Archive for February, 2010

You Are What You Eat

You Are What You Eat  is a fun little show on the BBC.  Set your DVR or TIVO for this show and record!  It is only 30 minutes, but really all the reminder you need for why eating fresh and healthy is best!  The host Gillian McKeith, and the shows commentator make it entertaining, and informative!  You also learn a lot of valuable information!

http://www.bbcamerica.com/content/273/index.jsp

Gillian McKeith is a great resource for healthy eating and living.  I have two of her books (just saw them at FredMeyer) and she uses a lot of photos, bullet-points, and the layouts are easy to nagivgate…get the facts, the 411, and move on!

 

Her website is worth checking out! http://www.gillianmckeith.info/

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Sweet treat!

So if you are NOT a GRAPEFRUIT fan, you probably will not like this!  If you are lukewarm on GRAPEFRUIT this may help you turn the corner!  If you think GRAPEFRUITS are FAB, this will leave you wondering “Why didn’t I think of that?”

I saw this in a magazine a few years back and never got around to trying it. I then saw a variation of it again in my Tosca Reno, Clean Eating cookbook a few days ago and given I had a new, HUGE, bag of Grapefruits from Costco, I went for it!

DELICIOUS!

The kids actually enjoyed it too!  I love any sweet treat in the later hours of the evening that I can have for minimal caloric intake!  (208 full/ 104 for half)

Spiced Broiled Grapefruit

INGREDIENTS

  • 1/2 grapefruit per person
  • 1 tbsp pure maple syrup for each half
  • 1/2 tsp vanilla extract for each half
  • Pinch each ground cardamom, nutmeg, and cinnamon per grapefruit
  • (you can also use agave, honey, brown sugar)

DIRECTIONS

  • Position rack 4 inches below broiler
  • pre-heat to broil
  • cut grapefruits in half, remove seeds, and section with a grapefruit knife (you are not removing the fruit, just loosening it)
  • set grapefruits in baking dish and cover with toppings
  • broil for 5 minutes, or until edges are brown and fruit is bubbling

Serve warm, BUT ALSO they taste great cold, as I had a left-over half for breakfast the next day!  You could also add leftovers to a salad!

The 411 on Spiced Grapefruits:  Calories 104/ Fat 0/Protein 1g/ Fiber 2g

 Here is some proof that the little ones were digging it!

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Maria.

When Maria and I are speaking the same language I know I am on the right track, and so should you!

(Poop in our soda? NICE!)

Top 5 Reasons NOT to Drink Soda

February 19, 2010

Talk of a “sugar tax” on soda has people all abuzz about whether it’s an American thing to financially punish people for drinking soda or not. I say go ahead and tax soda, and here are five good reasons why:

1. Soda is one more cause of the climate crisis. We have exported our carbon dioxide addiction all around the world. Just think of the costs in fuel to ship it—and the emissions produced. Maybe if we stop drinking so much of it, the appeal of American sodas will decline elsewhere. And at least in most other countries, the local soda is still made with real sugar!

2. Yeah, yeah, yeah…high-fructose corn syrup. HFCS is only cheaper than sugar because our government subsidizes the toxic, poisonous farming of corn in order to keep chemical companies (and maybe big tractor companies, too) in business. Plus, studies have shown that high-fructose corn syrup has mercury in it. So all those moms who think (incorrectly) that mercury in vaccines causes autism had better not be giving their kids soda!

3. Diet soda causes people to make poor decisions. According to a recent study, people who drink diet sodas think they are getting some energy, but their bodies still feel starved, so they kick into famine mode. Which basically means that the future doesn’t matter, all that matters is getting a next dose of fuel—hence, impulsive, short-term thinking. Amazing.

4. Soda isn’t really thirst quenching anyway.
Did you ever really, really pay attention to how your mouth feels when you drink a soda? All that sugar kind of sucks out the liquids from your mouth and leaves a taste that is so icky you have to eat something to get rid of it. So not only are you getting empty calories from your drink, but you are urged to snack, too.

5. Fountain soda has fecal matter in it!
It’s been a bad couple of weeks for soda in the news. Another study just this past week found that more than 40 percent of all fountain sodas have traces of fecal matter germs in them. It’s not in the ice, it’s in the soda itself. This was highly disappointing to me personally, since when I do have soda, I really like to have fountain soda with lots of ice in it to water it down and make it somewhat more thirst quenching. Now even that is off limits to me. I look at that cup of Coke with a lid and a straw and think, fecal matter? No thanks.

