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RETHINKING FOOD I: Raw & Heavenly

If you love food but hate how some of it makes you feel, check out these two new recipes.  It’s the first in a series of new approaches to eating well called Rethinking Food.

For the next few months I will be sharing with you some delectable yummy and healthy food options.  If you are like me and want commercial wheat out of your diet, these two amazing concoctions will make it even easier to say ‘buh-bye’ to that gluten addiction.

Rethink your food — don’t let yourself get into a rut!  Find ways to make food satisfying, healthy and delicious, and let me know what you come up with.

Namaste.

Zucchini Pasta

Zuccini Pasta

Six Small Zucchinis

Marinara or Spaghetti Sauce of Your Choice

Spiral six zucchinis in a turning slicer, place in bowls and ladle with warm marinara or spaghetti sauce.Serves 4-6 adults.

The picture above is tasty, easy and healthy.

All you need is a special gadget called a turning slicer (www.paderno.it, item #49827-99, cost is $40).

turningslicerOnce you have the turning slicer, it takes all of ten minutes to make.  It’s delicious and healthy — raw zucchini is rich in vitamin A and other nutrients — my five-year-old ate THREE bowls full and loved it.  Not only are you NOT eating wheat in the form of pasta, but you are also getting raw veggies instead, which ups your production of naturally occurring enzymes.  We are supposed to eat 80% raw in our diets…

Heavenly Bite Cookies

Two Egg Whites A dash of almond and vanilla extract
1/2 cup chopped dates
1/4 cup pecans
1/4 cup cashews
1/2 cup shredded coconut
Dollop of Honey
Sesame Seeds & Currants to garnish
Coconut Oil

Whip egg whites and extracts until soft peaks form, set aside.  Add the rest of the ingredients (except sesame seeds and currants) to a food processor and blend until crumbled or balled.  Fold mixture with a spatula into the egg whites, being mindful not to mix too much to flatten egg whites.  Scoop with a teaspoon onto a cookie sheet greased with coconut oil.  Sprinkle sesame seeds on top, place a currant or two in the center.  Cookies will be small mountains.  Bake at 300 for 10-12 minutes.

I delivered a plate of these cookies to my parents and, well,  let’s just say the plate was almost empty before they closed the door behind them #notkidding.  The entire batch was devoured, I had to make another batch just to keep everyone from fighting over the crumbs.  It’s super easy to make.  Enjoy!

4 Ways to Kick High Blood Pressure

What is High Blood Pressure? Check it:

– in the U.S. alone, 95% of all reported high blood pressure cases are classified as “undetermined.” This is called essential hypertension.

– Ninety five percent is a big number at which to be shrugging our shoulders — this is a condition that the Centers for Disease Control claims affects 1 in 3, or 68 million Americans.1

High Blood Pressure is often a precursor to the #1 and #3 leading causes of death in the United States, heart disease and stroke.  Technically, it’s the measure of the force of blood pushing against the walls of the arteries.  When your blood pressure rises, it means the heart is has to work harder.  It also contributes to hardening of the arteries (atherosclerosis) and causes heart failure.

Western medicine attributes: smoking, obesity, lack of physical exercise, too much processed salt, more than 1-2 cocktails a day, stress, old age, genetics, chronic kidney disease and adrenal and thyroid disorders.

It also attributes it to genetics (high blood pressure runs in families) to gender (it’s more likely to affect men than women), to race (it afflicts twice as many African-Americans as Caucasian Americans, although the gap begins to narrow around age 44. After age 65, black women have the highest incidence of high blood pressure).

Here’s the key: it’s not the behavior that causes the problems, it’s whatever is driving us to choose the behavior that will unlock the key to change.  What is that drives behavior?

Emotions.  It’s how we process (“deal”or “don’t deal” with them), which can be both learned and genetic in families.  In Ayurveda, unprocessed emotions can lead to:

  • smoking (many holistic practitioners feel smoking is an attempt to inhale words we are too afraid to say).
  • overeating and obesity (often a sign of an unresolved, wounded childhood).
  • depression, which can lead to malaise (lack of exercise); over drinking, stress, premature aging, cancer, etc.

