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Wednesday, March 31, 2010

Raw Foods-What's Up With That?

A lot of you know that I have been exploring the world of "raw foods" over the past many months, making myself loads of green smoothies, experimenting with new raw recipes and reading a lot about the philosphy behind the movement.  And I guess I even scared my mom, who called me and gently suggested that I might be an orthorexic. So I just wanted to take a moment and clear the air and also let everyone know my current thoughts on the raw food thing.

I am not a "raw foodist" but I do try to eat a lot of raw veggies, fruits and nuts.  That does not mean that I also do not eat a ton of cooked veggies.  It's all good!

So why this fixation on raw? Well, it turns out that if you follow Dr. Fuhrman's advice on becoming a Nutrarian (1 pound of raw veggies and 1 pound of cooked veggies every day--not nearly as difficult as it sounds) you might start out by consuming a lot of green salads.  And that can get a little boring after a while. It's not nearly as much fun as testing out all of the wonderful cooked recipes in his books, on the internet and in cookbooks, that's for sure.

That's where the world of raw food stepped in to save the day.  It's full of millions of amazing recipes--all with raw fruits and vegetables. It made being a Nutrarian all the more fun and exciting, but it didn't turn me into a radical.

If you are interested in what Dr. Fuhrman has to say about the raw vs. cooked debate, check out the following links:



Tuesday, March 30, 2010

My Friend Liz's Strategy--Eat Healthy and Accept Your Body

The following was written by my wonderful friend and employee of 5 years, Liz. Thanks for sharing Liz!

"I am not naturally thin or a skinny bitch. Nor am I overweight. So where does that leave me?

My whole life I have been a weight that has been defined by doctors as “healthy”. I’ve never had an eating disorder and have always been active in one sport or another. I really only became aware of my weight when in college I did a bit of modeling. As a size 10/12 I was too “fat” to be a regular model and not quite fat enough for “plus-sized”. I decided the whole thing was ridiculous.

Two years ago, without really trying, I lost a bunch of weight. I started taking a medication that zapped my appetite and began training for a half marathon. I went from 180 pounds to 150 in less than 6 months (I am 6’2”). I was thin and people noticed and I thought I should have been happier than I had ever been. But I wasn’t. I was unhealthy, both physically and emotionally.

So I started cooking for myself and discovered my body loved delicious and nutritious foods. I cut back on running and began doing yoga, swimming, and weight training. Since then I have gained back about half the weight, a lot of it in muscle. I currently fluctuate between 160 and 170 pounds and I love my body (most of the time).

I think too often people have a “goal” weight that doesn’t match what god gave them. Just because I weighed 150 pounds at one time, doesn’t mean that is where my body wants to be. I eat as much healthful, nutritious food as I want and when I want a burger, I eat a burger. I work out 5-6 days a week. I don’t own a scale. Some days I look in the mirror and wish that the tops of my thighs didn’t touch. But most of the time I think I am exactly where I am supposed to be."

Monday, March 29, 2010

See Mom, I'm Not an Orthorexic--Big Family Dinner #3

We had two great families over this week for dinner.  In the interest of full disclosure, and so my mom can see that I am not limiting myself to only healthy food, I am posting the menu for this week's dinner:

Challah
Green Salad with Hearts of Palm, Avocado, and Red Pepper (thanks Lisa!)
Kathy's Family's Brisket (recipe below)
Roasted Brussels Sprouts
Easy Peasy Broccoli Salad (recipe below)
Rice Pilaf (from a box!)
Dessert (thanks Shauna!)

Easy Peasy Broccoli Salad

Approximately 6 cups broccoli (I used two bunches), cut into small florets
1 1/4 cups raw cashews
1 1/4 cups craisins
3/4 cup vegan mayonnaise (they sell it at Whole Foods)
1/4 cup red wine vinegar
2 Tbsp sugar or agave syrup

In a small bowl, mix together the vegan mayonnaise, vinegar and sugar (or Agave) and set aside/refridgerate until a few hours before you want to serve the salad,

In a seperate large bowl, combine the cut broccoli, cashews and craisins. Refridgerate until you want to toss with the dressing (a few hours before you serve it).

A few hours before serving, pour the dressing over the broccoli. Add a sprinkle of salt and pepper, to taste.
 Refridgerate until ready to serve.


Kathy's Family's Brisket

1 big brisket (you can go as big as you would like, depending on how many people you are serving. I went with a 6.5 pound brisket to serve 15 people and there was enough left over for an extra dinner for my family)
Lawry's Seasoned Salt
Garlic Powder
Pepper
Paprika (there are mild and hot versions--if you use the hot paprika your brisket will have a spicy kick--yum!)
1 jar Heinz Chili Sauce
3 heaping Tbsp grape jelly
1 envelope Lipton Onion Soup Mix

Preheat oven to 350 degrees.

With a fork, poke holes in both sides of the brisket.  Season the bottom side (the side without the fat) with Lawry's Seasoned Salt, garlic powder, pepper and a lot of paprika.  Flip the brisket and put in in a roasting pan (can use a disposable aluminum one with handles for easy clean up). Repeat the seasoning on the top side (the side with the fat), but not as heavily.

Pour the Heinz Chili Sauce on top of the brisket.  Sprinkle one envelope of Lipton Onion Soup Mix on top.  Put 3 heaping Tbsp. of grape jelly on top.  Mush it all around with your hand (or with a big spoon if you are squeemish like me).

Fill the jar of chili sauce with water one and a half times and pour on the sides of the brisket (there should be about 2" high of water around the brisket).  Sprinkle more paprika (a lot) in the water. Cover pan tightly with foil. Bake for 3 hours.

After 3 hours, take the brisket out of the oven. Let the meat cool off for a while and then slice it all up (against the grain--it should be fairly easy to slice). Place the sliced brisket back in the pan with the juices.

You can serve the brisket right then or cover and refridgerate until about 1 1/2 hours until you want to serve it. At that time you can put the whole pan back in the oven at 275 degrees and reheat it.

Saturday, March 27, 2010

Orthorexia--The Dark Side of Healthy Eating, Part II

Orthorexia.  I absolutely think that I qualify as having a mild case of it. Actually, it makes me laugh, because I would rather have a mild case of "orthorexia" than be my former overweight and out of shape self.

I don't really know how to do things half-way. When I am drawn to something, I want to be the best that I can be at it. I'm not a true "perfectionist" because I don't beat myself or others up if things don't go the way I would like them to. I accept things as they are too easily and move on.  But, reading the Wikipedia article about Orthorexia http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orthorexia_nervosa  did point out to me some really important points:

#1 I don't want to exclude myself from social situations because of food. That does become an issue for me at times. For example, on Sunday night I was at a Cavs game with my husband, his brother and his brother's wife.  They asked us to go out for dinner after the game and I didn't want to go. Simply because I didn't want to eat, I didn't want to be tempted. Reading the stuff on orthorexia totally pointed out the me that taking this healthy food thing to that extreme is not a healthy place to go. The better part of me did chose to go with them and I shared a burger and had a huge salad.   I can definately see that every week will have multiple "indulgences" and that I can maintain this weight. Going to restaurants with friends and family is an extremely important part of life and one that I do not want to miss (because from what I know, we only get one shot at this!).