The only time I really bring soda into my house is when we are sick. There is nothing quite like a real coke or ginger ale to soothe an aching stomach. It’s medicine, really, and frankly, I think it should be treated as such. Think of all the plastic bottles, sugar, and toxic GMO corn we can keep out of the waste stream (and our bodies) if we stop drinking soda routinely.

Thirsty? Buy bottled water instead. YES, bottled water. It’s thirst quenching, has zero calories, and is damn good for you. Of course, you can fill your reusable water bottle with local tap water for free, instead of paying too much for water that’s been shipped and is probably municipal water anyway. And you should. But if you are at a gas station and need something to drink, pass over the soda and don’t feel guilty if a cold bottle of water hits the spot. (Just recycle that bottle.)

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Simple.

 courtesy of Dr. Oz

If you see one of these five ingredients listed as one of the first five things used to make it, don’t eat it.

High fructose corn syrup
“We most commonly get this in soft drinks,” Dr. Oz says. “It’s an inexpensive sugar, which means we’re getting a lot of it in our diet.”

Sugar
Dr. Oz says when you eat sweets, your brain receives schizophrenic messages. “It says: ‘I got calories, but I didn’t get any nutrients,’” he says. Your body will keep craving food until it gets those nutrients. (it is looking more and more like artificial sweeteners (Diet Coke) fall in this category too!)

“Enriched”
Also watch out for products made with “enriched” flour, like white bread. “Why would they take bread and have to enrich it? Because they take all the important vitamins out of it, and they sprinkle just a little bit back in there,” Dr. Oz says.

Trans fat
Also known as hydrogenated fat, these are fats that were once in liquid form but have hydrogen added to make them solid at room temperature. “It extends the shelf life of the product,” Dr. Oz says. “But it shortens the human life.”

Saturated fats
These fats come from four-legged animals like pigs and cows.

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Are Organics Worth Their Price?

That is the title of a GREAT article in this month’s Oprah magazine!

The Environmental Working Group, EWG sorted data from over 85,000 USDA and FDA tests to help us figure out when we should throw down the dough for organic, and when it is ok to go mainstream…NICE!

 Check out their list here!

http://www.foodnews.org/fulllist.php

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Q and A for Tracy!

My friend Tracy watched Food Inc. a few days ago and I am so impressed!  Instead of burying her head in the sand she is being PROACTIVE!  Go GIRL!

She emailed me some Q & A, so here is my 411!

Do you buy all organic?  

I do not buy all organic.  If I am not sure whether or not something needs to be organic I google it and do some reasearch.  I try to buy organic when it is something my kids consume a lot of.  I also go by the rule of buying organic when the “skin is thin”. 

Go organic: apples, peaches, strawberries, raspberries, blueberries, blackberries, cherries, grapes, pears, nectarines, peppers, celery, potatoes, and carrots

Save your cash: avocados, eggplants, pineapples, bananas, corn, kiwi, mangoes, papaya, sweet peas, oranges, grapefruit, and squash

Go organic: all lettuces and greens such as kale, collards, mustard, swiss chard, and spinach

Save your cash: broccoli, cabbage, asparagus, cauliflower, eggplant, melons, and sweet potatoes 

Go organic: milk, yogurt, and cheese (milk and yogurt I am firm on.  String cheese I also buy organic because my kids eat a lot of it.  I buy regular cheese for sprinkling on chili or a quesadilla because we eat soooo little of it.)

You can also buy a lot of organic berries frozen, and I use those in shakes every day!

Eating organic seems really expensive?

I thought so too at first, but if you pay attention it really isn’t that much more.  Given that eating cleaner also led us to eating at home more, we have saved tons of money (and calories)!  Also when you are conscious of what you are eating you buy foods you know you will eat, verses a lot of stuff I just tossed out in the past.

The one thing you realize very quickly is if you eat IN SEASON you will save money.  I bought two spaghetti squashes at Trader Joe’s the other day for $1.75 each.  They keep forever in a cold, dark place and allow me to feed 4 of us, plus leftovers for about $5 (when I add the pasta sauce and a salad). 

Winter has forced me to explore new foods (squash, leeks, carrots, and lentils) that I use to stay away from.  I love summer.  The farmer markets around here make eating organic, and clean, so EASY! 

We don’t eat a lot of meat and that is what gets pricey if you are buying grass-fed (the GMO Corn is as concerning to me as the hormones and antibiotics (we were not raised with these things) being put into our bodies in the amounts our kids are exposed to.  We feed this to the cattle, but it is also in almost all of our processed foods).

We eat lots of seafood.  Frozen tilapia, and wild Alaskan salmon are pretty inexpensive at Costco.