You get the picture.

 

Break the Cycle

In Ayurveda, there is no predetermined outcome because of demographics or genetic code.  The mind controls the body always.   Which means, “Everything is reversible but death.”

Here are four ways to get started eliminating high blood pressure naturally — important because side effects of blood pressure medication are numerous and range from sexual dysfunction to depression, poor circulation to skin rash, insomnia, headaches, constipation, dizziness … the list goes on.  There are also a zillion different classifications of high blood pressure medication as western medicine tries manipulating the body from a variety of angles in an effort to control the symptoms.

Get to the root and control the cause.

If you need more information or a consult, contact me through comments.

Namasté.

Four Ways to Naturally Lower High Blood Pressure

1. Change your Salt.

Get rid of table salt.  It’s evil, and lacks the full spectrum of minerals and other nutrients that protect and enhance your health.  It is a highly refined, processed white substance that in addition to hypertension can cause gastrointestinal problems, kidney stones, fluid retention and calcium depletion (this is very bad).  For the body to metabolize table salt, it must waste tremendous amounts of energy to keep the body at optimum fluid balance. This creates a burden on the elimination systems in the body. Water is removed from other cells in attempt to neutralize the unnatural sodium chloride.  Studies show that for each gram of table salt your system cannot process, your body will use over twenty times the amount of cellular water to neutralize the sodium chloride in chemically treated salt. This can lead to cellulite, rheumatism, arthritis, gout, as well as kidney and gallbladder stones. The average American consumes 5,000 mg of sodium chloride a day, the issue is serious and needs to be addressed.

Switch to Himalayan Pink Crystal Salt which contains 84 minerals and trace minerals.

Choosing to use Himalayan Sea Salt as an alternative can have a big impact on your total health and well-being.  And remember, restaurants are the biggest culprit when using table salt.

2. Do a daily inversion.

Hubby Demonstrates Modified Shoulder Stand

Make a point to spend 1-3 minutes a day in a mini-inversion.  Start off slow.  Doing this even 2-3 times a week will not only reduce your blood pressure immediately, but by having the heart higher than the head you also give your heart a break.  It’s very rejuvenative for the body and is an incredible pose for restoring balance to the mind, body & spirit.

This modified version is super easy to do:

– Take two yoga blankets if you have them, (the best ones are available at The Blanket Connection, and are about $13 each).  If not, use thick towels.

– Fold one into thirds to support the spine, and fold the other in half and place it at the head of the first blanket, making a “T.”

– Grab the legs of a folding chair at the bottom of the T.  Place the feet on the edge of the seat, and push the pelvis up.  Keep the knees pulling towards each other, and if this is too hard to do, get a yoga strap to hold them in place.

– MAKE SURE NOT TO LET GO OF THE CHAIR or it will go flying across the room.  Hold the pose for 2-3 minutes, being mindful to breathe, pushing the belly out with each in hale and pulling the belly in toward the spine as you exhale.

You are revitalizing the pads in between the vertebrae, giving the kidneys a fresh flush of blood, giving the adrenal glands on top of the kidneys a fresh flush of blood, refreshing the pineal and pituitary glands at the base of the skull, giving the face a fresh facial with fresh blood, AND you are also keeping the blood vessels in the BRAIN open — an important way to stave off memory loss and senile dementia.

Did you know there have been autopsies done on yogi’s in their 90s in India, and their brain tissue was like that of a 12-year-old because they did daily inversions?

Oh yeah, and it reduces hypertension.

Where can you get all of that from a 3-minute pose?

3. Take Carditone.

I LOVE Ayush herbal products because they are clean and organic.  And Carditone is an Ayurvedic herb that for years has helped people reduce high blood pressure.  If you have already been diagnosed with high blood pressure, start taking Carditone as well as the other three things on this list.  Then, under the supervision of your doctor, start weaning yourself from your hypertension medications.  If your doctor won’t work with you to do this, find a doctor that will work on your terms.

