Archive for April, 2010

chia pudding

April 13th, 2010

Another warm-weather treat the kids adore is chia seed pudding. We’ve touched on the health benefits of chia seeds, which include being a great source of EFA’s (essential fatty acids like omega-3), fiber and protein, on top of loads of nutrients and antioxidants. We make the almond milk ahead of time, usually for another purpose, and keep it in the fridge, so we can have this delicious cold treat. One that they have made in the past for themselves.

Chia Seed Pudding

  • 2 cups almond milk
  • 2 Tablespoons chia seeds
  • berries to taste

Pour nut or seed milk into a bowl, add chia and stir. Let this mixture sit for 20 minutes, stirring periodically. Sweeten if the milk wasn’t, and top with berries, crunchies, etc.

The kids love this and made it twice last week. We add perhaps an extra tablespoon or two, so that the pudding is very thick. We add chopped frozen fruit to the pudding,  but you could blend berries, fruit, cacao, maca, vanilla, or other flavorings with the milk before adding the chia seeds. If you add goji berries, they will plump up nicely if you leave them in the pudding for a day or so, softening up nicely.

Have you tried chia pudding? How do you like to flavor it? Do you like it thick or runny?

Vanilla Fudge Crunchies

April 13th, 2010

I was browsing through my recipe books the other day in search of to make for a treat for the kids who come to the raw potluck and something kind of different as I tend to make lots of chocolaty types of desserts. I came across one I haven’t made in awhile and that my kiddos love! It is from Healthy Lunchbox and is so easy to make and gives vanilla lovers a chance to shine!

Ingredients:
2 c. cashew butter*
1 c. coconut butter
1/2 c. raw honey
1 tsp. vanilla
1 c. buckwheat crunchies

To make:

process everything but the crunchies in the food processor until smooth and well combined. Add in the crunchies and pulse to incorporate. Use a spoon to scoop into ice cube trays or a small ice cream scoop to form balls on a tray. Put in the freezer for a few hours until solid and frozen, about 4-6 hours.

* I didn’t have any cashew butter on hand so I made some. So easy to do! I took raw cashews, unsoaked and put them in the food processor. Start it up and let it go. It needs to go and go and go for about 10-12 mins. It will first crumble and look like meal. Next it will start to release some of it’s oils and it will get more gloppy and form a big doughball. Let it keep going and more oil will release and it will become creamy and all be whizzing around nice and smooth. That is it!

They pop out of the ice cube trays easily but are pretty as a formed ball. You can add in gojis, raisins or other dried fruit during the pulsing stage as well.

Warning!!! These are super rich and sweet and it is recommended to eat only one at a time to avoid a belly ache. Eat more only at your own risk!

I served these to the kids, teens and adults at he raw potluck we had the other night. I am not sure which age group liked them the most. Let’s just call it a tie! I like it when everybody wins!

blue sunset smoothie

April 12th, 2010

This week we wanted something a little different for breakfast, and staring at the almond milk in the fridge, I remembered that everyone loved the Blue Sunset smoothie from Raw Food/Real World: 100 Recipes to Get the Glow. We were heading off to our homeschool coop for a day filled with interesting people and classes, so we needed something quick but filling, and Blue Sunset did the trick.

Blue Sunset

  • 2 cups pineapple chunks
  • 1 small ripe banana, or 1 cup frozen banana
  • 1 cup diced mango
  • 1 1/2 cup Brazil nut milk
  • 3 Tbs agave
  • 2 tsp vanilla extract
  • pinch sea salt
  • 1 cup blueberries
  1. In a blender, puree all ingredients except blueberries until smooth.
  2. Pour out about half of the mixture into serving glasses, filling each glass halfway. Add the blueberries to the remaining shake in the blender, and blend until smooth.
  3. Gently pour the remaining blueberry shake over pineapple mango shake. Note Pouring the mixture over the back of a spoon (a bartender’s technique) helps keep the two layers separate).

Since the nut milk was sweetened with honey and this recipe is chock full of sweet fruits, we didn’t add any sweeteners or dates. And I simplified the recipe based on what we had on hand, and what I had time for. So here’s my rush-out-the-door-don’t-have-all-ingredients version  that was absolutely delicious! We poured them into Mason jars so that we could drink them in the car on the way.

Quick n Dirty Blue Sunset

  • 3/4 pineapple, chunked
  • 1 banana, broken into a few pieces
  • 1 cup almond milk
  • 1 Tbsp ground flax
  • 1 1/2 cup blueberries

Blend milk, pineapple, banana and ground flax. Pour half this mixture evenly into serving cups. Pour blueberries into blender with remaining mixture and blend. Pour this on top of the first half and serve (definitely a skill I’m acquiring, but it tastes good even if it pours into the center).  YUM!

