Disclaimer...I printed this recipe off a while ago and can't remember who the source was...so if this is your recipe, forgive me!*

Asian Slaw
12 oz veggies slaw
2 Tbsp  rice wine vinegar
1 Tbsp  Honey
1 Tbsp  Sesame Seeds
1 Tbsp  Sesame Oil
3 Tbsp  coconut cream (if you aren't dairy free you can use greek yogurt)
1/4 tsp ground ginger
salt and pepper to taste

Put the slaw in a bowl.  In a separate bowl, mix the remaining ingredients together.  Pour the dressing over the slaw and stir together.  Put in fridge to chill.

Korean Ground Beef:

1/2 white or yellow onion, diced
3 cloves garlic, minced
1 T extra virgin olive oil
1 1/2 lbs ground beef

Sauce:
1/4 c. coconut aminos (if you aren't gluten/soy free you can use soy sauce here!)
1 Tbsp sesame oil
1/4 C Honey
1-2 tsp crushed red pepper (omit or use less if you don't like spicy!)
1/2 tsp ground ginger
1-2 tsp sriracha


In a bowl, mix all of the ingredients for the sauce together, mixing well, and set aside.

On medium, heat Olive oil in a skillet, and sauté onions until translucent.  Add in garlic, and sauté until fragrant (a.k.a. you can start to smell it!)  Add in ground beef and cook through. 

When the beef is browned, drain the liquid from the pan.  Pour the sauce over the beef and bring to a simmer.  Reduce heat to medium low and simmer until the liquid has been cooked down.

Serve over lettuce wraps, topping with the Asian Slaw.

Here is where it gets interesting.  That sauce is ah-mazing.

So on Friday night I cooked up some pork chops.  When my meat was about 70% cooked, I added that same sauce to my skillet and cooked my pork chops the rest of the way.  The sauce turned into a glaze and it was delicious. 

Monday, November 2, 2015

Infertility update

So just to fill in a little back information...

My husband and I stopped trying to NOT get pregnant around January of 2014.  We weren't trying to get pregnant but we weren't trying to not get pregnant either.  I was always hopeful every month that we would get pregnant though!  We found out in February of '14 that I had hashimotos, and that's when everything started falling apart!

In August of '14 I started having 4+ month cycles...a.k.a I was going 160 days without a period.  Not Good.  When I saw my old OB/Gyn in December '14, he told me that my long periods were from my thyroid and I likely had PCOS and to go home and google it.  I fired him. 

I started seeing Dr. P in January of '15.  He also suspected I had PCOS and put me on the list to see a Creighton Fertility Instructor to teach me how to chart my cycles.  I started meeting with her in April or May of 2015.

Between August of 2014 and June of 2015 I had a total of 4 periods,  that last of which was a force start with progesterone.  The next 3 cycles I supplements with Progesterone for 10 days starting 3 days post peak (post ovulation).

In September of '15 I started a Hormone Profile that spanned over the course of a month.  And let me tell you what, they took a BUNCH of blood.

I finally saw Dr. P to go over my lab results last Thursday (10/29/15).  Where I had a minor meltdown. 

This was my Instagram post from that experience:
 
"When you're at the Doctor's office to find out why are aren't getting pregnant...
And you are surrounded by pregnant women...
Then you finally get back to a room, and you can hear the Doppler in the room right next door,
And you hear that Precious little heart beat.
And then the tearsstart to fall.
I just want to hear that heart beat for myself, so badly.
And I know that God has a plan,
And I believe He is going to give me babies,
But the fear creeps in.
I see women on fertility support gourps that have been trying for 5 and more years.
They use the same Creighton method that I am using.
There are women all over the world that are not able to get pregnant.
And those are scary thought. 
And baby heartbeats make me cry.
And I'm okay with that.
Because this is real life."
 
Dr. P came in at the end of my meltdown, who knows what He was thinking.  He did end up telling me that I was the third person to cry that day, so maybe He is used to tears.
 
We went back to his office and he compared my charts against my labs.  Basically I have zero progesterone. 
 
Just a little hormone lesson.  At the beginning of your cycle your ovaries produce estrogen.  As your body prepares to ovulate your estrogen spikes.  When you ovulate your estrogen levels decrease and your progesterone starts to rise.  My Estrogen did great.  My Progesterone didn't get above 2.9.  It's suppose to get to around 18, which is a sign that I am probably not ovulating, just going to an ovulatory phase. 
 
 
So, we are scheduling surgery for sometime in January.  My cycles will decide when.  I could have done it in December.  But if I'm going to meet a deductible, I would rather it be in 2016 where I'll have the whole year to enjoy having a deductible met :)
 
Surgery!?!?!  It sounds kind of extreme.  I know.  He will go in and check out my fallopian tubes and make sure that nothing is blocked.  He'll look at my uterus and make sure there isn't any endometriosis going on.  Then he'll look at my ovaries, and since I have PCOS he is 99% sure that he is going to find Polycystic Ovaries.
 
So what does that even mean.  Basically the outer tissue of the ovaries gets really thick so that the eggs can't release, and the cyst that releases the egg can't do it's job properly to be making progesterone.  So He will preform an Ovarian Wedge Resection and cut my ovaries to a normal size.
 
Yes.  He's cutting out part of my ovaries.  You know the thing that stores all my eggs and future babies.  Yikes.  Thankfully there are two parts to the ovary (I'm sure there is more to it than this, but I'm just making it simple here!), the core and the outer tissue.  The core holds all the eggs.  That part gets left alone.  All he does is cut away some of the thick outer tissue so that my ovaries can work like they are suppose to!
 
The question has been asked, "what about clomid?".  In women with PCOS, clomid only has a 15% success rate of ovulation and a pregnancy.  This surgery will give me an 85% success rate of ovulation and normal cycles.  If I am one of the 15% where the surgery doesn't fix it, then the Clomid success rate skyrockets because I don't have all that excess tissue in there.  Plus, the ovarian wedge resection actually fixes the problem, so it's a long term solution, and my health should improve!
 
So yea...that's about the gist of it!  Here's to hoping for a baby in 2016!!!!