Juneathon, day 4

Hot!  It is a hundred and one freaking degrees out there right now.  I walked a total of 2 miles today, for my transit commute and a little side-shopping detour.  I’ll do a run later when it cools off, and I’ll report on that in tomorrow’s Juneathon update.

Today Juneathon is not my only motivation to get out for a run in this heat.  There are two other very er, cool reasons to go for a run today:

  1. It’s National Running Day.
  2. It’s the eve of the 50th anniversary of my childhood hero, Jim Ryun’s breaking the 4-minute mile.  You can read his memory of that historic race here.  When I was growing up, I lived just a few houses from the stadium where he ran college track and field.  He would do his training runs on our streets in town.  There was never any question that I would be a runner.

Juneathon, day 3

Did an early 1.2 mile run this morning.  As a consistent evening runner, it is a rare feeling to want to go out for a quick run in the morning.  Then a few steps into the run, when the heavy, sluggish feeling sets in, I remember why I am an evening runner.  But then I get warmed up and start feeling darn good about getting out there in the morning.

If you know you have to swallow a frog, do it first thing in the morning.  If there are two frogs, swallow the big one first.  

Mark Twain

Juneathon!

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It’s here again, just in time!  I badly need the motivation.  I ran 2.5 miles today.  I had a check to deposit, so my run was to the ATM machine and back.  The days here have been hot this week, but the evenings are pleasant for running.


On other things that made life pleasant this week–

I took a 24-hour trip, on a plane, to meet up with friends and see a concert in Texas.

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It was the perfect getaway.  I had a wonderful time, and finally saw this incredible guitar player who has crafted his own unique style.

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I hope this was not the last time I see him perform live.  He’s also got a magnetic stage personality. Highly recommend his CD, and seeing him live!

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Making yogurt even easier

Yogurt, hmmm.  I’ve gone from avoiding yogurt my whole life because of the tangy taste, to making it an essential part of my daily diet for these last three years.  It is a great way to get more calcium and protein.  I’m sold on the probiotic effect on my digestive system, too.  It makes my stomach feel calm virtually all the time.   Furthermore, I’ve concluded that making it myself from skim milk, in quart (liter)-sized batches, is the only way to go.

At first it was a challenge to keep enough, but not too much, prepared yogurt on hand. But then the process became a well-settled part of my food prep routine.  It helped that I discovered a couple of tricks to cut an hour, and my least favorite step, out of the yogurt-making process.

Ingredients:

  • 4 cups (or 1 liter) skim milk
  • 1/2 cup non-fat powdered milk
  • 1/2 cup plain yogurt with active cultures, to use as the ‘starter’.  (Check for ‘active cultures’ somewhere on the label.)

Steps:

1.  Pour the skim milk into a microwavable container.

2.  Stir in the non-fat powdered milk.

Yogurt ingredients

3.  Microwave the milk until almost boiling.  (This takes 5 minutes in my microwave. Occasionally mine has actually started to boil.  It doesn’t ruin the batch but it boils over, so I have to clean my microwave.)

4.  Let the milk cool until lukewarm.  This takes about an hour in my kitchen.  This is my least favorite step, but it is necessary.  If the milk is too hot when you add the yogurt starter, it will kill the active cultures.  However, if you don’t want to wait out the cooling process, you can do my alternate method. 

(*alternate Step 4*)  Freeze your yogurt starter ahead of time, in 1/2 cup portions.  Then, instead of waiting for the hot milk to cool, put one of the frozen starter packets directly into the hot milk when it comes out of the microwave.  This method has worked for me every time.  It eliminates the annoying hour-long cooling process.  The frozen yogurt cools the milk to just the right temperature, while the hot milk thaws the yogurt.

Frozen yogurt starter

5.  Once the milk has cooled to the right temperature (or with the alternate method, once the yogurt has completely thawed in the warm milk), gently stir the yogurt starter into the milk, and then set the mixture in the yogurt maker and leave it plugged in for 4 to 8 hours.

Yogurt mixture

Yogurt making

Sometimes it is hard to tell how set the yogurt is.  I spooned a small amount here to test the consistency.  If not as thick as you want it, give it more time.  The picture below was taken at 4 hours.

Set yogurt

6.  Once the yogurt has set to your liking, chill it in the frig.  When chilled, it will be thicker on the bottom, with some liquid on top.  Stir it up and then remove 1/2 cup from the batch, to freeze as the starter for your next batch.  I label the starter according to its generation from the original store-bought starter.

Yogurt starter

Is the powdered milk a necessary ingredient?

No, but they say it adds more solids to the finished product.  I think that’s true.  It also boosts the calcium and protein content.

Yogurt not set after 4 hours?

Give it another 4 hours.  If it still isn’t set, stir in another 1/2 cup of plain yogurt (room temperature), and give it a few more hours.  I’ve probably had fewer than 5 batches ever, that didn’t set the first time.  Of those few rogue batches, I’ve never had one that didn’t set using the follow-up steps.  You will be successful.

How do I use the yogurt?

Mainly in smoothies, which I make ahead in pitcher-sized quantities.

Strawberry Smoothie

 On yogurt makers:

It’s true you don’t need to buy one; certainly not an expensive one.  I spent less than $20 on mine, because I caught it on special.   Also, I held out for a yogurt maker that does the quart-sized batch.  The makers that come with individual serving cups look unnecessarily tedious to me.

Until I broke down and acquired a yogurt maker, I used a metal enamel bowl (such as the large one in this set), and an inexpensive candle warmer.  That setup worked great.  This is not the candle warmer’s intended use, so if you try it, make sure you do it safely.

Yogurt equipment

Are you partial to “Greek” yogurt?