4. Eat more Fruits and Veggies, fresh fish and meats, and whole grains.

Duh.  Get rid of the McDonald’s and the Burger King, and keep processed foods as a rare treat.  You will find you won’t enjoy it nearly as much as you used to.

References

  1. CDC. Vital signs: prevalence, treatment, and control of hypertension–United States, 1999-2002 and 2005-2008. MMWR. 2011;60(4):103-8.

7 Tips for Permanent Weight Loss

Rarely do I find a western doctor with whom I agree.  And weight loss is one of those hot topics to which I generally steer clear.  I prefer instead to maintain a clean system, focus on eating a balanced, whole-foods diet and the weight generally takes care of itself.

But in Ayurveda I love that we recognize each individual as a unique, like a snowflake.  And for some of us, weight loss is a long-term game that can be riddled with trials and tribulations.

That’s why when I stumbled upon Dr. Melina Jampolis’ 7 Tips for Permanent Weight Loss this week in the Huffington Post, I had to share.  Not only is Dr. Jampolis well credentialed, her 7 Tips actually are in alignment with a lot of what I recommend to my Ayurvedic clients.

Have to say though, I don’t fully condone her program (which you can read more about on her website).  Suggestions like microwaving strawberries with sugar sprinkled on top, as she suggests, sends me the heebie jeebies.  But, in the interest of not throwing the baby out with the bath water (a principle I live by as you may recall from an earlier post I did this year), I am reposting Dr. Melina’s 7 Tips here for those of you trying to lose weight.

Namasté.

Dr. Melina Jampolis

Internist, board certified physician nutrition specialist

7 Tips for Permanent Weight Loss

Posted: 06/05/2012 8:15 am

As an actual diet doctor, I’ve spent the past decade helping people lose weight, and I’ve learned a lot in the process. Many of my patients were successful, many regained weight, and some didn’t lose much weight at all. In the process, I learned a lot about successful long-term weight loss in the real world — not TV weight loss; not celebrity weight loss, which usually includes private chefs, trainers and nannies, but rather weight loss for real (often stressed out and overworked) people trying to lose weight while living their lives. This kind of weight loss includes monthly challenges like holidays, vacations, loss of motivation, and even changes in the weather that affect exercise. In addition, working as a part-time writer, diet and nutrition media expert, and TV host that evaluates almost every diet out there, I’ve also realized that there is no one-size-fits-all when it comes to dieting — most diets will work for some people some of the time. So rather than tell you what to eat, I thought I would share what I believe are seven of the best tips for losing weight, and keeping the weight off, no matter what diet you choose to follow.

Pump up the volume of meals.
We eat approximately the same volume of food every day,[1] so including foods with lower calorie density (calories per gram) is essential unless you eat very small portions (like the French). Foods that have lower calorie densities are high in water (fruits, vegetables, soup, low-fat or fat-free dairy), high in fiber (whole grains, beans, fruits, and vegetables) and lower in fat. Foods that do not contain water, like dry salty snacks, crackers, and dense baked goods have a higher calorie density even if they are fat-free, and portions need to be carefully controlled. By permanently modifying meals and recipes to include more low-calorie-density ingredients, you don’t have to cut portions to lose weight and keep it off, and eating well is much more live-able.

Limit liquid calories.
Our body simply doesn’t register liquid calories like calories from solid food, so it is very easy to consume too many calories each day drinking extra-large lattes (even if they are fat-free), sugar-sweetened beverages (including sweetened tea, sports drinks, and even juice, which has naturally occurring sugar but is still loaded with calories), and alcoholic beverages. Downsize your morning latte, limit intake of sugar-sweetened beverages as much as possible, drink juice out of old-fashioned juice glasses (which used to be 6 or 8 ounces), and if you drink alcohol, avoid sugary mixers and cut calories from elsewhere in your meal if possible.

