This is a quick, and enlightening read on the topic of sugar!
http://www.healyourlife.com/author-jorge-cruise/2010/07/lifeshelp/get-healthy/get-real-about-sugar
This is a quick, and enlightening read on the topic of sugar!
http://www.healyourlife.com/author-jorge-cruise/2010/07/lifeshelp/get-healthy/get-real-about-sugar
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/
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!
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!
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.
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”!
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 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 every other day, but you can find them without HFCS and lots of the other junk… I wish he would drink water everyday but I want to keep it fun too. 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.
Here is a great resource for discovering what fruits and veggies are in Season, as well as what each fruit/veggie offers as far as nutrients.
Click this link and access each fruit/veggie from the right-hand side of the page!
http://www.worldcommunitycookbook.org/season/guide/general.html
Maria Rodale is the CEO & Chairman of Rodale Publishing. Rodale is a pretty cool company - they are VERY GREEN and focused on bringing us publications centered around health, wellness and the environment! Check them out at Rodale.com!
Maria is a pretty amazing woman, the more I read about her the more fascinated I become that one person can accomplish, contribute, teach and live as much as Maria has. Seriously, her bio reads like SUPERWOMAN, though when you spend time in her kitchen you feel like you are with the Aunti you always wished you had! OK, so I am not really in her kitchen but I am in her blog, a place I have come to love.
Treat yourself to a new friend, and a new find, and visit Maria’s Farm Country Kitchen!
Maria just released her 2nd Annual Farm-to-Table restaurant recommendations and a Seattle eatery made the list:
6. Serious Pie, Seattle, Washington. To be honest, I am sure there are even better farm-to-table restaurants in Seattle, but this is the only one I’ve had time to try, and it was really good. The pizza crust was perfection—thin, tender, smoky, tasty. And the toppings were unusual, but not so unusual as to not be comforting, which is what pizza is truly all about. tomdouglas.com/index.php/restaurants/serious-pie
Here is the complete list! http://www.mariasfarmcountrykitchen.com/maria%e2%80%99s-second-annual-top-ten-farm-to-table-restaurant-recommendations/
I read this article below and thought, “Exactly!” I couldn’t have said it better myself, Laura Pensiero gets a “Standing O “from me! If you are wondering what exactly I have been trying to convey regarding the changes in my personal eating-habits, Ms. Pensiero sums it up pretty well!
This week I will post more about how Ms. Pensiero suggests we make the changes she discusses and live a Real Food Diet!
Working in the field of food and nutrition for almost 20 years, I have seen many “miracle” diets touted: high carb, low carb, low fat, high protein. During the same time, overweight and obesity rates have skyrocketed. But just telling people to eat healthier foods doesn’t work, either. Despite national education campaigns designed to increase fruit and vegetable consumption, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention has published data showing our national intake has actually declined slightly from the early ’90s. How do we change this? People need strategies to help translate health information to the market and stovetop.
It’s time to look at the problem from a different perspective. Eating well might require some adjustments, but trust me, none that hurt. The first step? Eat locally and seasonally. This is a natural, easy way to move toward better health and manage your weight. The reason is that locally raised food harvested at the pinnacle of ripeness will taste better, and if it tastes better, the pleasure of eating it goes way up. Biting into a mealy peach is a form of torture, after all. But a peach at its prime…that’s bliss.
Feeling satisfied and well nourished is critical to making lasting changes. Face it, if you aren’t enjoying yourself, you’ll revert to old habits. So my second piece of advice is this: Don’t do anything drastic. Don’t feel you have to cut out food you love and then suffer and feel deprived. Instead, try putting more “good” food on your plate. Add a colorful vegetable to a familiar stew or sandwich, begin dinner with a great salad, or replace mashed potatoes with a whole grain pilaf. Get what you need not through duty but with pleasure.
I’ve long found that Mediterranean-style cooking offers the most enjoyable way to eat healthy. Since 2001 I’ve owned Gigi Trattoria in Rhinebeck, New York, and as a restaurateur, I’ve had a chance to share with customers my passion for foods made and harvested right here in my community. Recent research suggests that such ingredients are not just delicious but actually better for you than similar items grown halfway around the globe. Produce bred for long-distance shipping, for example, is likely to be lower in some nutrients and antioxidants. Most supermarket food travels an average of 1,500 miles after it is harvested. So calorie for calorie, locally grown food may offer more nourishment as well as more flavor.
During my four years as culinary coordinator at the Memorial Sloan Kettering Wellness and Prevention Center, I gave regular cooking demonstrations and saw firsthand how even dedicated meat-and-potato eaters respond to vegetables that have been cultivated and prepared with care. The usual wide-eyed response is, “I didn’t think I would ever like that.” That’s the power of fresh food.
If you don’t live by a Trader Joe’s, I am so sorry! I also hope you are campaigning to get one! It really is life changing.
Vegan Product List
http://www.traderjoes.com/attachments/Vegan.pdf
Gluten Free Product List
http://www.traderjoes.com/attachments/NoGluten.pdf
Vegetarian Product List
http://www.traderjoes.com/attachments/Vegetarian.pdf
Kosher Product List
http://www.traderjoes.com/attachments/Kosher.pdf
Fat Free Product List
The movie speaks for itself and includes some valuable contributors, including Michael Pollan (one of my rock stars, “In Defense of Food”)! Watch it.

If you do not know who Tal Ronnen is then you are really missing out! Learn this Man’s name because his recipe’s are going to become elegant, decadent, healthy treats in your home! Mr. Ronnen is an amazing Vegan Chef and came to an international fame last spring when he cooked vegan meals for Oprah for 21 days.
His Cookbook The Conscious Cook: Delicious Meatless Recipes That Will Change the Way You Eat, is really wonderful and the recipes are not as complicated as they first appear and they do not disappoint…leaving you looking at Vegan Dining in a whole new (and more gourmet) light.
Celery Root Soup With Granny Smith Apples is one of his most popular recipes so of course I gave it a whirl and let me tell you DELICIOUS! I will post the recipe next.
Simple & Savvy Strategies for Creating Healthy Eaters is a book written by Beverly Pressey and is GREAT! If you are expecting a baby or have a small child this book will be a lifesaver since it will start you out on the right foot when it comes to feeding your little QT! But the great thing about this book is it is not too late! If you have a child that thinks ketchup is a food group, or will only eat chicken nuggets, mac-n-cheese and french fies…..this book can help you turn it around…and honestly, you need to turn it around!
Beverly was the Nutritionist in my Son’s infant class at the local Community College. I could not understand why she was there….15 tired Moms with 3 month old baby’s hanging off our boobs and this gal wanted to talk about first foods, and how healthy habits start young. I wanted to sleep more than 4 hours in a row NOT think about how far away my Son actually feeding himself really seemed!!!
But we listened. We went on field trips to the grocery store. We learned how much crap is marketed to Mom for kids…that kids really have no business eating. Yo Baby Yogurt really stands out. Now this was 4 years ago but I think one Yo Baby was half the size of an adult yogurt with TWICE as much sugar….some starteling fact like that. And not cheap.
By the time the class was over my Son was walking, talking, sitting in a chair at the table and eating REAL WHOLE foods like humus, sweet potatoes, plain yogurt, avocada….and fresh, from the source and the kids loved it!
She also reminds us that it can take up to 15 times of a child trying a food before they develop a like for it! This is TRUE people! My Son put up a fight on most of the veggies he now loves….lettuce, edamame, tomatoes……he loves them all but if I had given up at the first sign on fight he would not eat any of them, I know.
I really believe the best thing you can do for your kids is teach them what REAL – WHOLE foods are and eat them in your home each and every meal!