Thursday, October 16, 2025

Better than the Jar Salsa - Pantry Series

 


🌢️ Pantry Series: Better-Than-the-Jar Salsa

Use What You Have — Fresh, Simple, and Sleeve-Friendly

Welcome to my Pantry Series, where I take a look at what’s already in the kitchen and make something satisfying out of it — no special trips to the store, no complicated ingredients, just real, doable food.

The other night I was completely out of my Taco Bell sauce and even the jarred salsa was gone. Instead of giving up, I grabbed what I had: a can of diced tomatoes, half a jalapeΓ±o, some onion, and a lemon. A few minutes later, I had something fresh, bright, and far better than anything from a jar.

This little recipe reminded me that even in the middle of my gastric sleeve bariatric journey, food can still feel fresh and full of life. So many meals at this stage are soft or simple, but every now and then something wakes your taste buds up again — this was one of those moments.


Better-Than-the-Jar Salsa

πŸ₯£ What I Used

  • 1 can diced tomatoes (I kept the juice for extra body)

  • ½ jalapeΓ±o, finely chopped (or about 1 tablespoon jarred jalapeΓ±os, drained and minced)

  • ¼–½ onion, chopped

  • Juice of ½ lemon

  • 1 small clove garlic (or ¼ tsp garlic powder)

  • ¼ tsp cumin

  • Salt to taste

  • (Optional: pinch of sugar to balance acidity)


πŸ”ͺ How To Make It

  1. Add all ingredients to a blender or food processor.

  2. Pulse until you reach your desired consistency — smooth like restaurant salsa or left a bit chunky for texture.

  3. Taste and adjust: add more lemon for brightness, salt for flavor, or cumin for warmth.

  4. Chill 10–15 minutes before serving so the flavors can blend together.



πŸ‹ Notes

This recipe makes about 2 cups of salsa — just enough to enjoy fresh for a few days. Keeping the tomato juice makes it chunkier and adds depth, and the garlic and cumin bring warmth without needing cilantro.

It’s light, refreshing, and bariatric-friendly — adding brightness to eggs, chicken, tacos, or even mixed into cottage cheese or refried beans for an easy protein-packed dip.

Sometimes, the best meals are born out of the moments when you simply use what you have.

Let’s Connect

Have an idea?
Share it in the comments — I’d love to hear what’s working for you during your different phases πŸ’›

Till we meet again

love and find joy in your day 

Louise

Monday, October 6, 2025

Tiny Meals - Sweet Potato Tuna Melts

 


🍠 Sweet Potato Tuna Melts — A Tiny Twist on Comfort Food

I’m still walking through my bariatric real-food phase, and every week feels like a new chapter in rediscovery. The challenge now is learning how to build real meals — soft, protein-forward, and easy on my new stomach — while still finding a little spark of comfort and creativity in each bite.

Right now, I’m working with about 4 oz portions, aiming to slowly reach 8 oz (about one cup) in the next month. Every meal is a lesson in balance, patience, and portion awareness. Some days, I hit that perfect mix of flavor and fullness — and other days, I’m simply grateful for progress, not perfection.

That’s how this one came to be — my Sweet Potato Tuna Melts. It’s one of those “tiny but mighty” meals that delivers warmth, comfort, and a little bit of nostalgia, all within a few small bites.


Why I Love This Tiny Meal

There’s something about melted cheese, seasoned tuna, and roasted sweet potato that just feels homey. This version came together when I wanted something warm, filling, and soft-textured — but still protein-rich and mindful of portion size.

Each little round feels like its own mini meal. They’re easy to hold, chew, and digest, and they give that “real food” feeling without overdoing it. You can start with just a few — and later, as tolerance improves, stretch it into a full plate or even make them toast-style using longer slices of sweet potato.


🍴 Sweet Potato Tuna Melts (Tiny Meals)



Makes: 1 serving (about 3.5–4 oz total)
Prep Time: 10 min Cook Time: 10–12 min Total: 20–25 min

Ingredients

  • 1 small sweet potato, sliced into rounds (each about ½–¾ oz)

  • 1 (5 oz) can tuna, drained to 4 oz

  • 1½ tbsp plain Greek yogurt or small-curd cottage cheese

  • 1 tbsp finely minced carrot

  • 1 tbsp finely minced celery

  • 1 tbsp finely minced onion

  • ½ slice American cheese (or a small sprinkle of shredded cheese — use your favorite)

  • Seasonings to taste: salt, pepper, garlic powder, paprika, lemon pepper or Old Bay

  • Optional (later stages): 1–2 thin slices of cherry tomato


Instructions

  1. Prepare the Sweet Potato:
    Slice the sweet potato into ½–¾ oz rounds. Leave the peel on while cooking — it helps the rounds keep their shape.

  2. Cook the Rounds:
    Lightly spray with oil or cooking spray.
    Air fry at 390 °F for 8–10 minutes, turning once halfway through, until tender and lightly crisped on the edges.
    (You can also bake or toaster bake due to the small size.)

  3. Make the Tuna Salad:
    In a small bowl, combine the drained tuna, Greek yogurt (or cottage cheese), and minced vegetables. Season with lemon pepper or Old Bay to taste. Mix well.

  4. Assemble the Melts:
    Use about 1–1½ oz of cooked sweet potato rounds as your base.
    Top each disc with a small scoop of tuna salad (about 2–3 oz total, depending on your stage).
    Add a small piece of cheese (I used ½ slice of American) or a light sprinkle of your favorite shredded cheese.