Milkshakes!

April 11th, 2010

I used to love family night at our house as a kid. We would get out our milkshake maker and load it up with cow’s milk, ice cream, ice cubes and some fruit or we would also make root beer floats.

I went in the fridge the other day and realized the almost still full pitcher of homemade almond milk needed to get used right now or it will have to visit the world below the drain. So, I decided to start the day with a yummy treat for the kids. Strawberry milk shake time!

This was so easy and packed with good stuff and very filling! I poured about 6 cups of milk in the Vita-Mix with close to 2 cups of frozen strawberries, 6 pitted dates and 1 TBS maca (optional), whizzed it up and served!

It was so delicious, we all came back for seconds. For me, I should probably have this mid day as it was very filling and I do better with light in the morning which is true for most of us as that is when we are breaking our fast and digestion is just waking up as well. The kids do well with a heavier morning meal so it worked well for them and they stayed full for awhile which is always a challenge when we just have fruit in the morning.

The milkshake is so versatile and begs for you to be creative. For vanilla, use milk, add frozen banana and 2 tsp vanilla. For chocolate, add about 2 TBS cacao powder and a frozen banana. Throw in some mint with the chocolate one for mint chocolate chip. Top with cacao nibs for an extra treat. All can be topped with buckwheat crunchies as well.

BPA-free freezer gadgets

April 10th, 2010

I’ve been wanting to make popsicles for a while now, but have been avoiding it because I’ve no idea if the molds we have are BPA free. In fact, since they’re older, they’re probably not. So they linger down in the bottom drawer in the kitchen, along with all the other plastic stuff I never use but can’t seem to part with for some reason. So what’s the problem with BPA anyway? Head on over to Environmental Working Group (EWG) to find out.

I just found a replacement though! I’ve been cruising the internet for stainless steel popsicle molds and have finallyfound one! The Tickle Trunk has lots of safer alternatives for food storage, including bottles, plates, cups, tiffins, straws and more.  They’ve even got a stainless steel version of your grandma’s ice cube trays, lever and all! I wonder how that’d stand up to pesto and smoothies, since that’s what I’ve mostly used our old plastic ice cube trays for in the first place.

Now that warmer weather is upon us, I want to be able to provide our family with frozen treats make from whole foods and these molds look like just the thing. Popsicles are a great way to use up “leftover” smoothie, and I’d like to try some flavored banana ice cream in these as well. As with the plastic molds, all you need do is run them under hot water for a few seconds and they pop out easily.

We started the week watching Sam Suds and the case of PVC, the poison plastic. We went through the house looking for the PVC symbol on things, and looked up some items we suspected were made from PVC that weren’t labeled as such. I was disappointed to find that Madame Alexander dolls (which Lucia received for Christmas) as well as the American Girl Dolls (which she wants for her birthday) are both made from PVC. Disappointed but not surprised — snuggle up and take a whiff, and you can smell that “new shower curtain” aroma. She has several cloth dolls, but wants the more sophisticated dolls with eyes that blink, arms that move and stay in place, etc. But I have a need for her not to play with toxic toys. So we’re going to have to find a way to muddle through this one so we’re both happy.

natural dyes

April 9th, 2010

I used to love dyeing eggs as a kid — those little copper hexagonal dippers that came with the tablets in the PAAS kits, the smell of vinegar, and the blue Spode teacups with broken handles that only came out of the cupboard above the stove once a year for egg-dyeing. I didn’t care for hard boiled eggs — I only ate the whites, and detested the chalky, sulfurous flavor of the yolk — but I could sit all afternoon and dye eggs. We would take our colored treasures over to my grandparents’ house where my grandfather baked them into knots of dough, little eggs in a basket. I loved getting the “baskets” hot from the oven, and even more loved the look of the table afterward, with the mosaic of egg shell shards amidst the crumbs and  greenish-yellow yolk.