I make that too.  In other words, I occasionally strain a batch of fresh yogurt and keep it on hand for use in place of some of the sour cream or mayonnaise in certain recipes.  Straining it then means doing something with the whey (aka liquid protein) that’s drained off.  You can dispose of it (bad), or find a use for it in other foods (good).  Stay tuned…

First of May

It’s that time again!  Juneathon starts in a month.

We’ve had some wonderful running weather this Spring, but this week it has been cold, windy, and downright Wintery.  Tonight we have a frost advisory, which means I have to cover up the tiny plants I’ve been transplanting outdoors over the last two weeks.  And so it goes through these weeks of ‘Sprinter’.

And…there went March.

Before I discovered Janathon, I would put on weight every January.  The holiday seasons have never been a problem for me; I’ve rarely overindulged in Christmas party buffets.  Then when that was all over, I would start indulging, possibly giving in to post-holiday doldrums.  But the past two years, Janathon cured me of that, and staved off the new year’s weight gain.  Until February, that is.  My January weight gain has now apparently become my February weight gain, which then folds into something to give up for Lent.  This year I’ve successfully (so far) given up pizza, and eventually resumed my daily yoga and mile.  I ordered several pizzas in February, which means I ate several pizzas. Pizza orders are a leading indicator that I’m on the slippery weight gain slope.  Then eventually even my ‘fat jeans’ start feeling snug, and then I know it’s time to stop indulging and step up the activity.

And now Spring is here, with light in the evenings for running, and milder temperatures.  All is good.  I did my mile after 7pm last night, and it wasn’t dark out.  I can’t say enough about the daily 15 minutes of yoga stretches in the morning, and a mile run in the evening.  The distance is nothing to brag about.  Some (me included at times) wouldn’t even count it as a run. But making it part of my daily routine is, along with the yoga, making me faster.  My posture is better, my stomach is tightening up, and I am energized with good spirits all day.  These things become evident after less than a week of the routine.  How can this not be a good routine?  I will have to start building in some weekly long runs, because I’ve got a few races planned this year; the first in early June.  But for now, I’m celebrating the success of this seemingly small daily effort.  It is making me feel good.

And then there was a superb tribute band that came to town.
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Use it up

Last month while stuck indoors during one of our winter storms, I cleaned out my stash of yarn, needles, patterns, and pieces.  The knitting muse struck.  It was time to use some things up.

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My inspiration piece was the lower back of a sweater that my grandma had started knitting in some prior decade, but never finished.  I had several balls of the main color yarn, but none of the accent colors.  I cut her piece in half vertically (after using the sewing machine to zig-zag on each side of the cutting line).  This made two lower sleeve pieces.

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Then I started knitting the body.  The needles were Size 15.  I used 3 or 4 yarns at a time, and worked in a k2-p2 checkerboard pattern.  That made the sweater extra-bulky.  When it was time to connect the sleeves and form the shoulders and neck, I adapted to this crochet pattern.

Crochet sweater lionbrandThe crochet pattern is a free download from here, once you’ve registered (for free) with Lionbrand.com.

I used a crochet shell stitch in Grandma’s main color, to bind the center front edges and make the sleeve seams.  The plastic buttons were my only purchase for the project.  They came in multi-colored sets of six for under $2.IMG_6375w-cropped--marked

The sweater is heavy enough to be a light coat.  It will be just right for some of our upcoming Spring days.

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The sweater still needs to be steamed and blocked, particularly the waistline and edging.  There are a few loose ends to tuck in.

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My grandma was my life’s example of using what you have.  I can hear her laughing now, at how I “finished” her sweater.  I think she would approve.

Much of this project was knitted and crocheted on Sunday nights, while I watched this season of Downton Abbey.  My grandma would have been the age of Downton babies, Sybil and George.  And now a glimpse of what their grandma, the Countess of Grantham does in the off-season:

Well, there went February

Just like that, it’s gone.  I really don’t know where February went.  I was terribly busy, but on what?  On watching Downton Abbey (and knitting) on Sunday nights.  And then there is basketball.  Lots of basketball.  What a season!  And then I’ve been blessed with lots to do at my “day job.”  All is good.

It is still Winter, judging from this past weekend’s ice and snow, and frigid temps.  I do hope this is the last blast of the bitter, bitter cold for the season.

I did a 3.5 mile run-walk on Sunday evening, when the outside temperature was 7F/-14C, with a windchill of -15F/-26C.  I bundled up in a hooded down parka and pants, with a wicking layer underneath, and suede ugg boots, with face and hands well-covered; yet another strange ensemble, but it worked.  I took along my ‘good’ camera, and cradled it like a football while running.  The boots are not waterproof, but it was too cold for anything to melt and soak in.  My feet, and the rest of me, stayed toasty warm. I ended up sweating quite a bit inside the down layer, but that doesn’t mean I wore too many layers.  I needed that level of protection against the cold, because I quickly got cold when taking a walk break.  This kept the walk breaks short and infrequent–not a bad thing, since I really don’t need them as much as I’m just using them to change up the pace, or to pause and admire a view with my camera.

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The only signs of life I saw on the entire 3.5 mile loop, were an old pickup-snowplow making his rounds, and this guy, who had a faaabulous coat.

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Once again, I got started too late, and finished in the dark.  This is becoming a habit.  There is a captivating vibe, being out on foot on a snowy road at night.  It is a beautiful stillness that belies the upset routines and daytime chaos of vehicles trying to conquer the snowy streets.  The bright snow and occasional street lamps make it just light enough to see.

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Apparently, I’m not the only one March has snuck up on.  *smile*

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This weekend, if the forecast holds, I’ll be back in my cropped tights.  I’m crossing my fingers for that, and imagining the warmer air.