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Wednesday, December 29, 2010

Vacation Kale and Bean Saute



Just a reminder, don't forget to participate in my first ever blog contest and enter to win a copy of the newly revised Eat to Live by Dr. Joel Fuhrman! Winner will be picked at random on January 1st.

Are any of you wondering why I've been so quiet lately? Probably not, but I'll tell you anyway. I'm travelling with my family, escaping the cold of frigid Cleveland, if only for a short time. We're lucky enough to stay in a condo on the beach in Southwest Florida, where I have my very own kitchen. And that makes this healthy girl a very happy girl! I've been cooking up this amazing recipe for greens from the Dr. Fuhrman Member Site.  Here's my variation on this winner:

Kale and Bean Saute
Inspired by a recipe on http://www.drfuhrman.com/
Serves: 4

2 bunches kale, tough stems and center ribs removed, chopped or 1 large bag of prewashed/cut kale
1/2 cup sun-dried tomatoes soaked in hot water for 30 minutes, drained and chopped
1 medium onion, finely chopped
1 cup shiitake mushrooms, coarsely chopped
3 cloves garlic, pressed
vegetable broth, as needed
1 15 ounce can beans, any type, rinsed and drained
1 1/2 tablespoons fruity vinegar
1 tablespoon Dijon mustard
red pepper flakes, to taste
1/4 cup raw sunflower seeds or any type nuts (chopped if the nuts are large)
dash of salt


In a large skillet over medium heat, add vegetable broth to just cover the bottom of the pan. Broth sauté the onions and garlic until onions are translucent. Do not let onions burn. Add mushrooms and cook for 5 minutes, stirring frequently.  Add kale and re hydrated tomatoes and cook, tossing with the onion and mushrooms, over medium heat , adding broth only as needed, until kale is soft.

Add the beans, vinegar, mustard and red pepper flakes (be careful!), then cook for 3 more minutes. Taste and season with only a dash of salt.

I know from a lot of people that the holidays are an easting disaster.They resolve themselves to eating food that they don't feel good about mentally or physically and commit to eating healthy again as soon as January 1st rolls around. Why don't I just do the same? I'm here on vacation, why not go on a healthy eating vacation? Because something in me has changed. Maybe it was the reading and rereading of Eat to Live. Maybe it's the way that a green smoothie makes me feel. The "old" food just holds no appeal for me now. Brainwashed for the better I guess.

What have you been cooking up this holiday week? Are you sticking to your plans or falling prey to the holiday offerings?


Tuesday, December 21, 2010

Win a Copy of the New Eat to Live by Dr. Joel Fuhrman

THE FIRST EVER HEALTHY GIRL'S KITCHEN CONTEST


What program or programs are you working that are working for you? Have you lost weight or gained energy? Leave a comment describing your recent experiences and get entered in a random drawing to win a free copy of the revised edition of Eat to Live.

Just in time for the new year--and these books are hard to come by--they are only available at http://www.drfuhrman.com/ and the customer service person that I spoke to said they are going to run out of them just based on the pre-sales of the book. But I've got the winner's copy in transit to me right now!

Winner will be announced on January 1, 2011.

Saturday, December 18, 2010

Finding More Inspiration, a Healthy Vegan Dinner Party and a Contest!

Sometimes it's easy for me to lose sight of the things that made my weight loss possible. Hard to believe given the fact that I write this blog and all, but it's really true. Even sticking to a "high vegan" diet with almost no added fat or processed food, the opportunities to "fall off the wagon" come fast and furious. And the result of this loss of focus is, for me, weight gain. And that, my friends, has started to reverse itself (phew!).

How did I reverse myself? First, I signed up for and am participating in The Point of No Return program from http://www.peertrainer.com/. What I quickly realized when I started listening to the program was that I was losing site of just how low calorie and nutrient dense I need to eat to be at my ideal weight. I woke up to the fact that I was losing site of what brought me so much weight loss success and energy to begin with: Dr. Fuhrman's Eat to Live principles. I also began logging my food again every day using the free Peer Trainer log--what an eye opening experience! It's easy to think you are eating really well until you see it on "paper."