So when my son was just a little guy, I wanted to share this tradition with him. But I was concerned about the chemical colorants in the dye — since he was so little, there was a lot of contact between skin and dye bath. Since our skin is our largest organ, and pretty porous, I pursued the lofty goal of keeping poisons out of his body. Thus began our exploration of natural dyes.

natural paletteThe first year we kept it simple. I raided the grocery store onion bins for skins. I was there so long the produce guy came up to chat with me, and went in the back to get some more of the papery skins. Evidently I wasn’t the first crazy lady rifling about in the onion bin near Easter. He was really helpful, and I think of him each year as I scramble furtively for onion skins. We also used red cabbage and beets. We discovered right away that the natural dyes take a longer time to make their mark, but once we knew this, we planned accordingly, dropping them in and running off to play before returning to find out what beautiful colors were emerging on our eggs. We started dyeing eggs with natural materials to avoid the chemicals, but we continue because of the soft, natural color palette you can achieve this way.  A beauty more subtle than their garish neon cousins from the store-bought kits.

The next year we experimented with using white crayons to draw designs on our eggs that would resist the dye. That year I had a HUGE pot of red cabbage dye, so we drew stars on the eggs and left them in the dye bath overnight. The eggs were a deep, midnight blue the next morning, with constellations of asterisk stars covering them. We also expanded from the onion, beet and cabbage into using turmeric and paprika. The turmeric gives such a beautiful yellow that it’s worth the funky smell given off by a large amount of boiled turmeric accented by a dollop of vinegar. P-U! We also added red onion skins to give the light golden brown enough of an oomph to make a salmon color instead.

dye ingredientsAnother year Dante wanted to keep the eggs, so we used a pin to prick holes in the top and bottom, poked a big needle up into the egg to break the yolk, and blew the insides of the egg out. We did this before dyeing the eggs. Which meant that, er, the egg floated. So we had to figure out a way to keep the egg submerged without leaving a mark. Needless to say, if you want to blow the eggs, do so after the dye bath.

onion skins

One year we experimented with coffee and carrot juice (but honestly, if I’m going to juice carrots I’m going to make carrot cake smoothie with them, not dye eggs!), and a couple of years ago we added liquid chlorophyll to our repertoire, which makes a gorgeous, grassy green. We bought a large bottle and have used it for this and other dyeing projects for three years now and still have some left. We also used celestial seasonings red zinger tea which gave a pretty lavender but can’t seem to find that on store shelves any more. We have used black tea to “age” pirate invitations and while we haven’t tried that with the eggs, I bet that would work well. Berries and berry, grape or cranberry juice  also give nice colors in the purple-red department. Next year I want to try some wild sources — violet blossoms are supposed to give a nice light purple, and black walnut would yield a lovely warm brown.

cabbage in the pot

Our basic process has also evolved. The first few years, I covered the chopped beets or cabbage with several inches of water, brought them to a boil, simmered for half an hour and strained. But I felt like the solution wasn’t concentrated enough. Then I tried simmering them down with the plant matter still in, and straining afterwards, but I found it difficult to get enough liquid to cover the eggs this way, so this year, I chopped, covered with water, boiled, simmered, strained, and returned the liquid to the pot to simmer further. I also add vinegar as I simmer the colors to help deepen the color on the egg.

draining beets

We do whatever decorative technique we’re exploring — wax resist, wrapping the eggs in cheesecloth, putting lace, leaves or anything other small flat distinctly shaped objects onto the egg and securing with pantyhose or mesh produce bags, etc — then drop the eggs into the dye. Since we like to leave them in overnight, we put them in the fridge and head to bed. In the morning we fish out our eggs and ooh and aah at our new treasures. If you would like a glossy finish on the eggs, rub them lightly with oil which also deepens the color slightly.
The natural egg dyes aren’t just good for eggs — I tend to make a big batch of them and I hate to waste it all by tossing it after we’ve gotten our fill of dying eggs. This year we bought white tissue paper, folded it up and dipped the different corners into the dye. I’d like to explore this further, but as Lucia noted, the paper comes away with a very, er… earthy, or vinegary smell. So we might need to incorporate essential oils and a period of “de-smelling” before using the paper next time. The present looked pretty though, pink from the beets, blue from the cabbage, green from chlorophyll and a hint of yellow from turmeric.

friendly fruit

April 7th, 2010

Tired of snacking on a whole apple? Don’t have time to make fruit salad? Or maybe you have a lot of time on your hands and are feeling creative?

It’s time for a  fresh approach to fruit! Fruit skewers are always appreciated — especially grapes frozen on skewers. These go over well, especially with hot or feverish little ones. As we mentioned in the banana ice cream post (also a great way to play with your fruit), frozen banana pops are a perennial favorite. Chop up some melon and set the bowl on the table with some toothpics and see what sorts of structures your family can create.

Put out some small bowls full of nuts, seeds, cacao nibs, and fresh fruit and/or veggies and see what sort of a zoo you can build — strawberry mice with cacao nib eyes and almond slice ears. Green apple frog with green grape feet.You’re only limited by the contents of your fridge and your imagination!