Join the PCC (or any local co-op).  You are supporting local growers, and your local economy, and you know you are getting good stuff!  It was a $65 fee to join, and I get a coupon for 10% off every month and you also get 5% off every 15th and 16th of the month and a newsletter with great recipes for eating in season.

Also, I view it as an investment.  I would rather spend a bit more up front and keep us all as healthy as possible, than pay downstream in medical bills.

I went to Trader Joe’s today and did pretty good-just paying more attention to labels.

They say to watch the first 3 ingredients, I try to watch the 1st five.  Watch for sugar, corn syrup, high-fructose corn-syrup.  A clean, clear label with words you can pronounce is a GOOD THING!  I think the best book you could read to learn about all of this is Michael Pollan’s, In Defense of Food.  He also has a great explanation (cliff notes if you will) in Food Rules, for why and how to eat healthier.

Good rules to follow (when you can)

No sugar.  

No high fructose corn syrup.  

No trans fats.  (hydrogenated or partially hydrogenated)

No saturated fats.

Nothing enriched.  

Words you don’t know or cannot pronounce. (Mono- dyglicerides for example)

And extra words, like “added”!

Do you cook every night?  If you do, what kind of meals do you make? 

I do.  If we eat out or do take out as a family it is sushi, subway, taco time or Indian food.  Or occasionally we order Zeeks and I get half- no cheese loaded with veggies and sauce (you would be surprised)!  It is just easier for me to know what I am putting in my mouth, and to know where it came from and what has been done to it.

We eat lots of lentils (a million ways to cook these and Trader Joe’s has them pre-cooked so you can just add them to a recipe), chili (vegetarian, or turkey-homemade or bought), salmon, tilapia, shrimp, tofu (don’t knock it til you have tried it), soups, salads (oil and vinegar, or a variation….no more ranch or other sugar and fat dressings), and whole grains. Whole grain pastas, wild rice, brown rice, quinoa, and tabouleh (this one takes 30 minutes and just hot water).  And I do cook chicken, and red meat, just not often, and I do buy it from the PCC or Whole Foods.

The kids love chili night, my tortilla soup, and we make pizzas all the time-their FAV!  It is amazing what kids will put on their pizza if they help put it in the topping bowls, and then we just throw them on the BBQ.  (Whole foods and TJ both sell pizza dough for under $3.00). 

We bought some crab for Valentine’s Day, so tonight was crab cakes, shrimp and a salad – YUMMERS!

What do you send with your kids for lunch?

What is tough about lunches is being creative, and making it fun enough that they don’t harp on wanting all the crud the kid next to them has!  The first day of school this year James came home asking when he could have a gogurt?  So we had a chat about food, verses fun food, verses sugar, chemicals and food coloring masquerading as yogurt.  It is impossible to ask your kids to eat healthy if you do not.  I have found my kids are pretty cool about it because they want to be like Mom and Dad.  Some day that will change, and then I will focus on how those “fun foods” make us feel (tired, lethargic, thristy…so on).

There is no peanut butter allowed at his school so it is turkey cheese, sunbutter, cream cheese and jelly.  The key is the bread, this is where I try to make it as nutritious as possible.  We also do wraps and he likes hummus, turkey,cream cheese, cucumbers.  I do send a juice box, Hansen’s 100% juice (Costco).  I wish he would drink water…but lets be real.  We then send a fruit-seasonal, so right now it is small tangerines, apple slices, or pear slices.  We also send hummus and chips. He loves cucumber slices with lemon pepper on them (so do I)).

The junk food/treat is either stretch island fruit leather, kids cliff bar (Costco), dried mango slices (Costco), or a cookie (they might be organic, or vegan, he doesn’t know nor care).  I look for things that maybe aren’t perfect, but better than the alternative.  Last week the kid next to him got 8 OREOS, a chocolate milk, and some Cheeze-Its for lunch.  I sware, people have lost their minds!

I will post my Costco and Trader Joe’s Grocery lists, the staples that I always pick up.  I still hit Safeway for basics, and their organic brand is pretty good.  I have not been down any of the middle aisles at Safeway in ages.

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Yummy yogurt, Yucky yogurt

Yogurt is a staple in our home, but the yogurt you find in my fridge today is nothing like the yogurt you would have found over a year ago.  I think yogurt in America has become nothing more than a base for adding sugar, food coloring, additives, high-fructose corn syrup, potassium sorbate, sodium citrate, caramel color, and EXTRA YUMMY stuff like modified food starch.  Would any of you guessed you needed any of those things to make yogurt?

