Showing posts with label lunch. Show all posts
Showing posts with label lunch. Show all posts
Wednesday, March 23, 2011
Mexi tofu sandwich
I hate wasting food so when I found myself with left over sauteed tofu and refried beans from dinner I thought....lunch!
The tofu had been very simply prepared, marinated in a little oil, vinegar and lemon juice and sauteed with salt and pepper and had served as my soft taco filling while the boys ate chicken. On the bottom we have a layer of my refried beans homemade in my trusty crock pot, topped with a tofu slab then some sauteed onions and a big thick slice of tomato. This was a big, tasty, messy sandwich, I miss that sandwich...I was sad to see it disappear....
Wednesday, January 26, 2011
A lunch for little P
In the never ending quest to find fun, interesting, and healthy lunches I turn once again to What's for Lunch Wednesday. I always enjoy looking at the super cute lunches that some kids are opening up around the country. For Paulo on this day he feasted on baked potato sliced up, a couple of carved carrots-the carving was a huge hit with him and with his lunch buddies-and some grape tomatoes in the main section. Some raw goat cheese-we're experimenting with goat dairy!-and dried cranberries to satisfy his sweet tooth and the last section has strawberry coconut yogurt with a sprinkle of gluten free vanilla cereal on top. Not pictured, for snack, was a rice cake with sunbutter and jam on top which, interestingly, he's decided he doesn't like. He loves rice cakes with Tofuti cream cheese and jam but the sunbutter was not a hit....note to self, no sunbutter on rice cakes....check!
For more lunch inspiration visit What's for Lunch Wednesday!
Wednesday, January 12, 2011
What's for Lunch Wednesday
It's that time of the week again! I love Wednesday, I get loads of inspiration from the What's for Lunch blog. I enjoy perusing other moms and dads' attempts at getting their kids to eat good healthy, whole, REAL food.
This is Paulo's lunch today, he has a dish of potato gnocchi soup, I am loving the glass containers my mother in law gave me for Christmas, he can warm up his lunch in the classroom microwave and I don't have to cringe at the thought of him eating plastics. In his divided container he has a Mandarin, some vanilla coconut milk yogurt, blueberries, grape tomatoes, green olives and some new chips we're trying. They are actually yams and carrots but we'll see if he figures that out and A. loves them or B. hates them or C....somewhere in between.
For more lunch time inspiration visit What's for Lunch at Our House.
Thursday, December 9, 2010
What's for lunch-Paulo
Little P has in his lunch today a tofutti cream cheese and orange marmalade jelly sandwich on Momma made gluten free honey oat bread. A checkerboard apple, carrots and cucumbers cut into cute flowery shapes and some Kettle chips. I also included a dish of vanilla rice yogurt and gluten free cereal for his morning snack.
I invested recently in some cute bento supplies. I got an assortment of stainless steel cutters as well as some new silicone dishes. I also bought an adorable two tier dish that I used this week for fruits and veggies.
Pardon the poor quality picture, I'm in need of a new camera! |
For more adorable lunch inspiration visit What's for Lunch Wednesday!
Wednesday, November 24, 2010
What's for Lunch Wednesday
It's that time of the week again! Time to see just what my 1st grader has been eating. Time to link up with What's for Lunch Wednesday on the Bento Lunch blog and get inspired for lunches to come.
This is one of Paulo's lunches from his last week of school before the Thanksgiving break. In here we have some sliced oranges and kabobs with carrot slices and green olives. I also used a cookie cutter to shape a cucumber into a candy cane. Interestingly enough...he ate it! I guess he really will eat just about anything as long as it's cut cute! The main compartment holds a new item I found at my local New Seasons market. They are called Oregon Harvest Veggi Tots from Chez Gourmet from Marie. To see what's in them click here! I picked them up because they are vegetarian-which is a requirement from the lovely people that own the building we are renting for school, our lunches must not contain meat-and because they have no wheat in them! It is really hard to find a vegetarian "meat" sub that does not contain wheat! All the veggie nuggets I've seen use wheat in one way or another. I have wheat free chicken nuggets but I can't send them to school! Anyway, I was nervous frankly, there's lots of good healthy things in these that kids routinely turn their noses up at. But Paulo, as usual, surprised me and LOVED them! I will definitely be using these again when school starts up as a sandwich alternative.