Mango Hedgehog with a Pinealoupe caterpillar

Breakfast ants on a log — bananas halved, smeared with almond butter and topped with raisins or other dried fruit

Apples with cinnamon — sliced apple sprinkled with cinnamon or almond butter

Have fun!

bok choy joy & ANDI scores

April 5th, 2010

Causes of death in the USI’ve recently been reading Joel Fuhrman’s Eat For Health: Lose Weight, Keep It Off, Look Younger, Live Longer (2 book set), and found his ANDI score system a revelation. He rates the nutrient density of various common foods –  a higher score for foods that deliver the most nutrients with the least amount of calories. He does not discourage fat consumption entirely, just recommends keeping fat intake low and ensuring that the majority of fats consumed are plant-based from nuts, seeds and avocados.

Many of the medical problems faced by Americans today are diseases of diet — we are a nation paradoxically obese and malnourished. This bizarre predicament is the result of over-consumption of foods that lack the nutrients our bodies need to maintain a healthy, balanced system. Heart disease, cancer, stroke and diabetes (the red bars in the pic at right, from Jamie Oliver’s  TED talk) are clearly the big killers in the US, and they are all diseases that can be prevented through a change in dietary habits. An obsession with calories does you no good if the calories you do consume are devoid of nutrients.

The essential change that Fuhrman recommends is to increase the amount of nutrients consumed while keeping the overall calories lower, and that’s where the ANDI scores come in. Since kale, collards, mustard greens and other dark leafy greens have the most nutrients per calorie delivered, they top out the ANDI scale at 1000.  Arugula and radishes score in the 500 range, cabbage a 402, Romaine a 384. Carrots 292, celery124, sweet potato 82, cucumber 49. For fruit, strawberries get a 211, raspberries 146, blueberries 128, cantaloupe 99, apple 75, cherries 68, watermelon 90, avocados 37, grapes 31, bananas 30, dates 19, raisins 16. By comparison, oats score 53, brown rice 40, corn 44, chicken breast and eggs each score a 27. Whole wheat pasta 19, white pasta 18, white rice 12, pizza 18, McDonald’s cheeseburger 16, McD’s fries 10, saltines 11, potato chips 11, pretzels 13 and cola a whopping 0.7. You can find the chart in his Eat For Health books, or see a condensed version online at eatrightamerica.com. On my last few visits to Whole Foods, I noticed that they have started posting ANDI score signs throughout the store.

I find these scores helpful when meal planning to ensure that we’re loading up on the high-nutrient veggies and fruits, and keeping the lower-nutrient grains, corn and potato to a minimum. Fuhrman also redesign the “food pyramid” we all learned about at school, with leafy greens and other foods that score over 100 in the base instead of grains

While we have dropped wheat and dairy from our diets, I noticed that the kids had simply started eating lots of things made from rice and corn instead, still not eating enough fresh fruits and veggies. So last week we started limiting grains or bready foods to one meal a day for a while to break the grain habit. Breakfast usually includes fruit in some form –whole fruit, slices of apples with cinnamon or nut butter, frozen fruit sorbet, banana ice cream, fruit salad, or smoothie. Lunches have been RAT sandwiches (tomato and avocado rolled up in romaine leaves), lemon fennel soup or a big green salad, and dinners have consisted of two salads, with a small portion of grains often mixed with more veggies. Some days they choose to have oatmeal with berries for breakfast, so those days I find myself challenged to serve a dinner that doesn’t include grains, potatoes or corn chips/tortillas.

food journal coverWe also started keeping a food journal, which has been illuminating — we think we eat differently than we actually do. The kids were surprised to see what a large percentage of their overall intake the rice, corn and potatoes were. Keeping the journal has enabled them to see for themselves what they truly consume, rather than taking my word for it. And now we have a record of what we have eaten and liked to use as a reference when meal planning in the future.

One of the vegetables we’ve been exploring lately is bok choy. A member of the brassica family, bok choy provides a similar nutrient profile to other varieties of cabbage: rich in folate, fiber and Vitamin C, it also contains significant amounts of aromatic organic compounds known as indoles, which are linked to lowering the risk of some forms of cancer.  Thanks to the deep green leaves at the top of the stalks, bok choy contains more beta-carotene and significantly more calcium than other members of the cabbage family. I’ve always had bok choy cooked in stir fry, but the stalks have a lovely juicy crunch and the leafy greens a mild mustard flavor — both welcome tastes and textures in a salad.

