Thursday, April 28, 2011

The Power Plate


A few months ago there was an article in the LA Times about a group of doctors who sued the USDA for ignoring this vegetarian alternative to the food pyramid. (Click here to read the LA Times article.)

I'm not saying I agree or disagree, but I think it is interesting, and definitely more user friendly than the food pyramid. Enjoy!

Tuesday, April 26, 2011

The Cleanse Rules


The last theme of this blog is The Cleanse. This is what we call it. It is actually called The 28 Day Cleansing Program and is outlined in a book by Scott Ohlgren. Some of the claims he makes are kind of extreme and I don't really believe them, but overall the diet has really good principles that make sense. I've done it before and felt fantastic which is enough evidence for me to do it again and again. So I started again yesterday. Here are the rules:

Forbidden List
1. Rule #1 is Do Not Go Hungry
2. No Dairy
3. No Processed Grains (this includes any product which contains flour as well as any other product containing a processed grain )
4. No Processed/Refined Sugar
5. No Meat (however, if you are working out regularly you can eat organic eggs and fish)

Things to do Every Day
1. Drink AT LEAST half your body weight in ounces of water
2. Drink AT LEAST 12 oz. of fresh vegetable juice (this can also contain fruit)
3. Eat AT LEAST one food item containing live bacteria (ie. some pickles, sauerkraut, some soy products, some olives, some types of soy sauce, anything with miso, etc.)
4. Eat AT LEAST one food item rich in minerals (ie. celtic sea salt, some type of seaweed)
5. Perform AT LEAST one of the 7 daily cellular cleansing activities (see below)
6. Live Organic (eat organic whenever possible, use organic/natural personal products)

7 Cellular Daily Cleansing Activities
1. Skin Brushing
2. Cardiac Sweat
3. Sauna Treatment
4. Massage
5. Colon Cleanse
6. Mineral/Salt Bath
7. I can't remember #7 right now


Monday, April 25, 2011

Reuben #1 - Red Rock Brewing Company


This weekend I had huge success in the Search for the Perfect Reuben. The delicious sandwich was at Red Rock Brewing Company in Salt Lake City, Utah. I have to rate this at least in the top 5 best Reubens I've had so far in my search.

You can see from the picture that the bread claimed to be a rye bread, but was not the typical marbled rye. One thing that was different about this sandwich was that the bread was lightly fried, like it usually is on a grilled cheese sandwich. This was a huge plus since sometimes the bread can be too hard around the edges.

Another thing great thing about this sandwich was that it tasted really fresh and not too heavy. I think that probably comes from the fact that Red Rock Brewing Company makes their own corned beef and sauerkraut in house, both of which were delicious and tasted fresh.

The only complaint I have about the sandwich was that it didn't have quite as much zing as some others I've tried recently. If the sauce had been a bit more flavorful, this may have been the Perfect Reuben Sandwich.


Friday, April 22, 2011

Black Bean Vegetable Soup

I got this recipe from Jenny Corry who got it from a friend of hers who specialized in vegan recipes. It is definitely one of our favorites, although there is always a debate whether to seed or not to seed the jalapeno.

Also, I've included a delicious black bean recipe. The soup is still good with canned beans, but what makes it great is using beans you cooked on your own.


Black Beans

1 lb. dried black beans, rinsed

6 cups water

2 bay leaves

Pinch of baking soda

I also add a bunch of spices, usually cumin, salt, pepper and anything else I feel like adding.

Another tip is to include about an inch of kombu seaweed. I know it sounds weird, but it helps with the digestibility of the beans. Same idea as the baking soda.

I cook these in a crock-pot for 6-8 hours. You could do the same with a large pot on the stove…cook on low-medium heat. Cook until the beans have soaked up all the water.


ingredients

1 recipe of Black Beans

3 Tbsp olive oil

2 small onions or 1 large onion, diced finely

4 cloves garlic, minced

1 green bell pepper, seeded and diced finely

1 jalapeno, seeded and minced (or not seeded depending on your spice preference)

1 stalk celery, diced finely

1 carrot, peeled and diced finely

1 ½ tsp ground cumin

2 tsp dried oregano

1 tsp dried thyme

1 Tbsp white wine vinegar or sherry vinegar

2 tsp salt, or to taste

Freshly ground black pepper

3-4 cups vegetable stock

for serving

lime wedges

chopped avocado

fresh cilantro

tortilla chips

Greek yogurt


directions

Place black beans in very large stockpot.

To prepare vegetables:

Preheat a large heavy-bottomed skillet over medium heat. Sauté the garlic in the oil until the garlic begins to sizzle, stir for 30 seconds, and add the onions and bell pepper. Stir and cook for 12 to 15 minutes, until the onions and peppers are very soft, then add the jalapeno, celery, and carrot. Cook for another 10 minutes, until the carrot has begun to soften, then remove from the heat.

Add the vegetables to your cooked beans in the large stockpot. Stir in any remaining oil, plus the cumin, oregano, thyme, and vegetable stock. Cover the pot, raise the heat to high and bring to a boil. Lower the heat to medium-low, partially cover the pot, and simmer for 35-40 minutes, until the carrots and celery are tender.

Remove from the heat, allow to cool 10 minutes, add the vinegar, and season to taste with salt and pepper. Like most soups, this soup will be richer and more flavorful the next day.

Garnish each serving of soup with chopped cilantro and chopped avocados. Serve with lime wedges.

-Recipe from Veganomicon by Moskowitz & Romero

Wednesday, April 20, 2011

Is Overeating an Addiction?


This article, which compares overeating and alcoholism, was in the New York Times in January. As I sit here finishing off an entire bag of chocolate covered cinnamon bears, I know for myself that the answer to this question is yes.


