Monday, September 27, 2010

Hot Cocoa (Cacao) in the Raw

Sure, it's hot chocolate season and you should go ahead and indulge because chocolate is good for you.  You've probably heard that before, right?  Remember, though, when people say that chocolate is good for you, they're not talking about processed milk chocolate.  They are talking about dark chocolate (70%+ is the party line), or even better than that, raw chocolate.  Cacao comes from the nuts (the seed from the fruit) of the cacao tree.  Yep, chocolate grows on trees.

Raw chocolate (cocoa, cacao) is super-rich in antioxidant bioflavonoids (more than any other natural food tested so far), which can aid cancer prevention, boost immunity, and help maintain healthy blood flow (regulate BP).  Cacao is a great source of important minerals and vitamins including magnesium, sulfur, calcium, zinc, iron, potassium, manganese, and many B vitamins.  It's also a source of important amino acids and neurotransmitters (tryptophan, dopamine, and others), which promote positive mood and mental alertness, alleviate depression, and can postpone the onset of dementia.  Cacao has anti-inflammatory properties and has been shown to be an appetite suppressant.  But remember: eating processed milk chocolate is not the same thing.  You can sit down and eat a whole bag of mini-Snickers bars near Halloween and you just keep wanting more, but you wouldn't feel that same addictive need to eat a whole bag of raw chocolate.


So, by all means, have your hot cocoa, but this year DO IT RAW.  If you've been making your hot cocoa from packets or big tubs of cocoa mix, you are definitely not alone.  I think most people who make their cocoa this way do so because they think it's easier (instant!).  I'm here to tell you that making your hot cocoa from raw chocolate, natural sweetener, and your choice or milk or milk alternative is easy, fast, tasty, and so much better for you and your family. 

At the end of this post, I'll be leaving you with a recipe for making your own Raw Hot Chocolate with these ingredients: high-quality milk or unsweetened almond milk (for a dairy-free version), raw cacao powder, and 100% pure maple syrup.

But first, here are the ingredients lists for the Regular Hot Chocolate and No Added Sugar Hot Chocolate products from one of the most popular hot chocolate mixes on the market.

Regular Hot Chocolate Mix

11 Ingredients:
  • sugar
  • modified whey
  • cocoa, processed with alkali
  • hydrogenated coconut oil
  • nonfat dry milk
  • calcium carbonate
  • salt
  • dipotassium phosphate
  • mono- and di-glycerides
  • artificial flavors
  • carrageenan
No Sugar Added Hot Chocolate Mix

14 Ingredients:
  • modified whey
  • nonfat dry milk
  • cocoa, processed with alkali
  • malodextrin
  • hydrogenated coconut oil
  • calcium carbonate
  • salt
  • dipotassium phosphate
  • carrageenan
  • acesulfame potassium
  • sucralose
  • artificial flavors
  • polysorbate 60
  • mono- and di-glycerides

Wow, that took up a lot of space!  And that was half my point.  You don't need all that in your hot cocoa, do you?  I don't have the space to go through each of the ingredients above, but I'll spotlight 3 of them and tell you a little bit about why they're good to avoid.

Cocoa, processed with alkali - Cocoa powder, great.  Processed with alkali, not so great.  Because it is alkaline (on the pH scale), alkali is added to cocoa powder in many processed products in order to neutralize the acidity of the raw cocoa.  The result is a milder, sweeter powder that mixes more easily with liquids.  That all sounds great, but processing cocoa with alkali also reduces the concentration of antioxidants (specifically, flavonols) in the cocoa, thus negating some of the biggest health benefits of drinking your cocoa.  That's no good.

Carrageenan - Carrageenan is a thickening agent derived from seaweed.  Hey, seaweed's great for you, so that doesn't sound so bad at first either.  The problem is that carrageenan in processed foods can easily degrade into poligeenan, which studies have linked to inflammation, gastrointestinal ulcerations, and cancer.  Why take that risk?

Hydrogenated coconut oil - Again, we start with the positive -- coconut oil is great (one of the only saturated fats that you should include in your diet).  But hydrogenated is BAD.  You always want to run, not walk, from hydrogenated oils.  If you don't already know it: whenever you see "hydrogenated" or "partially hydrogenated", you're looking at a trans fat, the worst kind of fat to ingest.  Trans fats are not naturally occurring fats, rather they are created when hydrogen is added to naturally occurring oils.  Our bodies simply don't know what to do with these foreign substances -- it's kind of like eating plastic -- and trans fats (trans fatty acids) have been linked to obesity, heart disease, diabetes, high cholesterol and much more.

Now, on to the good news.  Making your own Hot Cacao in the Raw is so easy and incredibly tasty.  Give it a try this Fall and Winter.  You can probably find raw cacao/cocoa powder at your local health food store.  If not, you can definitely buy it online -- this is one of my favorite online sources of raw cacao powder (and other herbs and spices), but you can also buy from Amazon using one of the links up top. 

Hot Cacao in the Raw

(less than 100 calories per serving, when using almond milk; ~150 calories with milk)

Ingredients:
  • 8 fl oz milk (high-quality/organic/raw)
    or unsweetened almond milk (dairy-free alternative)
  • 1 TBSP raw cacao powder
  • 1-1/2 tsp - 1 TBSP maple syrup (to taste)
Making your Hot Cacao:
  1. Heat most of your milk/almond milk in a saucepan on the stove to just about boiling.
  2. Leave the rest of your milk/almond milk (~2 TBSP) in the mug and mix with cacao powder and maple syrup.  It may not fully dissolve in cold milk/a.m., but once you add hot liquid, it will dissolve just fine.
  3. Add hot milk/a.m. to mug and mix to dissolve cacao and maple syrup.
  4. Enjoy.
Alternatively, you can combine your milk and cacao in the saucepan, whisk to combine them while heating, and finally stir/whisk in your maple syrup -- you might find that your cocoa blends more easily with this approach.

Eat Well.  Live Well.  Be Well. 

Friday, September 24, 2010

Pesticides, Fruits & Veggies: My Rebuttal to Dr. Oz

You're probably familiar with Dr. Oz, a physician who now has a daily talk show.  I've seen bits of his show several times and I almost always find myself in an emotional struggle while watching.  On the one hand, I think it's great that there's a physician out there, sharing integrative approaches to preventive health and disease management.  He does a lot of good in terms of emphasizing the importance of proper nutrition and addressing hot topics in health and wellness.  That's all great.  But, on the other hand, when I hear him talking about food or supplements (or whatever the topic) I'm often very frustrated by what I believe to be dissemination of misinformation.  I feel like he sometimes offers advice that is less than accurate, perhaps because he thinks the general public won't go along with his recommendations if they're more strict.  I think that's unfortunate.  I think it's irresponsible.  I'm all for offering sensible solutions, but not at the cost of misrepresenting the whole truth, particularly when you have such a huge, trusting audience.  I think, in that situation, it's best to lean towards the side of caution and to be conservative.

Okay, Jen, take a breath.  Sorry about that.  I got really fired up by this latest Dr. Oz encounter, in which he was talking about the top 4 foods to be worried about in terms of pesticide exposure.  He proceeded to uncover each fruit or veggie (strawberries, peaches, apples, and spinach) and discuss how many distinct pesticide residues the USDA had found on them -- each had residues from 40-70 different pesticides.  Dr. Oz proceeded to tell his audience that you can simply soak strawberries in water for 2 minutes to help remove the dirt and pesticides, and then you'll be "pretty much out of the woods".  Next up: apples.  You can just scrub those with a brush.  Next: spinach.  His solution?  Buy frozen because the blanching process (prior to freezing) helps remove the pesticides.  Finally: peaches (the worst in the bunch in terms of pesticides).  This is when he mixed up a solution of water, vinegar, baking soda, and lemon juice that you can use to spray your fruit to clean it.  My reaction?  Other than seething and mentally drafting my letter to the The Dr. Oz Show, my reaction was ... B.S.!!!!!  This is absolutely absurd! 

I should also mention that there was an expert on the show, a toxicologist, but Dr. Oz continually blew past her comments.  Every time he offered some absurd solution for washing your pesticide-covered fruit/veggie with baking soda or giving it a water bath (what?!?!), she said, "You should also consider buying organic" and "The only way to be sure is to eat organic".  She repeated this for each of the four highlighted fruits/veggies, and she also made the very important point that pesticides aren't just sitting on the surface of your fruits and veggies, awaiting the baking soda rinse -- they are often inside the cells of your produce because they can travel up from the ground and water into the plants via their root systems.  His response to her suggestion about organic produce was, "Yeh, that's the expensive solution." 

So, what should you do to protect yourself from pesticides on your produce?

Well, here's my rebuttal to "Yeh, ... the expensive solution".  Yes, organic produce costs more than conventional produce.  That's true.  But, let's be a little more open-minded about our options.  There are a number of fruits and veggies that are relatively safe to buy conventionally grown ("The Clean Fifteen", for starters), so you can save your money by not buying organic for those items and you can eat proportionately more of The Clean Fifteen if you're on a tight budget.  The only way to ensure that you're getting the lowest possible amount of dangerous pesticide-residue cocktails on your produce, though, is to make sure you buy organic for the really dangerous ones ("The Dirty Dozen").  And if you feel like you can't afford that, consider this when it comes to the Dirty Dozen: buy organic, but buy less.  Eat more Clean 15 and less Dirty Dozen.  Make peaches a treat instead of a staple, for instance.

And you know what?  Every once in a while, you can buy conventionally grown apples, strawberries, and greens, but make a concerted effort for this to be the exception and not the rule.  And when you do buy conventionally grown Dirty Dozen fruits/veggies, why not give Dr. Oz's recommendations a try?  Give your strawberries a 2-minute water bath.  Peel your apples.  Spray your peaches with vinegar-water-baking soda-lemon juice solution.  Maybe you'll remove some of the pesticide residues on those fruits and veggies, but please don't be fooled into thinking that washing your peaches with vinegar and baking soda is the same as buying organic.

Exposure to these pesticides can lead to asthma and other respiratory distress, cancers, and countless other conditions. Isn't it worth shifting your buying behavior just a bit in order to protect the current and future health of you and your family?  Think about all the disease you'll be preventing and all the money you'll save on future medical bills. 

Eat Well.  Live Well.  Be Well.  Consider Organic, and Learn Your Dirty Dozen & Clean Fifteen.

Monday, September 20, 2010

Scrumptious September Stew

Hey, I told you how much I love soup.  Tonight I decided to mix it up and make stew.  Alright, alright...it's just thick soup, you got me.  But it's so incredibly good and everything in this dish was locally grown (except the beans).  I'll spare you the soup poetry and get right to the recipe, but I really hope that at least one of these soups/stews I've posted lately has inspired you to put down those canned soups at the store and make your own. 

Kale-Sausage-and-White Bean Stew

For veggie option, simply leave out the sausage -- you'll get your protein from the beans and it still tastes great.  This recipe serves ~8.

Ingredients:
  • 3 small yellow onions, chopped
  • 3 cloves garlic, minced
  • 1 bunch kale, chopped/torn coarsely
  • 2 c uncooked mushrooms, chopped (I used locally grown shitake and oyster mushrooms)
  • 1 lb sausage (I used humanely raised and locally made Italian sausage), removed from casing and crumbled
  • 1-1/2 c navy beans (or a 15-oz can, Eden Organic's the best!)
  • 5-6 c diced/crushed tomatoes (I used my recently canned tomatoes; can also use canned tomatoes from the store)
  • 3 c water
  • 1/2 - 3/4 c fresh basil, coarsely chopped
  • 1/2 - 3/4 c fresh parsley, coarsely chopped
  • 1-2 TBSP olive oil
  • 1 TBSP butter (or an additional TBSP olive oil)

Making Your Stew:
  1. In a large, deep saucepan (or soup pot), sautee onions and garlic in olive oil until onions are translucent.
  2. Add kale and sautee on medium until wilted.
  3. Remove kale-onion-garlic mixture to a bowl and set aside.
  4. Place butter in pan and sautee mushrooms ~2 minutes.  Remove and set aside with kale mixture.
  5. Remove sausage from casing and crumble into pan.  Brown sausage over med - med/high heat.
  6. Once browned, add 1/2 the tomatoes (~2 cups) and continue cooking over medium heat.
  7. Add rinsed beans to sausage and tomatoes, mix.
  8. Add basil and parsley, mix, and continue cooking over medium heat.
  9. Add mushrooms, kale, onions, and garlic, remaining tomatoes, and water (~3 cups, depending on the desired consistency) to stew.
  10. Bring it all to a simmer and keep over heat for ~10 minutes to blend flavors.
  11. Salt to taste.
  12. You could add some freshly grated parmesan or crumbled goat cheese when you serve, but you absolutely don't need it.  This soup is flavorful and satisfying as is.
  13. Enjoy!

shitakes, oyster mushrooms, and kale
 I hope you love it.  I had it for dinner tonight and it took tons of self control to pack up more than half of the leftovers into jars for freezing.  It also took tons of self control to not eat the mushrooms and kale while they were waiting to be added back to the stew (don't they look good on their own?).  But it'll be worth it when I get to have leftover sausage-kale-white bean stew some cold night when I just don't feel like cooking. 


Eat Well.  Live Well.  Be Well.  Make your own soups and stews.

Thursday, September 16, 2010

Canning Up Some Local Phytonutrients & Phytochemicals for Winter

If you're already on my mailing list, then you received the September newsletter this morning.  The September newsletter features an article with 5 important tips for boosting your immunity this Fall, as well as a story about canning late summer fruit and recipes for Peach-Ginger Preserves and Peach-Applesauce.  If you didn't receive today's newsletter, you can sign up here.

I realize that my canning stories so far have been all about fruit, but canning veggies is great too.  This afternoon I headed to a local farmers market and got tons of ripe tomatoes and red peppers, and this evening I've been canning them so I can cook with local fruits and veggies this winter. 

Here's what I canned tonight:
  • roasted red peppers, in olive oil
  • roasted roma tomatoes, in olive oil
  • diced field tomatoes with basil
And here's how...


almost done.  maybe 5 more minutes?
Canning Roasted Red Peppers

I used 9 med-lg red sweet peppers (like in the picture above) & 8 red bell peppers.  You'll also need a bunch of olive oil (the amount really depends on how you pack your jars) and some sea salt to taste.

This produced three 12-oz jars, one 8-oz jar, and two 4-oz jars.
  1. Preheat oven to 425 degrees.
  2. Deseed the peppers and cut lengthwise into strips (~3/4-inch wide).
  3. Coat in olive oil.
  4. Lay out (in one layer) on a baking sheet, skin side up.
  5. Sprinkle with salt.
  6. Roast at 425 for ~20 minutes (time will depend on thickness of peppers), until softened and just starting to blacken in spots.
  7. Add to sterilized canning jars and cover with olive oil.
  8. Process jars for 10 minutes, as you would with any canning process.

10 more minutes???
Canning Roasted Tomatoes

I roasted 10 large roma tomatoes (you can roast any kind of tomato, from tiny cherry tomatoes to large field tomatoes, but be aware that the roasting time will be shorter as the size of your tomatoes/pieces gets smaller).  You'll also need olive oil, sea salt, and garlic (if you like).

This produced two 8-oz jars and one 4-oz jar, all well packed.
  1. Preheat oven to 325 degrees.
  2. Cut tomatoes into quarters (these romas were large, so I cut each of these pieces in half again).
  3. Toss cut tomatoes in bowl with olive oil and salt to coat.
  4. Place tomatoes on baking sheet (skin side down).
  5. Sprinkle minced garlic over tomatoes -- try to get the garlic directly on the tomatoes; otherwise it will burn to the sheet (this is optional -- it's great without garlic too).
  6. Roast uncovered for 1h 45min - 2 hours, depending on size of tomatoes.  Remove from oven when tomatoes begin to blacken around the edges.
  7. Add to sterilized canning jars.  Cover with olive oil.
  8. Process for ~10 minutes, as you would with any canning process.

Canning Diced Tomatoes with Basil

I used 9 regular-size (med-large) field tomatoes, ~2 TBSP olive oil, & 1/3 cup basil (or 1-2 TBSP dried basil).

This produced four 16-oz jars and two 12-oz jars of diced tomatoes with basil.  Can't wait to use these for making soups, stews, etc. this winter.
  1. Chop tomatoes to desired size, saving all tomato juice while chopping.
  2. Add tomatoes, 1-2 TBSP olive oil, and basil to large, deep pan.
  3. Mix over medium heat for ~10-15 minutes to combine flavors.
  4. Ladle into sterilized canning jars.
  5. Process ~10 minutes, as you would with any canning process.
Eat Well.  Live Well.  Be Well. 

Sunday, September 12, 2010

Soup Season's Started

Sweet Winter Squash Soup, garnished with Squash Seeds
I love soup!  Soup is comforting, healing, warming, and nutritious.  All summer long I pretty much go without soup.  I naturally get into more of a raw food -- tons of fruit and veggies -- mode, and soup just doesn't seem to make sense.  So, by the end of summer, I start my love affair with soup all over again.  For me, this has started to happen over the past couple weeks. 

Here in NH, we had a short stretch of cold, rainy weather a couple weeks back, and that was my excuse to make my first soup of the season: chard and ceci beans (chickpeas) in my homemade chicken broth {recipe #1 below}.  Last week, I found myself with an interesting new winter squash from the farmers market and some hand-picked apples from a local orchard, and that's when I made soup #2: winter squash-apple soup with kale, dulse, and pinto beans {recipe #2 below}.  And just the other day, I made soup #3: hearty lentil soup with swiss chard {recipe #3 below}.  It's so nice to enjoy these soups freshmade, but I also try to freeze half the pot in single-serving jars because it's great to have a ready-made meal on those nights when you come home tired and just don't feel like cooking.

So, get out your big soup pot (and some jars for freezing) and give one or all these recipes a try. 

Swiss Chard, Chickpea, & Chicken Soup (*veggie option too)

Ingredients:
  • 8 cups chicken broth (*or veggie broth)
  • 2 cups water
  • 4 small sweet onions, chopped
  • 4 cloves garlic, minced
  • 1 bunch swiss/rainbow chard, stalks sliced and leaves chopped
  • 3 cups cooked chickpeas
  • 1/3 cup fresh parsley, chopped
  • 1/3 cup fresh basil, chopped
  • 2 celery stalks, sliced
  • 3 carrots, sliced
  • 1 TBSP olive oil
  • sea salt, to taste

Making Your Soup
:
  1. In a large soup pot, sautee onions in 1 TBSP olive oil, until soft and translucent.  Add some chicken (*or veggie) broth if the onions begin to stick.
  2. Add garlic, chard stalks, celery, carrots, and 1/2 cup broth, and cook for another 5 minutes.
  3. Add remaining broth, water, and chickpeas.  Bring to a boil for 3-5 minutes.
  4. Reduce heat, cover, and simmer for ~10 minutes.
  5. While soup is simmering, chop chard, parsley, and basil.
  6. Add chard, parsley, and basil, and continue to cook for another 5-10 minutes, until chard is tender.
  7. Salt to taste.
Sweet Winter Squash Soup (with kale and pinto beans)

Ingredients:
  • 2 cups cooked winter squash (1/2 med-lg. winter squash) -- save your squash seeds.  rinse them, coat with olive oil and salt, and toast in oven.  set aside to garnish your soup.
  • 2 small sweet onions, chopped
  • 2 celery stalks, sliced
  • 1/4-inch piece of ginger root, peeled and minced/grated (~1 TBSP)
  • ~1-1/4 cup pinto beans, cooked (or, a 15-oz. can) -- could also use aduki beans
  • 3 cups veggie/chicken broth (or water)
  • 1/4 cup dulse (or other seaweed), cut into small pieces
  • 3 med apples, cooked and chopped (or 1 cup unsweetened applesauce)
  • 4 fronds kale (~1 cup, uncooked)
  • sea salt, to taste
  • 1-2 TBSP olive oil

Making Your Soup
:
  1. Sautee onion in olive oil for a few minutes.
  2. Add celery and ginger, and sautee another 1-2 minutes.
  3. Add 1 cup veggie/chicken broth and HALF the beans.  Sprinkle with salt and keep on medium heat another 2-3 minutes.
  4. Combine cooked squash, cooked apples/applesauce, sauteed veggies/broth in food processor.
  5. Add another cup broth and 1 TBSP apple cider vinegar to food processor.  Puree.  Salt to taste.
  6. While soup is in processor, sautee chopped kale in 1/2 TBSP olive oil.
  7. Return mixture to soup pot and heat with sauteed kale, remaining pinto beans and final cup veggie/chicken broth.
  8. Simmer on low-med heat for ~10-15 minutes
  9. Garnish with roasted squash seeds (or roasted edamame)
Hearty Lentil Soup

Ingredients:
  • 1 med-lg sweet onion, chopped
  • 4 cloves garlic, minced
  • 3 celery stalks, sliced
  • 1 bunch swiss/rainbow chard, slice stalks & chiffonade leaves
  • 3-4 carrots, sliced thick
  • 5-6 new potatoes or fingerlings (I used purple potatoes), thinly sliced
  • 4 med-lg tomatoes, chopped (or 28-oz can diced/crushed tomatoes)
  • 8 cups chicken or veggie broth
  • 3-4 cups water
  • 1-1/3 cups dry lentils
  • 2 TBSP olive oil
  • sea salt, to taste

Making Your Soup
:
  1. In a large soup pot, sautee onions, garlic, celery, and chard stalks in olive oil until onions are translucent.
  2. Add potatoes and carrots. Sautee 2-3 minutes.
  3. Add tomatoes. Cook another 3-5 minutes.
  4. Add lentils. Mix with veggies over heat.
  5. Add broth and water.  Bring to a boil.
  6. Cover and cook at a soft boil/simmer for ~30 minutes.  After 15 minutes, add chard leaves.
  7. Salt to taste.
  8. Garnish with fresh-grated parmesan, if you like.

Eat Well.  Live Well.  Be Well.

Thursday, September 9, 2010

Back To School: Migraines in Children

I recently read a NYT article about headaches in children, particularly during the schoolyear, and I wanted to share this topic since it's Back-to-School time.

As a person who used to suffer frequent migraines, I was struck with empathy for these kids whose pain is being dismissed. Please take a few minutes to read the article (link above).  It's a good reminder of how important quality food, water, and sleep are for all of us to stay healthy and headache-free.

Eat Well.  Live Well.  Be Well.

Saturday, September 4, 2010

I Got Some Beautiful Bok Choy, But What Do I Do With It?

Last week I showed you pictures of all the gorgeous fruits and veggies I got at the farmers' market, and I promised you some recipes.  I'll start here by telling you what I did with my bok choy.

First off, are you familiar with bok choy?  Bok Choy is a beautiful, Asian leafy green veggie.  It's a member of the plant family Cruciferae (also called Brassicaceae), which means that it's in good company with these other cruciferous veggies: broccoli, cabbage, kale, cauliflower, turnips, radishes, watercress, and arugula, to name a few.  Bok choy has a high water content, which makes it great for eating raw and for stir frying (fast cooking) -- in fact, if you've ever ordered "Buddha's Delight" from a Chinese restaurant, bok choy was one of the main ingredients, so you may already love bok choy without even realizing it.

Leafy green veggies are sadly underrepresented in the diets of most Americans, which is unfortunate because they are packed with much-needed nutrients, as well as many micronutrients (phytochemicals) that help protect our bodies from cancer and other diseases.  Here's a short list of some of the great stuff packed into your dark leafy greens: magnesium, calcium, folacin (folic acid), flavonoids, carotenoids (like beta-carotene), and vitamins A, C, and E (which are all antioxidants).  Good stuff!  Alright, I'll stop with the "eat your greens" promotion now and show you the two things I did with my bok choy this week. 

I had one large head of bok choy and used it to make both dishes.  First, I separated 6 large stalks from the leaves and set those aside for my Bok Choy-Carrot Salad.  I used the remaining stems (~6?) and all the leaves (from ~12 stalks?) for my Stir-Fried Bok Choy with Celery and Ginger.  Both were really great.  I was particularly surprised by the subtle, and super yummy, flavor of the bok choy, celery, and ginger dish.  Enjoy.

Bok Choy - Carrot Salad

Remove the leaves and set aside for our next recipe.
Salad Ingredients:
  • 6 large stems of bok choy, sliced thin (kind of like julienned)
  • 2 medium carrots, julienned (you could also grate the carrot)
  • 2 tiny tart apples, sliced and cut into matchsticks
  • 1/3 cup raw sunflower seeds, toasted 
Dressing Ingredients:
  • 2 TBSP apple cider vinegar
  • 1 tsp dijon mustard
  • 1/3 cup olive oil
  • 2 tsp raw honey
  • salt and pepper to taste
Hmmnn...I got a little spacey and forgot
to take a pic of the finished salad.  Oops.
So easy!  All you have to do is combine all your sliced/julienned salad ingredients in a large bowl.  Mix your dressing ingredients by whisking in a separate, small bowl.  Toast your sunflower seeds -- I just tossed them in a small sautee pan on med-high heat and kept tossing them until 1/2 had browned slightly.  Then...just mix it all together.  Refrigerate.  Eat it up.




Bok Choy with Celery & Ginger

(I got this recipe from a nice book called Greens Glorious Greens.  Check it out if you want to start eating more greens, but you aren't familiar with them and don't know what to do with them.  It's a great resource!)

Ingredients:
  • 1 head bok choy (or the leftover leaves and stalks from your bok choy-carrot salad)
  • 1/4 - 1/3 inch piece of ginger root
  • 2-3 celery stalks
  • 1 tsp extra virgin olive oil
  • 1 TBSP water
  • ~2 TBSP walnuts, chopped coarsely and toasted
  • salt (to taste)


Directions:
  • Rinse bok choy with cold water. Cut off the thickest part of the stalk from each frond and slice into pieces, ~1/3-inch wide and 3-4 inches long.  Cut the leaves into strips (or chiffonade).  Set aside.
  • Slice celery into 1/4-inch diagonal pieces.  Set aside.
  • Peel ginger.  Slice into thin pieces.  Set aside.
  • Toast the walnuts.  Set aside.
  • Preheat large wok or deep sautee pan over high heat.
  • Put the oil in the wok/pan and swirl to coat the bottom and sides.
  • Add the ginger first.  Stir fry for 10 seconds.
  • Add the celery and stir fry for another minute, until color brightens.
  • Add the bok choy stem slices.  Stir to combine with ginger and celery.  Stir while the veggies cook for about 1 minute.  Then add the bok choy leaves.  Continue stirring while cooking for another minute or so.
  • Add 1 TBSP water, sprinkle with salt, and cover.  Cook for another minute -- the leaves should be wilted, but the stalks will be crisp-tender.
  • Remove from heat.  Garnish with toasted walnuts.

So, there you have it.  Two yummy bok choy recipes -- one hot, one cold.  I hope you give them a try.

How do you prepare bok choy?

Eat Well.  Live Well.  Be Well.  Eat Greens.

Wednesday, September 1, 2010

Get Well Grounded | Holistic Health & Nutrition NEWS

A quick hello to announce a few new and upcoming things at Get Well Grounded:  

*New Programs
*New Website
*New Presence
*New Post/Recipes
*New Topics?

Today is the first day of September, which used to mean it was starting to feel autumny, but hasn't so much in past years.  We really are in the season of Late Summer, which is one of the 5 (not 4!) seasons recognized in Traditional Chinese Medicine. 

Around here, the first day of September means that my summer coaching offers transition into My 3 Newly Designed and Packaged Health Coaching Programs, which range from 14 days to 6 months in duration:
  1. CLEANSE MY PALATE Program (14 days)
  2. READY FOR CHANGE Program (3 months)
  3. TRANSFORMATION Program (6 months)
Read more about them HERE on the NEW Health & Nutrition Coaching Programs page.

Also, I am currently working on the design of my NEW Website, which will integrate my blog, so you can find all the information you need from Get Well Grounded | Holistic Health & Nutrition in one place.  We are working to transfer all the content from this blog over to the new site, so you'll lose nothing and gain tons.  I'm really excited about it and will let you know as that gets closer.  I expect the change to happen well before the end of September (fingers crossed!). 

Get Well Grounded is now on Facebook and Twitter, so join us there too.

I have another post, about migraines, in the works, and I will be submitting more recipes soon.  But I'd also love to hear from you.  Please e-mail me (getwellgrounded@gmail.com) or comment here on the blog...

What topics would you like to read about?

Is there a health claim or remedy you've always wondered about? 

Let me know.  I'm eager to address your specific interests and concerns/questions.

Eat Well.  Live Well.  Be Well.