For other great lunch box ideas visit What's for Lunch in Our House!
Thursday, November 11, 2010
Curry tofu salad
Paulo woke up really, really early Sunday morning-thank you time change! The only benefit to that was turning on the Food Network and catching a bit of The Barefoot Contessa. She was all about chicken Sunday morning, roasting it, making sandwiches from it and also a curried chicken salad. I watched that and thought...that would be easy to make vegetarian!
Curry Tofu Salad:
1 small block of extra firm tofu
2 stalks celery, sliced
1/4 red onion, finely diced
1/2 cup veganaise
1 lemon
1/2 teaspoon curry
1/2 teaspoon cardamom
1/2 teaspoon tumeric
1/4 cup raisins
Drain the tofu, I lined my colander with a paper towel, put the tofu in, covered it with a small plate and then weighed that down with a full tea kettle. When it is drained well, slice it into bite sized pieces.
In a medium sized bowl add the veganaise and the juice from the lemon. Mix in the spices, the celery and the onion and stir well. Stir in the drained and sliced tofu and sprinkle with the raisins. Cover and set aside in the refrigerator, I left mine over night so the tofu really tasted like the spices. Serve stuffed in a pita bread or on a bed of cabbage leaves.
Wednesday, November 10, 2010
What's for lunch Wednesday
Time to visit Bento Lunch's What's for lunch Wednesday for inspiration!
Here's Paulo's:
- sunbutter and jelly sandwich on vegan buckwheat bread
- apple slices
- kettle chips
- kebobs with green olives, cherry tomatoes and soy cheese
Wednesday, October 27, 2010
What a teenager eats
I write about what I feed my little one for lunch often, because, in all honesty his lunches can be cute. I can make checkerboard apples, I can add little bat pics and smiley faces, I can carve cucumbers into little hearts. He's 6. He doesn't mind, he's happy when he finds those little things in his lunchbox. If I did that for my 15 year old, he would probably get beat up in the cafeteria.
But today I thought I'd share what a teenage boy does eat. By the way, he eats a lot. I'm often surprised by what that skinny boy can put away! (And I won't be sharing this post on facebook, because he is also on facebook and I really don't want to embarrass him!)
So today's lunch consists of a peanut butter and jelly sandwich on Dave's Killer Bread with diced jicama and red bell peppers in one dish. In the other we have our cheese and fruit assortment. Little babybel cheeses, trisquits, an apple and a kiwi. Not shown will be his dish of almonds and raisins to munch on when needed-which he'll need...because he eats a lot. I'm a big believer in stuffing as much produce as possible into the lunch and thankfully 95% of the time he finishes it all. I think a lot of kids don't get enough raw veggies and fruit into their diets and I'm really happy that mine are good veggie eaters-for the most part. I mean, this dude would eat an entire red bell pepper if I let him, he loves them! This thrills me because it is a great source of vitamin C, a single cup of diced red bell pepper provides nearly 200% the RDA of vitamin C. Plus since it has fiber the natural sugars in the pepper don't dump straight into your blood stream causing the spike and crash that you can get from candy, juice or soda.
There you have it, a glimpse into the stomach capacity of the modern American teenage boy. I might need a second job to keep feeding him but hey, he's worth it!
For more cute lunch ideas visit the always inspiring Bento Lunch site.!
Wednesday, October 20, 2010
A lunch for Mr. P
I enjoy visiting the What's for Lunch blog, I always get a lot of inspiration for Paulo's lunch box. And every Wednesday, if I'm feeling brave enough, I can share one I made for him!
Here we have a sunbutter and strawberry jelly sandwich on Momma-made gluten free honey oat bread. Grapes and raspberries in Halloween muffin paper. Some sugar peas and cherry tomatoes and last but not least, dessert. He loves dessert. I made cocoa crispy balls last weekend, they were a big hit with the little guy and the big guy! For amusement I stuck in a bat toothpick to eat the grapes. Somehow spearing food makes it so much more fun to eat!
Saturday, October 2, 2010
Welcome to October lunch!
Yesterday being October 1st I decided to get in the Halloween spirit. My son loves Halloween, I'm sure that thrills my big sister to no end if she's still reading my blog, Halloween is her holiday, she gets into it. In all honesty it is my least favorite holiday. But to encourage my sweet boys love of all things spooky I picked up some cute trinkets at the craft store to dress up his lunch.