Can You Be Addicted to Foods?
(click here to view original article)

Many people tend to think that all obese people have to do to solve their problems is eat less and move more. Alcoholics, on the other hand, need treatment.

But are the two disorders really all that different? Is it possible that eating in today’s sweet and salty fast-food world is actually somewhat, well, addictive? Could people with a predilection to abusing alcohol and drugs just as easily abuse food?

A study published in The Archives of General Psychiatry this week is not the first to examine the neurobiological similarities between behaviors that drive obesity and those that drive substance abuse. The researchers, from Washington University School of Medicine in St. Louis, examined two large surveys of nationally representative samples of American adults questioned about alcoholism in their families. Each included about 40,000 adults; one survey was carried out in 1991 and 1992; the other was done a decade later, in 2001 and 2002.

The people surveyed were asked whether a relative had “been an alcoholic or problem drinker at any time in his/her life,” a question repeated for several types of relative — mother, father, brother, sister, half-sibling and children. Participants also reported their own weight and height, so body mass index could be calculated (B.M.I. is a calculation of weight in kilograms divided by height in meters squared, and a result of 30 or more is considered obese).

The first survey, from the early 1990s, found no link between a family history of alcoholism and obesity. “There was an almost perfect overlap between the B.M.I. distribution of people without a family history of alcoholism and people with a family history of alcoholism,” said Richard A. Grucza, assistant professor of psychiatry at Washington University and lead author of the new paper.

Ten years later the survey told a different story. In 2001 and 2002, adults with a family history of alcoholism were 30 to 40 percent more likely to be obese than those with no alcoholism in the family. Women were at particularly high risk: they were almost 50 percent more likely to be obese if there was family alcoholism than if there wasn’t. (Men were 26 percent more likely to be obese.)

Why the change over time? Dr. Grucza says our so-called obesigenic, or obesity-inducing, food environment has changed in the decade between the two surveys. The most likely culprit, he said, “is the nature of the food we eat, and its tendency to appeal to the sorts of reward systems, which are the parts of the brain implicated in addiction.”

Certain foods — loaded with sugar, salt and fat and specially formulated to appeal to consumers — might be cues that trigger overeating in people with the predisposition for addiction, appealing to the primitive reward centers of the brain, and reinforcing the addictive behavior. These types of foods, which the former Food and Drug Administration commissioner Dr. David Kessler has called “hyperpalatable,” may be more reinforcing of overeating than, say, green vegetables, Dr. Grucza said, and they’re more commonly and easily available than they were in the past.

In his book “The End of Overeating,” Dr. Kessler describes how these highly palatable foods — the kind served at fast-food and chain restaurants — change brain chemistry, triggering a neurological response that stimulates people to crave more food, even if they’re not hungry. The sense some people have that they cannot control their intake may in fact be true, he argues, because these rich, sweet and fatty foods stimulate the brain to release dopamine, a neurotransmitter associated with the pleasure center. In the process, they rewire the brain, so that the dopamine pathways light up even at the thought of eating these foods.

Other explanations for the increased obesity among relatives of alcoholics are possible, however. For example, it may be that people from families with alcoholism are more susceptible to stress generally, or to suffer from underlying depression that leads them to drink or overeat.

No single gene is responsible for making someone obese or alcoholic, Dr. Grucza said. But people who eat or drink excessively may share critical characteristics like lack of impulse control and the inability to stop once they get started, a sort of “missing stop signal,” he said. Stress is also implicated in both behaviors.

“The notion of alcoholism being a disease can be oversimplified,” Dr. Grucza said. “At some point, it’s a behavior and a choice. It’s just that some people are more vulnerable to the effect of that choice than others. I think the same is probably true of overeating — some people just don’t have the predisposition to find certain kinds of food that pleasurable, or to eat that much.”

Black Bean and Butternut Squash Tacos



This is a recipe I got from my dear friend Jen Smith. I'm not sure where she got it. Also, I forgot to take a picture of my tacos, so I got this picture off the internet by googling "pictures of butternut squash." I think I am supposed to say that.

I love this recipe because it is simple, but has a really great flavor. Make sure to cut up the butternut squash into very small bite size pieces so it fits nicely in a taco. Tips for peeling & cutting the butternut squash: Poke it with a fork and microwave for about a minute before peeling. Then use a really sharp knife.

Also, I made my own refried black beans by first, soaking the beans overnight. Second, cooking them in the crock pot while I was at work. Third, adding the beans, enough of their juice to keep them the right consistency and some coconut oil to a pot and stirring them around with a little bit of cumin, salt & black pepper. Delicious.

ingredients

1½ cup refried black beans

1 small butternut squash

2 tablespoon olive oil

1 teaspoon salt

½ teaspoon ground cinnamon

1 teaspoon ground cumin

½ teaspoon freshly ground pepper

soft corn tortillas

for serving

Salsa Verde

Cilantro sprigs

Creme fraiche or sour cream or I like to use greek yogurt

directions

Warm the refried beans gently over low heat. Cut the butternut squash into very small bite size piece, about 1/2 inch. Heat large nonstick skillet over high heat. Add olive oil or coconut oil. When it smokes, add squash cubes and toss well. Sprinkle with 1 teaspoon salt, cinnamon, cumin and black pepper. Saute over high heat, tossing frequently, until tender but not mushy inside, about 10 minutes. To serve, heat tortillas quickly one by one in a very hot dry skillet, about 10 seconds per side. Assemble tacos by spooning in black beans, topping with sauteed squash, cilantro sprigs, and cream or yogurt.

Food, Actually

This blog is about food. There are going to be five main themes:

1) Delicious and Healthy Recipes

2) Interesting Articles about Food & Health

3) Good Restaurants of the World

4) The Search for the Perfect Reuben Sandwich

5) The Cleanse