It is sad that our taste buds have evolved to a place where even our dairy products need to be ”fake” in flavor and pink or green to appeal to our eyes!  Come on people, you know when you peel the lid back and dip your spoon into a “Key Lime” flavored yogurt with a thick, neon-green syrup at the bottom that you are not really eating fresh lime, right?  RIGHT?

Again, moderation.  If your kids need to have a Go-gurt once or twice a week, probably not a big deal (I don’t buy these).  Personally if I were going to buy these, and serve them, it would be an occasional treat, and as dessert!  Let’s teach our kids that junk food is, well, junk…instead of raising them believing junk food is food!

Greek yogurt can be sweetened up for your kids in several healthy ways.  Add a few drops of Agave, a small spoonful of a healthy jam, fresh blueberries, crunchy cereal…PLAY AROUND with it.

Here is a comparison of Yummy vs. Yucky yogurt!  I wanted an Apples-to-Apples comparison, though I doubt many of us purchase this version of “Yucky” yogurt, it is probably much, much worse!

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And Something Spicy for the Super Bowl

 

You can not have a Super Bowl Party without a Seven Layer Bean Dip, right?  Offer to bring it and make Tosca Reno’s from her Clean Eating Cookbook, it is THE BOMB!

This dip will give you a healthy option at the party, though if you don’t tell everyone how healthy it is I venture to bet it will be gone before the 1st Quarter!

Seven Layer Bean Dip by Tosca Reno

 

INGREDIENTS

1 1/2 Cups plain non-fat yogurt, strained for about two hours to thicken.  (see below)

4 Tbs green chilies

1 tsp sea salt

1 tsp ground black pepper

2 cups plum tomatoes, peeled, chopped and drained in a colander

1 cup finely chopped purple onion (nicer dicer it)

1/2 cup fresh cilantro

1 16-oz can low-fat refried beans (get spicy if they have it)

Tabasco sauce, several drops

Worcestershire sauce, several drops

1 1/2 cups guacamole (trader joes and Costco have great ones, already made and zippy)

1 cup black olives, chopped (optional)

1 bunch green onion, trimmed and chopped

1 1/2 cups low-fat Monterey Jack cheese, shredded

DIRECTIONS

1.  In a small bowl combine strained yogurt with chilies, sea salt and pepper.  Set aside.

2.  In a medium bowl, combine chopped, drained tomatoes, purple onion, cilantro…mix well and set aside.

3.  In another medium bowl combine beans, Tabasco and Worcestershire sauces.  Mix well and set aside.

The dip gets messy so try NOT to use a glass dish if you have another option!

1st layer is the bean mixture.  Spread, making as smooth as possible.

2nd Layer is guacamole

3rd layer is the yogurt mixture from step 1

4th layer is chopped olives if you are using them

5th layer is tomatoes mixture, use hands to distribute evenly

6th layer is green onions

7th layer is shredded cheese

*To Strain the yogurt: Place 2 layers of cheesecloth which you can get at any grocery store in a fine-strainer and dump the yogurt in.  Place over a bowl to catch the liquids and place in the fridge.

NOT HARD!

The 411 on Tosca’s Dip:  Calories 59/Protein 3g/carbs 4g/TOTAL fat 3g/ Saturated fat 1g/ Trans Fat 0g/ Fiber 1g/ Sodium 166mg/ Cholesterol 1mg/ Sugar 1g

Serving size is 4 Tbl.  And the leftovers make for great tacos, or rolled up as burritos!

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Something Sweet for the Super Bowl

Coco-Cocoa Fantasy Fudge Ingredients

INGREDIENTS

• 1/2 cup coconut butter

• 1/2 cup raw organic honey or pure maple syrup (or use a little of each to equal 1/2 cup)

• 1 teaspoon pure vanilla extract (optional)

• 1/2 cup cacao or cocoa powder (no sugar added)

• Walnuts if you wish

DIRECTIONS

Using a spoon, blend the coconut butter with the honey or syrup and mix well.

(If the coconut butter is too hard, place it in an ovenproof container and set it in a 250 degree oven for a few minutes until softened).

Add the vanilla extract, if desired. Stir in the cacao or cocoa powder. Mix until smooth. (add nuts now if using them, and mix again)

Pour into an 8×8 inch pan and refrigerate until firm.

Cut into 16 pieces and keep cool (living in Vegas, I found that it will melt if left out too long).

NOTE: You can also use this mixture as FROSTING! Simply use it before refrigeration and it will spread easily!

This recipe is from Clean Eating magazine.

The 411 on Coco-Cocoa Fantasy Fudge:  Calories 130/Fat 9g/Carbs 11g/Protein 1g

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