Thursday, August 30, 2012

Don't Forget Your Milk and Cookies!

Did you know that in 1912, the government recommended bread, a giant serving of milk, and cookies as a healthy dinner?  They also recommended cutting back on fruit and veggies since they weren't high in protein.  Milk and cookies were the recommended diet for energy for factory workers.
Parents were told to choose whole milk over skim and don't forget to butter your bread!

In 1939, the USDA recommended getting your vitamins from cereal and butter.

So now you're thinking, "well, that was a long time ago.  Surely we've come a long way since then."

In 1992, concerned about high fat diets that were causing heart disease, the USDA produced the Food Guide Pyramid, which we all know and love, recommending 6-11 servings from the "Bread, Cereal, Rice, and Pasta Group."  As a matter of fact, considered more nutritious than fat- any fat, including the healthy ones - was saltines and white bread.

The Food Guide Pyramid gets even shadier.  “In 1998, the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine (PCRM) filed a federal lawsuit against the USDA and the Department of Health and Human Services.  PCRM claimed that federal laws were violated when the USDA selected six out of the eleven people with financial ties to various food industries to serve on the Dieteary Guidelines Advisory Committee….[These] affiliations included the American Meat Institute, National Livestock and Beef Board, the American Egg Board, the National Dairy Promotion and Research Program, the National Dairy Council, Dannon Company (yogurt), Mead Johnson Nutritionals (milk-based infant formulas), Nestle (milk-based formulas, ice cream, condensed milk, and Slim-Fast (milk-based diet products.)  How dare they?” – Skinny Bitch
And continuing in that vein, even the US surgeon general has propagated questionable information.  “In the first-ever report on the ‘state of the nation’s bones,’ the US surgeon general warned of an impending ‘osteoporosis crisis’ expected by the year 2020.  In order to ward off this potential disaster, the Surgeon General’s report recommended three glasses of milk a day.  [The report was issued by] The Department of Health and Human Services.  Trust no one.” – Skinny Bitch

If you remember the information on dairy, drinking milk can actually cause osteoporosis.  These authorities who we have trusted all our lives to tell us what to eat have ulterior motives.  Do the research.  A long and healthy life is worth it!

Of course, the USDA has introduced a new directive now:  "Fill half of your plate with fruit and veggies, half with grains and protein, and get a little low-fat dairy on the side."  Better, yes.  But do you want to take their word for it entirely?

Have you looked around?  Does everyone look healthy to you?  Somewhere along the food chain something has gone wrong.  Marketers actually have experimented to appeal to our chemistry - to make us crave unhealthy foods so that they can make money.

Watch:  Food, Inc.  Check out PCRM's site to stay on top of current legislation and how to make a difference.  The more you look, the more you find that is VERY interesting...

Monday, August 27, 2012

Easing Into Health

Recently, a friend emailed me: “My life is too busy to participate in the full cleanse right now, but can you offer some advice to help get me started on a healthier track?”

You, too, may have deemed the vegan cleanse a bit too intense at this time in your life, but would like to take baby steps towards a healthier lifestyle.  

Following is my advice based on where I started three years ago, after reading Michael Pollan’s In Defense of Food: An Eater’s Manifesto.

Pollan’s advice boils it down to the basics: “Eat [whole] food.  Mostly Plants.  Not too much.”

Look for whole foods- try to get away from prepared meals with powdered mixes.  Replace with brown rice, quinoa, and other complex carbs.  Pollan further explains the meaning of “whole foods” in his book Food Rules
“Avoid food products that contain more than five ingredients,”
“Avoid food products containing ingredients that a third-grader cannot pronounce,” and
“Don’t eat anything your great-grandmother wouldn’t recognize as food.” 
Basically, the more ingredients and the bigger the words on the package, the worse for you and less food-like it is.
My friend Colleen also read In Defense of Food and made simple changes like these.  She recently wrote to me, “The way that Christians have accepted Jesus into their hearts, I have accepted that every day I need to eat veggies and walk.”  She has lost more than 40 pounds over the last year.  Every little change you make, every conscious bite, every step you take- makes a difference!
For breakfast, try to alternate between oatmeal and smoothies (fruit or 50% fruit, 50% any veggies you like.)  If you have an egg breakfast on a weekend, try to use organic, free-range eggs and real potatoes for hash browns.

Most important things to cut out entirely:
•    Sugar and sugar’s ugly relatives (especially High Fructose Corn Syrup – HFCS- never eat that, even if you re-introduce sugar.)
•    Lunch meat – it is highly processed and has really gross chemicals in it.  If you can, lighten up on the bacon, too (for the same reasons).  I know that’s a tall order, so do your best.
•    White flour/white bread – White flour is highly processed, just like sugar, making your body process it too quickly and wreaking all kinds of havoc on your digestive system.  OatNut bread is good and much better for you.  I’ve heard a lot about sprouted bread being really healthy, but I’m still working on finding the right brand for me.
•    Hydrogenated oil, partially hydrogenated oil – if this is listed as an ingredient, drop it like it’s hot.  This is one of the most dangerous chemicals in our food.
•    Vegetable oil

Reduce:
Meat – Pollan recommends, “Treat meat as a flavoring or special occasion food.”
When you do, opt for free-range & grass fed (it’s better for you and tastes better, too.)  The main thing is, don’t think of it as needing to accompany every meal.  First reduce to one meal a day with meat, then maybe you will be able to declare one day a week a vegetarian day.  Replace with beans, lentils, or meat substitutes (Morningstar's Black Bean Burgers are wonderful.)  Consider omitting meat as you discover the delicious new substitutes and as your taste buds adjust to less meat.  Not only is it good for your diet, it’s good for the environment, too. 
The Environmental Defense Fund explains, “If every American skipped one meal of chicken per week and substituted vegetables and grains, for example, the carbon dioxide savings would be the same as taking more than half a million cars off U.S. roads.”

Add fish to replace beef and chicken as often as possible.   Avoid farmed fish and opt for wild.

Reduce Beer (don’t hate me!)  It contains the most simple, streamlined carbs you can get.  Bad for blood sugar and bad for bellies.   You don’t have to give it up completely, but reduce as much as you are able.

Also, avoid using the microwave.  It may actually change the chemical make-up of your food and there are still studies being done on the effects of the radiation.  Plus, the food tastes better and has a much better consistency when you use the stove or the oven and most things don’t take that much longer.

Your dinner plate should be ½ veggies, ¼ grains, and ¼ protein. 

Some good snacks:
•    Organic tortilla chips & salsa
•    Popcorn -not in a microwave bag – you can pop with oil on the stove and drizzle with a little olive oil or butter, and sprinkle with salt.  It feels indulgent, but is so much better than chemicals in the microwave.  Air-popped is even better, but making it on the stove is one of my fun things that keeps me from feeling deprived.
•    Raw veggies with unsweetened, natural peanut butter
•    Fruit
•    Whole wheat (or gluten free) crackers and unsweetened, natural peanut butter

And finally, try to walk after each meal if at all possible.  Move as much as you can, whenever you can, even if it means using a Wii fit, dancing in your bedroom, or even doing calf raises at your desk.  I recommend walking for 20 minutes each day, then increase to 30, 60, and adding additional activities.  My personal favorites are running, yoga, and dancing in my living room.

Why is it so important to make these changes?

“The three most common causes of death in [America] – heart disease, cancer, and stroke- have all been linked to the standard Western diet, rich in animal products, refined carbohydrates, and processed food.” – Scott Jurek

By eating whole foods- mostly plants- and omitting processed “food”, you can make positive strides in health for you and your family.

These are my "Cliffs notes" after three years of reading, cooking, and journeying towards a healthier lifestyle.

Other recommendations by Colleen:
Bob Greene's The Best Life Diet (contains a journal to reflect and get to deeper food issues)
David Kessler's The End of Overeating (discusses the chemical manipulation of food companies to make us want more of their food)

Sunday, August 12, 2012

Tips for Continuing on a Healthy Journey

"When diet is wrong medicine is of no use.
When diet is correct medicine is of no need."
-Ayurvedic Proverb

Wow, we did it.  We committed to 21-days to take care of ourselves and to improve our health and our awareness of what we put in our bodies.  You should be so proud!

If we’re being scientific, the best approach is to re-introduce each of the “Big 5” one at a time, so that you can evaluate the effects on your body in an isolated manner.  These are my recommendations for optimal health:

I recommend continuing to omit Animal Products.  After all that we’ve learned about meat and dairy, it makes sense to keep out of our bodies.  Plus, there’s that lovely, light feeling after eating.  If you do decide to reintroduce dairy, watch out for sinus congestion or stomach upset.  If these things show up, you may be one of the 50% of people who are allergic and don’t even know it.

When dining out, you can always ask if you don’t see something on the menu that works for your diet.  In New York City at a steak restaurant, I asked the waiter for a vegan meal, and this is the beautiful dish the chef whipped up, just for me!  It’s best to call ahead, whenever possible, if requesting off-menu meals, but is not typically required.  You may be surprised how accommodating and creative chefs can be.
It's always fresh, made just for you, and usually presented rather artistically.  This was another delicious vegan meal that was prepared for me at a wedding on Saturday (veggies with a balsamic reduction sauce):
Vida commented that the baked red skin potatoes on my plate were tastier and better seasoned than the scalloped potatoes on his!

If you did not find many changes from omitting gluten, slowly reintroduce it into your diet.  Look for whole grains like barley, buckwheat, oats, and whole wheat.  Pay close attention to noticing if you experience headaches, asthma, skin rashes or hives, weight gain and/or loss, bloating, fatigue, or depression.  It could mean you have a gluten intolerance and then you would want to continue to omit.

I strongly recommend leaving caffeine out of your diet.  You’ve already gone through the withdrawal, so why put your body through the deleterious effects again?  If you decide to partake on occasion, pay close attention to how you sleep and if you notice a rise in anxiety and/or irritability.  You may also experience tummy troubles.  And remember, coffee is acidic.  Too much acid in the body keeps us fat and sick.  To boot, if you are a cream and sugar addict like I used to be, that’s added fat and calories that you can spare yourself daily.

Ah, alcohol.  Again, we’ve broken the habit, so why not leave this one for special occasions?  And pay attention – you will be more likely to notice the way your body reacts, both while drinking and after.  Evaluate if that’s what you want to experience and make your conscious choice instead of succumbing to peer pressure or habits.  Alcohol is really pure sugar – it’s grains processed down until the body uses them too quickly.  That’s bad for blood sugar and your metabolism.

If you are going to re-introduce sugar, I hope you will do so much more lightly than before you began the cleanse.  Sugar is another toxin that makes our body acidic, causing our body to cling to fat cells and also increasing the fuel for cancer.  Of course, if you have dessert at a party every now and then, that’s fine.  And I will have dark chocolate from time to time.  But if you can resist, take advantage of the fact that your body has broken its craving.  And again – pay close attention to how you feel.

These are my recommendations.  Of course, you and your body know best.  Hopefully you’ve become more in-tune and will be able to discern what is best for you at this time in your life.

Have a wonderful week and I’ll have another delicious recipe for you on Thursday.  Please keep the comments and questions coming.  Enjoy your healthy journey!

Saturday, August 11, 2012

Day 21- The Beauty of a Plant Based Diet



“What we eat is a matter of life and death.  Food is who we are.” – Scott Jurek

It’s the 21st day!  We’ve done it!  I’ve heard wonderful stories from many of you about losing up to 11 pounds, feeling lighter and happier, performing better in sports and increasing running distance, and feeling liberated by the consciousness of your choices.  I concur with all of these, although I’ve only lost 7 pounds (so far).  Works for me!

We’ve learned a great deal about how beneficial it is to eat a plant-based diet.  Here are a few more facts.

“Genetically and structurally, we are designed to thrive on plant foods…Plants store the sun’s energy, which we receive by eating them.  If you can, just picture the light energy from the sun beaming down to the vegetables and fruits, and as we eat those foods, imagine that energy being transmitted into our bodies.  Our nervous systems are maintained and stimulated by this light.  What an amazing gift from nature- to be able to eat such pure foods that give our bodies so much!” – Skinny Bitch

If you’d like to step it up a notch, opt for organic, preferably locally grown veggies.  According to Dr. Todd Pesek’s book, Eat Yourself Super, based on studies performed on individuals who display longevity, it’s “worthwhile to note that their foods are locally produced whenever possible and grown in rich soils.  Your sense of place is in your local ecosystem.”

The picture to the left is all produce from local farmers.  I'm not sure what I will do in the winter!

Click here if you would like more info on where to find local produce.

If you would like more information on going vegan or vegetarian, there is some great info at Goveg.com and you can even order a free vegetarian starter kit.
 If you enjoyed this 21-day program, another one that I would strongly recommend (that I have done several times and really like) is PCRM's 21-Day Vegan Kick Start.  They share delicious recipes for breakfast, lunch, and dinner for all 21 days.

“My refusing to eat flesh occasioned an inconveniency, and I was frequently chided for my singularity, but, with this lighter repast, I made the greater progress, for greater clearness of head and quicker comprehension.” – Ben Franklin


Not only does a vegan diet “restore health and tighten waistlines, there’s evidence it extends our lives as well.  The U.S. National Institute on Aging did a study of the longest-lived peoples in the world and found the people of Okinawa (Japan), Sardinia, and Seventh Day Adventists are among the longest lived on earth.”  Their common traits are:
  • They eat lots of fruit, vegetables, and whole grains
  • They don’t smoke
  • They are active every day
  • They stay socially engaged
  • The Adventists also eat lots of nuts and beans
-The Kind Diet

Thank you for joining me on this journey of learning and experimenting with health and nutrition.  It has been an absolute joy for me to share this information with you and I hope you’ve found it helpful.  I’ve found this way of living to be so beneficial that I plan to continue a vegan lifestyle, while avoiding gluten, sugar, caffeine, and alcohol.  It sounded so difficult at first, but now I’ve found many delicious substitutes and new recipes.  I will re-introduce occasional dark chocolate (it’s dairy free!) and may have a glass of wine, a cup of green tea, or fresh baked bread from time to time, but I fully intend to maintain this healthy lifestyle.

If you decide to continue omitting any of the Big 5 from your diet, Kathy Freston encourages us, “remind yourself that you have free will and it is your choice to have or do whatever you want.  And then say to yourself, ‘Okay, I can have this piece of cake [or jigger of Scotch or chunk of cheese, or what have you], but if I do, these are the consequences.’ And then list them.” 

Starting tomorrow, I will begin regularly posting on Mondays and Thursdays.  I hope you will follow my adventures as I continue the search for life’s balance through nutrition, exercise, and whatever else life brings!

To conclude the cleanse, I would like to share Kathy Freston’s parting words:

“Now you know just how powerful you are.  Now you know that you are the healer who can heal yourself and extend that healing out into the world.  May you be well and thrive in every respect, and may you use this foundation of power to help move us all forward.”





Friday, August 10, 2012

Day 20 - Awakening to the Power of our Food Choices

“Nothing will benefit human health and increase chances for survival of life on Earth as much as the evolution to a vegetarian diet.” – Albert Einstein

There are some weighty health and spiritual implications that we have now managed to free ourselves from for nearly 21 days – long enough to change a habit!  We will discuss conditions that affect our health in the big business of meat and dairy, a little bit about the abilities of animals, as well as the severe environmental toll caused by these industries.

This is all so important – I wish everyone could know these scary facts about what happens to our meat.  You must know what you are putting into your body.  You have a choice.  Though this gets a little heavy, I left out the bits about the animal treatment in the slaughterhouses.  You can look that up for yourself, if interested.

“You have just dined, and, however scrupulously the slaughterhouse is concealed in the graceful distance of miles, there is complicity.” – Ralph Waldo Emerson

First, let’s continue talking about our health:

“Illegal hormones are regularly pumped into veal calves, which are suspected of increasing the growth of cancer cells in the humans who eat them.  The USDA has not only been accused of overlooking these practices, but also of falsifying lab results, altering records, and pressuring staff to lie about events.” *  If they operate like this with veal, who is protecting the rest of the meat?

When a worker in a horse slaughterhouse was interviewed, he said, Might be part of him’s [a contaminated horse] bad, might be the pneumonia’s traveled everywhere.. The meat’s supposed to be condemned, but still you’d cut it up and bag it.”  When asked, “Doesn’t it have to be stamped ‘USDA inspected?’ the factory worker replied, “He [his boss] got the stamper.  He can stamp it himself when the doc leaves…You take a condemned horse, skin him up, sell the meat…We’ve sold it as beef.”

The USDA has also allowed the processing of “downed” animals, or ones that are too sick or injured to walk.  In 2004, with the outbreak of mad cow disease, this was banned.  But then in 2005, it was announced that downed animals could once again be used for human consumption.  “So in addition to all the other filth you’re eating, you’re also eating whatever illness the animal had.  You are what you eat.”

At the expense of our health, large corporations are making billions of dollars.

Did you know that the USDA is “responsible for ‘the safety’ of meat, poultry, dairy and eggs and also promotes the sale of them.  In fact, they even go so far as to purchase the products themselves, using our tax dollars.  The USDA will spend $30 million a year on beef buyouts alone.  Another $30 of our hard-earned money goes toward pork purchases…” 

And where do these products go that couldn’t be sold to consumers?  The National School Lunch Program (NSLP) is “a nation-wide $4 billion scheme that allows the USDA to buy up all this meat, milk, and cheese with our tax dollars, and then dump this crap into the bodies of more than 26 million school children.  Ever wonder why school lunches are required to include milk?  The NSLP directly benefits the meat, dairy, and poultry industries at the expense of our nation’s children.”

When we hear the terms “grass-fed” beef, “free-range”, “free-roaming”, we imagine happy animals enjoying sunshine, fresh air, and the company of other animals.  “But labels- other than ‘organic’ on egg cartons” or beef products are not subject to regulation by the USDA.  And even if the farm is free-range and humane, the animals are still being sent off to the slaughterhouse, where the conditions are unconscionable. 

Then there is the spiritual side – the kinship with other living beings.  Did you know that “cows actually nurture friendships and bear grudges?  One study showed cows displaying excitement while solving intellectual challenges.”

“Chickens are as smart as mammals, including some primates…they are apt pupils and can learn by watching the mistakes of others…A PBS documentary revealed chickens’ love for television and music.”

And here’s a fun one – Pigs can play video games!  “They’ve been labeled as more intelligent than dogs and three-year-old humans.”

If you choose to go vegan, you are sparing the lives of over ninety animals a year.


“An individual can adopt the way of life of the future- the nonviolent way- without having to wait for others to do so.  And if an individual can do it, cannot whole groups of individuals?  Whole nations?” – Mahatma Gandhi

There is also issue of environmental devastation.  In Quantum Wellness Cleanse, Kathy shares the results of a United Nations scientific analysis of raising animals in order to eat them.  They declared eating meat, dairy, and eggs is “one of the …most significant contributors to the most serious environmental problems at every scale from local to global” and “should be a major policy focus when dealing with problems of land degradation, climate change and air pollution, water shortage and water pollution, and loss of biodiversity.”

According to Freston, the meat and dairy industry’s deleterious effects on climate change, for instance, are more significant than “all the cars, trucks, and planes in the world combined.”

To look at the even bigger picture: “The amount of feed that it takes to funnel through an animal to create one 8-ounce steak could fill forty to fifty bowls with cooked grain….the world’s passion for meat is a much bigger cause of global hunger than its passion for the car.”  This means that choosing to eat a vegan diet helps to combat world hunger!

In Matthew Scully’s book, Dominion, he writes “…inside the factory farm, animals…received no comforts, no names, no affection, no nothing, only my silent and resolute indifference…  Each creature bred and born just for me.  Confined and isolated just for me.  And then in lonely terror packed off to die, just for me.  And every time I saw and heard them I would have to remind myself just why I as doing this, to ask if my taste for pork loins or ham or steak or veal was really worth this price, to ask if this was really my choice and there was no other way…Therefore, I want no part in any of it.  I do not want this product…When you eat flesh extracted in this way, as novelist Alice Walker puts it, ‘You’re just eating misery.  You’re eating a bitter life…’ For me, it comes down to the question of whether I am a man or just a consumer…Whether to side with the powerful and comfortable or with the weak, afflicted, and forgotten.  Whether, as an economic actor in a free market, I answer to the god of money or to the God of mercy.”

*All quotes are from Skinny Bitch unless indicated otherwise.

Meditation (From Quantum Wellness Cleanse):
I awaken.  I am no longer asleep.  What is good for my body is good for my soul.  I can take a huge leap as I move along the continuum of consciousness by staying alert and adhering to the great wisdom passed down through the ages that advises us to be loving, merciful, and compassionate.  I am no longer willing to be greedy, gluttonous, or ignorant.  Eating with spiritual integrity is of the utmost importance.”

Also, be proud that your choices can make a positive impact in the world.  By voting with our choices and our economic power, we can make a difference!


Spicy Black Bean Soup (in the Slow Cooker)
2 cups dried beans
8 cups water
1 onion, diced
2 cloves garlic, diced
1 roasted red pepper from a jar or bell pepper of any color, diced
2 ½ tomatoes, diced large
½ habanero pepper, diced small (optional)
1 TB olive oil
2 tsp cumin (one in the beginning and one for later)
2 tsp chili powder (one in the beginning and one for later)
2 tsp garlic powder (one in the beginning and one for later)
1 tsp salt
2 ears of corn, grilled or cooked (frozen corn would be okay, too – ½ cup)
½ yellow squash, grilled and diced into small pieces
For the garnish:
½ diced avocado
½ diced tomato
¼ cup fresh cilantro, chopped
2 green onions, chopped

1.    Heat the olive oil in a small pan on medium heat.  When hot, add the onion and sauté for about 2 minutes.  Add 1 tsp each of cumin, chili powder, and garlic powder.  Then add the garlic and sauté for another 30 seconds, until garlic is aromatic.

2.    Place onion mixture, beans, water, tomatoes, roasted red pepper, and habanero pepper into slow cooker.  Stir, set on low, and cook for 8-9 hours

3.    One hour before serving, stir in 1 tsp each of cumin, chili powder, garlic powder, and salt.  Re-cover and let continue to cook on low.

4.    Use an immersion blender or hand mixer to puree some of the beans to thicken the soup.  It’s up to you how many beans to puree and how many to keep whole based on the texture you like.

5.    Grill the corn and yellow squash, then scrape corn off and dice ½ of yellow squash.  (I used the other half in a salad that I served on the side.)  Place corn and yellow squash into slow cooker, stir and you are now ready to serve the soup.  Check seasonings and add more salt/chili powder/cumin, if necessary.

6.    Ladle the soup into bowls and garnish with diced tomato, avocado, cilantro, and green onions.

If you like, you could bake corn tortillas, cut them in strips, and float on top of the soup.  This would probably take 2 hours on the stove.  If you don’t have a hand-held immersion blender, you could scoop some of the soup out and put it in a blender to thicken.



I served with a salad on the side to make it a beautifully balanced meal.

Thursday, August 9, 2012

Day 19 - All That Hype about Protein

The first time I went vegan (almost 3 years ago), I gained about 15 pounds.  Dismayed, I declared, “I must need more protein.”  The real trouble?  I told myself that since I wasn’t eating meat, I was “healthy” as I ate French fries.  Anything that wasn’t an animal product was fair game.  I ate all the bread I could get my hands on.  Dessert.  The only vegetables I would eat were broccoli, carrots, lettuce, tomatoes, potatoes, and corn.  Breakfast would be coffee.  Lunch would be a frozen meal, microwaved, with a side of French fries.  Dinner would be perogies or another easy, white starch.  Snacks: potato chips, candy bars, cappuccinos from a machine. Yeah, must have been the lack of protein…(can you detect the sarcasm?)

Granted, I was in a program to get my Master's Degree in 11 months while simultaneously student teaching full-time, so to my credit, the faster deduction was all I had time for...

But why did I immediately blame the protein instead of taking a closer look at my diet?  And when we tell people we are vegan/vegetarian, why are they so quick to shout:  “But what about your protein?  You have to get enough protein!  Stop right now!  Eat some meat!”

We have been brainwashed as a society to eat protein, protein, protein.  Protein to lose weight.  Protein to gain muscle.  Protein to save the world.

“The average 19- to 30-year-old American consumes 91 grams a day, nearly twice the recommended daily amount (56 grams for an adult male, 46 for an adult female)…Too much protein stresses the kidneys…and can leach calcium from the bones.” – Scott Jurek, Eat and Run

“It is a complete myth that we need a massive amount of protein,” write Barnouin and Freedman.
As a matter of fact, over-consumption of protein – especially animal protein- “can impair our kidneys; leach calcium, zinc, vitamin B, iron, and magnesium from our bodies; and cause osteoporosis, heart disease, cancer, and obesity.”

Can you remember the last time you heard of someone being hospitalized for a protein deficiency (kwashiorkor-is the clinical term)?  Never heard of it.  How about cancer, kidney failure, heart disease, osteoporosis, obesity?  Now those sound familiar…

And on quality of life:  “High amounts of protein can damage our tissues, organs, and cells, contributing to faster aging.  People in other cultures consume half the amount of protein that we do, yet they live longer, healthier lives.” – Skinny Bitch

According to Rip Esselstyn, as a vegan, “not only will you get all the protein that you need, for the first time in your life you won’t suffer from an excess of it.”

Even the strongest animals in nature – gorillas, elephants, hippos, bison –are plant eaters.  And they don’t seem to have any trouble growing and thriving while eating only veggies.

According to the American Dietetic Association, “eating a vegetarian diet provides twice the amount of protein needed daily.” 

Carl Lewis, winner of 10 Olympic medals in track, said that his best year competing was the first year he ate a vegan diet. 

Strength trainer Mike Mahler says, “Becoming a vegan had a profound effect on my training…My bench press excelled past 315 pounds, and I noticed that I recovered much faster.  My body fat also went down, and I put on 10 pounds of lean muscle in a few months.” – From Quantum Wellness Cleanse  (That's him to the left.)

Beans, nuts, seeds, lentils, whole grains, soy products, fruits, and many vegetables have plenty of protein.

Those Skinny Bitches tell us, “If you want an extra boost, treat yourself to spirulina, a high protein algae that contains omega-3 and omega-6 fatty acids, B-12 (important for vegetarians), enzymes, and minerals.  It also supports the immune system, fights cancer, and helps with hypoglycemia, anemia, ulcers, diabetes, and chronic fatigue syndrome.  Spirulina also contains all nine essential amino acids.” 

In The Kind Diet, Alicia creates a chart that is very illuminating, so I’m sharing.  This chart demonstrates the protein in steak vs. the protein in beans.

Steak                                   vs.                    Beans
20% of calories from protein                          25% of calories from protein
80% of calories from fat (mostly saturated)     5% of calories from fat (unsaturated)
0% of calories from complex carbs                  70% of calories from complex carbs
Contains excess hormones                              Help discharge excess hormones
Raises cholesterol                                           Lower cholesterol
No fiber                                                         High in Fiber
Contains steroids, antibiotics                          If organic, contains no chemicals
Constipates                                                    Keep you regular
Unsustainably produced                                  Sustainably grown
Depletes the earth                                          Beans add needed nitrogen to soil
$5-$10/lb (1 serving)                                     $2-$4/lb (4 servings)

Another thing you've probably heard is that “animal proteins are complete proteins and plants are not.”

According to Esselstyn, “The myth that [plant proteins are not complete] or are of a lesser quality than animal proteins, dates back to experiments performed on rats in the early 1900s.  Forget the fact that rats aren’t humans, have different nutritional requirements, and need more protein than humans to support their furry little bodies.  The meat, dairy, and egg industries have marketed the hell out of this ancient research and …most every Dick, Tom, and Jane thinks the only way to get complete protein is through meat, eggs, or dairy.”

So don’t worry about protein.  Now you are free to focus on world peace.


Another resource on vegan protein power meals for athletes: http://www.mikemahler.com/online-library/articles/nutrition-programs/power-vegan-meals.html
 
Thanks for the spirulina tip, Zeljka.  I just ordered a pound of it online to put in smoothies!

Here is a protein-packed dinner:


Cilantro Tomatillo Rice and Beans

3 Tablespoons Extra Virgin Olive Oil
1 medium onion, diced
3-4 cloves garlic, diced small
1-2 serrano peppers or 3 jalapenos, de-seeded and diced (less if you don’t like the heat)
½ bell pepper (any color you like)
4-6 tomatillos, diced
2 (15 oz) cans of black beans, drained
1 can pinto beans, drained  (you can swap these if you like pinto better than black)
1 Tablespoon water
½ cup fresh chopped cilantro
Juice from ½ lime
Salt to taste
2 teaspoons chili powder
2 teaspoons cumin
Brown rice
1 avocado, diced
1 tomato, diced (mix avocado and tomato together with more chopped cilantro)

1.    Prepare brown rice according to package (When I prepare 1 cup dry, I have some rice leftover for other recipes.)

2.    Heat oil on medium high.  Add onion and sauté for 2-3 minutes.  Add peppers, tomatillos, chili powder, cumin, and salt.  Add garlic and reduce heat to low.  Simmer for about 5-7 minutes, until onions are translucent and tomatillos are softening.

3.    Add beans and water.  Cover and cook until beans are heated through (5-15 minutes depending on how soft you like your beans.  I tend to go more towards the longer side.

4.    Stir in cilantro, lime juice, and salt.  Cook for 2 minutes and check seasonings to see if you need to add more chili powder, cumin, or hot sauce.  Serve over rice or mixed into rice.

5.    Top with avocado/tomato mixture.  You may also want to add green onions.  Yum!


Note:  Yours will probably not look like mine in the picture.  I actually messed up and it was still delicious.  I thought I had the recipe memorized and cooked the beans on a higher heat for a long time and ended up with more of a sauce.  I added a little bit of cornstarch and served it over the rice instead of mixed in like I usually do.  I mixed some with rice and left some as sauce, then made enchiladas out of the leftovers the next day, similar to the recipe here: http://laurajnovak.blogspot.com/2012/07/day-4-whats-wrong-with-gluten.html.  I filled the tortillas with bean mixture, rice mixture, then topped with bean mixture and baked.  It was quite delicious!

This is great served with a salad on the side – I like to reserve half of the avocado/tomato mixture and serve it over lettuce.  Then I mix up my own dressing:

Mexican Dressing
2 TB chopped cilantro
½ cup peanut or canola oil
1 tsp honey
½ tsp chili powder
½ tsp cumin
1 tsp garlic powder
1/2 tsp salt

Wednesday, August 8, 2012

Day 18- Embrace your inner “freak” to incite positive change in the world.


“As we let our own light shine, we unconsciously give others permission to do the same.”
-Nelson Mandela

One thing that I love about a vegan lifestyle is that it's non-conforming.  It’s a personal revolution and utter rebellion to say, “I will not buy into an industry that is cruel, does not care about my health, and is followed as a matter of convenience for most.”  When you order your meal without meat and without cheese, you’ve probably already noticed some of the reactions.  It’s confusion, raised eyebrows, sometimes even hostility – especially if you don’t live on the West Coast, USA.

Freston agrees, “Our challenge as humans is always to love the part of ourselves that is rejected and disowned.  When we come to terms with the part of us that is vulnerable, we arrive at a deeper inner peace, and thus are able to act in the world a bit more peacefully.”

A couple of weeks ago, I was sitting in a restaurant and overheard a young woman saying, “I felt so emotional.  I know, I told him.  I’m so crazy!”  This struck a chord with me as I remembered saying the same thing more times than I would like to admit.  My heart moved for this girl.  Why should we be labeled as "crazy" for letting ourselves emotionally react?  For being ourselves? 

Why do we tuck these emotions, these eccentricities away?  We are all unique, with differing needs, interests, bodies.  Yet, society has groomed us to want to be competitive versions of the same prototype.  It makes us more apt to buy things, to stay in line by striving for sameness, constantly asking ourselves, “Is this okay?  What will they think?”

“The system does not want us to know our own best selves, because if we do we then have no need to buy things that ‘they’ say are worthy and desirable.  Satisfied people don’t buy as much stuff.” – The Minimalist Women’s Guide to Having it All

Let’s stop judging ourselves based on society’s imposed standards.  How about judging based on our own heart’s standards?  Or best yet, don’t judge yourself at all!

I am curvy.  My hair is purple.  I don't have cable.  I don’t eat animals.  I love yoga and find that “church” is on my mat.  Totally weird?  Not fitting into society?  So?  I’ve been exceedingly happier since realizing: It’s my choice how I live; what I wear, how to nourish my body, what’s important to me!   

“Be who you are and say what you feel because those who mind don’t matter and those who matter don’t mind.” - Dr. Seuss

Today’s yummy recipe is a little bit different, too.  I made it up the other day when I had an abundance of peaches and corn.


Laura’s Fabulous Peach Salsa
3 green onions, chopped small (or 1/2 sweet onion, diced)
½ green pepper, diced small
2 jalapenos, diced small
1/3 cup cilantro, chopped
7 peaches, peeled, pitted, and diced
4 cobs of corn, grilled and sliced off cob
Squirt of lime juice
salt to taste (just to bring out the flavors)

Mix and enjoy!

Hint:  You will need more cilantro, green onions, green pepper, jalapenos, and lime for tomorrow’s recipe.

Kathy Freston’s Wellness Cleanse Meditation for Today:
I open my eyes so that I may heal.
I am ready to confront the darkness within (the parts that care only about immediate or personal satisfaction) and the darkness in our world.  By nudging myself to open my eyes, I will begin to see what needs to shift on a fundamental level.  By healing myself and becoming more aware and thoughtful about my choices, I am also offering that light and healing outward into the world.”


Tuesday, August 7, 2012

Day 17- Sugar’s Evil Step Sisters- Mmmm, Chemicals!


Let’s talk about Soda (“Liquid Satan.”)  Not only does a typical soda have 10 teaspoons of sugar (which I bemoaned yesterday,) the high levels of phosphorous can leach calcium from your body, which can lead to bone loss and even osteoporosis. 

“There is nothing in soda that should be put in your body,” according to the Skinny Bitches.

If you are proudly saying, “I drink diet soda, I’m good!” you may, unfortunately, be even worse off.

“Aspartame (an ingredient commonly found in diet sodas and other sugar-free foods) has been blamed for a slew of scary maladies, like arthritis, birth defects, fibromyalgia, Alzheimer’s, lupus, multiple sclerosis, and diabetes.” – Skinny Bitch

The Food and Drug Administration (FDA) has received more complaints from the public on aspartame than any other “food” product.  There are actually aspartame victim support groups.  Also according to Freedman and Barnouin, “Some of the ninety-two aspartame side effects listed by the FDA include memory loss, nerve cell damage, migraines, reproductive disorders, mental confusion, brain lesions, blindness, joint pain, Alzheimer’s, bloating, nervous system disorders, hair loss, food cravings, and weight gain.”  No, I didn’t make a mistake.  Diet soda leads to weight gain.

NutraSweet and Equal are the chemical sweeteners that contain aspartame.  So why is aspartame so dangerous?  When eaten, methyl alcohol, one of the ingredients in aspartame, changes into formaldehyde, a deadly neurotoxin which is carcinogenic (cancer-causing.)

Also, when aspartame is combined with carbs (chips and diet soda), it “causes your brain to slow down its production of serotonin.  A healthy level of serotonin is needed to be happy and well balanced.  So drinking diet soda can make you fat, sick, and unhappy.” – Skinny Bitch

Equal goes even a step further, increasing your risk of seizures, depression, and schizophrenia due to high levels of phenylalanine that go to your brain.

So, you prefer Sweet & Low?  (You thought you were going to sneak on by, didn’t you?)  It contains “saccharin, a coal-tar compound.”  Mmmmm.

And Splenda?  Ah, I wish I could go back in time and take Splenda out of my cabinets years ago.  It contains small amounts of heavy metals, methanol, and arsenic.  Sucrose, in Splenda, is made by chlorinating sugar and “has been found to cause diarrhea; organ, genetic, immune system, and reproductive damage; swelling of the liver and kidneys; and a decrease in fetal body weight.” – Skinny Bitch 
Additionally, there is evidence that Sucralose may increase appetite.  (Wait, what?)

Please, throw those nasty chemicals AWAY!  I won’t even go into the legal battles that happened to get them into our food, but I will say that they were shady and not in the best interest of human health.  (Hint: $)  According to The Kind Diet, all artificial sweeteners followed the same path: “failing safety tests, being approved by the FDA anyway, and now producing ever-growing anecdotal evidence of ill effects.”


Also, beware of “low-fat” or “fat-free” claims on packages.  What these words really mean, according to Skinny Bitch, is “Chemical Shit Storm.”  Foods go through more processing to take out the fat.  Typically, it means adding extra forms of sugar (or sweeteners), stripping the “food” of more minerals and vitamins, and adding hydrogenated oils (not diet food, really.)



I just heard someone say, “I’ll eat what I want now and just take medicine later.”  Ugh.  If your body is saying, “I don’t like this,” that’s a natural signal to keep it out of your body.  “Every time you take medicine, you interfere with your body’s natural ability to heal itself.  You are alleviating those intelligent responses that alert you to a problem, and sending false signals to your brain…most likely, your body is having an adverse reaction to the unhealthy crap you’re eating.” – Skinny Bitch


When we pay attention to our bodies and take proper care, the body is a perfect machine.  We have the ability to heal ourselves.  When we cover up the problems with medicine (chemicals), we cause other side effects that ruin the balance in other ways.  Of course, there are times when medicine can be a necessary evil, but if you have a little headache, drink some water (you could just be dehydrated.)  Or rest!  The more chemicals that we regularly add into the body, the more likely we will be to fall out of balance and have to take more and more to ease the symptoms.


“He that takes medicine and neglects diet, wastes the skill of the physician.”
-Chinese Proverb

Polenta Gnocchi in Tomato Sauce


¼ cup olive oil
Prepared polenta (follow instructions on box.  I like to buy a pre-made roll of polenta from Trader Joes- I know what you’re thinking and I checked the ingredients – organic yellow corn meal, salt, water, vitamins)
2 cups spaghetti sauce (hopefully leftover from yesterday- if not, see below for a quick sauce)
¼ cup finely chopped fresh parsley or basil, for garnish
Freshly ground black pepper

1.    Prepare a baking sheet by placing a layer of aluminum foil over the surface, then greece with half of the olive oil.

2.    Spread the polenta in a smooth layer on the baking sheet and refrigerate the polenta until cool and firm, 2 to 4 hours.  Use a biscuit or ravioli cutter to stamp out rounds of polenta (this is why I buy it in a tube – I just cut the circles.)

Note:  For a thicker sauce, puree in a blender for 10-15 seconds.  It makes it even and it spreads more nicely on the polenta.

3.    Preheat the oven to 400 F (204.5 C).  Prepare a baking dish by coating it with the remaining olive oil.  Arrange the polenta gnocchi so the pieces are slightly overlapping one another in the bottom of the baking dish.  Generously spoon the sauce over the polenta gnocchi and bake until hot, about 30 minutes.

4.    Remove the gnocchi from the oven and sprinkle with the parsley, then grind some fresh pepper over the top.  Serve immediately.

Great with a salad!

Quick and Easy Pasta Sauce
Your favorite jarred (32 oz) sauce (I like Mids and Ragu)
1 TB olive oil
1 onion, diced
½ yellow bell pepper, diced
2 cloves garlic, chopped
1 tsp oregano
1 tsp basil
½ tsp parsley
1 pinch rosemary
1 tsp garlic powder

1.    Heat the oil on medium-low and sauté the onions when hot.  After 2 minutes, add the pepper.  Add the oregano, basil, parsley, rosemary, and garlic powder.  After 3 minutes, add the garlic and sauté for about 30 seconds (it gets aromatic.)

2.    Pour about half to ¾ of the jar into the sauce pan (depending on if you want leftovers.)  Bring to a gentle boil, cover and simmer for 30 minutes.

You can add diced tomatoes if you add a tablespoon of agave nectar and simmer for at least an hour.

Monday, August 6, 2012

Day 16 – Your Love for Sugar is Unrequited


This is really awkward… I’m so sorry to have to be the one to tell you this, but your sweetheart, Sugar – she’s never going to love you back.  As a matter of fact, your SweetTart, your Love, your Sugar…has been trying to kill you for years.  I know it must be hard to hear.  But from what I can see (the attempted murder and all), I’m not sure it’s going to work out between you two…

“Sugar is like crack, and food manufacturers know that if they add it to their products, you’ll keep coming back for more.” – Skinny Bitch

White sugar, often called an “antinutrient” actually steals nourishment from your body.  It leaches vitamins and minerals from your blood and bones.  That’s why you get cavities, as I’m sure you know, but it also leads to bone loss, depression, and weak blood.

Additionally, “Refined sugar, a simple carbohydrate, has been linked to hypoglycemia, yeast overgrowth, a weakened immune system, hyperactivity, attention deficit disorder, enlargement of the liver and kidneys, mental and emotional disorders, cavities, and an imbalance of neurotransmitters in the brain.” – Skinny Bitch

Not bad enough?  White sugar is associated with cancer.  “Cancer cells swarm to sugar like bees to honey, because it is an important source of food for them.” – The Engine 2 Diet, Rip Esselstyn

Sugar contributes to insulin resistance and diabetes, where your “blood sugar remains high, but your cells are starving.” – Kind Diet

Also according to Alicia Silverstone: “Sugar makes you fat…Because excess refined sugar converts to fat, every soda, every cupcake, and every candy bar is going straight to your thighs.”

Rip Esselstyn agrees, “When sugars are refined, adulterated, and processed, they become empty calories: They contain almost no nutritional value, can raise cholesterol levels, and make a beeline for your waistline.”

Did you know that it was the arrival of refined flour and sugar that brought disease to isolated areas?  “Western diseases followed closely on the heels of the arrival of Western foods, particularly refined flour and sugar and other kinds of 'store food.'…When one Western disease arrived on the scene, so did most of the others and often in the same order: obesity followed by type 2 diabetes followed by hypertension and stroke followed by heart disease.” – In Defense of Food, an Eater’s Manifesto by Michael Pollan

According to Kathy Freston's Quantum Wellness Cleanse, “the most important thing to realize  is that no matter how out of balance your system is, even if you have type 2 diabetes, you can do a great deal to get healthy again by cutting out sugars, refined carbs, and high-fructose corn syrup, and by exercising regularly.” 

Continue to avoid:
  • Soda (Deemed “Liquid Satan” in Skinny Bitch)
  • Store-bought cookies, cakes, or pastries
  • Candy
  • Condiments that contain sugar or high fructose corn syrup (HFCS), which is processed even more than refined sugar
  • Ice cream or frozen yogurt
  • Other words for refined sugar on packages: evaporated cane juice, sugar, brown sugar, high fructose corn syrup, corn syrup, honey, barley malt, or beet sugar.
  • Also, a tip from The Kind Diet: “All ingredients ending in “-ose” should be considered white sugar: Dextrose, glucose, sucrose, maltose, and fructose are all simple sugars.”
Kathy recommends avoiding fruit juice because “it contains high concentrations of naturally occurring sugar.”  If you really love your juice, I have a trick to share that was taught to me by my good friend, Arlyn.  Pour yourself ¼ glass of juice, then fill the rest with water or sparkling water.  You get the flavor, but much less sugar.  It’s especially good with pomegranate juice, which has a strong flavor.

If you get a craving for sweets, these are some delicious substitutes:
  • A piece of fruit (mango, apple, peach, banana, grapes, whatever you like!)
  • You might just be thirsty – have some water with a squeeze and slice of lemon (or soak some cucumbers, oranges, or lemons in water for a couple of hours in a pitcher- so refreshing!)
  • A spoonful of unsweetened, natural peanut butter- this has been my lifesaver.  It tastes sweet and indulgent and the high protein and healthy fat keeps me full.
  • Agave nectar (actually contains vitamins and minerals and does not affect blood-sugar levels), maple syrup, molasses, Stevia, brown rice syrup, Turbinado sugar, and raw sugar.  Do not use artificial sweeteners.  More on that tomorrow.
Today's meditation is below the recipe.

My dad used to start this sauce at 6am on Sundays to serve the family (early) dinner.  Everyone loved getting an invitation to Joe’s for pasta!  The longer it simmers, the sweeter it gets- that's one of the secrets.


Joe-Daddy’s Famous Sauce Goes Vegan!
2 TB olive oil
3 medium onions, diced large
4 cloves garlic, diced large
1 yellow bell pepper, diced small
9 roma tomatoes, skin peeled and crushed by hand (or a 32 oz can whole tomatoes)
1 small can tomato sauce (8 oz)
1 small can diced tomatoes (16 oz)
1 small can tomato paste (6 oz)
1 TB oregano + 1 tsp
1 TB basil + 1 tsp
2 tsp dried parsley + ½ tsp
½ TB garlic powder
½ tsp crushed red pepper
1 bay leaf
2 TB Molasses
Gluten-free Pasta of your choosing (quinoa pasta, brown rice pasta, etc.)

1.    Heat the oil on medium.  Once hot, add the onions.  After about 2 minutes, add the spices (oregano, basil, parsley, red pepper & garlic powder- use the first measurement – the second comes later.)  Stir.

2.    Once onions are getting soft (about 3 more minutes), add the garlic and stir for 30 seconds until fragrant.  Immediately add the crushed tomatoes.

3.    Add tomato sauce, diced tomatoes, tomato paste (fill can once with water & add), bay leaf, and Molasses.

4.    Bring to a gentle boil, then reduce heat to very low and simmer with lid tilted for 2.5 to 4 hours, stirring every 15-20 mins.

5.    Add diced yellow pepper and spice measurements after the “+” sign (oregano, basil, parsley) and simmer for another 1-2 hours.

6.    Make pasta according to package directions.  After straining, spoon 3 large scoops of sauce into the pan with the pasta.  Mix to coat.  Serve on plates and then add several generous scoops of sauce to top the pasta. Sprinkle with a dash of red pepper flakes, if desired.

Save some for tomorrow's recipe - you should have quite enough.

Today’s post on sugar is dedicated to my Love.  I caught that damn mistress Sugar trying to poison him again and I just wish he would stop loving her so blindly…
And to Jess G.  You can do it!

Dedicated especially to Joe-Daddy.  I didn’t share all your ingredients, so don’t worry!  I know you are chuckling about the ones I still don’t know…Thanks for teaching me to make real sauce.  I know you’re with me every time I make it and I hope you can hear me talking to you while I stir in a  little extra love.

Kathy’s Meditation:
I choose wisely.  I am more than just a body on autopilot.  I am a thinking, rational, strong person who has pointed myself in the direction of ever-evolving wellness.  I am no longer willing to do things just because they feel superficially or temporarily good.  I want to experience a deeper sense of satisfaction now, which includes being responsible to myself and to the world around me.  I know that sweating it through this period of discomfort will pay off.    I choose wisely, and with each day, that wisdom lifts me to a higher level.”

Sunday, August 5, 2012

Day 15 – Better than Ever and Better than Most

Yesterday, I ran 4 miles for the first time in almost two years.  I did not really ramp up gradually – I ran 3 miles a couple of days ago, slowed down and just went for 4.  And I feel GREAT!  In the past, I would really be hurting (ice, motrin, hours of stretching) after adding an entire mile out of nowhere, but I feel perfectly fine!  I’m wondering if it’s the cleanse diet or the chia seeds or all of the extra vegetables or the yoga?  Maybe it’s everything.  There really is something to this.  I can’t believe my after-run recovery.  I’m testing what I’m preaching and it’s TRUE, brothers and sisters!

Though we have been told that we need to eat meat and drink milk for optimal performance in sports, there are many incredible athletes who prove the contrary.  Scott Jurek & Brendan Brazier are both vegan and Ultramarathon runners – that means they typically run 50 – 160 miles per race, without stopping the clock like in the Tour de France for sleep.  More often than not, these ultramarathons are 100 miles.  To say that’s hard core is like saying it’s warm on the equator.  And they do it with plants and whole grains!  There are also many bodybuilders and Olympic athletes who are vegan or vegetarian.  Their muscles are just fine without animal protein and they are going on not just to compete, but to win.

Being a vegetarian is not a trendy fad.  These were some early and contemporary trend setters: Plato, Ovid, Leonardo da Vinci,  Voltaire, Jean Jacques Rousseau, Henry David Thoreau, Leo Tolstoy, Abraham Lincoln, Sir Isaac Newton, Charles Darwin, Albert Einstein, Mahatma Gandhi, Rosa Parks, John Lennon, Paul McCartney, Bob Dylan, Mary Tyler Moore, Oliver Stone, Alec Baldwin, Deepak Chopra, Prince, Lenny Kravitz, Alanis Morrissette, Ellen DeGeneres, Shania Twain, Reese Witherspoon, Tobey Maguire, Natalie Portman, Nelly, and Anthony Kiedes. 

Olympic medalists include: Lizzie Armistead, Edwin Moses, Bode Miller, Carl Lewis, Ruth Heidrich, Chris Campbell, and many others.  Other athletic superstars include 4 time Mr. Universe winner and bodybuilder Bill Pearl, football player Joe Nameth, basketball star Robert Parish, baseball’s Prince Fielder, and David Scott (who holds the record for most Iron Man World Championship wins).  Now tell one of those guys that being vegetarian “isn’t cool, man.”

I did not share these lists for the sake of saying, “Look at the cool people who are doing it!” Think of how much these people have accomplished in their lives.  Think of the focus, endurance, athleticism, brainpower and/or energy required.  They’ve managed not just fine, but far better than most while eating veggies and granola.

I’m currently reading Scott Jurek’s book (Eat and Run: My Unlikely Journey to UltraMarathon Greatness) and he talks about how he noticed better performance in sports from eating vegetables and whole grains in high school.  He went away to a camp for cross country skiing and they fed him vegetarian fare.  He realized on his own that his sports performance was better than ever, resulting from the new diet. 

I’ve never before run in conjunction with a vegan diet and I'm shocked by the difference I feel personally.  I’ve also started experimenting with more interesting grains, like kasha (included in the recipe below.)  I think the kasha had an effect on my endurance.  This is really exciting!  There’s no going back for me.

To quote my Teta (Aunt) Kata, “Try it- you will like it!”

I’ve just discovered kasha – it is cracked buckwheat.  It has a very nutty, earthy taste and is amazing in this salad.

Dijon Brown Rice & Kasha Salad
½ cup kasha (prepared according to box)
½ cup brown rice (prepared according to box)
1 red bell pepper – diced
1 yellow bell pepper- diced
1 avocado – diced
3 green onions, sliced
1 large tomato, diced
½ cucumber, diced
½ cup walnuts (bite-sized pieces)

Dressing
¼ cup rice vinegar
½ TB Dijon mustard
1 tsp agave nectar
½ tsp salt
½ tsp fresh ground pepper
2 cloves garlic- minced
¼ cup olive oil
(whisk together before pouring over salad)

Cook rice and kasha as directed on the package.  Let cool for at least 1 hour.  Add the rest of the ingredients.  Pour dressing over the salad & mix well.  Serve cold.

This serves about 8-10 people (or will make you tons of leftovers for lunches.)  It’s great to bring to a family gathering and delicious.  Someone always asks for the recipe.  Enjoy!

Note:  You can use any other veggies that you like, but the avocados, peppers, and nuts are very complimentary with the dressing.  Also, I used half olive oil and half pumpkinseed oil, along with fresh grilled corn in my recipe.  It was delicious.

Saturday, August 4, 2012

Day 14- How are YOU?


Since it is Sunday and a day of rest, I will give your brain a break, as well as my fingers.  Please take today to feel the glow of pride for the amazing things you are doing for your body.

I've been blogging and sharing how I am feeling, but I would like to know how you are feeling! 

Do you have any questions?

Have you adopted any part of the cleanse and want to share your experience?

Have you discovered some new recipes or go-to foods?

Is there anything that you would like me to add on the blog as we approach the last week of our cleanse?

This cleanse is an exciting journey so far.  I've learned even more about myself  and nutrition by sharing the information with you.  Thank you for reading!


Below is a recipe from Vegetarian Times magazine.  It's a raw breakfast recipe created by an Ayurvedic lifestyle counselor.  That means that it balances all six tastes, which in Ayurveda is how you know you are getting everything your body needs.
Note:  It was much tastier when I cooked it on the stove.  If you like it raw or know you have a busy morning the next day and prefer to make it overnight, the cold recipe is decent.  But when you warm it, it's really incredible.  I could eat it every day!
Overnight Chai Steel-Cut Oats

1 cup steel-cut oats
1 cup almond milk (or soy, hemp, any non-dairy milk)
2 TB chia seeds
1/4 tsp. ground cardamom
1/4 tsp vanilla extract
1/4 tsp ground ginger or 1 TB crystallized ginger
1/4 tsp ground cinnamon
1 pinch nutmeg
1 pinch black pepper
1 TB maple syrup
1 TB shredded coconut, optional (but delicious!)
1 TB chopped pistachios, optional (delicious!)