Catching myself at this point inspired me to reread Eat to Live and Eat for Health by Dr. Fuhrman. Dr. Fuhrman has actually published a revised addition of Eat to Live and it's even better than the original. The only way to get the revised addition right now is by ordering it here. I've been browsing it as a vook, but I'm old school and I really just prefer the real thing, so I ordered myself a copy.

I also decided to join the Dr. Fuhrman Member Center online and to give up my Weight Watchers online membership. For me, the $44.95 for the first 6 weeks and $14.95 for every month after that is worth it. The site is far more useful and personal than the Weight Watchers site and ALL of the recipes are friendly to me (instead of a small fraction on WW). I also happen to love listening to the podcasts on whatever topic I have questions about. For example, I listened to the podcast on "Is it Possible to Overeat Healthy Food?" and found out that, yes, it is possible. The information contained in that podcast was vital to me and I made some immediate changes in my diet from that moment forward (can anyone say avocado? duh!). There's a lot more to the member portion of the website that I haven't even had time to explore, but from what I have already seen, it's probably incredible.

And what have I discovered so far? That I am simply just not eating enough of the right foods. The foods that are really low in calories and dense in nutrients--raw vegetables--ideally one pound per day. Cooked vegetables--also one pound per day. And that I am eating too many whole grains and starchy vegetables. In my zealousness to try all sorts of fun, no-added-fat vegan recipes, I forgot how vital it is to just fill up on the basics--salads, low calorie soups, low calorie smoothies and water sauteed greens. Even otherwise healthy foods can have a lot of calories, enough for me to gain weight fairly rapidly. So I've got to really get myself in check, and I'm pretty sure that these two resources are just the right way to do it.

A nice visual of Dr. Fuhrman's Nutritarian food pyramid.

Bluevado Pie. Just one of the almost 900 recipes available on the Dr. Fuhrman Member Center. What I love about finding recipes there is that each one is rated by the members (one to five stars) and comments are left with suggestions about changes or variations, so I don't have to waste money and time on recipes that just aren't that great. And of course, you know I love to add my two cents in after I have prepared each recipe!

So, to sum it up, I'm totally re inspired. Thanks for being on this journey with me!

Preping for the vegan feast.




Dijon Pistachio Dressing /Dip
A no-oil salad dressing from http://www.drfuhrman.com/ Thank you to the kind people over at Dr. Fuhrman for letting me publish this recipe!

1 1/3 cups water
1 cup raw pistachio nuts, unsalted
4 tablespoons lemon juice
2 tablespoons ground flax seeds
4 teaspoons Dr. Fuhrman's VegiZest or Mrs. Dash seasoning
2 teaspoons Dijon mustard
1 teaspoon Bragg Liquid Aminos or low sodium soy sauce
1/2 teaspoon garlic powder
4 deglet noor dates or 2 or 3 medjool dates

Blend all ingredients in a high powered blender or food processor until smooth and creamy.

Roasted Acorn Squash

Roasted Brussels Sprouts

Crispy Kale Casserole from http://www.drfuhrman.com/

This is what the Crispy Kale Casserole looks like under the topping. It was very yummy and the leftovers were even better than the first time we ate it!

Ahhhhh, happiness . . .  a healthy vegan dinner.

THE FIRST EVER HEALTHY GIRL'S KITCHEN CONTEST

What program or programs are you working that are working for you? Have you lost weight or gained energy? Leave a comment describing your recent experiences and get entered in a random drawing to win a free copy of the revised edition of Eat to Live. Winner will be announced on January 1, 2011.


Wednesday, December 15, 2010

Forks Over Knives-The Movie

There's quite a family history of cancer amongst my blood relatives; breast cancer, lung cancer, brain cancer, leukemia, skin cancer and as of yesterday, pre-colon cancer. So it was pretty natural for me to be thinking that it was just a matter of time before I was dealing with whatever form of cancer I was stricken with. It wasn't until I read The China Study that I began to challenge my beliefs about the inevitability of cancer. And that's where my weight loss journey took an interesting turn into more than just a battle with how I looked and into an exploration of my own disease prevention.

Word is starting to spread that there is a documentary called "Forks Over Knives" that will be in theaters on March 11, 2011. Here is the description of the movie, taken verbatim from http://www.forksoverknives.com/ The trailer is really great too, and I have included that below.



"What has happened to us? Despite the most advanced medical technology in the world, we are sicker than ever by nearly every measure.


Two out of every three of us are overweight. Cases of diabetes are exploding, especially amongst our younger population. About half of us are taking at least one prescription drug. Major medical operations have become routine, helping to drive health care costs to astronomical levels. Heart disease, cancer and stroke are the country’s three leading causes of death, even though billions are spent each year to 'battle' these very conditions. Millions suffer from a host of other degenerative diseases.

Could it be there’s a single solution to all of these problems? A solution so comprehensive but so utterly straightforward, that it’s mind-boggling that more of us haven’t taken it seriously?

FORKS OVER KNIVES examines the profound claim that most, if not all, of the so-called 'diseases of affluence' that afflict us can be controlled, or even reversed, by rejecting our present menu of animal-based and processed foods. The major storyline in the film traces the personal journeys of a pair of pioneering yet under-appreciated researchers, Dr. T. Colin Campbell and Dr. Caldwell Esselstyn.



Dr. Campbell, a nutritional scientist at Cornell University, was concerned in the late 1960’s with producing
'high quality' animal protein to bring to the poor and malnourished areas of the third world. While in the Philippines, he made a life-changing discovery: the country’s wealthier children, who were consuming relatively high amounts of animal-based foods, were much more likely to get liver cancer. Dr. Esselstyn, a top surgeon and head of the Breast Cancer Task Force at the world-renowned Cleveland Clinic, found that many of the diseases he routinely treated were virtually unknown in parts of the world where animal-based foods were rarely consumed.

These discoveries inspired Campbell and Esselstyn, who didn’t know each other yet, to conduct several groundbreaking studies. One of them took place in China and is still among the most comprehensive health-related investigations ever undertaken. Their research led them to a startling conclusion: degenerative diseases like heart disease, type 2 diabetes, and even several forms of cancer, could almost always be prevented—and in many cases reversed—by adopting a whole foods, plant-based diet. Despite the profound implications of their findings, their work has remained relatively unknown to the public.

The filmmakers travel with Drs. Campbell and Esselstyn on their separate but similar paths, from their childhood farms where they both produced 'nature’s perfect food'; to China and Cleveland, where they explored ideas that challenged the established thinking and shook their own core beliefs.

The idea of food as medicine is put to the test. Throughout the film, cameras follow 'reality patients' who have chronic conditions from heart disease to diabetes. Doctors teach these patients how to adopt a whole foods plant-based diet as the primary approach to treat their ailments—while the challenges and triumphs of their journeys are revealed."

In addition, there are also many sneak preview showings across the country. You can bet that I will be the first one at the door of the Cedar Lee Theater on January 27th for Cleveland's sneak preview! What do you think? Are you going to join me in seeing "Forks Over Knives"?

Tuesday, December 14, 2010

Easy No Oil Vegan Butternut Squash and Kale Soup

So Easy Your 5 Year Old Can Make It!


Easy Vegan Butternut Squash and Kale Soup
serves 8 (small/1+ cup) or 4 (large/2+ cup)

5 small or 2 large yellow onions, peeled and chopped
2 32 ounce boxes vegetable broth
1 butternut squash
1/2 bunch kale-washed, stems removed and chopped
salt
pepper
dash of Cayenne pepper

Place dutch oven or other soup type pot over medium heat. Pour in vegetable broth to coat bottom of pot. When broth is bubbling, place chopped onions in pot and stir. Cook onions over low-medium heat, stirring frequently. Watch that they do not burn. They can cook slowly over low heat for up to 30 minutes.

Meanwhile, poke holes in the butternut squash and place it on a paper towel in the microwave. Heat on high for 2 minutes to soften it and make it easier to cut. Remove squash from microwave--be careful, it's hot--and peel it with a vegetable peeler. Cut in half lengthwise and remove seeds. Cut squash into medium sized chunks.

When onions are really soft, add butternut squash to pot and pour in enough vegetable broth to cover everything. This amount will vary depending on how large your squash was. You cannot mess this up!

Simmer over low heat for 25 minutes. Puree with an immersion blender. Add chopped kale and simmer for 10 more minutes. Season with salt and pepper and a dash of Cayenne pepper if you like heat (be careful!).






Sunday, December 12, 2010

Anyone Need a Little Inspiration?

Making healthy choices when it comes to eating and exercise is something that I personally struggle with on a daily basis, even though I have come so far. The planning, preparation, and execution of an ultimately satisfying healthy lifestyle takes work. You've got to figure out exactly what works for you and then stick to it. And if you are serious about it, the figuring out process takes months, if not years, of your life.

Maybe you've gotten over the figuring it out phase and you know exactly what to do. Then your at the sticking with it phase. Or if you're like me, you think you've figured it out, then you realize you haven't, so your back to the figuring it out phase again. The good news for me is that I like this kind of challenge, it keeps my mind active, and I have the confidence that I will succeed. So I have been reading and rereading Eat to Live and Eat for Health and everything I can get my hands on as far as the Nutritarian diet goes. And in my quest for knowledge I happened upon the following story.

This is Emily Boller now:
Usually you see the before pictures first, right? But I wanted you to see what a beautiful person Ms. Boller is. The picture of health. She's hot, right?

This was Emily Boller before following Dr. Fuhrman's Eat to Live:



It's hard  to believe that is the same person. But that really is the promise and the power of the Nutritarian way of eating. To see all of the photographs and read Ms. Boller's entire account, I highly recommend clicking here. I cried. I know I'm inspired.


Saturday, December 11, 2010

The Food Network-Porn for Fat People

Does Watching Cooking Shows Make You Hungry?

I don't know about you, but just watching cooking shows on television tends to make my mouth salivate and lead me to think that I am hungry. This pretty much stinks for me, because I love me my cooking shows! Top Chef, Top Chef Masters, Top Chef Just Desserts and now Top Chef All-Stars. And that's just the beginning. Iron Chef, The Next Iron Chef, How to Cook Like an Iron Chef . . . I've loved them all. I even completely enjoy watching people eat food on TV, especially on The Travel Channel, where Anthony Bourdain, Andrew Zimmern and the Man vs. Food guy (what's his name?) gorge themselves on unhealthy and pretty much disgusting grub. But it's entertainment, my kind of sport on TV.

So you can imagine how hard I was laughing a few years ago when a joke was made on Saturday Night Live, "The Food Network-porn for fat people." Well, maybe I cried a little. Something in my head changed that night, I could never watch cooking on TV again without thinking, "Maybe this just isn't that healthy for me."

But the mind is a powerful thing, and I found myself able to adapt. Once I knew that any type of food craving I had while watching food porn was just that--a craving--and not real hunger, I just stopped associating watching food on TV with eating. It really was that simple. A disconnect happened in my brain. I may still have a craving when I see Top Chef Just Desserts, but I talk myself down immediately and move on to enjoying the show.

Advertisers for processed food crap know all about how the human brain works, and they have no shame either. So they plaster their ads and commercials everywhere--including the shows our children watch--enticing us all with imagery of sugary baked goods, knowing the effect it has on us. We want it, and we want it now.

And have you ever noticed how little vegan or even vegetarian cooking is done on television? Why are the chefs on TV so obsessed with meat and refined sugar? Is it a symptom of how our society is obsessed with these things or is it creating our fixation on them? Don't any of these TV personalities care about their own health? Come on Michael Symon, do you really eat like it appears that you do from how you cook on TV and your restaurant menus? Can anyone say "heart disease"? It must take a lot of working out at the club to look like you do. I love you man, but you're killing me! I dare you to go hear Dr. Caldwell Esselstyn speak about the causes of cardiovascular disease and continue eating like you seem like you do.

The new Cooking Channel aired a special about the growing vegan and vegetarian restaurant movement in America called The Veg Edge. "The Veg Edge journeys the country unearthing a new breed of vegetarians. From a punk rock vegan in L.A. to vegetable-loving firemen deep in the heart of Texas, to a kick boxing chef who serves up meatless Mondays at his high-end NYC restaurant. Vegetarians 2010: food carts in Portland, a California beauty, East Village hipsters, confessions, recipes, even ribs!...sort of."

It was so fun and exciting to watch, I only wish that, for the sake of our society's health, the powers that be were creating regular programming on vegan cooking. It's not too late to catch the special, they are going to air it again many times. Did watching The Veg Edge make my mouth water the way some other food programs do? Surprisingly not. But the food did look darned good! Check out a clip from the show here:



NPR did an interesting piece on a group of researchers at Carnegie Mellon University who are studying the effect of thinking about food on the amount of food that we eat.

"The researchers found that people who just imagined moving M&Ms around ate nearly twice as much those who had fantasized about eating them. The findings were just published in the journal Science.

It turns out that there's something about this visualization of eating that confuses our brains. It's as if our minds mistake the mere act of imagining with real consumption.

Cornell's David Just, a behavioral economist, has a theory about how it works, 'If you start imagining yourself eating the M&Ms your body is actually going to produce some of the dopamine and some of the physical responses to having eaten.'

So your first real bite can sort of feel like the 30th. The novelty has worn off—and you eat less."

Get the full story here. And of course, I would love to know your thoughts on this issue!

Thursday, December 9, 2010

Your Waist is Like a Bank Account--Only You Want a Low Balance

I confess, I'm a Weight Watchers drop out. It's pretty official at this point, given that I deactivated my online account with weightwatchers.com and am no longer attending meetings. Why did I do it? Well, I just had to come to terms with my history. I'm great when it comes to losing weight with Weight Watchers, but I'm a total flop at maintaining the losses as soon as I hit my goal. Like they always say, the program works if you work the program. But what if you try and try and just can't get yourself to work the program anymore? To get an idea of how many people actually have long term success on Weight Watchers, click here.

So I have been asking myself, "Is it possible to maintain a healthy weight without weighing and measuring food, recording what I eat, and keeping some kind of running total?" Because it sure seems to me that if I don't figure out either how to continue to weigh, measure and track for longer than a year OR how to maintain my weight in some other fashion, then I am going to end up on the fat end of that stick.

Sure, there are lots of diets out there that promise to make you thin without having to weigh, measure and track, but those diets seem to me to be patently unhealthy and none have ever worked for me. Can anyone say "high protein diet"? The closest I have come to weight maintenance without counting calories, i.e. Points, is by eating a no-added-fat vegan diet. But even that is failing at keeping me at my low weight that I achieved on Weight Watchers.

But don't get dismayed! I am not giving up without the world's biggest fight! I have been very active recently on PeerTrainer.com and have begun to see the error of my vegan ways--too many healthy whole grains and starchy vegetables replacing what I need to be eating--soups, smoothies, salads and sauteed greens. And this just might be causing my problems. Dr. Fuhrman and Eat to Live here I come!

Anyway, back to my original question. Is it possible to maintain a healthy body weight without counting calories? Here is a very interesting point of view from someone who I have always considered "naturally thin," only now I have come to realize that her healthy weight isn't happening by accident.

Q: Tell me about how you maintain your healthy weight. I don't see you recording what you eat or looking up calorie values for food all of the time, or any of the time for that matter!

A: It wasn't until my early thirties, after the birth of my first child, that I had to think about my weight. I was so health food focused and active that it took care of my weight until that point. After my body changed, a result of a combination of having a baby and getting older, I realized that I needed to "step it up" to maintain the body that I wanted.

I just knew that I couldn't eat too much highly caloric food, period. Ideally, I would eat no high calorie food, but that's not realistic. So when I did eat a high calorie food, I would think, "That's a calorie bomb, can't do that again for a while."

No counting calories.

"A while" was an undetermined amount of time. I have enough of a nutrition knowledge base that subconsciously I could rate my meals and know when it was okay to have another bomb. I have a bit of a computer-like brain that calculates everything all the time. I imagine that most people don't function like this.
I rate everything in my life quietly in my head on a scale of 1-10, including all of my meals.

So if I rate a calorie bomb meal, let's say a grilled cheese sandwich, french fries and a slice of key lime pie for dessert (a meal I would be happy to eat every day) a 1, then I would need at least 2 to 3 days of eating meals that I rated an 8-10.  A sample 9 dinner might be an all vegetable salad with a little bit of low cal dressing OR a hearty vegetable soup and some whole grain bread with nothing on it. A sample 9 breakfast might be just a banana and coffee.

I've been doing this for so long that it's always on my mind, but not to the level that it sounds like as I tell you about this. I'm not obsessing about it. It's pretty easy for me and doesn't take a lot of effort at this point.

Q: Tell me what it's like for you to restrict your eating for a few days in order to make up for a calorie bomb meal.

A: It's not really a big deal. I eat healthy anyway, I just need to make some small modifications and avoid any more bombs. I don't have any issues with emotional eating, so it's not hard at all for me to eat really healthy and low calorie food for days if I have to. I don't have an issue with night eating. I generally don't eat when I'm not hungry. It may not be easy to choose healthy food all of the time when I am hungry, but I talk to myself and I say, "I don't want a tire around my waist."

Q: How often do you eat a bomb?

A: I would say small bombs (a piece of a cookie) are every day to two. Big bombs, one to three times a month. Instead of eating a bomb meal that I score a 1, I would rather take a couple of bites of a sandwich or a couple of fries or a couple of bites of key lime pie, and then my compensation is far easier. It might be less nuts on my salad. It's less nut butter on my toast, if I even need to do that.

Q: Give me more examples of bombs.

A: Anything fried, anything very sugary tasting, pretty much all normal desserts, anything with a serving or more of cheese (like pizza or eggplant Parmesan). Anything 500 calories or more per serving.

Q: What do you consider a 5 lunch?

A: I had a big white bagel with peanut butter this morning (I rank that a 4). I had run out of wheat bread, it was there in my kitchen so ate it. I won't eat that again for a long time, probably months. I didn't think about lunch at that time or that where I was going for lunch would likely involved bagels. I was not very hungry for lunch, so I ate half of a whole wheat bagel, 1/3 cup tuna salad, cucumbers, black olives, black coffee. Not a big lunch at all, for me, very light on veggies, so my compensation will not be calorie based, but rather vegetable based. I'm thinking in my head that I am going to have a big, big salad for dinner with nuts if I feel like it. No cheese, no dried fruit, no high calorie dressing.

There is also preparation. There is also this on the front end. So if I know I am going to some big catered event, I might, for 1 to 3 days eat a combination of less food/less highly caloric foods like nuts, knowing that I am going to be eating what I want at the event. This is about once a month for me.

Q: Would you ever eat at home before going to an event where you know that all of the available food would be a bomb, or would you just figure that you would have to make up for the bombs after the event?

A: I base my decision on whether I will like the food or not. If I'm going to like it, I prepare a little in advance and make up for whatever is left after the event. If I'm not going to like the food, for sure I will eat before I go. I do not want to stand there hungry looking at gross food I don't want to eat.

I have put the time, energy and effort into being able to do this in my head. I have studied food and nutrition since college and happened to find it fascinating. Everyone should be doing these calculations, but not necessarily the same way. If you are not able to do it my way, then you've got to use a calorie calculator (I've heard there are many Internet options and smartphone apps and the Weight Watchers Point System). I don't do any hard calculation but I listen to my body more than anything. I weight myself everyday, which is a little bit inaccurate because of water weight, but is generally a good gauge. It helps me know that I am on track.

It might seem like this is really easy for me, but believe me I've put a tremendous amount of time and thought into this. Reading articles, labels, books . . . watching documentaries, videos . . . really anything on the subject.

With my method, I just don't have an issue with weight gain. I'd like to weigh less than I do, but I'm consistent and reasonably comfortable. The work to lose weight is not worth what I would have to do to get there at this point and probably not healthy. Thanks Victoria Secret models!

Now here's a question for all of the readers: Do you have a method for making sure you are not eating beyond your calorie needs? If so, what is that method?