Bok Choy Salad

  • 1 head bok choy
  • 1/2-1 cup mung bean sprouts
  • 1/2 cup rice vinegar
  • 1/4 cup lemon juice
  • 1/3 cup olive oil
  • 2 Tbs sesame oil
  • 1 Tbs tamari
  • salt to taste
  • 2 Tbs sesame seeds
  1. Chop bok choy in thin slices. Put into a large salad bowl.
  2. Add mung bean sprouts. I start mine 2-3 days ahead, soaking then sprouting the mung beans in a jar near the sink. When the tail is about as long as the mung bean itself, the sprouts are ready to eat. If you aren’t ready to pop them in a salad yet, rinse them again, drain well and pop them in the fridge for up to a week until you are ready.
  3. I used to mix the dressing separately to emulsify, but these days I just pour the dressing ingredients on the veggies and toss. I add the black and unhulled sesame seeds to garnish.

I have made this dressing when I don’t have bok choy on hand — it’s great with broccoli, carrots, celery, kale, mustard greens, etc. Sometimes I add raisins to bring on the sweetness, sometimes I get the longer mung bean sprouts from the store since the kids prefer them to the smaller, home sprouted version. Either way, we’re really enjoying our salads around here!

FYI, if you’re wondering what criteria were used by Dr. Fuhrman to develop the ANDI (aggregate nutrient density index) scores, here’s a list of what was analyzed for each item:

Calcium, Carotenoids: Beta Carotene, Alpha Carotene, Lutein & Zeaxanthin, Lycopene, Fiber, Folate, Glucosinolates, Iron, Magnesium, Niacin, Selenium, Vitamin B1 (Thiamin) Vitamin B2 (Riboflavin), Vitamin B6, Vitamin B12, Vitamin C, Vitamin E, Zinc, plus ORAC score X 2 (Oxygen Radical Absorbance Capacity is a method of measuring the antioxidant or radical scavenging capacity of foods).

The Infamous Fruit Salad

April 5th, 2010

When getting together with family or friends, I always try to bring a dish to share that is family friendly really meaning the adults will like it and the kids will like it, too. I am the one in particular in the family that is also known for being super health conscious and particular about food choices. I love when I bring dishes that are loved by all.

To me, the fruit salad is one of the best choices in the world. It is easy to throw together, can be made with so much variety, what is on sale or wild and exotic and everyone around the table loves it.

Be creative and think in season and see what you can find that is fresh and local. In the summer, you can make a lovely red white and blue salad with organic strawberries, organic blueberries and chunks of apple. Or go for a more tropical bowl of mango, banana, papaya and kiwi. It is also fun to hollow out a watermelon and fill it with fruit when it is in season. In the fall, go for the plums, pears and grapes with apple. In the winter, I slow down on the fruit salad since there is not much in season but you could do a melon, banana, apple type dish.

Today we are going to visit family and I am bringing the fruit bowl. I cut up cantaloupe and tossed it with small oranges and grapes. I added mint cut chiffanode and a drizzle of honey. Of course, I taste tested along the way and can’t wait until later when I can have a whole bowl full.

Adding the mint is another area you can be quite creative. Mint is a favorite of mine for fruit salad but again you can vary this depending on what is growing in the garden and what fruits you have in your salad. Seeds like hemp, poppy and sesame also add a new twist.

Any leftover fruit and herbs can be put in the blender and whizzed up for a smoothie or freeze the fruit whole and take out for frozen little snacks. There is really no way you can go wrong with the fruit salad and I just know it will be enjoyed by everyone.

Dig in!

Hop Hop Hop

April 4th, 2010

It’s Easter! Around here that means an ‘egg’stavaganza of egg coloring. This year we used 3 colors. Turmeric for yellow, paprika for red and chlorophyll for green. Last year we had also boiled red cabbage for a blu-ish color and beets for red.

To make the dyes, we added boiling water to our color with a couple teaspoons of vinegar which helps the color set on the egg. For colors with foods like onion, cabbage and beets, you would boil the veggie until the water is colored and then pour off the liquid and add the vinegar.

The color of the eggs are fantastic! They are mellow and earthy and I never feel bad if some of the dye seeps in through a crack unlike when we used to use the chemical dyes. There is something to be said for the process as well. My kids (and me) love making the colors themselves and knowing what it came from. Gatlin enjoyed smelling the turmeric and paprika to see what “flavor” they were.

Good things can not be rushed. I will say, the natural dyes do take time to set. It is not wham bam done but that is part of the fun for us. It is an event of egg dying not a two second project.

So boil those local farm fresh eggs and hop to it! Have fun and happy Easter!