1. Combine oats, almond milk, chia seeds, cardamom, vanilla, ginger, cinnamon, nutmeg, black pepper, and maple syrup in a glass jar with lid.  Stir, close lid, and refrigerate overnight.

2. Open lid, stir, and sprinkle with coconut and pistachios, if using.

I made this a couple of days ago and it's very portable.  I took my jar with me today.  It stretched to 3 breakfasts for me.

I usually like my oatmeal warm.  I think I'm going to try it on the stove tomorrow.  Take your pick!  It would be good to make overnight if you know you'll have a busy morning and need something to grab and go.

Day 13 - Get Silly and Make Some Soup (from Scratch!)

This cleanse and the lifestyle changes it embodies, are meant to inspire a “joy of living, not fear of dying.”  Not only do we hope to live longer, but also to live better.

Now you’ve been on the cleanse long enough to stop thinking about it so intensely and have a little fun.  Today, spend as little time as possible thinking about the cleanse.  For today, dismiss the advice and warnings and stop thinking about the things you are not eating.  Instead, get excited about what delicious meals you will have today.

Hopefully, you’ve been spending some extra time on yourself to rest.  Now, spend a little more time on FUN and get a little silly.

In our busy lives, it’s easy to feel guilty when giving time to ourselves.  But we are no good to anyone else when depleted.  What’s left to give when you’re pushing so hard?

Kathy writes, “By taking fun seriously, we regain a quality of innocence.  We shake out leftover tensions, and get our minds off the heavier subjects of life.”

Today, take some time to watch a funny movie, run around outside with your dog, play MarioKart, dance and flail wildly to your favorite song.

Anyone who has ever seen me when “I Like It” by Enrique Iglesias is playing knows what I do to let loose in my living room.  I flail like a marionette with a drunk puppeteer.  And I giggle the whole time.  And it feels great!  Yes, a little embarrassing, I’m not sure why that’s the song that does it for me.  But if you haven’t already, find the song that makes you silly, giggly, and provides a surge of energy.  It’s great after a long day to dance with abandon!

Kathy suggests making a list of your 7 favorite things to do and try to slot one in each day for the next week.  Even if it has to be 5 minutes, the smile on your face and lightness in your heart will brighten the rest of your day.

“When we get silly, we feel the weight of our responsibilities slipping away and we feel free,” according to Kathy (and I agree emphatically.)

If you promise not to laugh, I will share some of the silly things I have done to assist you in case you’re having trouble getting started: 

  • I have a Little Mermaid coloring book.  I color with crayons.  It’s very soothing and still as fun as ever.
  • Sometimes I play dress up.  Like wearing my wedding dress to knight my cat as the queen of my domain.  It’s on video.  True story.  And it was not on Halloween.
  • Occasionally, my husband and I drink tea in our fancy china teacups with saucers while playing scrabble and speaking in British accents. 

So as you can see, I’m kind of an authority on silliness…but it really does make me feel free, joyful, and innocent.  It helps me to be grounded in the moment, enjoying life in my own little world.

Today’s Meditation:
I am happy, and I am free!  I rejoice in my innocence and celebrate the gift of life.  No matter what is going on, I can laugh.  I can be silly.  This levity makes my spirit soar.  I am happy, right now, and I am free!”

If you love being in your kitchen and cooking, this will be a great weekend recipe for you.  Whenever possible, I like to make my own vegetable soup stock.  If you don’t have the time to make the stock, you can use canned vegetable broth to make this soup, but it feels very empowering to make the entire meal from scratch!  It’s healthier for you, too. 

It’s not that it’s so long that you are cooking, but it’s a lot of chopping and you need to be near the kitchen to stir for some time.

Please note:  While I’m chopping up the ingredients for the stock, I like to dice the ingredients for the soup, too, and put into a container in the fridge as long as I’m making it in the next 24 hours.  This way, you get all the chopping done at once.

Laura’s Comforting & Sweet Vegetable Soup

For the vegetable stock (if using pre-made broth, skip this step)
1 TB olive oil
1 large onion – red is great, sweet is too, skin washed and saved – chopped large
3-4 large stalks celery + some leaves, chopped large
3-4 large carrots, chopped in large chunks
1 yellow bell pepper, chopped in large chunks
2 leeks, chopped large
1 red or yellow apple, washed well, core & seeds removed, chopped into quarters (this gives the stock sweetness)
3 cloves garlic, chopped large
1-2 tomatoes, diced large (you can use a can of diced tomatoes, too)
1 pattypan or ½ butternut squash, chopped large and seeds reserved
½ sweet potato, diced large
8 cups water
Spices:
1 TB garlic powder
½ tsp turmeric
1 tsp marjoram
Fresh pepper
2-3 Fresh rosemary sprigs

  1. Heat the olive oil on medium.  Add the onions and cook for 2 minutes.  Add the carrots and celery and cook for another 3 minutes.  Add the pepper, leeks, squash, sweet potato, spices and garlic.  Cook for one minute, then add the tomatoes, water, onion peel, and apple.
 
  1. Bring to a boil, then reduce to very low.  Cover and simmer, stirring often.

  1. Cook for 1.5 to 2 hours, until carrots are soft and all veggies are falling apart.

  1. Strain into a large bowl, a little bit at a time.

A tip on the stock:  You can really throw in any veggies that you have and are in the mood to eat.  Try not to use too many green ones besides the celery and leeks, though, as it can make the stock bitter.  The onion skin gives the broth good color and richness.  The apple is important for sweetness without sugar (but don’t use a green apple).

(Pattypan squash, in case you were wondering)                   (Mmmm, homemade broth)


Now you can start making the soup (or refrigerate for later use – will last one week.)

For the soup:
1 TB olive oil
½ large onion, diced
3 large carrots, diced
3-4 stalks of celery, including heart and leaves from heart, diced small
5 cloves garlic, diced small
1 jalapeno or Serrano pepper, diced small
½ yellow bell pepper, diced small
½ sweet potato, diced into bite-sized chunks
1 pattypan squash or ½ butternut squash, diced into bite-sized chunks
1 tomato
¾ cup red lentils
¼ cup gluten free soup noodles (I used annelini from corn)
Spices:
½ cup parsley – fresh and chopped- plus 2 TB for just before serving
1 tsp marjoram
1 TB garlic powder
1 Bay leaf
1 TB oregano
1 TB Kapha Surya mix (mixture of turmeric, cinnamon, coriander, ginger, and mustard.  Amazing in soups and anything with rice, lentils, and/or sweet potatoes: http://store.chopra.com/productinfo.asp?item=427)

  1. Heat the olive oil on medium in a large stock pot.  Add the onion and sauté for 2 minutes.  Add the carrots and celery – sauté for 3 minutes.  Add bell pepper & jalapeno or Serrano, stir.  Add sweet potato, squash, lentils, and garlic, stir.  Add spices, then tomato and stir.  Now ladle in the vegetable stock (you can use 6 cups if you want to save some for making rice or anything else later.)

  1.  Bring to a boil, then reduce heat to very low.  Cover and simmer for 45 minutes.  Add the soup noodles and about 2 teaspoons of salt, along with some fresh pepper.  Simmer another 20-30 minutes.  Taste and check if you need to add more salt.

  1. Serve sprinkled with fresh parsley, along with salt and pepper to taste.

Note:  Since I had the seeds from the squash, I cleaned them and roasted them in the oven with a spray of olive oil and a sprinkling of salt & garlic powder.  Then I topped the soup with the toasted seeds, too.  Delicious!

You can make any variation of this soup with veggies you need to use up or to suit your mood.  I’ve used zucchini, yellow squash, black beans, green lentils, and regular potatoes.   The beans really change the flavor, but are good when you’re in the mood for them.

I hope you enjoy this nice, homemade recipe!