Make mindless eating work for you.
Numerous studies have looked at the relationship between a person’s eating environment and food intake. By building a better eating environment, you can mindlessly control calories for good, no matter how stressed you are at work or how much your motivation levels drop. How? Start with dishware. Eat off smaller plates, out of smaller bowls, and drink out of tall, thin glasses. In your pantry, fridge and freezer, keep more tempting foods out of sight as much as possible by putting them on higher shelves or transferring them to opaque storage containers. At the dinner table, leave serving dishes containing higher-calorie foods in the kitchen and keep lower-calorie vegetable dishes on the table within easy reach for seconds. Entertaining? Limit variety of less healthy foods (this is also important when stocking your pantry), as research shows that increased variety equals increased caloric intake.

Think outside the gym when it comes to exercise.
Yes, getting at least 30 minutes per day of cardiovascular exercise five times a week and twice-a-week sessions of strength training is critical, but you can actually burn far more calories over time by increasing lifestyle-based activity like standing while talking on the phone, getting off the train or bus a stop early and walking the rest of the way to work, or engaging in more active hobbies like bowling instead of going to the movies, or taking dance lessons instead of photography lessons. Research shows that basic things like dishwashers, cars, elevators, and washing machines cause us to burn fewer calories per day, so you have to find a way to burn these extra calories despite advances in technology. Adding in as much non-exercise activity can really add up in terms of calories burned over the long run, and is much easier to permanently incorporate into your life, no matter how motivated you are.

Ditch the all-or-nothing mentality.
I can’t tell you how many times patients come in and tell me they “took the weekend off” from their diet (or worse, a week or more if they are on vacation). I don’t expect anyone to be perfect all the time. In fact, I encourage my patients to indulge early on in their weight loss program to help them build confidence, learn to handle controlled indulgences, and bounce back from less healthful choices quickly. Don’t act as if there is a switch in your brain that determines whether you are on or off a diet — instead, make better choices most, not all, of the time, and you will be less tempted to go “off your diet,” gain back some or all of the weight you have worked so hard to lose, and perhaps even stay “off your diet” for good.

Think ahead.
I personally don’t do well at planning out my meals for the week, but many of my patients are much more successful when they do. I tend to eat, and buy, many of the same things each week, so less of a plan is required. I do insist that patients always have somewhat of plan for eating away from home — whether it is making sure you have three or four restaurants around the office that have healthful choices, looking at the restaurant menu ahead of time if you are eating out (especially at ethnic restaurants) to figure out better choices, or deciding ahead of time what you are going to indulge in at a party or dinner out (wine, bread, dessert, or pasta). By mentally committing ahead of time, you limit the mindless eating and drinking that often occur at social eating occasions. If you are attending a party or dinner, offer to bring a healthful dish so you have a safe option to fill up on, or eat a little snack before heading out the door (lean protein and vegetables work best to prevent overeating — and include a little healthy fat if you plan on drinking, as fat delays the absorption of alcohol).

Always have a plan B for eating and exercise.
This is essential, especially for the majority of Americans who are busy juggling work, family, and home and don’t always have time to get to the gym, prepare the best food, or find the healthiest restaurant. If you can’t make it to the 7 a.m. spin class, don’t skip your workout altogether — try to squeeze in even a 10-minute walk at lunch or after work, or do the first 20 minutes of an exercise DVD at home or 10 minutes of push-ups and sit-ups if you don’t have time for more. Consistent, smaller changes really do add up over time. And always stock your freezer with a few healthful frozen meal options, including entrees and frozen vegetables, for those nights when you don’t have time to cook and are tempted to order pizza or Chinese food. Finally, always try to keep an emergency healthful snack pack on hand to take the edge off hunger and give you time to make the best eating choice possible if you haven’t eaten for hours. Smart and easy snacks include fresh fruit, portion-controlled bags of nuts, and lower-sugar, higher-fiber protein or energy bars.

In addition to the seven tips above, try to eat fewer foods out of a box (highly processed foods, especially snack foods, often encourage overconsumption), weigh yourself regularly (but not so often that you drive yourself crazy or get depressed chasing the number on the scale), and focus on both quality and quantity when it comes to what you eat. Nutrient-dense foods like whole grains, beans, fruits and vegetables (especially when they are in season), lean protein, low-fat or fat-free dairy, and healthy fats (nuts, seeds, avocado, and olive oil) should be the foundation of any diet plan.

Dr. Melina Jampolis, M.D. is a board-certified physician nutrition specialist specializing in weight loss and disease prevention and the author of The Calendar Diet: A Month-by-Month Guide to Losing Weight While Living Your Life.

For more by Dr. Melina Jampolis, click here.

For more on weight loss, click here.

References:

[1] Wansink, Brian. Mindless Eating: Why We Eat More Than We Think. New York: Bantam Dell, 2006.

Raw Milk Debate Goes to Harvard Law

I am not a fan of drinking milk.  As a natural health practitioner for 16 years, there have been too many people I have treated that suffered from lactose intolerance for me to recommend it to anyone.  Moreover, I believe fundamentally that when we are born we are supposed to drink milk from our mothers, and not the milk of another animal.  We are the only animal that does this.  Cow’s milk is made for baby calves to drink, not humans.

However, I do know that the nutritious benefits that exist in milk have long been destroyed by processing (homogenizing, pasteurizing), leading the way for a boomerang effect of health problems — everything from arthritis to fibromyalsia, hormonal imbalance to endocrine dysfunction, diabetes to heart disease.  Man cannot process foods that have been stripped of all their enzymatic content.  And when we process dairy products that’s exactly what we are doing.

So even though milk is not for me (we drink homemade almond milk, see my earlier post on “Why Milk is Bad (and not Michael Jackson Bad)” for the recipe), I do support The Weston Price Foundation and their efforts to make information about nutritious foods more available.  And now, this heated topic is making its way to the ivy walls of Harvard University.

On Feb. 16, at 7:15 pm – 8:45 pm EST, the Food Law Society at Harvard University will present a debate covering the legal, health, and nutritional merits of raw milk.   This is a very important event for several reasons.  First, it demonstrates the significance of the raw milk debate in our society — an issue that has escalated significantly in the past six months following federal raids and arrests that occurred at private food clubs in California. Second — and most importantly — it is proof positive there is a vacuum present between our government and corporations that manufacture food (whom lobbyists make certain remain in bed together), and the people they supposedly serve.  This vacuum needs to be removed so that  issues surround food regulation, supply and production and how they affect our health can see the light of day.

If you can’t get to Harvard Law to see the debate in person, no worries — you can stream it live.  Go to http://www.foodsoc.org for information on how to do so.

Participants will be Fred Pritzker, Pritzker & Olson Law Firm
Dr. Heidi Kassenborg, Director, Dairy & Food Inspection Division, Minnesota Department of Agriculture
vs.
Sally Fallon Morell, President, Weston A. Price Foundation
David Gumpert, Author, The Raw Milk Revolution

If you are in the Boston area and can attend in person, the location at Harvard Law School is the Langdell South Classroom, 1563 Massachusetts Avenue, Cambridge, MA 02138.

The video will also be archived on this YouTube page: http://www.youtube.com/user/HLSFoodLawSociety.

Namasté.

*Special Thanks to Food Freedom for this story.  To see the Food Freedom blog, go to https://foodfreedom.wordpress.com/2012/02/02/harvard-food-law-society-to-host-raw-milk-debate-feb-16/ to subscribe.

 

Delish Creamy Cauliflower Soup Recipe Without the Cream

I am so proud of my Dad. As part of his new year, he has embarked on a systemic cleanse that includes taking herbs to remove parasites and toxic waste.  He is also taking vitamins to help nourish his body on a cellular level, and is including a liver cleanse to help his metabolic processes improve in their efficiency.

All that I just wrote?  That’s actually the easy part.  The hard part is changing the food choices.