We have a spoooooky bat holding one kiwi together and another keeping his green olives in line and two Halloween themed muffin cups with soy crisps in one and two muffins in the other. He LOVED it. He didn't see the lunch when I was making it or in the morning so when he opened his box at lunchtime he was so happy to find these Halloween decorations. He's already asking me for Thanksgiving themed lunches next month!
Another fun lunch box surprise was his checker board apple. I found this blog from the links on the What's for Lunch blog. Paulo was looking through the submissions and the apple caught his eye. He immediately asked me to recreate it. After a quick Q to the original creator of the apple I set to work with a knife and created this:
Totally adorable, only took a few extra minutes and it made for a very happy 1st grader!
We have a spoooooky bat holding one kiwi together and another keeping his green olives in line and two Halloween themed muffin cups with soy crisps in one and two muffins in the other. He LOVED it. He didn't see the lunch when I was making it or in the morning so when he opened his box at lunchtime he was so happy to find these Halloween decorations. He's already asking me for Thanksgiving themed lunches next month!
Another fun lunch box surprise was his checker board apple. I found this blog from the links on the What's for Lunch blog. Paulo was looking through the submissions and the apple caught his eye. He immediately asked me to recreate it. After a quick Q to the original creator of the apple I set to work with a knife and created this:
Totally adorable, only took a few extra minutes and it made for a very happy 1st grader!
Wednesday, September 29, 2010
Bento lunch
The lovely, creative, Bento Mom posts a weekly What's for Lunch thread where readers can share what they've been sending our munchkins off to school with. This is my first time participating. It's for an excellent cause though, the more people post their bento lunches the more food she and her husband will donate to their local food bank-an excellent cause, hunger in America is astoundingly high and it affects men, women and children across all cultural and regional boundaries-it especially makes me sad to think of the children going to school hungry. So here goes!
Paulo's lunch for today:
1 black bean tostada with olives, orange cherry tomatoes and avocado.
carrots and green olives
Coconut yogurt parfait layered with GF cereal, fresh blueberries and Trader Joe's dried strawberries
Paulo's lunch for today:
1 black bean tostada with olives, orange cherry tomatoes and avocado.
carrots and green olives
Coconut yogurt parfait layered with GF cereal, fresh blueberries and Trader Joe's dried strawberries
Friday, September 10, 2010
Cocoa nutbutter muffins
Mini cupcakes |
Dry ingredients:
1/2 cup millet flour
1/2 cup brown rice flour
1/4 cup tapioca flour
1/4 cup potato starch
1/4 teaspoon salt
2 teaspoon baking soda
1 teaspoon baking powder
1 teaspoon xanthan gum
2 teaspoon ground flax
1/2 cup cocoa
Combine in a large bowl and set aside.
Wet ingredients:
1/2 cup nutbutter (I used sunbutter due to peanut allergies in school)
2 teaspoon vanilla
1/2 cup honey
1 1/3 cup rice milk
1/4 cup light olive oil
1/4 cup applesauce
Combine in a small bowl, mix well. Add the wet ingredients to the dry and stir to combine. Spray a mini cupcake holder and add batter.
The chocolate chip artist in action |
Decorate with dark chocolate chips and bake at 350 for 20 minutes. Allow to cool in the pan then remove and let them finish cooling on a wire rack.
Enjoying the fruits of his labor |
The continued quest for bread
I love my honey oat bread and plan to make many more loaves of it. But to be honest I've had difficulty with the rising of the bread. I wonder if it's because I have to sub out the eggs for silken tofu, I also wonder though if I wasn't using the wrong size pan. I read that if you want to use a 9x5 pan then you should double the recipe. I had no idea! I will try the honey oat bread recipe again using my old 8x4 and see if that doesn't help.
In the meantime I found a vegan bread recipe that did not require any substitutions. I tried it out early this week. Oh...my.....goodness! It works perfectly! I had high hopes when I saw how beautifully it had risen and even had a sharp crisp edge develop as it lifted itself out of the pan. I also tried a new method for the rising. I had read on another blog about a steam method. Take a clean towel, soak it, wring it out and warm it up in the microwave for 60 seconds. Place your bread pan on the towel and shut the door. Check on it later, reheat the towel if you need it to rise more. Worked great.
I was really excited to see how the bread had baked. Nice and crispy, pretty brown color, that wonderful hollow thunk when you tap the loaf. I set it aside and said a little prayer to the bread Gods that the loaf not fall during cooling.
They answered my prayer. My loaf did not fall. My spirits were lifted. I CAN do this! Woo hoo!!
Sliced into that beauty after it had fully cooled to make my son a PB&J sandwich. That is a pretty loaf of bread! Taste and texture are both very similar to gluten full bread. Paulo gave it his stamp of approval and declared "bake more of that bread Momma!" Ok Paulo, I will!
Monday, August 30, 2010
Stuffed corn muffins-revisited
I made these muffins a few weeks back. They were really simple but I knew I wanted to make a couple of adjustments. I'd used coconut oil, didn't like it, gave an unusual taste. Tonight I revisited the stuffed muffin. Back to school is looming on the horizon here and frankly, I need to go grocery shopping so this is creative cooking week!
1 cup cornmeal
1/2 cup flour *
1/4 cup sugar
1 teaspoon salt
2 teaspoons baking powder
1 cup milk **
2 tablespoons vegetable shortening, melted***
* I used Bob's Red Mill Gluten free all purpose flour
** I subbed in vanilla Rice milk, I only had vanilla on hand, you could not tell I used flavored milk.
*** I melted Earth Balance this time, much happier with the result.
Sift and mix the dry ingredients.
Add the milk and melted butter. After I mixed the wet into the dry ingredients I added my precooked sausage, frozen corn about 1-2 cups cooked, rinsed black beans and gave it a stir.
Pour into greased muffin tins (I used muffin papers) and bake at 350F for 30 minutes.
The result was a muffin that reminded all of us of tamales, very moist, very dense and very filling. I will be making and freezing a batch of these before the back to school rush takes over my brain. To round out the meal I made a very simple salad (I told you I need to go grocery shopping!) and dressed it with a lime tomatillo dressing.
1 cup cornmeal
1/2 cup flour *
1/4 cup sugar
1 teaspoon salt
2 teaspoons baking powder
1 cup milk **
2 tablespoons vegetable shortening, melted***
* I used Bob's Red Mill Gluten free all purpose flour
** I subbed in vanilla Rice milk, I only had vanilla on hand, you could not tell I used flavored milk.
*** I melted Earth Balance this time, much happier with the result.
Sift and mix the dry ingredients.
Add the milk and melted butter. After I mixed the wet into the dry ingredients I added my precooked sausage, frozen corn about 1-2 cups cooked, rinsed black beans and gave it a stir.
Pour into greased muffin tins (I used muffin papers) and bake at 350F for 30 minutes.
The result was a muffin that reminded all of us of tamales, very moist, very dense and very filling. I will be making and freezing a batch of these before the back to school rush takes over my brain. To round out the meal I made a very simple salad (I told you I need to go grocery shopping!) and dressed it with a lime tomatillo dressing.
Tuesday, August 17, 2010
Spicy raw carrot soup
Natalia Rose's book, Detox for Women, has some amazing raw soup recipes. One of them is a carrot soup that is flavored with curry powder. While I enjoyed that one I wanted one with a little more heat.
It's been really hot here in the Northwest (FINALLY!) and last night I wanted a spicy, cold soup to go with dinner. My family is new to the whole cold soup thing, but they seemed to enjoy it.
Spicy raw carrot soup
20 ounces freshly juiced carrot
1" ginger, processed through the juicer
1 avocado
1/2 serrano chile-seeds removed if you wish
2 cloves garlic
Add all of the above to a high power blender and blend until smooth. Chill or serve immediately. This made enough for three small portions last night and quite a bit of leftovers for my lunch today. It is light, tasty and has just enough spice to make things interesting.
Wednesday, August 11, 2010
Creamy lemon dill tuna salad
Lemon dill sauce:
2/3 cup Veganaise
1 lemon, juiced
Fresh dill
Sea salt
Whisk together and adjust herbs and seasonings as needed.
Pasta salad:
Noodles of choice, cooked according to directions
Cucumber, split lengthwise, quartered and diced
Cherry tomatoes, cut in half
Artichoke hearts, one jar, cut the larger pieces if desired
Tuna, two cans, drained well
Combine the above and toss with the lemon dill dressing.
Last night I wanted something light, and satisfying. This definitely fit the bill. It is based loosely on a Shrimp Cucumber salad that I love at a fabulous local restaurant called Noodles. Not wanting to thaw any shrimp though I opted for tuna. I wasn't sure how well it would go over with the little dude, but he loved it, and we agreed that this would be on the lunch rotation as well when he goes back to school next month. It seems he too is bored to tears of sandwiches! We rounded out last night's feast with fresh honeydew melon, sliced kiwi and carrot sticks.
Tuesday, August 10, 2010
Gluten free energy bars
I've already declared my love for Larabars here. But, between you and me, they're spendy! They're totally worth every penny but they could easily add up to a good chunk of change by the end of the month. I wanted to try making something myself.
I have made protein bars before, very simple recipe, however it required egg whites which are on the no fly list at our house. After we got the orders for the elimination diet I set off googling recipes-my goodness there are a lot of people that can't eat gluten! Luckily they've done a lot of research work for me and my son gets to benefit from their endeavors.
I found this recipe on About.com a couple of weeks ago and decided that last Sunday's Betty Crocker day was the perfect time to give it a whirl.
It's fairly simple, the only thing I needed to actually buy for the recipe was the gluten free brown rice cereal, everything else I had in my pantry or refrigerator.
Ingredients:
3/4 cup nut butter (almond or cashew or peanut or sunflower butter)
3/4 cup sweetener (honey or GF brown rice syrup or good quality Agave nectar)
1 1/2 cups roasted raw nuts and/or seeds
1 cup unsulfured dried fruit
4 cups GF brown rice crispie cereal
1/8 teaspoon kosher salt
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
Preparation:
Line a large baking sheet with parchment paper.
Place nuts and/or roasted seeds and dried fruit in the bowl of a food processor. Pulse several times, just until the mixture is coarsely ground. (This part was more difficult than it seems! I had to use the Vitamix and even then the almonds just would not chop much! I think next time, if I am using nuts, I will presmash them to break them up a bit before I put them in the chopper.)
In a large saucepan melt the nut butter with liquid sweetener over medium low heat. Stir and watch carefully to prevent scorching. When the mixture is smooth and bubbling, cook for about one minute. Remove from heat. Add salt and vanilla and stir to combine. Use a large spatula to stir in nuts, dried fruit and cereal. Stir until all ingredients are coated with nut butter mixture.
Scrape mixture on to the prepared baking sheet. Use a spatula to evenly spread the mixture on the pan. Place a large piece of waxed paper over the mixture and use a rolling pin to smooth the top of the mixture. Cover with the waxed paper and refrigerate for about two hours before cutting the energy bars into whatever sized you prefer.
Wrap bars in waxed paper and store in a covered container in the refrigerator.
Results:
I have made protein bars before, very simple recipe, however it required egg whites which are on the no fly list at our house. After we got the orders for the elimination diet I set off googling recipes-my goodness there are a lot of people that can't eat gluten! Luckily they've done a lot of research work for me and my son gets to benefit from their endeavors.
I found this recipe on About.com a couple of weeks ago and decided that last Sunday's Betty Crocker day was the perfect time to give it a whirl.
It's fairly simple, the only thing I needed to actually buy for the recipe was the gluten free brown rice cereal, everything else I had in my pantry or refrigerator.
Ingredients:
3/4 cup nut butter (almond or cashew or peanut or sunflower butter)
3/4 cup sweetener (honey or GF brown rice syrup or good quality Agave nectar)
1 1/2 cups roasted raw nuts and/or seeds
1 cup unsulfured dried fruit
4 cups GF brown rice crispie cereal
1/8 teaspoon kosher salt
1 teaspoon vanilla extract
Preparation:
Line a large baking sheet with parchment paper.
Place nuts and/or roasted seeds and dried fruit in the bowl of a food processor. Pulse several times, just until the mixture is coarsely ground. (This part was more difficult than it seems! I had to use the Vitamix and even then the almonds just would not chop much! I think next time, if I am using nuts, I will presmash them to break them up a bit before I put them in the chopper.)
