Man. I miss the days when Facebook was just a simple website where you would see your friends photos and be updated on big life events. Instead, nowadays it’s a place where hackers unite and Mark Zuckerberg sells our information to Russians. It’s been since Friday last week that my Facebook was hacked and I’ve received absolutely no help from Facebook. I’ve reported everything, I’ve reached out to everyone, I’ve changed my passwords, but the hackers are still kicking it. They continue blasting any of my PaleOMG followers newsfeeds with spam links…minute after minute after minute. Super fun. And because I spend most of my days trying to get in contact with someone at Facebook but continue to fail because Facebook doesn’t give AF, I even dream about the hackers. I literally think about it all day every day.

Here’s the thing – who uses Facebook anymore?  If you do, you’re either old or behind the times. It’s become a place that people only see spam, fake news or depressing stories. I never see my friends photos or that they got engaged or that they had a baby. Instead, it’s just spam articles that Mark Zuckerberg welcomes to his website. That being said, I wish I could simply deactivate my personal account, hopefully in turn deactivating my PaleOMG account. BUT, I work with many companies and telling them that I have organically grown my Facebook to the size it is today is important. Even though Facebook doesn’t let any of my followers see my content because I don’t pay them thousands of dollars to do so. I have hated Facebook for years now and this customer service experience has left me with a terrible taste in my mouth.

Here’s the question…do you even use Facebook anymore? What do you think of it nowadays? Tell me stuff.

PaleOMG Pad Thai Shrimp Lettuce Cups

This Facebook stuff has me majorly distracted and forgetting some of the exciting stuff coming up. Like leaving this weekend to explore Steamboat Springs! I’m excited to check out a town in Colorado that I’ve never been. But you know what I’m even more excited about?? My Denver event coming up! Did you hear the news yet? On Sunday April 15th at 3pm and 6pm, I will be hosting a meet-up with Tula at Just Be Kitchen! There will be snacks, grab bags, skin consultations, a chat about all things health, beauty, and fitness, and a Q&A session! There are two event times to choose from to make sure we can get as many people as possible in! Are you coming?! You can grab tickets here!!

Ok wait, let’s talk about this recipe. I’m really bad at that. I’ve been obsessed with lettuce cups lately. I’ve been putting avocado oil mayo, sliced turkey, prosciutto and arugula in lettuce wraps for lunch lately and have LOVED it. As long as it’s butter lettuce. Don’t give me no romaine hearts for lettuce wraps. No. Gross. So I recently felt inspired to mix it up and since shrimp are some of the easiest things to cook up, I mixed up my normal turkey routine. So glad I can finally eat shrimp again after my Tulum experience. I still will never eat shrimp in Mexico again, but I’ll have them in a landlocked state. Totally makes sense.

PaleOMG Pad Thai Shrimp Lettuce Cups

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Pad Thai Shrimp Lettuce Cups

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4.8 from 11 reviews

 

  • Author: juli
  • Prep Time: 15 minutes
  • Cook Time: 10 minutes
  • Total Time: 25 minutes
  • Yield: 3-4 1x

Ingredients

Scale

For the Pad Thai Sauce:

  • 1/3 cup sunflower seed butter
  • 1/3 cup water
  • 2 tablespoons honey
  • 1 tablespoon coconut aminos
  • 1 tablespoon lime juice
  • 1 tablespoon sriracha
  • 1 tablespoon sesame oil
  • 2 teaspoons fish sauce
  • 1 teaspoon fresh ginger
  • 2 cloves of garlic, minced

For the Slaw:

  • 1 large carrot, peeled and julienned
  • 1/2 english cucumber, thinly sliced
  • 2 fresno peppers, thinly sliced
  • handful of cilantro, roughly chopped
  • juice of 1/2 a lime
  • pinch of salt and pepper

For the Lettuce Cups:

  • 2 tablespoons ghee or coconut oil
  • 1 pound deveined and peeled shrimp
  • 1 red bell pepper, diced
  • 1/4 yellow onion, minced
  • 2 garlic cloves, minced
  • 1 head of butter lettuce

Instructions

  1. Place all ingredients for the pad thai sauce into a blender and blend until smooth. Set aside.
  2. Toss together all ingredients for the slaw. Set aside. 
  3. Place a large saute pan over medium heat. Add ghee. Once heat, pat shrimp dry and sprinkle with salt. Place in pan to cook for 3-4 minutes per side, until golden brown. Be sure to not crowd the pan – you may have to work in batches. Set shrimp aside on a plate then add the red bell peppers and onion to the pan. Cook until onion is translucent and red peppers begin to brown, then add garlic cloves and cook for another 2-3 minutes.
  4. Remove pan from heat and add shrimp back to the pan. Then add 1/2-3/4 of the sauce to the pan and toss until all shrimp are coated. 
  5. Wash butter lettuce. Spoon a small amount of sauce into each lettuce cup, then a big scoop full of the shrimp mixture and top it all with some slaw!