#2 I do not want to sound preachy about healthy food. I am sure that I have come off that way over the past 6 months to certain people in my efforts to try to help them. I am going to resolve right now not to be intrusive. If people are curious, they can read this blog, it's what it's here for.

I'm really glad that the concept of orthorexia was pointed out to me at this stage (thanks Mom!). I really think I could have continued to go down a negative path with this. I tend towards obsessive compulsiveness (something I have attributed much of my success to) and I definately know how to turn it off when I think that I need to.

Friday, March 26, 2010

Orthorexia--The Dark Side of Healthy Eating, Part I

The following is by Steven Bratman, M.D.  I think it's a great read . . . just fascinating!
Originally published in the October 1997 issue of YOGA JOURNAL
http://www.beyondveg.com/bratman-s/hfj/hf-junkie-1a.shtml

Twenty years ago I was a wholehearted, impassioned advocate of healing through food. In those days I was a cook and organic farmer at a large commune in upstate New York. Today, as a physician who practices alternative medicine, I still almost always recommend dietary improvement to my patients. How could I not? A low-fat, semivegetarian diet helps prevent nearly all major illnesses, and more focused dietary interventions can dramatically improve specific health problems. But I'm no longer the true believer in nutritional medicine I used to be.

Where once I was enthusiastically evangelical, I've grown cautious. I can no longer console myself with the hope that one day a universal theory of eating will be discovered that can match people with the diets right for them. And I no longer have faith that dietary therapy is a uniformly wholesome intervention. I have come to regard it as I do drug therapy: as a useful treatment with serious potential side-effects.

My disillusionment began in the old days at the commune. As staff cook I was required to prepare several separate meals at once to satisfy the insistent and conflicting demands of our members. All communes attract idealists; ours attracted food idealists. On a daily basis I encountered the chaos of contradictory nutritional theories.

Our main entree was always vegetarian, but a vocal subgroup insisted we serve meat. Since many vegetarians would not eat from pots and pans contaminated by fleshly vibrations, the meat had to be cooked in a separate kitchen.

We cooks also had to satisfy the vegans, who eschewed all milk and egg products. The rights of the Hindu-influenced crowd couldn't be neglected either. They insisted we omit the onion-family foods which, they believed, provoked sexual desire.

For the raw-foodists we always laid out trays of sliced raw vegetables, but the macrobiotic adherents looked at these offerings with disgust. They would only eat cooked vegetables. Furthermore, they believed that only local, in-season vegetables should be eaten, which led to frequent and violent arguments about whether the commune should spend its money on lettuce in January.

After watching these food wars for a while, I began to fantasize about writing a cookbook for eating theorists. Each food would come complete with a citation from one system or authority claiming it to be the most divine edible ever created; a second reference, from an opposing view, would damn it as the worst pestilence one human being ever fed to another.

Finding examples wouldn't be difficult. I could pit the rules of various food theories against each other: Spicy food is bad; cayenne peppers are health-promoting. Fasting on oranges is healthy; citrus fruits are too acidic. Milk is good only for young cows (and pasteurized milk is even worse); boiled milk is the food of the gods. Fermented foods, such as sauerkraut, are essentially rotten; fermented foods aid digestion. Sweets are bad; honey is nature's most perfect food. Fruits are the ideal food; fruit causes candida. Vinegar is a poison; apple cider vinegar cures most illnesses. Proteins should not be combined with starches; aduki beans and brown rice should always be cooked together.

Dietary methods of healing are often offered in the name of holism, one of the strongest ideals of alternative medicine. No doubt alternative health practitioners are compensating for the historical failure of modern medicine to take dietary treatment seriously enough. But by focusing single-mindedly on diet, such practitioners end up advocating a form of medicine as lacking in holistic perspective as the more traditional approaches they attempt to correct. It would be far more holistic to try to understand other elements in the patient's life before making dietary recommendations, and occasionally to temper those recommendations with that understanding.

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Orthorexia Nervosa

Many of the most unbalanced people I have ever met are those who have devoted themselves to healthy eating. In fact, I believe some of them have actually contracted a novel eating disorder for which I have coined the name "orthorexia nervosa." The term uses "ortho," meaning straight, correct, and true, to modify "anorexia nervosa." Orthorexia nervosa refers to a pathological fixation on eating proper food.

Orthorexia begins, innocently enough, as a desire to overcome chronic illness or to improve general health. But because it requires considerable willpower to adopt a diet that differs radically from the food habits of childhood and the surrounding culture, few accomplish the change gracefully. Most must resort to an iron self-discipline bolstered by a hefty dose of superiority over those who eat junk food. Over time, what to eat, how much, and the consequences of dietary indiscretion come to occupy a greater and greater proportion of the orthorexic's day.

The act of eating pure food begins to carry pseudospiritual connotations. As orthorexia progresses, a day filled with sprouts, umeboshi plums, and amaranth biscuits comes to feel as holy as one spent serving the poor and homeless. When an orthorexic slips up (which may involve anything from devouring a single raisin to consuming a gallon of Haagen Dazs ice cream and a large pizza), he experiences a fall from grace and must perform numerous acts of penitence. These usually involve ever-stricter diets and fasts.

This "kitchen spirituality" eventually reaches a point where the sufferer spends most of his time planning, purchasing, and eating meals. The orthorexic's inner life becomes dominated by efforts to resist temptation, self-condemnation for lapses, self-praise for success at complying with the chosen regime, and feelings of superiority over others less pure in their dietary habits.

This transference of all of life's value into the act of eating makes orthorexia a true disorder. In this essential characteristic, orthorexia bears many similarities to the two well-known eating disorders anorexia and bulimia. Where the bulimic and anorexic focus on the quantity of food, the orthorexic fixates on its quality. All three give food an excessive place in the scheme of life.

As often happens, my sensitivity to the problem of orthorexia comes through personal experience. I myself passed through a phase of extreme dietary purity.

When I wasn't cooking at the commune, I managed the organic farm. This gave me constant access to fresh, high-quality produce. I became such a snob that I disdained any vegetable that had been plucked from the ground for more than 15 minutes. I was a total vegetarian, chewed each mouthful of food 50 times, always ate in a quiet place (which meant alone), and left my stomach partially empty at the end of each meal.

After a year or so of this self-imposed regime, I felt clear-headed, strong, and self-righteous. I regarded the wretched, debauched souls about me downing their chocolate chip cookies and french fries as mere animals reduced to satisfying gustatory lusts. But I wasn't complacent in my virtue. Feeling an obligation to enlighten my weaker brethren, I continually lectured friends and family on the evils of refined, processed food and the dangers of pesticides and artificial fertilizers.

I pursued wellness through healthy eating for years, but gradually I began to sense that something was going wrong. The poetry of my life was disappearing. My ability to carry on normal conversations was hindered by intrusive thoughts of food. The need to obtain meals free of meat, fat, and artificial chemicals had put nearly all social forms of eating beyond my reach. I was lonely and obsessed.

Even when I became aware that my scrabbling in the dirt after raw vegetables and wild plants had become an obsession, I found it terribly difficult to free myself. I had been seduced by righteous eating.

The problem of my life's meaning had been transferred inexorably to food, and I could not reclaim it.

