Roasted Sweet Potato Fries and Salsa Yogurt Dip |
I know this is old news for those of you who care about (American) Football, but the Seattle Seahawks are on their way to the Super Bowl for the second time in two years. Woohoo! Go Seattle! Go Hawks!
Actually, I don’t really care that much about following football or any other spectator sport for that matter; however there is something different about a big game that carries big dreams and big hopes with it. The Super Bowl. For professional football players, winning the Super Bowl is the culmination of years and years of dreams and practice and sacrifice and hard work to get a chance to carry, kick and throw a beautifully shaped pigskin (by the way footballs never were made of pigskin) to victory, proving to themselves that it was all worth it.
It’s no different, really, than the striving of any individual to reach the peak of their chosen endeavor – whether it be in sports, art, medicine, engineering, teaching, business – anything that someone is passionate enough about to want to do well. In his best-selling book The Outliers Malcolm Gladwell talks about the 10,000 hours it takes to become an expert. Consider that there are 168 hours in every week, 8,736 hours in a year; 2912 of which, per doctors’ orders, we should be sleeping. If during that remaining 5,824 hours, we are doing something other than working on the thing we are passionate about, it is perhaps safe to assume that no more than roughly 6 hours per day on average would be focused working toward the goal of being expert in our chosen subject, or 2,184 hours per year. That means that if we are really focused and really going for it on average 42 hours every week, it would take us roughly 4.5 years from today to become the expert we want to be in anything.
Roasted Sweet Potato Fries and Salsa Yogurt Dip |
Is there anything you spend that much time on? I love the subject of food and health and how good food is only one component in a healthy lifestyle; and some weeks I do indeed spend 42 hours working on learning more about it. But life happens too. We have other obligations. We get distracted. Our focus slips. We may lose sight of the goal. For these football players (and other young prodigies), they have become experts over 20+ years of practice while going to school, being kids, growing up, figuring out who they are. That they were focused enough (or in some cases their parents were) to channel their energies primarily toward a single goal is remarkable.
Why do so many people watch sports? Follow every game? Cheer on their chosen team? Feel, alongside of the players, both the pain of defeat and the exultation of victory? It’s because anybody who has really put their heart and soul into become excellent is, when given the chance to to exhibit that excellence, a reminder to all of us of what a human being is capable of. There is a video series on YouTube called People are Awesome. It shows people performing athletic tricks that would sound impossible on paper, but which have been made possible through practice and determination and an unwillingness to give up when things get tough. It is, indeed, pretty darn awesome.
But for me, it’s even more awesome to watch the brave, 17-year-old Malala Yousafzai become the youngest person in the world to receive a Nobel Peace Prize or to see young entrepreneurs, who heard plenty of “no ways” and “it’s not possibles”, who went ahead anyway to follow their dream and create the companies that provide excellent products and services that the make life easier and more enjoyable for the rest of us.
The thing is, we all can be excellent at what we want to do; but for most of people, “pretty good” is satisfying enough; allows us to lead a comfortable life; gets us home to our families on time; allows us to live in a place we like with a lifestyle we enjoy. That’s OK. As Brene Brown has said, there is nothing wrong with wanting a good, ordinary life. That doesn’t stop us, though, from enjoying the victory of a top performer in any field, and being grateful for the inspiration that they can all give us; for pulling humankind just one step further forward into what we are all capable of, even if it’s only by proxy.
If you follow the game on Feb 1, 2015, as you cheer for your team and your favorite player(s), and feel the emotional ebb and flow that comes with every play and point, enjoy as well the reminder that people are awesome, and that includes you.
In his book The Dip Seth Godin talks about what it means to be the best in the world, and about the “extraordinary benefits of knowing when to quit (and when to stick).” It doesn’t, he asserts, mean being better than everyone else in the entire world at what you do. It can also mean being the best in your world at what you do: your family, peer group, business, neighborhood, city, state. It means making a commitment to your own excellence, and continuing to deliver on promises you make to yourself, it means not giving up just because because you are stressed out in the moment, but it also means being brave enough to quit when where you are is on a path that leads to nowhere.
As you mull that over and get geared up to enjoy the game, you may be needing a few snacks. Or if, like me, you’ll skip the game to focus on something else, you may still need snacks. I’ll tempt you with an alternative that doesn’t include deep frying, and which your most awesome nutritional advisor would love.
Roasted Sweet Potato Fries and Salsa Yogurt Dip |
Roasted Sweet Potato Fries and Salsa Yogurt Dip
1 large sweet potato
2 tablespoons olive oil
1 teaspoon ground cumin
1 teaspoon ground Chipotle powder
1 teaspoon smoked ground paprika
3/4 teaspoon salt
1 cup low-fat Greek or Turkish yogurt
3/4 cup hot salsa
Preheat oven to 200°C/400°F
Scrub the outside of the sweet potato well to remove any dirt. Leave the skin on. Cut the sweet potato into slim sticks. In a bowl, combine the oil, cumin, chipotle powder, smoked paprika and salt. Add the sweet potato pieces and toss well to coat them thoroughly. Spread the sweet potatoes out on a parchment covered baking sheet. Place into the hot oven and bake for 20 minutes, flipping the sweet potatoes once, halfway through. Check for doneness: they should be crisp on the outside and tender in the middle. Remove from oven and serve with the Salsa Yogurt Dip.
To make the Salsa Yogurt Dip, pour the salsa and yogurt into a bowl and stir well to combine. If you’d like the dip to be even spicier, add a little Sriracha or hot sauce.
Serves 4-6 as a snack.