Keep Working on it Kirstie Alley!

by Laura on March 28, 2010

in Writing Exercises

Kirstie Alley’s Big Life is better and more inspirational than watching all those Jenny Craig commercials. To see her actually exercising, going hiking and climbing those stairs… it is far more real than all the polished commericals ever were. I think before it seemed she had someone lose the weight for her, it was never real. We get so used to seeing Hollywood being fake and fawning over each other. I really like seeing Kirstie as someone real, doing real things, feeling real things.

I’ve laughed, I’ve cried and I’ve wondered at how different the Hollywood lifestyle is (cause there is no way I would have thought a rat running around my house was cute – dead, not cute).  But, watching her last Sunday and again this weekend, I can’t believe she is really doing it and being a real fat woman versus someone selling a diet program. Good for you Kirstie!

I’ve been trying to eat less. I don’t exercise. I try to walk more but not really thinking of it as exercise. I can’t say I will do more after watching Kirstie but I don’t feel quite so alone in the world.

Kirstie on Twitter and her Blog

Have a look at Phitter too.

Phitter is a Phitness Phocused community and gift from Kirstie to encourage talk or ‘Phits’ about health, diet & exercise while making new Phriends in the Phitter-mmunity and having Phabulous Phun…Phew!

Found on Oprah.com:

Recipe created by Kirstie Alley and Sean Prenter
In her quest to lose weight, the actress eats this green soup made with as many organic vegetables as possible.
Servings: Makes 23 cups
Ingredients:
Kirstie Alley’s Green Soup
6 to 8 big chunks shallots
8 leeks (Cut leeks just above their white part, about 2 inches. Peel the outer layer off and then slit them open lengthwise, but not completely severed clear through. Rinse them out well.)
1/3 cup organic olive oil
2 big bunches asparagus (cut the hard ends off about 3 inches)
3 big bunches broccoli (cut the stems off halfway up the shafts)
2 big bunches spinach (cut off the tiny part of the dirty ends)
6 containers (32 ounces each) organic chicken broth (for vegetarians, use vegetable broth)
Sea salt (at least 3 tablespoons of coarse grain)
Pepper , to taste
Directions:
Peel and slice shallots thinly.
Put all the olive oil in a very large, deep pot. Turn the heat to medium-high. Put the shallots into the oil and sweat the shallots. “Sweating” means to cook the vegetables to tenderize them without browning them. Adjust heat as necessary to ensure they do not brown.
Add 1 tablespoon of coarse, ground, good quality sea salt to shallots to absorb while they are sweating. Cut the leeks into thin slices and toss them into the oil with the shallots. Sweat the leeks along with the shallots. Chop the asparagus into small bits and then add them to the mixture and sweat them, along with the shallots and leeks.
When the shallots, asparagus and leeks are fully sweated and tender, break the broccoli into small chunks and throw them into the soup pot. (If the shallots, leeks and asparagus combo gets too dry before they are tender, just add small amounts of chicken broth to the mix and keep on sweating.)
Let the broccoli sweat a little while (about 2 minutes) and then add half of your organic chicken stock. Cook this for about 10 minutes.
Add remaining chicken stock and continue cooking for another 5-10 minutes. (You want the broccoli to be tender, but not overcooked, and you want the color of soup to always remain a nice, bright green.) Add all the spinach and cook for an additional 3 to 5 minutes. Turn the flame off the mixture and season to taste with sea salt and pepper.
Transfer the soup into a blender by increments and puree the mixture. Put the pureed soup mixture into one big pot. Then taste and season it to your liking. Only season with salt and pepper. If you desire any other seasoning, create an individual serving, not in the whole pot.
Split the soup into 2 equal parts, one for you and one for your Chubby Buddy or for storage. Cool the soup before refrigerating and/or freezing.
You are basically adding the vegetables in order of their hardness. The spinach is so soft, you would never want to add it too early. If you do, it can make the soup turn brownish…ICK!
Eat this soup once or twice a day or whenever you are hungry. Green Soup is 62 calories per cup.
This recipe yields about 23 cups of soup, enough for you and your Chubby Buddy for an entire week. Make sure your cooking pot is big, or you can halve the recipe.

Kirstie Alley’s Green Soup Recipe created by Kirstie Alley and Sean Prenter
In her quest to lose weight, the actress eats this green soup made with as many organic vegetables as possible.
Servings: Makes 23 cups
Ingredients:
Kirstie Alley’s Green Soup6 to 8 big chunks shallots8 leeks (Cut leeks just above their white part, about 2 inches. Peel the outer layer off and then slit them open lengthwise, but not completely severed clear through. Rinse them out well.)1/3 cup organic olive oil2 big bunches asparagus (cut the hard ends off about 3 inches)3 big bunches broccoli (cut the stems off halfway up the shafts)2 big bunches spinach (cut off the tiny part of the dirty ends)6 containers (32 ounces each) organic chicken broth (for vegetarians, use vegetable broth)Sea salt (at least 3 tablespoons of coarse grain)Pepper , to tasteDirections:
Peel and slice shallots thinly.
Put all the olive oil in a very large, deep pot. Turn the heat to medium-high. Put the shallots into the oil and sweat the shallots. “Sweating” means to cook the vegetables to tenderize them without browning them. Adjust heat as necessary to ensure they do not brown.
Add 1 tablespoon of coarse, ground, good quality sea salt to shallots to absorb while they are sweating. Cut the leeks into thin slices and toss them into the oil with the shallots. Sweat the leeks along with the shallots. Chop the asparagus into small bits and then add them to the mixture and sweat them, along with the shallots and leeks.
When the shallots, asparagus and leeks are fully sweated and tender, break the broccoli into small chunks and throw them into the soup pot. (If the shallots, leeks and asparagus combo gets too dry before they are tender, just add small amounts of chicken broth to the mix and keep on sweating.)

Let the broccoli sweat a little while (about 2 minutes) and then add half of your organic chicken stock. Cook this for about 10 minutes.
Add remaining chicken stock and continue cooking for another 5-10 minutes. (You want the broccoli to be tender, but not overcooked, and you want the color of soup to always remain a nice, bright green.) Add all the spinach and cook for an additional 3 to 5 minutes. Turn the flame off the mixture and season to taste with sea salt and pepper.

Transfer the soup into a blender by increments and puree the mixture. Put the pureed soup mixture into one big pot. Then taste and season it to your liking. Only season with salt and pepper. If you desire any other seasoning, create an individual serving, not in the whole pot.
Split the soup into 2 equal parts, one for you and one for your Chubby Buddy or for storage. Cool the soup before refrigerating and/or freezing.You are basically adding the vegetables in order of their hardness. The spinach is so soft, you would never want to add it too early. If you do, it can make the soup turn brownish…ICK!
Eat this soup once or twice a day or whenever you are hungry. Green Soup is 62 calories per cup. This recipe yields about 23 cups of soup, enough for you and your Chubby Buddy for an entire week. Make sure your cooking pot is big, or you can halve the recipe.

Word Grrls is my mad science experiment, my adventures with fame and world domination (politely). This is where I inspire people to create: invent mutations, cause change, bring colour into your world. Web writer since 1998. Find me on StumbleUpon , and Tumblr.

Facebook Twitter Google+ Flickr 

Comments on this entry are closed.

Previous post:

Next post: