It’s that wonderful time of year again! The beautiful veggies from Geauga Family Farms CSA are making me jump up and down with glee this week.
There is nothing like fresh, local, organic produce that I can feel so good about eating on a physical AND spiritual level.
“In the eye of the cook or the gardener or the farmer who grew it, this food reveals itself for what it is: no mere thing but a web of relationships among a great many living beings, some of them human, some not, but each of them dependent on the other, and all of them ultimately rooted in soil and nourished by sunlight.”
– Michael Pollan, In Defense of Food: An Eaters Manifesto
Pollan also writes, “To shop at a farmers’ market or sign up with a CSA is to join a short food chain and that has several implications for your health. Local produce is typically picked ripe and is fresher than supermarket produce, and for those reasons it should be tastier and more nutritious.”
It’s true! I made my delicious Spaghetti with Roasted Tomatoes and Herbs and now it’s finally summer! I even cut up the garlic scapes (those curly green things in the picture – they are the tops of garlic and are milder) and added them with parsley and basil. It was delicious!
Showing posts with label tomato. Show all posts
Showing posts with label tomato. Show all posts
Thursday, June 27, 2013
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.
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.

“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.
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.”
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.
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.
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.”
Thursday, August 2, 2012
Day 12- Food for your Spirit
“There is a sacrosanct quality to taking something into your body to nourish it. Treat the foods you eat with the respect they deserve.”- Eat Yourself Super, Dr. Todd Pesek
You’ve made it through eleven days! We are more than halfway there, and I’m sure you’re starting to feel amazing. Have you started noticing a more kind, spiritual connection yet? I know that I was surprised by it the first time I did the cleanse. I felt, and still feel, more gentle in the world and proud of myself.
“By giving up meat and dairy, you withdraw your support from industries that take a toxic toll on the environment and on the well-being of your fellow humans…By not eating animals, you are reducing the needless suffering that occurs in the world, on many levels. Whether or not that’s a priority for you, isn’t it nice to know that being good to yourself benefits others? You’ve arrived at the place where kindness to yourself meets kindness to the earth meets kindness to other creatures, and that’s pretty cool. Abstaining from animal products is a profound act, with physical, emotional, and even spiritual benefits.” – The Kind Diet, Alicia Silverstone
Kathy writes that by changing a few eating habits, we also align our behaviors with our spirituality, our sense of values. She encourages us to keep our eyes – and our hearts- open and to think deeply about everything that goes into feeding ourselves the diet that we’ve grown accustomed to. In this way, we become more conscious eaters. She writes: “Just slow down enough to ponder the big picture, and soon enough, it will begin to come into focus.”
The reason that I have posted a new recipe every day is to share with you how abundantly delightful vegan, and even gluten-free eating can be. You have traded in brown and gray colored foods for the colors of the rainbow, for vegetables so delicious they make you crave more, grains that are nourishing and make your body sing, like quinoa and brown rice, new sources of protein like black beans, black-eyed peas, chickpeas, seeds, and nuts. An avocado can taste like butter and is wonderful on top of spicy, Mexican dishes in place of cheese. I never used to like green beans until I found the recipes I’ve shared with you. This has been a great opportunity to reach outside of my comfort zone and to try new vegetables and recipes.
In Eat Yourself Super, Dr. Todd Pesek writes:
“There is no substitute for home-prepared, close-to-nature whole foods…plant based, nutrient-dense, calorie sparse.” He also says, “When you love people, feed them. But only yummy, healthful food.”
Kathy urges us, before sitting down to eat, ask yourself:
How can I eat in a way that is kind, responsible, and attuned to the needs of my body?
What can I do to bring my life to the highest vibration possible?
Kathy’s Meditation:
“I open my eyes so that I might heal. What a powerful statement. It means I am ready to confront the darkness within (the parts of myself that care only about immediate or personal satisfaction) and 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.”
It was really hot today, so I was in the mood for a nice, light veggie salad. This is one of my go-to recipes.
Light Summer Tomato Salad
3 tomatoes, diced large
1 avocado, diced large
½ medium onion, diced or sliced
1 large cucumber, diced large
1 TB Apple Cider Vinegar
2 TB Good Olive Oil
2 TB Fresh Italian Parsley
1 TB dried oregano
1 tsp garlic powder
½ tsp onion salt
Salt & pepper to taste
plus a couple handfuls of walnuts
Mix together, let marinate for 10-15 minutes, serve and enjoy!
We had the tomato salad with grilled corn on the cob and grilled bell peppers. Tastes like summer!
Labels:
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Friday, July 27, 2012
Day 6 - Drop Your Glass
Many health and wellness authors have concerns about alcohol:
“Alcohol…raises the level of hydrochloric acid in your stomach, wreaking havoc on the digestive process. If you suffer from poor digestion, then your food will not pass through your body properly... To make matters worse, some alcohol (and non-organic wines) still contains urethane, a cancer-causing chemical…And don’t kid yourself: When you have a hangover, you’re bound to eat shit all day long.”
-Skinny Bitch, Rory Freedman & Kim Barnouin
“Alcohol possesses no nutritional value, it inhibits your body’s ability to burn fat by more than 30 percent, and it’s loaded with empty calories.”
-The Engine 2 Diet, Rip Esselstyn
“Yes, some studies have shown that one glass of red wine a day (or two for men) may be good for the heart. But that’s only because we’re walking around with meat-battered, stress-stricken tickers, and a little booze helps to relax us, thins the blood, and contains antioxidants. However, giving up meat and dairy, eating your veggies, and getting some exercise will do all of the above. Red wine is a pretty extreme “medicine” for a condition caused by extreme foods.”
-The Kind Diet, Alicia Silverstone
Drinking alcohol can move our body into a low-grade fight-or-flight metabolism by raising cortisol (stress hormone) levels. Additionally, it depletes vitamins B6, B12, and folic acid, which can interrupt REM sleep.
According to Dr. Neal Barnard, president of the Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine, if you are female and are having even one glass of wine every day, you have a slightly higher risk of breast cancer, compared with women who drink less frequently.
Sometimes, we drink to loosen up at parties. I would urge you to give your weird self permission to come out without alcohol. Why do we have to be drunk to feel free to act how we want? Of course, you could always be an ass and then SAY you were drinking- save yourself the headache and the health problems. Just sayin’.
I’ve often used drinking to loosen up/unwind from an awful day/talk to people/have a free stupid pass at parties. But I’m taking my own advice (and all the professionals above) and hope to chill on drinking in the future. So, after the cleanse is over, it’s really not a big deal to have a glass of wine occasionally. But now we know the consequences if we overdo it and will hopefully consider reducing the frequency in which we imbibe.
So, time to relax with some sparkling water and one of my favorite meals: Pistachio-Crusted Eggplant Cutlets & Quinoa with Roasted Tomatoes & Herbs (same one as earlier post, but with quinoa!)
Pistachio-Crusted Eggplant Cutlets
Serves 2
1 cup shelled unsalted pistachios (why do they say “shelled” when they mean “unshelled?”)
8 oz oil-packed sun-dried tomatoes, drained
2 jarred roasted red peppers, drained
2 garlic cloves, minced
1 medium eggplant, peeled and cut lengthwise into ¼ inch-thick slices (6 to 8 slices each)
1. Preheat oven to 375 F (190.5 C) and coat baking sheet with cooking spray.
2. Blend pistachios in blender or food processor until finely chopped. Transfer to plate or shallow bowl.
3. Add sun-dried tomatoes, roasted red peppers, and garlic to blender or food processor (no need to rinse) and puree until smooth.
4. Spray 1 side of each eggplant slice with cooking spray, and place sprayed-side down on baking sheet. Spread 2 Tablespoons sun-dried tomato mix on each eggplant slice, and sprinkle with 1 Tablespoon ground pistachios.
5. Bake 15-20 minutes, or until eggplant is tender and pistachio topping is browned and crispy.
- Adapted from Vegetarian Times
Quinoa with Roasted Tomatoes and Herbs
½ cup quinoa
1 pound cherry tomatoes
4 cloves garlic, smashed
2 Tablespoons olive oil, plus more for serving
½ cup mixed herbs (basil/parsley/chives)
Salt and pepper to taste
.
1. Heat oven to 375 F (190.5 C), while cooking the quinoa according to package.
2. Meanwhile, on a rimmed baking sheet, toss the tomatoes, garlic 1 TB oil, and ½ tsp salt. Roast, tossing once, until the tomatoes begin to burst, 15-20 minutes.
