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Old 03-02-10 | 11:24 AM
  #51  
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rhm
multimodal commuter
 
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Bikes: 1940s Fothergill, 1959 Allegro Special, 1963? Claud Butler Olympic Sprint, Lambert 'Clubman', 1974 Fuji "the Ace", 1976 Holdsworth 650b conversion rando bike, 1983 Trek 720 tourer, 1984 Counterpoint Opus II, 1993 Basso Gap, 2010 Downtube 8h, and...

I make granola bars every couple of weeks. Oats, flax seeds, almonds, oil, honey, coconut, candied ginger, and chocolate.
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Old 03-02-10 | 10:13 PM
  #52  
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From: Belmont, CA

Bikes: Motobecane Fantom 29, Trek 850 Mountain Track

Originally Posted by tarwheel
Doesn't anyone around here just eat milk and cereal for breakfast? That's what I eat most of the time. It's quick to prepare, tastes good and fills me up. I buy healthy cereals made with whole grains and dried fruit and nuts. Sometimes I have oatmeal or frozen waffles with yogurt for variety. Eggs take too long to cook and clean up, and I usually don't have a taste for them when I first get up.
I used to, but after eating the same thing for a long time, I end up switching it up to something else. I usually make it the night before and get the coffee pot set-up (w/timer) so I can stuff my face and roll when the time is right.

I also used to do the "get up, get dressed and leave" thing for years because I thought I could maximize the amount of time that I could sleep, but I found out that it just made me more miserable. Getting up a little earlier, eating breakfast and slamming a pot of coffee made me feel a lot better, have more energy and be able to start the day on a more positive note.
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Old 03-03-10 | 10:48 AM
  #53  
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I bike to the station and then take the train in - it's a loooong train ride, so I like to sleep. This means no breakfast or caffeine when I get up - I wait until work, otherwise, I'll have too much energy to nap on the train. I also don't like riding right after I eat.

Right now, I'm doing the "low carb" thing, so I was getting scrambled eggs + bacon at the caf every morning. This is getting pricey, so I'm now packing in breakfast, which I'll make the night before, refrigerate, and pack in a re-usable plastic container, which then goes into a soft-sided insulated lunch bag. My lunchbag zippers shut and buckles to the outside of my commuter pannier - it's really small, but, will hold both breakfast and lunch plus ice pack, and has a little pocket for utensils.

Here's on the menu for next week:

a) A pair of hardboiled eggs, and a few slices of canned corned beef browned in the skillet (like hash, only w/o the potatoes.) I nuke the corned beef and eat the eggs cold with a little black pepper.
b1) Breakfast burrito with toasted low-carb tortilla, scrambled eggs, shredded fontina cheese, sauteed bell pepper and linguicia (Portuguese sausage popular in Rhode Island. Spicy italian or BBQ sausage will work. I hate breakfast sausage.) Do up the sausage, peppers and eggs in a scramble, wrap in a tortilla. Nuke at work.
b2) Breakfast burrito with thin-sliced or chopped steak (or steak-ums if you're feeling lazy), sauteed mushrooms and onions, shredded cheddar and scrambled eggs. Nuke at work or the steak will stick in your teeth.
c) Tunafish salad in a low-carb pita pocket - tuna, diced celery and mayo, with a few greens, a slice of sharp cheddar, and a thin slice of onion. (I also pack a toothbrush.) Eat cold.
d) Cobb salad - sliced hardboiled eggs, fresh, crumbled bacon and a few slices of avocado on greens with bleu cheese dressing or bleu cheese crumbles. Eat cold.

Non low-carb options for cheat days (or when I have a cold - don't diet sick!):

d) Salmon and brown rice kedgeree - works either hot or cold. I don't like trout, and salmon is available in the can if I'm lazy and don't want to cook up a fillet or steak. Brown rice is one of those things I used to think was health-food store junk, but it's beyond tasty when cooked right.
e) Oatmeal - get some nice steel-cut oats, and a mini-crockpot. Cook all night at the lowest setting with a handful of slivered almonds, crushed walnuts, craisins, raisins and dried cherries, and a few sprinkles of nutmeg. Will be sweet, tangy, nutty, and keep you full until dinner. Pack it in a little thermos or nuke at work.
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Old 03-03-10 | 03:18 PM
  #54  
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Joined: Oct 2009
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From: Cape Ann, MA

Bikes: Two wheels, it goes

I've used this recipe and think that it is not only nutritious but delicious and packs a lot of punch in a little package!

https://www.foodnetwork.com/recipes/a...ipe/index.html

All hail Alton Brown..
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