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Tacos, Pizza, and a Milkshake

I was eventually saved from the doom of eternal health-food addiction through two fortuitous events. The first occurred when my guru in eating--a vegan headed toward fruitarianism--suddenly abandoned his quest. "A revelation came to me last night in a dream," he said. "Rather than eat my sprouts alone, it would be better for me to share a pizza with some friends."

His plaintive statement stirred me, but I could do nothing to change my way of life until a Benedictine monk named Brother David Steindl-Rast kindly applied some unorthodox techniques.

I had met Brother David at a seminar he gave on the subject of gratitude. I offered to drive him home, and on the way back to the monastery, I bragged a bit about my oral self-discipline. Brother David's approach over the subsequent days was a marvelous case of teaching by example.

The drive was long. In the late afternoon, we stopped for lunch at an unpromising Chinese restaurant in a small town. To our surprise, the food was authentic, the sauces were fragrant and tasty, the vegetables fresh, and the eggrolls crisp and free from MSG. We were both delighted.

After I had eaten the small portion which sufficed to fill my stomach halfway, Brother David casually mentioned his belief that it was an offense against God to leave food uneaten on the table. Brother David was a slim man, so I found it hardly credible that he followed this precept generally. But he continued to eat so much that I felt good manners, if not actual spiritual guidance, required me to imitate his example. I filled my belly for the first time in a year.

Then he upped the ante. "I always think that ice cream goes well with Chinese food, don't you?" he asked. Ignoring my incoherent reply, Brother David directed us to an ice cream parlor and purchased me a triple-scoop cone. As we ate our ice cream, Brother David led me on a two-mile walk. To keep my mind from dwelling on my offense against the health-food gods, he edified me with an unending stream of spiritual stories. Later that evening, he ate an immense dinner in the monastery dining room, all the while urging me to take more of one dish or another.

I understood his point. But what mattered more to me was the fact that a spiritual authority, a man for whom I had the greatest respect, was giving me permission to break my health-food vows. It proved a liberating stroke.

Yet more than a month passed before I finally decided to make a definitive break. I was filled with feverish anticipation. Hordes of long-suppressed gluttonous desires, their legitimacy restored, clamored to receive their due. On the drive into town, I planned and replanned my junk-food menu. Within 10 minutes of arriving, I had eaten three tacos, a medium pizza, and a large milkshake. Too stuffed to violate my former vows further, I brought the ice cream sandwich and banana split home. My stomach felt stretched to my knees.

The next morning I felt guilty and defiled. Only the memory of Brother David kept me from embarking on a five-day fast. (I fasted only two days.) It took me at least two more years to attain a middle way and eat easily, without rigid calculation or wild swings.

Anyone who has ever suffered from anorexia or bulimia will recognize classic patterns in this story: the cyclic extremes, the obsession, the separation from others. These are all symptoms of an eating disorder. Having experienced them so vividly in myself 20 years ago, I cannot overlook their presence in others.

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A Menu or a Life?

Consider Andrea, a patient of mine who suffered from chronic asthma. When she came to see me, she depended on several medications to stay alive. But with my help, she managed to free herself from all drugs.

First, we identified foods to which Andrea was sensitive and removed them from her diet. Milk was the first to go, then wheat, soy, and corn. After eliminating these four foods, the asthma symptoms decreased so much that Andrea was able to cut out one medication. But she wasn't satisfied.

Diligent effort identified other allergens: eggs, avocado, tomatoes, barley, rye, chicken, beef, turkey, and tuna. These too Andrea eliminated and was soon able to drop another drug entirely. Next went broccoli, lettuce, apples, and trout--and the rest of her medications.

Unfortunately, after about three months of feeling well she began to discover sensitivities to other foods. Oranges, peaches, celery, and rice didn't suit her, nor did potatoes, turkey, or amaranth biscuits. The only foods she could definitely tolerate were lamb and (strangely) white sugar.

Since she couldn't live on those foods alone, Andrea adopted a complex rotation diet, alternating grains on a meal-by-meal basis, with occasional complete abstention to allow her to "clear." She did the same for vegetables with somewhat more ease, since she had a greater variety to choose from.

Recently, Andrea came in for a visit and described the present state of her life. Wherever she goes, she carries a supply of her own food. She doesn't go many places. Most of the time she stays at home and thinks carefully about what to eat next, because if she slips up, the consequences continue for weeks. The asthma doesn't come back, but she develops headaches, nausea, and strange moods. She must continuously exert her will against cravings for foods as seemingly innocent as tomatoes and bread.

She was pleased with her improvement and referred many patients to me. But I began to feel ill whenever I saw her name on my schedule. The first rule of medicine is "above all, do no harm." Had I really helped Andrea, or had I harmed her? If she had been cured of cancer or multiple sclerosis, the development of an obsession might not be too high a price to pay. But when we started treatment, all she had was asthma. If she took her four medications, she also had a life. Now all she has is a menu. She might have been better off if she had never heard of dietary medicine.

I am generally lifted out of such melancholy reflections by success stories. I have another client whose rheumatoid arthritis was thrown into total remission by one simple intervention: adding foods high in trace minerals to his diet. Before he met me, he took prednisone, gold shots, and anti-inflammatories. Now he has gone a full year without a problem. Seeing him encourages me not to give up entirely on making dietary recommendations.

But my enthusiasm will remain tempered. Like all medical interventions--like all solutions to difficult problems--dietary medicine dwells in a grey zone of unclarity and imperfection. It's neither a simple, ideal treatment, as some of its proponents believe, nor the complete waste of time conventional medicine has too long presumed it to be. Diet is an ambiguous and powerful tool, too complex and emotionally charged to be prescribed lightly, yet too powerful to be ignored.

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Stephen Bratman, M.D., is a holistic physician practicing in Ft. Collins, Colorado. He is the author of The Alternative Medicine Sourcebook: A Realistic Evaluation of Alternative Healing Methods (Lowell House).

For more information about Orthorexia, you can visit the Wikipedia page:
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Orthorexia_nervosa

Wednesday, March 24, 2010

Calabasitas

Karen from LA was kind enough to share with us a few of her original creations.  I'll post her other recipe in a few days.  Thanks Karen!

"The first was inspired by a delicious dish from a restaurant in la called Mama's Hot Tamales. It is called Calabasitas which means little squashes. This is delicious served alone as a stew, or on tortillas as a filling for vegetarian tacos. Serve with sliced avocado. Enjoy. "

Sounds to me like a very tasty, very low calorie dinner!


Calabasitas
seems like a 0 WW Point recipe to me!

2-3 lbs organic zucchini (on the small side, like a cigar), sliced
7 cloves garlic, minced
one onion (i diced and steamed it in the microwave for 4 minutes)
1 can organic corn
1 pkg frozen okra
1 bay leaf
1 28 oz can diced tomatos
1 14 oz can stewed tomatos, mexican style
1/2 t. cumin
1/2 t mexican oregano
2-4 chipotle peppers en adobe, minced (you can find these hot, smoked peppers in a can in the mexican section of the supermarket. don't touch them!!! use a fork and knife.)

Cook all ingredients together in crock pot on low setting for 4-5 hours.

Tuesday, March 23, 2010

Food Cravings-What are They Really?

Emotional eating. It's what you are doing when you are putting food into your mouth at any time when you are not truly hungry.  I'm really familiar with this, and if you are here reading this blog, you might be too. 