Notes

 

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PaleOMG Pad Thai Shrimp Lettuce Cups


PaleOMG Pad Thai Shrimp Lettuce Cups

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24 Comments

  1. Cassie says:

    I do still use Facebook (cause I’m an old ass at 31 ????) but it is mostly just to stay caught up with friends and family who I no longer live anywhere near. I don’t post a lot and honestly I have not seen one of your hacked posts at all, I’ve gone hunting for them on your page so I could report them but I don’t see anything!
    This recipe looks delicious! If I were to make this for dinner what do you suggest as a side dish?

  2. Courtney says:

    Facebook sucks! I only have it to keep in touch with family and friends that don’t live near me. It’s so ridiculous they aren’t helping you get this fixed either. I hope they come around and resolve this for you! Can’t wait to try this recipe.. I’m on a Pad Thai kick right now!

  3. Amanda says:

    Sorry to be an old, out of touch person, but I still use Facebook regularly 🙂 My friends and I still post baby pics, etc. and I like to see what is going on with local businesses. Plus it makes it easter to survive the workday. That being said, I would definitely still check out your blog without a Facebook posting, especially since I know you post regularly. I would just miss the cute Jackson pictures.

  4. Meighan says:

    Deleted Facebook a few weeks ago and don’t miss it at all. So fed up with how FB operates and their manipulation with users’ data. I feel like the only reason people stay on is because of their photos but those can easily be downloaded and then you’ll never have to deal with that social media (which will likely die out soon) again.

  5. Sierra says:

    2 questions:

    1. Do you want to be aligned with a company that offers zero customer service? Your business is important and if you can’t protect it, where are you?

    2. Do you monetize FB in any way? If the answer is yes, keep it. You know the deal, especially now, so if it’s a revenue stream, there you go. If the revenue is a tiny trickle, well, evaluate the value of that tiny trickle and go from there.

  6. Becky says:

    I still (at the ripe young age of 27) use Facebook all the time. A lot of it has to do with the convenience of keeping in touch with people (I’ve moved and traveled a lot) and posting ridiculous quantities of photos that I can look back on like photo albums later, and the ease of communication. I also happen to be in graduate school, and my cohort heavily uses Facebook to organize events. I definitely don’t use it like I used to though.

    I will say I rarely use Facebook for finding/following businesses. Mostly just my gym, some previous non-profit work, and some very awesome small local businesses I want to support. And I’ve deleted Facebook mobile, only keeping messenger as another means of communication, because I agree–looking through my feed these days often leaves me feeling nauseated and depressed!

  7. Miranda says:

    Facebook just isn’t helpful for businesses anymore (unless you’re making hella money then maybe). But for real what is the point if your followers can’t see your content with those stupid algorithms. Honestly, it’s just easier for the younger audience to engage with you especially on Instagram stories so keep it up over there and Facebook can go crawl in its sad hole and die.
    But, talking about this recipe I’m pumped to try it! I love anything that’ll make lunch a little more exciting. I think that pack of shrimp is calling my name today!

  8. Kereshi says:

    I closed my Facebook down two and a half years ago when the election stuff started getting completely out of hand. I couldn’t take all the political bullshit. I only use Instagram now. I’m so much happier looking at travel pictures and puppies and avoiding everyone’s opinions on stuff they can’t control.

  9. Bethany says:

    I’m 39. I quit Facebook 8 years ago. Couldn’t be happier with my decision 🙂 Yes, it’s frustrating sometimes to not be able to see a company’s Facebook page, or enter Facebook giveaways, but still…a Facebook-free and happy girl here 🙂 Actually, I’m basically a Luddite – no Instagram, Snapchat, Twitter, anything. It can be done!

    The funniest part is when my 72-year-old mother-in-law keeps telling me I HAVE to be on Facebook to know what’s going on with the family 😀 Can’t phone calls, texts, FaceTime, and emails accomplish that?!?

  10. Kelley says:

    FaceBook is the worst and Instagram is getting just as bad. Thanks for the recipe!