Thursday, 17 of May of 2012

Category » weight watchers

Weight Watchers Tips for the Holidays

By Cathy Thomas, Orange County Register
Original story can be seen at:  http://www.ocregister.com/articles/-278383–.html

Judith Norton is someone who gets things done. My longtime friend envisions creative solutions where others just see quandaries. If a task requires endless energy, that’s never a problem.

Before the holiday season last year, her Weight Watchers group was developing strategies to avoid packing on pounds at parties.

Norton, an accomplished cook and a senior corporate trainer, thought it would be a great if members had a collection of healthy recipes that could be used for holiday entertaining. To make sure everyone understood how delicious and easy-to-make the recipes she had chosen were, she invited them to her home for a cooking party. A sign-up list for ingredients was circulated at the meeting, so everyone contributed to the cost of the event. And when they showed up, all the components for each dish were ready at stations inside and on the patios of her Huntington Beach home.

I wangled an invitation to this year’s cookathon, what she calls the second “healthful cooking adventure.” Twenty participants showed up the rainy Saturday before Thanksgiving. With the oh-so-wet patios off limits, Norton improvised work areas in her garage as well as her kitchen.

They divided into groups and set out to tackle 12 recipes.

“This close-knit group has been together for over two years, and they are really unique. They are so supportive of one another and they interact so well,” said Lorraine Clausen, the Weight Watchers leader of Norton’s group that meets in Long Beach. “The event shows that you can give a party and not overdo.”
Joining the faction in the kitchen, I watched as Norton gave a quick tutorial on poaching salmon. She explained that she uses a turkey roasting pan that has a lid because she doesn’t like to buy specialized pieces of equipment if she already owns something that works.

“Everyone thinks it’s difficult to poach salmon, but it is so easy,” she said lopping off a small portion of tail end and wrapping the skin-off salmon fillet in a double layer of cheesecloth (creating handles with excess cheesecloth on both ends). She lowered the fish into the roaster, submerging it in a mixture of water, white wine and fresh dill. She placed the pan over two burners and put on the lid. She turned the burners on high and set a timer for 12 minutes.

“If it isn’t cooked after 12 minutes, you can always return it to the pan and cook it some more,” she said.

Without missing a beat, she removed cold poached salmon from the refrigerator. It had some fissures in it, but she instructed the team to fill those in with sauce and adorn with garnishes. She assured them it would look gorgeous.

Judy Gesicki, Veronica Espinoza and Pat Norton joined Clausen to make two slathering sauces as well as thinly slicing cucumbers and limes to use as garnish.

In the garage, three teams were hard at work. One was making cold avocado soup to be served in shot glasses, another making flatbread atop strips of thin lavash. Another was making beet-boosted hummus and red pepper dip to be served with toasted pita triangles.

Soup-makers Lupe Hemauer and Cheryl Carter took advice from Peggy Giavanti and added more coconut milk. Hummus-makers Kris Margetts and Angie Ocheltree pureed, sampled and seasoned. Ocheltree told me she has lost 107 pounds in the Weight Watchers program.

Mary Holzgang and her team assembled flatbreads at a station that was popular; everyone seemed to stop by to put their signature on these tasty appetizers.

Soon the flatbreads were out of the oven. Piping hot, the cheese had melted around the figs and melded with caramelized onion. The scent was divine.

Everyone sampled, then moved on to create more dishes: coconut shrimp, goat cheese with spicy peach sauce, some skewered chicken with satay sauce and a salad with fuyu persimmon, jicama and mango. Plus, a lemony dessert with angel food cake.

The dessert group looked puzzled. They didn’t have a recipe, just a tray with ingredients. Norton explained that the dish was so simple, no recipe was required. She told them she had seen Giada De Laurentiis do a similar dish on TV. But instead of making a lemon sponge cake from scratch, Giada-style, they were going to use store-bought angel food.

After they cut the cake into cubes, Norton added nonfat Greek yogurt, lemon zest and juice, and agave syrup to taste. Nothing was measured – she simply added, tasted and added more as needed. I sampled. It had an irresistible, tart, lemon pie kind of flavor.

Spooned into shot glasses, each dessert was garnished with a little whipped cream.

The team arranged the buffet on a huge table in her neighbor’s garage.

Standing behind the table, the group squeezed in for a photograph.

“We’re all so thin from Weight Watchers, that’s why we can fit behind this table,” Giavanti said with a giggle.

Soon their plates held the fruits of their labor, a glorious assortment of holiday fare.

Me? I was eating from a rubber spatula, cleaning the bowl that held the remnants of that lemony dessert.

No one saw. Probably wrong, but I couldn’t help it.

Recipe: Judith’s Poached Salmon
Recipe: Mustard Sauce
Recipe: Flatbread With Caramelized Onion, Fig and Fontina Cheese
Recipe: Goat Cheese With Spicy Peach Sauce
Recipe: Coconut Shrimp
Recipe: Roasted Red Pepper Dip
Recipe: Golden Hummus
Recipe: Skewered Chicken With Satay Sauce

Share

Weight Watchers Revamping Point System

If you’re like most of my friends in the popular Weight Watchers diet program, you’ve memorized the point count for every food you eat. But now you’re going to have to start over. Weight Watchers

For the uninitiated, Weight Watchers assigns points for every portion of every food you eat.  One of the things that makes the diet program so popular is that you can eat anything you like — as long as you don’t exceed your allocated number of points. Weight Watchers has modified the program a bit, to encourage dieters to spend their points on healthier and less calorie-dense foods.

Now the program is getting a major change.  The new ProPoints system has been very popular in central Europe, where it was given a trial launch last year.  On  Friday Nov. 12 and Wednesday Nov. 17  (news so good it can’t be given all at once?) Weight Watchers is telling health reporters to gear up for a major announcement.  That announcement, already made at a stock analyst’s meeting in February, is that Weight Watchers is going to launch ProPoints in North America.

So what are ProPoints?  According to what the company is telling UK reporters, it tells you “the amount of energy that is available in food after you’ve eaten it.”  The system calculates points based on an individual’s sex, age, weight, and height.  Calculators already available as smartphone apps will calculate ProPoints for you once you’ve input these factors along with the weight and specific type of food you’d like to eat.

Food manufacturers who feature Weight Watcher points on package labels are expected to start listing the foods new ProPoint values.

Weight Watchers says the change is needed because new scientific knowledge about energy balance has made the old system outdated.  At news conferences for the financial press, WeightWatchers executive say the ProPoints program has been increasing business.  They hope the same will happen in the U.S., where business has been flagging.

WebMD has analyzed the Weight Watchers program and has found it to be among the most effective systems for losing weight.  It is a successful combination of watching what you eat,  avoiding hunger, emphasizing healthy eating, increasing exercise, and — a crucial ingredient — community support.

It remains to be seen whether the new point system will catch on with  North American weight watchers. But if blogs from Europe are any indication, the new system is likely to become quite popular — even if all my friends will have to learn a new point system.

Source:  Daniel J. DeNoon, Senior Medical Writer, WebMD

Share