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Breakfast without bread relies on organic brown rice bibimbap to give me a full feeling. In restaurants, bibimbap is usually served with a cooked or raw egg on top. |
I've given up bread and pizza, but not foods that leave me satisfied and allow me to keep off the weight I've lost.
I often rely on 100% whole-wheat pasta from Trader Joe's and organic brown rice from Costco Wholesale -- and other dinner leftovers -- as substitutes for bread at breakfast.
My body seems to process whole-wheat pasta and brown rice better than their conventional counterparts or bread.
I miss pizza, but get the same gooey pleasure by adding sliced, reduced-fat cheese to omelets.
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A gooey cheese-and-wild-lox omelet goes great with whole-wheat spirals. |
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Leftover sauteed cabbage and boiled squash add body to another cheesey omelet. |
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Stewed pollock, a prepared item from H Mart; smoked wild salmon and canned fish salad taste great for breakfast with tofu, radish kimchi and tomatoes in a za'atar thyme mixture. |
I bought shredded vegetables from H Mart, and prepared a Korean comfort dish called bibimbap for dinner one night last week.
But I ate most of it at breakfast instead of bread (top photo).
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For bibimbap, I made 2 cups of organic brown rice in an electric cooker, then added prepared vegetables from H Mart, a hot-pepper paste called gochujang and sesame oil. |
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H Mart Fresh in Fort Lee sells vegetables for bibimbap ($6.49). |
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This hot-pepper paste from Korea is one of the few without high fructose corn syrup. |
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H Mart Fresh (1379 16th St., Fort Lee; 201-944-9009) is the smallest of the Korean chain's stores in Bergen County, but it has a lot of prepared food and seafood, below. |
H Mart Fresh draws shoppers from nearby high-rises. You see the word "fresh" repeated a number of times inside the store.
I did find a hot-pepper paste, called gochujang, made without high-fructose corn syrup or sugar (see photo). A 2.2-pound jar was $7.49.
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