    Tip: If you’re early in recovery or sensitive to skins, peel the sweet potatoes after cooking and before eating.

  5. Melt & Serve:
    Return to the air fryer (or oven/toaster oven) for 1–2 minutes, just until the cheese melts and turns slightly golden.
    For later stages, add a thin cherry tomato slice under the cheese before melting.


πŸ”’ Nutrition Estimate (3.5–4 oz total)

NutrientAmount
Calories≈ 150 kcal
Protein≈ 16 g
Carbohydrates≈ 7 g
Fat≈ 5 g
Fiber≈ 1.5 g
Sodium≈ 370 mg




πŸ’‘ Bariatric Real Food Note

This recipe is portioned for one — perfect for early real-food stages.
As your tolerance and needs increase, you can make a few extra rounds or slice the sweet potato lengthwise to create toast-style bases for larger “melts.”
It’s a natural way to grow your portions while keeping the focus on protein and balance.


A Little Reflection

When I first imagined “tiny meals,” I thought I’d feel deprived — but it’s the opposite.
I’ve discovered that food, even in its smallest form, can still be satisfying, meaningful, and full of grace.

Each meal is a reminder that healing takes patience — and that even small bites can hold big progress.
One round, one melt, one mindful moment at a time.

Always and most importantly — thank you to my family and friends for all the love and support that has carried me this far. I will be back for me in the days ahead. This is just the beginning. πŸ’›

Let’s Connect

Have an idea?
Share it in the comments — I’d love to hear what’s working for you during your different phases πŸ’›

Till we meet again

love and find joy in your day 

Louise

Tiny Meals - Tortilla Pizza

 


πŸ• Tiny Tortilla Pizza — Real Food in a Tiny Way

I’m still in the bariatric stages, and I’ve finally reached the real food part — that exciting (and sometimes intimidating) stage where you start testing what your new stomach can handle. It’s a time of learning, experimenting, and rediscovering food in a whole new way.

Right now, I’m staying protein-forward and working with about 4 oz portions, gradually building up toward 8 oz — or roughly one cup — within the next month. It’s not always easy, but every successful meal feels like a small victory.

I enjoy sharing these moments as I go along — not because I have it all figured out, but because each stage teaches me something new about my body, my relationship with food, and what real nourishment looks like now.


Why I Love This Tiny Meal

There’s something so comforting about pizza — that familiar smell of warm sauce, melted cheese, and crisp edges. But after bariatric surgery, the traditional version doesn’t fit our new reality (literally!).

That’s where this little creation comes in: a single-serve, protein-forward Tiny Tortilla Pizza that brings all the flavor and satisfaction of pizza night — just sized for your current phase. It’s quick, simple, and gentle on your new stomach while still feeling like real food.


πŸ… Tiny Tortilla Pizza Recipe



Makes: 1 serving (3.5 ish oz total)
Prep Time: 5 min Cook Time: 5–6 min Total: 10–12 min

Ingredients

  • 2 zero-carb street tortillas (Mission Zero Carb or similar)

  • ¼ cup pizza sauce (or seasoned tomato/spaghetti sauce)

  • ⅛ oz shredded Italian cheese (or mozzarella)

  • 4 slices turkey pepperoni, diced very small (since the pizza is tiny)

  • Optional: finely diced toppings like onion, mushroom, olive, or bell pepper

Instructions

  1. Crisp: Air fry, bake, or toaster bake the two tortillas at 375 °F for 2–3 minutes until lightly crisp — whichever method works best for your setup, since the pizza is tiny.

  2. Layer: Spread a thin coat of sauce and a sprinkle of cheese on one tortilla, top with the second, then spread the rest of the sauce, cheese, and toppings.

  3. Cook: Return to air fryer, oven, or toaster oven for 2–3 minutes until cheese melts and edges brown.

  4. Serve: Let cool a minute; slice or enjoy whole — a compact, high-protein mini pizza.


πŸ”’ Nutrition Estimate (3.5 ish oz total)

NutrientAmount
Calories≈ 135 kcal
Protein≈ 13 g
Carbohydrates≈ 3 g (net 2 g if using zero-carb tortillas)
Fat≈ 7 g
Fiber≈ 1 g
Sodium≈ 420 mg




πŸ’‘ Bariatric Real Food Note

This recipe is portioned for one — perfect for early real-food stages. As your tolerance and needs increase, preparing two can make a balanced and satisfying meal while keeping the focus on protein and portion awareness.


A Tiny Bite of Normal

When you’re in recovery and craving something that feels like real food, it’s not about giving in — it’s about re-learning balance.

This little pizza is one of those moments where something small brings big joy. It reminds me that healing doesn’t have to mean giving up the things we love; it just means learning new ways to enjoy them.

Each “tiny” meal has its own quiet victory — one bite, one phase, one day at a time.
And through it all, I’m reminded: God is still in the details — even in a 3.5-ounce pizza. πŸ•✨

Always and most importantly — thank you to my family and friends for all the love and support that has carried me this far. I will be back in the days ahead. This is just the beginning. πŸ’›

Let’s Connect

Have an idea?
Share it in the comments — I’d love to hear what’s working for you during your different phases πŸ’›

Till we meet again

love and find joy in your day 

Louise

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