Beef mince

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Dear Reader,

I hope you’ve had a good week.

My week has been busy with work. I loved spending time with Kathleen in Adelaide and on Kangaroo Island. I did need to return to work.

How is the foot?

What’s happened this week?

I went to an outpatient appointment on Friday. The orthopædic trainee has told me I can wear sturdy shoes on my feet and ambulate more.

I asked when I could walk around without shoes, and he said the maximum tendon repair strength should be achieved after about three months. This means in about three to four weeks.

I’ve now been discharged from outpatient care and can book appointments to see a physiotherapist.

What have I been watching?

Star Trek Deep Space Nine and Star Trek Voyager

While I was in Adelaide visiting Kathleen, I watched Star Trek on her TV. Kathleen’s TV is newer than mine (I bought mine in 2007), and the picture quality is fantastic.

I’ll watch Star Trek on a new TV in a few weeks. Hint Hint 😉

What have I been listening to?

Monroe Doctrine Volume VIII

I previously wrote that Volume VII was meant to end the book. The authors claim that Volume VIII is the last in the series. I am about one-third of the way through this volume.

The US and coalition partners are confident in defeating China in World War III. The main concern is the post-war recovery and how to avoid a civil war erupting in a defeated China. India, which remained neutral in the conflict, is emerging as a post-war saviour for China, and the Indian leadership seems to be seeking to gain a significant economic and diplomatic advantage from this opportunity.

Of course, the Chinese artificial intelligence apparatus, viz., “Jade Dragon”, could turn the tables and tweak Isaac Asimov’s “Three Laws of Robotics”. The result could be the rise of robots over humans, to end the book.

If you’re not familiar with Isaac Asimov’s “Three Laws of Robotics”, they are:

  1. A robot may not injure a human being or, through inaction, allow a human being to come to harm.
  2. A robot must obey orders given by humans except where such orders would conflict with the First Law.
  3. A robot must protect its existence as long as such protection does not conflict with the First or Second Law.

All it would take is a change to the third law.

I highly recommend this book series if you enjoy science fiction and technical fiction incorporating warfighting.

Recipe?

I don’t have much for a recipe this week. I have more of a revelation.

Over the last week, after returning to Canberra after visiting Kathleen in Adelaide, my meals have been simple and consistent.

I’ve been eating eggs every morning and beef mince (AUD$11/kilogram) for lunch and many dinners. This would be about USD$7.80/pound in the US. If there are any readers from the US, please tell me if this is expensive or not. I think US residents would find USD$7.80 per pound of ground beef expensive.

I’ve noticed that I’m not craving variety or anything different. During the day, my thinking about food has become less, and I’ve been able to focus more on work tasks.

I know that in the past when I was eating carbohydrate-rich foods, I’d savour and crave the flavours, especially if there were complex flavour combinations. The sugar hooked me to derive pleasure from the sweetness, and the lack of satiety from carbohydrate-rich foods meant I thought I wanted more. I was always feeling hungry and unsatisfied.

I have more capacity to think about other things now.

Don’t get me wrong, I still get hungry, but from Monday to Friday, I don’t think about cooking anything more than eggs, beef mince, lamb chops, or thinly sliced steaks. I cooked some beef ribs in the pressure cooker last weekend, and I’ve been supplementing the mince with some rib meat, too. I know that beef short ribs are not cheap, but the meat goes a long way.

I’ll also still eat different food items occasionally, especially on weekends or when invited to a meal. There will also be variety when circumstances dictate that I can’t cook and prepare my meals. There will also be instances when I see something in the supermarket’s meat section or butcher shop and think, yep, I want that tonight.

I don’t know what this means for Yummy Lummy (the blog). It’s hard to justify a weekly update when I don’t have much to write about regarding recipes.

I don’t want to give up blogging. I like writing and the connection I have with some regular readers.

Photographs

Thoughts on the meals

I’ve already shared what I’m thinking. Perhaps I’ll stop wanting to photograph food and write about it. Somehow, I don’t think so.

Final thoughts

  • Do you ever feel like you need to change what you write about?
  • Do you spend much of your day thinking about meals?
  • When you’re not feeling hungry, can you focus on tasks better?

Disclaimer and comments

This post and other posts on this blog are not medical or health advice. I’m sharing my personal experiences from my lived experience. My opinions remain mine.

For health advice, see your regular medical practitioner. For diet advice, consult with appropriately registered professionals.

12 Responses

  1. I do need to change up my writing–so my blog gets my silly side out and then I write horror on the side–but also just some essays and other nonfiction, too. Variety is the spice of life when it comes to writing for me. So glad to hear that your foot is healing nicely!

    1. Hi Cecilia,
      Thanks. I think part of my concern is the blog title suggests food. I agree, variety in writing helps us to develop and grow as writers. 😊 Maybe I can change the name to “Yummy Lummy?” The ? denoting that the food may not always be yummy. 😆

  2. Gosh, yes – re changing what I write about. We all change our opinions on things all the time, right? I spend a bit of the day thinking about meals, but I don’t mind that as food is my big hobby and interest. I’m not sure I focus on tasks any better when not hungry.

    1. Hi Emma,
      Yes, I’m feeling like a phase change is happening. Food blogging has been my way of writing outside of the writing I do for work. It’s a bit of a release.
      Since changing my diet, I feel more lucid. I hope this feeling remains.

  3. Gary – having had to return to the library to pick up urgent mail I saw your post had dropped in. As we are on widely different pages I’ll simply answer your questions:
    1. For me every day brings a different scenario to which I’ll respond to m y best ability . . . life after all differs every day and I respond as i feel appropriate and, in writing often fun and pleasing! Why make the trip we have been blessed with boring ?
    2, Food surely is one of the most delightful and necessary topics in life . . . I read a lot about food culturally learning new matters every day and oft times discussing such at meetings, dinner parties, food courses and fairs et al . . . it is generally the most delightful and vibrant way to make new friends . . . but, naturally I have dozens of other matters after work from politics and current affairs to theatre, opera, litterature et al which all have their time. The day I have not learned at least half-a-dozen new things or met someone new is a poor one to be regretted.
    3. I came to Australia as a child after the Second World War. I have never everbeen hungry since . . . I do not follow any diets but am close in my likes and habits to the so-called Mediterranean and Dash ones including plenty of wonderful Australian wine. Not by any means do I think I would function better on a lesser menu. But, I shall be honest -I would not like to eat your ‘diet’ for more than a day . . . both my body and mind would hate me . . .actually, at the moment I have swerved somewhat from the Australasian versions of Malaysian and Shanghainese to Vietnamese and the very healthy Korean, learning Sardinian and Sicilian and Tunisian when I get the chance. Oh, am learning the flavours and textures of Filipino dishes from Raymund! Wonderfully exciting . . . let us leave it there, the Gay & Lesbian Parade is starting . . .

    1. Hi Eha,
      Thanks for sharing your thoughts, opinions, and insights.
      Again, I am grateful for the peace, joy, and happiness my life brings me.

      1. Pray what has your comment to do with your three prior questions or my straight-forward answers ?These were not just thoughts 🙂 !!!

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