3. Toss the quinoa with the tomatoes, herbs, and 1 TB oil.
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Friday, July 6, 2012
Spaghetti with Roasted Tomatoes and Herbs
I made one of my very favorite summer pastas last night and
it was extra delicious with the fresh, organic cherry tomatoes from Geauga
Family Farms. It was the first time I
ever used yellow tomatoes in this recipe and it gave the sauce a completely new
taste. Amazing! This recipe was shared with me a couple of
years ago by a dear friend. Arlyn, I still think of you every time I enjoy
this recipe!
*Note: I’ve recently been using refrigerated, fresh pasta.
If you can get the fresh pasta rather than the dry, it really makes a
difference. I used garlic & chive
spaghetti from Ohio City.
This is simple to make and tastes gourmet.
Spaghetti with
Roasted Tomatoes and Herbs (Serves 2- with leftovers unless you're really hungry)
12 oz spaghetti (3/4 box)
2 pints cherry tomatoes (2 little crates – best if red &
yellow mixed!)
6 cloves garlic, smashed
3 TB olive oil, plus more for serving
½ cup mixed herbs (basil, parsley, chives) I used basil and a little bit of Italian Parsley, too.
- Heat oven to 400 F. Bring water for the pasta to a boil.
- Meanwhile, on a rimmed baking sheet, toss the tomatoes, garlic, 2 TB oil, and 1 tsp salt. Roast, tossing once, until the tomatoes begin to burst (20-25 minutes).
- Prepare the pasta according to package directions.
- Toss the pasta with the tomatoes, herbs, and the remaining oil. Serve more olive oil and taste to check if you should add more salt and/or herbs.
*Improvisation: Sarah J, this recipe makes me think of
you. Saute some shrimp with a couple of
the tomatoes, some garlic, and basil and this will be almost as good as your
signature shrimp dish.
If you like, you can watch how easy it is to make this meal: Laura Makes Spaghetti with Roasted Tomatoes and Herbs. Please don't laugh - it's my first attempt at video editing and my first time preparing food while talking about it to a crowd! It's only 5 minutes as I'm using it to audition to be a cooking instructor, so some steps are skipped, but all are listed above. Enjoy!
If you like, you can watch how easy it is to make this meal: Laura Makes Spaghetti with Roasted Tomatoes and Herbs. Please don't laugh - it's my first attempt at video editing and my first time preparing food while talking about it to a crowd! It's only 5 minutes as I'm using it to audition to be a cooking instructor, so some steps are skipped, but all are listed above. Enjoy!
Wednesday, June 27, 2012
Laura’s Karmic Subs
My husband, Vida, and I love Dave’s Cosmic Subs. Since we’re scaling back on the budget and have so many fresh veggies from the CSA, I decided to attempt them myself. Okay, so obviously they are a bit overflowing. If you don’t want it sloppy and have some to eat with a fork afterwards, use less veggies. This was delicious! Keep your napkins close!
They are Karmic because they’re vegan.
Laura’s Karmic Subs (Serves 2 and then some to lick off the plate)
Foot long French bread, cut in two
½ avocado, large diced or strips – whichever you prefer
½ tomato, diced
½ pepper, cut into long strips
½ onion, cut into long strips
Fresh horseradish or a sauce without egg or cream
Handful of fresh spinach
2 romaine leaves
½ cup cole slaw (recipe below)
1. Saute the pepper and onions in light olive oil on medium heat until soft (about 5-7 minutes.)
2. While sautéing, spread horseradish on both sides of the inside of the bread. Add spinach, lettuce, avocado, and tomato.
3. When done, add grilled onions and peppers.
4. Top with cole slaw.
5. Try to fit in mouth.
Feel free to make variations with your favorite veggies that you have available! If you like mushrooms, those would probably be nice to grill, too.
Fresh Cole Slaw
½ head cabbage, shredded to bite-sized pieces
1 carrot, use a peeler to peel the whole carrot into little strips
¼ cup red wine vinegar
1/3 cup olive oil
Salt & Fresh Ground Pepper
1 tsp ground mustard powder
Couple of dashes lemon pepper
1 TB garlic powder
Combine and mix. Let marinate about 15 minutes.
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