Because I know how hard it can be, (he’s eliminating wheat, dairy, sugar, caffeine, alcohol including vinegars, and processed complex carbs), I wanted to cook something for him that would be a treat but still be on his modified diet.

So last night when he and my Mom came over for dinner, I came up with a recipe for Creamy Cauliflower soup that is sweet and creamy but has neither sugar nor dairy in it.  It came out so great, and is such a perfect example for a few other healthy tricks I know, I decided to share it with you all today.

Please let me know how you like it.  We are HUGE soup fans in our family, and this version passed the test with thumbs up all around the table.  Enjoy!

Namasté.

Creamy Cauliflower and Sweet Potato Soup

  • 1 medium head cauliflower
  • 1 large sweet potato, peeled and cut in chucks
  • 1 large white onion, cut into chunks
  • 4 cups unsalted chicken or vegetable soup stock (recipe below) OR 4 c. water + 1 unsalted vegetable bouillon cube
  • One half tsp fresh or dried rosemary
  • 1 tsp fresh or dried thyme
  • 2 Tbsp olive oil
  • Optional: 1 – 2 cloves garlic, minced
  • 3/4 cup great northern white or cannellini beans (canned or soaked* for 8 hrs)
  • 1/8 tsp turmeric
  • 1/4 tsp gr. cumin
  • 1 tsp gr coriander
  • 1/2 tsp gr ginger
  • 1 can all natural coconut milk, no sugar added
  • Fresh ground salt and black pepper
  • 1/4 cup minced fresh parsley and/or cilantro

*Make sure if you are using fresh soaked beans instead of canned that you cook the beans in water or broth for about an hour, or until soft, prior to adding them to the soup.  I prefer fresh soaked but in this case used canned and it was fine.

  1. Add onion, garlic and olive oil to a dutch oven on stove top, low heat, stirring occasionally.
  2. Remove leaves, and break cauliflower into large (2 inch) pieces
  3. Add cauliflower and sweet potato, cook for ten minutes, stirring, or until olive oil is distributed
  4. Add stock and bring to a boil. Reduce heat, cover and simmer until tender, about 20 minutes, OR cook under high pressure in a pressure cooker for 3 minutes, with quick pressure release
  5. Add cooked beans, stir, simmer for ten minutes.
  6. Blend soup in a food processor or vitamix, (in 2 batches), return pureed soup to the dutch oven or soup pot.  Simmer.
  7. Add coconut milk and spices to a sauce pot, simmer on low for two minutes or until blended, whisk if needed.  Remove before it bubbles.
  8. Stir coconut milk and spices into the cauliflower puree.  Add fresh ground salt and pepper to taste.
  9. Heat gently (don’t boil).  Serve into bowls, sprinkle a touch of chopped cilantro and parsley in the center.  Serve immediately

Homemade Chicken Stock

I use homemade chicken stock daily because of its nutrient-dense properties.  (For more info see http://www.nourishedkitchen.com)  I have found using a pressure cooker enables me to make stock in 40 minutes instead of two days, it’s amazing!  Plus it’s a great use for your leftover chicken carcass from roasted chicken.  Here’s how:

  1. Add 1 or 2 (if small) whole chicken carcasses to a pressure cooker
  2. Add 5 peeled carrots, 5 celery stalks and 1 whole white onion cut into chunks
  3. Add 4 chicken feet, nails cut (I order mine from tropical traditions online, they are important because chicken feet add collagen and other nutrients to your broth)
  4. Add 1 bay leaf and 5 peppercorns
  5. Fill pressure cooker with clean water (see the ART of Water post) 1/2 full (3/4 if two chickens)

Place lid tightly sealed on top of the pressure cooker.  Make sure the rubber seal is properly in place in order to prevent ”chewing” it when twisting.  Lock and seal.  Cook on high until button pops up, then monitor closely and let boil for another 20 minutes.  Remove from heat, wait ten minutes and then open valve to release steam, taking care not to burn anyone.  After the button drops, you may open the pressure cooker and then strain out your golden broth!