I want to eat when I am tired.  It's pretty simple actually.  When I feel fatigued I have trained my body and mind to expect food.  Am I hungry? Not at all.  Do I eat anyway? You bet. Is that why I was overweight? Most likely it is a big part of it. And until I learned to replace eating when I am tired with doing something else when I am tired, my relationship with food was a nightmare and a source of embarrassment. Eating any food made me feel guilty, even when I was eating out of real hunger.

What do cravings have to do with all of this? Well, a craving for a certain food IS NOT THE SAME THING AS HUNGER. When you experience a craving, it is a signal that you are looking to experience a FEELING (in my case, more energy). That is why no amount of chocolate or potato chips can ever do the trick. What you are actually seeking is a sense of energy or calm, of excitement or peace.  In other words, we are seeking a feeling and not a food.

What are your sources of fatigue? Lack of sleep, stress, anger, boredom, loneliness--any and all of these feeling can trigger a craving for food because we have become habituated to eating in order to satisfy those needs.  But it doesn't work, does it?

Naturally thin people do not use food when they are tired, angry, lonely, or bored. They take a nap, work out their anger, call a friend or find something to do. Us emotional eaters need to rewire our brains' circuits. After all, what we're after is not the ice cream, chips or chocolate--it is a feeling of calm or revitalization at the end of the day. Junk food can never deliver this feeling.

Just remember, you are after a feeling, not a food. Find an alternate way of achieving that feeling. Maybe it's a warm bath or a hot cup of tea or a yoga class.  Or maybe just take a few deep breaths.  Make a practice out of using the alternative.  The alternative must feel like a reward.  Once you have done this multiple times, over the course of two to three months, your brain circuitry will be rewired in a healthy way.  You can do it and you are worth it!

Based on an article by Peggy Hall in the July/August issue of Clean Eating Magazine. http://www.cleaneatingmag.com/

If this post spoke to you and you are looking to dig deeper into how to overcome your cravings and not self-sabotage, here is a great article from Peer Trainer:
http://www.peertrainer.com/how_to_stop_self_sabotage.aspx?page=1

Monday, March 22, 2010

My Friend Sindy's Strategy-Become an Expert

I have a friend Sindy and if you took one look at her (all maybe 90 pounds of her) you would never think that food was a big part of her life.  She's one of those women who can hold her entire weight on her two hands while bending in a contortionist kinda way during yoga class.  When I heard that she was particpating in a long-term detox/cleanse I was thinking to myself, "Really, can she even stand to lose an ounce?" 

Well, that was over a year ago and now it all makes perfect sense to me.  She doesn't stay trim and healthy by accident!  She works at it, each and every day in fact.  So much so that one could even consider her an expert in maintaining a healthy weight.  She's an avid reader of this blog, probably because she is always trying to learn even more about this subject and keep herself motivated.  And it has been pointed out to me before that one successful strategy to lose weight is to become an expert at it.  Well, Sindy's story confirms that to be true. Thanks for sharing your story Sindy!

Staying Fit and Healthy

I’ve always been thin; in fact as a kid I was so painfully skinny I sometimes went on “teids” (diet backwards) to try to put some meat on my scrawny bones. So I was quite surprised when in my early-mid 20’s, I developed a pretty significant eating disorder. “Binge eating” is what they call it today. I didn’t know what to call it – I just knew something was wrong with me. My relationship with food became totally unhealthy; I became obsessed with being super skinny; I alternately gorged myself on junk food and then ate incredibly restrictively and exercised like a fiend to undo the damage.

Fast-forward fifteen years or so, and I am really healthy, emotionally and physically. I don’t obsess like I used to (nor do I binge and then restrict/exercise like I used to). But food is a very important part of my life. I taught myself how to cook a few years ago, and view cooking and eating healthy as a way to nourish myself and my family. That is not to say I am issue-free (I mean, who is?). I suspect I will always bear some markings from my disordered eating past, but the psychic scars seem to fade with time and growth.

So what do I do these days? I’m kind of a “life long-learner” about food, diet and health. I love reading about health and nutrition and experimenting with different approaches. It’s been a few years since I ate any chicken or beef (not for weight control reasons), and at the moment I’m on an extended second date with veganism. I’ve flirted with it before, added back fish, taken it back out, played around with dairy. I hesitate to categorize myself, though, because I hope that if I feel like a nice piece of salmon one of these days, I’ll go ahead and indulge. Like Wendy’s friend Winnie, I’ve discovered that absolute rules about what I “should” and “should not” put in my mouth don’t work so well for me.

Exercise is a big part of my life. I run or practice yoga most days, and exerting myself physically does something for me mentally that I find incredibly grounding and soothing. If I miss a few days, I’m definitely off-kilter. So too with my healthy eating. I like a nice, rich dessert as much as the next guy, and every now and then I’ll partake. And as long as I haven’t eaten so much that I’m really, really full, I don’t give it much thought. I just know that come tomorrow, I’ll be back to my usual healthy ways.

Sunday, March 21, 2010

Asian Twist Healthy Dinner

A few weeks ago my friend Karen in LA sent me a link to a Gingered Sweet Potato & Carrot Soup recipe that she thought sounded good.  http://www.womenshealthmag.com/nutrition/easy-soup  I agreed and put making it on my to do list. So today turned out to be the day that I had some kitchen time and I ended up making it along with a Raw Fried Rice that I also had been dying to try.

I added some of my own twists to the soup recipe and along with the "fried rice" it turned into an exotic healthy Asian dinner.  Because I like sweetness and asian flavors so much, I think this soup is one of the most delicious things I have made to date.  I love all Asian food, but most of it will really pack on the pounds. This you can indulge in guilt free!




Sweet Potato & Carrot Soup with Curry and Ginger
(makes approximately 11 cups, 1 cup=2 WW Points)
Prep time: 15 minutes
Cook time: 30 minutes

2 Tbsp coconut or olive oil
2 medium onions, chopped
5 cups low-sodium vegetable (or chicken) stock
3 medium-large sweet potatoes, peeled and diced
7 large carrots, peeled and sliced
2 Tbsp ginger, grated on a microplaner or chopped
2 tsp curry powder (I used Sweet Curry Powder from Penzey's)
salt to taste
Plain nonfat Greek-style yogurt (optional)

Heat oil in large stockpot. Add onion and cook until soft, about 5 minutes. Add stock, then add sweet potato, carrot, and ginger. Bring to a boil, reduce heat, and simmer until vegetables are tender, about 15 minutes.

Add curry powder. Puree with hand-held blender until smooth (or the consistency that you like--leave some chuncks if you prefer), adding a bit of broth if needed. (If you're using a standard blender, allow the mixture to cool first; hot liquid may cause the blender to squirt out contents. Depending on the size of your blender, you may have to do this in batches.)

Add salt. Serve with a dollop of yogurt on top, if desired.


Raw Fried Rice
This does not taste like fried rice, but it is yummy and crunchy.  Serves 4 generously, or more as a side dish.

Feel free to serve it very cold as a salad, or slightly warm.

1 Head of Cauliflower
1 ten ounce package peas, thawed, or fresh peas
2 tablespoons onion
2 cloves garlic
¼ cup cilantro (or flat leafed parsley)
1 inch of lemongrass
1 tablespoon olive oil
2 tsp sesame oil
2 teaspoons ginger, grated on a microplaner
Soy sauce, Braggs Liquid Aminos or tamari
1/2 cup hulled sunflower seeds

In the bowl of your food processor, pulse cauliflower into ‘rice’ and place in a bowl.



In the food processor, pulse the onion, garlic, lemongrass, and cilantro or parsley until finely minced. Place in bowl.


Place peas in bowl. Stir all ingredients together.
Drizzle with oils and soy sauce, tamari or Bragg's. Stir in sunflower seeds.


Optional but AWESWOME: Heat on very low heat in a saucepan, stirring contstantly until just warm to the touch, or place in dehydrator for 30 minutes.

I served the Raw Fried Rice over a bed of lettuce for a more filling meal.

Friday, March 19, 2010

Give Yourself Some Credit . . . Each and Every Day

I tend to give everyone the benefit of the doubt.  I really like my world that way.  No one is purposefully doing bad things through my lens' filter.  Everyone is safe and wonderful.  The world is a happy place! If something is going wrong, I'll always make up a legitimate reason why it's not really someone's fault.  There aren't bad people, or people who mess things up on purpose--everyone is doing the best that they can at that given moment. If there's a problem, I'll find a solution, not get into a blame game.  I do this for everyone, except for the one most important person to me, myself.

I'm really hard on myself.

If I eat too much, my thoughts are not pretty.  And my negative thoughts can take me to a place of anxiety and stress about my weight. Especially because weight issues are not something that can be "fixed" by brainstorming a good idea and then having immediate follow through.  Overcoming them takes a lot of time and persistence--a whole lifetime's worth in fact.

If you suffer with weight issues, than I'll bet you are very familiar with being hard on yourself. And what you may not be familiar with AT ALL is giving yourself credit for the things that you do right. Yes! You read that correctly! GIVING YOURSELF CREDIT FOR THE THINGS YOU DO RIGHT.

Give it a try. Today. When you do something right, like go to your gym or resist eating the kid's leftover macaroni and cheese, acknowledge to yourself that you did something awesome. When you mess up, which we all do, say to yourself, "Oh well," and leave it alone.

Why should you do this? Because this is what healthy, thin people do. They don't berate themselves when they overeat. They acknowledge it an move on. If you are in the berating yourself cycle, it is very easy to get overwhelmed, anxious and stressed about your weight. If you are in the giving yourself credit cycle, something else entirely can develop.

What is that? A new way of being. One that involves a tremendous natural high that you can get from doing the things that are healthy for your body.  For example, think about going to a party. You know that there are all sorts of foods at the party that are high in calories and that if you eat  them, you are not going to lose weight or worse, you will put some weight on.  There are two ways that this can go down, you can partake or you can resist.

I don't have to explain to anyone here what goes on in your head if you partook (is that a word?).

But what if you resisted? What would happen then? One of two things:

You would leave the party feeling really crappy. You would obsess about the food that you didn't eat and probably go home and binge.

Or, you could leave the party and on the drive home, think to yourself how amazing you feel because you didn't overeat. Why do you feel amazing? Because you know that you have maintained your weight and that it is really important to you. Maintaining your weight is really wonderful.  Do you know all of the fantastic things about being at your ideal weight? I'll bet you do. Go through them in your mind. And give yourself credit for not overeating at that party.  You just might experience a natural high, and as we all know, highs can be addictive. And this is just the sort of high you want to become addicted to if you are going to be successful at losing weight.

I want you to give yourself credit right now for something that you have done right. I would like you to put it in writing in the comments section right here--anonomously if you are not ready to be public about your involvement in this blog. Let's see what happens!

Wednesday, March 17, 2010

I Need to Stop Beating Myself Up and Give Myself Some Credit

It was exactly 4 weeks ago today that I declared that I was at my Weight Watchers goal weight.  What that means to all of you non-Weight Watchers is that I need to remain within two pounds of my goal weight for six weeks in order to obtain "lifetime" membership.  The important thing about becoming a lifetime member is that I will no longer have to pay for weekly meetings.  At $10 a pop, this adds up.  If my weight goes out of this 4 pound range, I guess I have to pay up to go to meetings again and earn my status back.

Well, I have to make a confession.  My weight has already gone out of my range.  And not in the right direction.  I have gained somewhere in the nature of 3 pounds, which means that I need to lose 1 pound to be in my range, but I will know for sure when I step on that WW scale today.  And I am not exactly easy on myself about this.  I have a type-A personality and failure is usually not an option.

Do I have excuses? Sure I do.  My life has been unusually hectic lately.  For most people, my life probably seems insane. So when I am saying that my life has been unusually hectic, I am not messing around. How did that affect my weight? Well, mainly, I stopped counting my points and recording what I ate.  Not a recipe for success. I'm pretty disappointed in myself.

Why should you care? Because I bet you beat yourself up too.  It turns out that the vast majority of people with weight problems really talk very negatively to themselves about it.  We say things like, "Uuuugh, I gained 3 pounds. I'm never going to be able to lose weight/stay at my goal weight. I might as well eat that crappy high calorie stuff on the table at work today. I have no self control anyway."

And do you know what else? Thin people, "naturally" thin people, don't talk to themselves like that.  The script in their head goes something like this: "I gained three pounds over the past 4 weeks.  Wow, that's not the weight I am comfortable at. Oh well, it's no big deal. I know exactly what I need to do for the next 4 weeks in order to get back to my normal weight. I'm going to follow my plan and get back to my normal weight."

Where does confidence like that come from? It is gained with experience. Do I have this experience? Heck yeah I do. I know exactly how to lose weight. So I don't need to have those negative thoughts anymore. My goals are better served if I think like a thin person.  Thin people give themselves credit for all of the good choices that they make in a day. More on that tomorrow . . .



If you are interested in radically changing the way that you think about losing weight, I urge you to read The Beck Diet Solution and follow the steps outlined in the book.  It can change your life if you want it to.

Saturday, March 13, 2010

Curried Cauliflower Soup, Revisited

"dear wendy,
i love your blog. i am learning so much and beginning to feel the more energy thing.

i made the cauliflower soup. it was delicious the first night, but totally amazing the second day!!! i modified it somewhat and made it in my crockpot. i can send you a picture if you like. i recommend it highly. it was so easy and filling and really really thick and creamy and tasty.
:)
karen"

My dear friend Karen from LA has been one of my biggest blog supporters.  I'm not sure if she knows that I posted a recipe for a Curried Cauliflower Soup a while back, but she was kind enough to share with me her experience with a different recipe for a curried cauliflower soup and the results look awesome.  I will definitely be trying her version a.s.a.p. but here it is in the meantime!

Karen's Crockpot Curried Cauliflower Soup
Serves 4 to 6 as a main dish; 8 as a first course. The soup will hold in the refrigerator for up to 4 days.  The soup is incredibly creamy and thick, like a split pea soup. It was great the first night, but exceptional and so much tastier the second night. Enjoy!!

1 medium to large onion, chopped
-5 large garlic cloves, coarse chopped
3 tablespoons curry powder (yes, the cheapest market brand will do...or I used an Oriental curry powder which is much stronger and tastier)
1 large head cauliflower, trimmed of greens, washed, cored, and cut into chunks
3 medium red-skin or Yukon Gold potatoes (about 1 to 1-1/4 pounds), peeled and cut into 1-inch chunks
2 vegetable boullion cubes
4 cups water
* juice of 2 large lemons

Add all ingredients except the lemon juice to the crockpot in the morning. Turn on low and cook for 6-8 hours.

Turn temperature to 'keep warm' and cool for 15-30 minutes. Then puree with a hand-held blender (for less cleanup) or in small batches in a regular blender. Taste the soup for seasoning.

Juice two lemons and stir the lemon juice right into the soup.
 




Thursday, March 11, 2010

My Friend Winnie's Strategies

One of the things I like to talk about here on my blog are strategies for maintaining a healthy weight.  Why? Because it was a 39 year struggle for me and I only recently realized that I could actually do it.  So, I've asked a lot of my "skinny" friends to share their strategies with us all, in the interest of presenting many approaches to staying healthy.

I'd like to introduce you to a friend of mine with whom I reconnected on Facebook after not seeing for about 20 years.  I was so excited to find out that she had become a Natropathic Doctor and that she had an amazing recipe blog.  Her story just makes me think that a lot of people struggle with their weight and we wouldn't even know it.  So, here she is, my friend Dr. Winnie Abramson:

"When Wendy first asked me to share my 'strategies for staying thin' with her readers, I almost said no.  Because even though I've maintained a healthy weight without too much fanfare for many years, things for me were not always this simple. Far from it.

I'm more than happy to share my current strategies with you (hint- I eat pretty much everything but I am moderation kind of gal), but first I'm going to tell you how I ended up where I am today.

It all started back when I was about 16 and I thought I was fat (I wasn't). All of my friends were dieting, so I figured I should, too. Back then, the low-fat diet was all the rage. I thought if low was good, then super low must be better.

I spent a year or two eating nothing but vegetables, fruit, bagels and frozen yogurt. Ok, I ate a few other things occasionally, but not much. I thought this was the perfect diet. I couldn't understand why I wasn't super skinny, and I was more than a little disturbed when I realized I'd actually gained five pounds.

I went off to college and the experience of being away from home distracted me from dieting for a while. I had fun. I gained 10 more pounds.

I went home after my first summer at school and resolved to lose the weight. I went back to my super low fat ways with a vengeance. I started exercising a lot and I waited for the weight loss to come. I went back to school a few pounds lighter, with a strong resolve to stay on my diet.

This is over twenty years ago, so I don't remember everything, but I do remember this: I spent the next three years completely obsessed with what I was and was not eating. I spent a lot of time being mad at myself. I constantly told myself I needed to be "better" with my diet. I cut my fat grams further. I ate even less: less than 1000 calories a day. I was depressed. I was tired. My skin was terrible. My menstrual cycle disappeared.

I was hungry all the time and started binging at night. I started exercising 1-2 hours a day to compensate for the binging.

In my head, I knew I was in trouble and during my senior year, I decided to swear off dieting. I made attempts to eat normally but unfortunately kept returning to this vicious cycle of binging and dieting.

Thank goodness for my mom. She saw how miserable I was and convinced me to see a holistic MD so I could straighten out my eating and health issues. After a whole bunch of tests, my doctor pointed out that this diet I'd been on was far from healthy. It was severely imbalanced and had led to many nutritional deficiencies. She also suspected I had a large number of food sensitivities.

I remember getting the phone call from my doctor that the results of my food allergy blood tests had come back. She had never seen one person react to so many foods. She told me I could no longer eat wheat, yeast, sugar, or dairy. She gave me a list of all the foods I could eat and reassured me that if I stuck to my program, I might just be amazed at what happened to my body.

What about my bagels? What about my frozen yogurt? I was afraid to give up the foods I had loved and craved for so long, but I intuitively knew I needed to trust that she was right.

Over the next few months, I ate the foods recommended by my doctor. I discovered healthy grains that were alternatives to wheat and I experimented with nuts milks instead of dairy. I learned about the importance of eatinghigh quality proteins such as fish. I limited sugar and found that my sweet cravings were truly satisfied by fruit. I introduced healthy fats, like avocadoes, flax and olive oil, back into my life. I was eating more calories than I had in years and yet I was losing weight. I dropped about 20 pounds.

The weight loss was exciting, but even more so was the fact that I felt at peace with food for the first time in a long, long while. I rarely thought about food when I wasn’t hungry. The urge to binge completely disappeared, as did the "need" to exercise excessively. My energy and my menstrual cycle returned.

My experience healing with a whole foods diet made me want to learn more about the connection between diet and health, so off to naturopathic medical school I went.  I studied holistic nutrition and learned about all sorts of eating philosophies over the next few years. I experimented with vegetarianism, veganism, the Atkins diet, raw foods...you name a diet and I probably tried it.  Here's what I learned, though: following any dietary philosophy that hinges on excluding certain foods just does not work for me. Why?

Because I love food and everything about it!

I love cooking. I love eating. I love learning about traditional foods and foods in a cultural context. I don't want to exclude foods. I spent too many years doing that and I have no interest in doing it any more.

So I eat a nutrient-dense whole foods diet that includes tons of vegetables (prepared in all different ways: raw, cooked, cultured), and I make sure to balance it out with protein such as wild fish, pastured eggs and chicken, and grass-fed beef. I eat lots of healthy fats (including organic butter and extra virgin coconut oil). I eat as organically/seasonally/locally as my wallet will allow and I grow many of my own vegetables in the summer. I bake my own treats with organic ingredients and natural sweeteners and I only eat small amounts of these.

Because I have had issues with wheat, sugar, yeast, and dairy in the past, I am somewhat careful about these foods.  Overeating anything with these ingredients leaves me unsatisfied and wanting more, yet sapped of energy. Small amounts work fine for me, though. I seem to do alright with dairy, especially if I stick to organic/grass-fed/raw varieties. The one thing I can say I never eat is packaged processed foods: it's not food to me.

As for my other strategies? I find that the upside of having a healthy recipes blog is that I eat almost all of my meals at home so I have full control over what goes into my body. I try to eat small meals and I never eat to the point of "fullness", just until I'm satisfied.  I almost always have lots of leftovers in the refrigerator for when I don't have time to cook. I try to get daily exercise, but I'm not a gym person. I exercise outside when it's nice and take karate classes a few times per week.

Please know that I am not perfect, though! I have two kids with busy schedules and if we're out in the evening and we're hungry, sometimes it's just easiest to head to the pizza place. So I'll have a slice with a salad and not worry about it.

It's what works for me..."

Winnie Abramson, ND

Visit my recipe blog: Healthy Green Kitchen
http://www.healthygreenkitchen.com/

Visit my website: Healthy Green Lifestyle
http://www.healthygreenlifestyle.com/

Wednesday, March 10, 2010

Retaining Water? Have some Celery!

It wasn't so long ago when I thought that dinner was supposed to be a rather grand affair involving some sort of protein, some sort of starch and some sort of vegetable.  And, if I was really industrious, a salad would start it off.  Well, that thinking started to change for me about ten months ago when I began the Weight Watchers program, yet again!

I vowed that this stint with Weight Watchers would be different from all the others. How? Well, for one thing, I recognized that in the past I had filled my day with some real food, but mostly garbage, processed food substitutes.  Yes, I remained within my daily points allowance and lost the weight, but I felt hungry all the time.  I never kept the weight off once I got to my goal.  Not even for a day.  Because once I hit that goal, I was so starved mentally and physically that I was out of control.  I knew that I was doing something wrong.

This time I was fortunate.  I happen to have a penchant for some of the "Housewives" shows and I happened to read a particular NYC Housewive's book called "Naturally Thin." It was in Bethanny Frankel's book that I first came across the term "Volumetrics" and first saw a recipe for Zucchini Soup.  THANK YOU MS. FRANKEL! I started to piece it all together . . . yes, I needed to eat fewer calories in order to lose weight, BUT I also needed to feel full and satisfied (that's the volume part of the equation), AND my body needs lots of nutrients to give me all of the energy and vitality that I need to get through each day.  How can you accomplish all of this? VEGETABLES

Is it true that there are magical weight loss foods? Heck, I don't know. I'm not a doctor or even a nutritionist.  What I do know FOR SURE is that if I fill my tummy with nutritious (read "unprocessed"), low calorie food (for you Weight Watchers out there, anything that is 2 points or less per cup of food) then I lose weight.  Soups, salads, smoothies plus creative almost vegan dishes like the recipe below fill me up, taste amazing, and have turned my body into something it has never been before.  And dinner got a whole heck-of-alot easier each night.  No more hour and a half long sessions in the kitchen after work.  Just a few minutes assembling a salad and warming up whatever soup or vegetable side dishes that fill up my refridgerator and freezer (more on how they got there in a future post).

The following is a scrumptious side dish.   You could serve it with a salad and some crackers and a healthy dip for a low calorie lunch or dinner. If you simply can't go without the meat, it is also fabulous served with chicken, turkey or fish (just ask my husband).

Braised Celery with Tomatoes, Olives and Capers
Makes 6 servings, each serving = 1.5 WW points (about 1.5 cups=1 serving)
based on a recipe by Mark Bittman

roughly 2 1/2 pounds celery, washed, trimmed and cut into 2" lengths
1 Tbsp butter
1 Tbsp olive oil
1/4 cup minced onion or shallots
Salt and pepper to taste
1 Tbsp flour
1 1/2 cups chicken or vegetable stock
1 Tbsp drained capers
1 cup pitted and sliced or chopped black olives
1 14 oz. can diced tomatoes (can use fresh--just core, seed and chop them)

1. Heat the butter and olive oil in a large, deep pan or pot over medium heat.
2. Add the onion or shallot and the celery to the pot and and cook, stirring, for about 2 minutes. Season with salt and pepper and sprinkle with the flour. Cook, stirring, for about 2 minutes more.
3. Add the stock and stir. Bring to a boil, then turn heat to low. Add the capers, olives and tomatoes. Cover and cook until the celery is very tender; 10-15 minutes. Uncover; if the mixture is very watery turn the heat up and boil off some of the liquid. When the mixture has a saucy texture, it is ready.

Refridgerates and reheats well. Some people don't like capers--just leave 'em out!

 




Monday, March 8, 2010

What To Do When You've Had a Weight Gain

Maybe you haven't been so "on" with your food plan for the past few days and the scale reflects that.

Or, maybe you've been sticking to your food and exercise plan religiously and you step on the scale only to register a two pound weight gain. Uuuuugh! How frustrating. 

Just know that the stuff you are experiencing on the scale is normal. Even thin people experience this regularly.  Think about what you have been eating for the past many days.  Think about your exercise too. There are two possible causes and only one solution.

Cause #1:  You may be retaining water (so try drinking a lot more when you experience this) or getting your period soon (if you are female). Do not let it derail you!  The MOST important thing is what you are putting in your body--not the number on the scale--so if you know that you are following your plan, the numbers WILL work themselves out within a week. Please know that small ups and downs on the scale over the long haul are totally normal when you are trying to lose weight.  What would be unusual would be a perfect line going straight down on your weight loss graph!

Cause #2: You haven't been "on" your plan.  It's that simple.  Maybe it was the weekend, maybe you had an unusual number of social events in the past week. Maybe your emotional eating got the best of you.  KNOW THE CAUSE! You can't fix anything if you don't know why it is broken.

Solution: Whatever the reason for your weight gain, the solution is the same:

 Let it go.  Resolve that TODAY will be a great food day.

You can even write down what you plan to eat all day today and how you plan on exercising.  Then follow that plan.  If you are in front of food that is not on your plan, say to yourself, "That food is not on my plan.  I will eat the food that is on my plan." It really can be that simple. You can string great food days together one at a time. And shortly you will see the scale move in the right direction.

Sunday, March 7, 2010

Tomato and Cucumber Salad

This extremely popular salad is made daily in millions of households throughout the Middle East and makes a great side dish for almost any meal.  It is wonderful served with an ezekial bread/hummus/tomato or cucumber sandwich for a light but filling lunch or dinner (see prior post). It keeps for two days in the refridgerator.

Middle Eastern Tomato and Cucumber Salad
serves 4, 1.5 WW points per serving

1 1/2 large English (seedless) cucumbers, diced
6 Italian plum tomatoes, seeded and diced
juice of 2 lemons
2 Tbsp olive oil
salt and pepper to taste

Optional ingredients: chopped onion, chopped green pepper, chopped parsley

Combine ingredients and enjoy!



Saturday, March 6, 2010

Two Sweet Treats!

Sweet Treat #1: Welcome Peer Trainers!
I just wanted to let everyone know that something exciting happened yesterday to my blog.  Jackie from peertrainer.com sent out an e-mail to about 30,000 people letting them know of it's existence.  I'm so excited that my blog is having such amazing exposure with an audience that can really help build some traction.  Please, if you like what you read/see here, let me know!

Sweet Treat #2: If you love vanilla and coconut and are need something sweet every once-in-a-while, these are a nice fix that you can keep in your freezer and enjoy without all of the guilt.

Raw Vanilla Macaroons
2 cups shredded coconut (not toasted)
2 Tbs agave or honey
2 Tbs raw almond butter
2 Tbs maca powder (Maca is a superfood, found the powder at Whole Foods)
1 Tbs pure vanilla extract or powder
Generous pinch of sea salt

Mix together by hand or with a wooden spoon in a bowl, until it sticks together, adding more sweetener or water to make it stick. 

Scoop 1 Tbsp of mixture at a time and roll into balls.  You can eat these immediately - they're perfectly chewy and delicious without dehydration.  Or you can scoop entire mixture onto a pie plate and spread until it is in an even layer.  Freeze (this sets them a little more) for a few hours and then remove from freezer, pry frozen disk off of pie plate and place in a cutting board.  With a large chef's knife, cut into triangles.



Friday, March 5, 2010

The Great Protein Myth

Just yesterday another person asked me how I get protein if I am eating mainly vegetables.  And my answer was that vegetables contain carbohydrates, fat AND protein.  Did you know that?  And along with the three macronutrients, vegetables contain thousands of micronutrients that protect us from cancer, diabetes and heart disease. Dark leafy greens like kale, spinach, collard, beet greens, etc. are the highest in micronutrients, plus they have lots of, you guessed it, PROTEIN!  You don't get those micronutrients from a steak.

We really do have a protein obsession in this country.  So I was not at all surprised to wake up this morning to find that some of my favorite people (that I have never met before), Jackie Wicks of PeerTrainer.com and Dr. Joel Fuhrman,  had made a YouTube video about just this topic yesterday!



The following is from Steve Pavlina, and it pretty much sums it up for me:

The Great Protein Myth

"When I tell people I’m vegan, often the first question out of their mouths is, 'Ok, so where do you get your protein?'

As soon as I hear this question, I do my usual eye roll and immediately know that I’m dealing with… well… someone who doesn’t know very much about plants. The idea that plant foods are somehow devoid of protein is nothing but a myth.

Myth #1: Plants are low in protein

Plant foods are generally abundant in protein. For example, lettuce gets 34% of its calories from protein, and broccoli gets 45% of its calories from protein. Spinach is 49%. Cauliflower is 40%. Celery is 21%. Beans range from 23% to 54% depending on the variety. Grains are 8% to 31%. Nuts and seeds are 8% to 21%. Fruits are the lowest at around 5-8% on average.

If you wanted to suffer from protein deficiency, you’d either have to seriously restrict total calories (i.e. starve yourself), or you’d have to eat a really messed up, unbalanced diet like nothing but low-protein junk foods and certain fruits. But in those cases, protein deficiency probably won’t be your biggest risk.

Personally I’ve never met anyone suffering from protein deficiency in the USA, vegan or otherwise. The much greater risk (in the USA at least) is overconsumption of protein.

Myth #2: Plant proteins are incomplete

Another myth is the idea that you need to combine different plant foods to form complete proteins. The idea was that most plant foods only contained some of the essential amino acids, so you’d have to combine “incomplete” foods like beans and rice to form meals that contained complete proteins. This idea was put forth in the 1971 book Diet for a Small Planet by Frances Moore Lappé. It was a million-copy bestseller. Unfortunately, many people still aren’t aware that this theory was later found to be completely false, as Lappé herself recanted her original theory in later works that were far less popular. The truth is that most plant foods do contain all the essential amino acids, but furthermore, your body will store amino acids in a pool between meals — it doesn’t even need to get all the essentials in a single meal. So the theory of combining plant foods to form complete proteins isn’t even remotely correct. Of course, lifelong vegans already knew Lappé’s theory was wrong, as they weren’t suffering from protein deficiencies regardless of how they combined their meals.

Many people today are still under the mistaken assumption that getting enough protein from plants is difficult or impossible. I particularly love it when people explain to me why I should either be dead or suffering from protein deficiency symptoms. I haven’t eaten any animal protein in 8.5 years now, and I’ve never had any protein deficiency symptoms, nor have any other vegans I’ve known.

Plus I’m not dead. On the contrary, I feel fantastic.

So don’t worry about getting enough protein. Just eat your veggies, and you’ll be fine."

http://www.stevepavlina.com/blog/2005/09/the-great-protein-myth/

Finally, I do want to mention that it is very possible to be an unhealthy vegetarian.  I was one for over 10 years.  Recently I came across the term "junk food vegetarian" and I would say that term applied to me.  I didn't really care about what I put in my body so long as there wasn't any meat from an animal in it.  But I didn't care if I ate a twinkie.  I wasn't healthy, I wasn't fit and I didn't have a surplus of energy.  I don't recommend that!

Thursday, March 4, 2010

Mom's Famous Sweet-n-Sour Cabbage

It always seems like those homey dishes that you remember from childhood turn out to be not-so-good-for-you by today's standards.  Well, this dish is one of the exceptions.  I happen to love it, and it's low calorie! If you're like me and you love your veggies, you could gobble this up all by itself, or it is fantastic paired with chicken. It freezes really well, so one batch can have a bonus round at a later date!


Sweet & Sour Cabbage
makes 12 cups

3 Tbsp vegetable broth
1 medium onion, chopped
1 medium red cabbage, coarsely shredded
2 large apples, granny smith works well, peeled and sliced
1 bay leaf
3 Tbsp maple syrup or brown sugar
1 tsp salt
pinch of pepper
1 Tbsp lemon juice or vinegar
optional: Dark raisins

Heat broth in a large pot.  Add onion and brown lightly.  Add shredded cabbage to pot.  Stir.  Cover pot and cook on medium-low heat for 25 minutes.  Add apples, bay leaf, agave or brown sugar, salt, pepper and lemon juice or vinegar and stir.  Cook another 25 minutes, covered, stirring occassionally.

You can add dark raisins if desired in the last 25 minutes of cooking.



Tuesday, March 2, 2010

Raw Collard Greens Recipe--Who Knew?

I'm just going to be honest here and say that I didn't think raw collard greens could taste good.  Well, I was right.  They're not good, they're GREAT! I love everything about this dish.  It is so healthy, easy and low calorie that it's going to be a staple in my house from now on.

Raw Thai Spring Rolls with "Peanut" Sauce
Adapted from a recipe from http://goneraw.com/recipe/raw-thai-spring-rolls-peanut-sauce The peanut sauce is actually made with almond butter instead of peanuts because peanuts are not technically raw, but it tastes just like the real thing!
Servings: 4-6


Ingredients:

For the Spring Rolls:
1 english/seedless cucumber
1 bunch collard greens
2 large carrots
1 bunch cilantro
Approx. 2 portabello mushrooms or 10 baby bella (crimini) mushrooms
Soy sauce (or Nama Shoyu, which is unpasteurized)
1-2 avocados

For the dipping sauce:
1/2 c raw almond butter
3 tbsp rice vinegar
1 1/2" piece of raw ginger, peeled (from the freezer if you keep it stored there)
Soy sauce (or Nama Shoyu)
2 cloves garlic
1/2 c water
1/3 c agave nectar

Preparation:
For sauce: combine all ingredients in a blender or food processor. Pour into individual bowls, depending on how many people you are serving.

Julienne carrots and cucumbers with a knife or japanese mandoline.  Wash collard greens.  Cut out stems of collard greens to make uniform wrappers (2 wrappers per large collard leaf).  Break off ends of cilantro stems and/or chop cilantro.  Slice mushrooms and coat lightly with soy sauce.  Slice avocado thinly, lengthwise.

Lay collard wrapper on a clean surface.  Arrange a few each of above ingredients (just 1 portabella mushroom slice or 3-4 babby bella slices) in the middle of each collard green leaf and roll.  Place spring rolls, open side down, on a plate. Serve with dipping sauce.






Raw Food Extravaganza

It is hard for me to put into words what a unique experience it was for me to attend a raw food potluck (a.k.a. "meet up") on Cleveland's East Side with a group of people that I had never met before. It seemed exciting and cooky all at the same time.  And I'm so glad that I went.  The food was incredible; the people were so nice.  I got to sample a ton of things that I have only read about: raw lasagna (YUM!), sunflower seed pate, raw pumpkin pie, Hail to the Kale salad (spectacular), raw mushroom stroganoff, zucchini "pasta" made in a spiralizer, and the most creative dish of the night, raw toaster pastries.  And that is just the short list!  Raw food really does taste better than cooked food.

The raw toaster pastries.

It was a food orgy. When can I go back?