In a large saucepan melt the nut butter with liquid sweetener over medium low heat. Stir and watch carefully to prevent scorching. When the mixture is smooth and bubbling, cook for about one minute. Remove from heat. Add salt and vanilla and stir to combine. Use a large spatula to stir in nuts, dried fruit and cereal. Stir until all ingredients are coated with nut butter mixture.
Scrape mixture on to the prepared baking sheet. Use a spatula to evenly spread the mixture on the pan. Place a large piece of waxed paper over the mixture and use a rolling pin to smooth the top of the mixture. Cover with the waxed paper and refrigerate for about two hours before cutting the energy bars into whatever sized you prefer.
Wrap bars in waxed paper and store in a covered container in the refrigerator.
Results:
I like them, perhaps a little too much if you know what I mean! They're very sweet though, I think next time I will reduce the amount of raw honey I use. I don't think it'll mess up the mixture too much. I had some difficulty getting the wax paper to lift off. I might try parchment paper-or better quality wax paper-on my next batch. I wrapped each individually in plastic wrap and then bagged them in a gallon size freezer bag, ate one last night for dessert and it was just as good as the first day I made them. I also wrapped and stored some in the freezer, hopefully they will defrost well.
When I make these after Paulo goes back to school I will stick with 100% sunflower butter and just use seeds and fruits. We are a nut free school. This time I used a combination of sun and almond butter plus the almonds, peanuts and cashews-definitely not classroom friendly!
Making my own takes time but I appreciate knowing 100% what ingredients are going into our bodies.
Sunday, August 8, 2010
Stuffed corn muffins
Welcome to the first installment of allergen free baking! I indulged my inner Betty Crocker today and tried out a couple of gluten free/egg free/dairy free recipes. One of my favorite food blogs is What's for Lunch in Our House. I've talked about her before, she's super creative, packs awesome bento lunches for her munchkins, I get a lot of inspiration from her site. One of her bento lunches for her little dude included a taco muffin. Ever since I've been determined to find an eggless corn muffin recipe I could use for Paulo. I found one this morning on http://www.recipeland.com/. I already had some cooked breakfast sausage and chorizo sausage set aside. After this morning's not so successful corn pancake endeavor I started baking.
The recipe is very simple.
** I subbed in original Rice milk
*** I used coconut oil which I warmed and melted, I'm not totally sure I'll do that the next time. I might just stick with a good olive oil, or melt the Earth Balance spread.
Sift and mix the dry ingredients.
Add the milk and shortening. After I mixed the wet into the dry ingredients I added my precooked sausage and gave it a stir.
Pour into greased muffin tins (I used muffin papers) and bake at 350F for 30 minutes.
The result:
A very tasty, meaty muffin! The muffin has breakfast and lunch possibilities. Paulo loved it. Had one for lunch today with diced tomato and avocado on the side. He's already excited about the idea of me putting these in his lunch box instead of the same old, same old sandwich. There is a lot of possibilities for variations, I could use ham or GF hot dogs, I could add frozen corn before baking or I could do a tex mex muffin and add black beans with the meat for extra fiber.
I'm happy to find a recipe that will fill his tummy during school and keep me from losing my mind from the boredom of making sandwiches day in and day out!
The recipe is very simple.
- 1 cup cornmeal
- 1/2 cup flour *
- 1/4 cup sugar
- 1 teaspoon salt
- 2 teaspoons baking powder
- 1 cup milk **
- 2 tablespoons vegetable shortening, melted***
** I subbed in original Rice milk
*** I used coconut oil which I warmed and melted, I'm not totally sure I'll do that the next time. I might just stick with a good olive oil, or melt the Earth Balance spread.
Sift and mix the dry ingredients.
Add the milk and shortening. After I mixed the wet into the dry ingredients I added my precooked sausage and gave it a stir.
Pour into greased muffin tins (I used muffin papers) and bake at 350F for 30 minutes.
The result:
A very tasty, meaty muffin! The muffin has breakfast and lunch possibilities. Paulo loved it. Had one for lunch today with diced tomato and avocado on the side. He's already excited about the idea of me putting these in his lunch box instead of the same old, same old sandwich. There is a lot of possibilities for variations, I could use ham or GF hot dogs, I could add frozen corn before baking or I could do a tex mex muffin and add black beans with the meat for extra fiber.
I'm happy to find a recipe that will fill his tummy during school and keep me from losing my mind from the boredom of making sandwiches day in and day out!
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