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Carrots & Currants

May 15, 2010
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Carrots & Currants

My take on Carrots & Currants

This is what I took to the L.A. raw vegan pot luck on May 1.  The recipe is from my favorite raw recipe book: Living Cuisine by Renne Loux Underkoffler.  I know, I know, I took my darn sweet time posting it.  Better late than never! The day I made it I was out of currants AND flax oil.  I substituted dried blueberries and hemp seed oil.  It still turned out fabulous.

Carrots & Currants
Serves 2-4

3 cups finely shredded carrots
1/2 cup currants or raisins
1/2 cup chopped walnuts
1/2 cup chopped parsley
1 teaspoon dill
1 1/2 teaspoons nama shoyu
2 teaspoons flax oil

Toss ingredients until well coated.  Serve with love!

Progress not perfection

May 13, 2010
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Green Smoothie (which isn't green)

Wow! Has it really been over two weeks since I posted? Life has trumped blogging as it sometimes happens.  Things are going relatively well in my raw world.  I’ve been high raw for several weeks even managing to stay vegan while helping a dear friend run the Grilled Cheese Invitational.  I’ve been enjoying many fresh greens from my wife’s garden.   I’m so fortunate to live in Southern California where I can have garden produce right outside my door throughout the year.  Mostly I’ve been doing green smoothies like this luscious one from this morning.  Best way I know to get in those greens.

I have a back log of recipes to share.  I’ll probably be busy with life for a few more weeks yet but stay tuned for some yumminess.  Also, I’ve been reading “Becoming Raw” and it’s an incredible resource on raw vegan nutrition.  I may be able to find some time to review it.   Short version? Get it, it’s worth it!

PS – the L.A. raw food potluck was way fun.  Meeting Dhru, Courtney, Debbie, and Mike was incredible – such an energetic lot!  I look forward to running into the L.A.-based folks at other local events.

Pot Lucky!

April 27, 2010
By
Spinach garden

Spinach garden

I’m going to an L.A. raw foodie potluck this upcoming Saturday hosted by Dhru (We Like it Raw), Courtney Pool (Radical Radiance), and Puki Freeberg.  I’m nervous! I suffer from the shyness & insecurity when it comes to meeting strangers, especially when they’re famous (at least in the raw world).  I know it’s ridiculous.  I’ll be repeating self-love mantras all week. I’m sure it will end up being wonderful and it will help keep me motivated on this high-raw path.

I’m going to make carrot & currant salad from my all time favorite raw culinary book:  Living Cuisine by Renne Loux (Underkoffler). Simple, healthy, delicious and my non-raw family love it.   I need to keep this as low-stress as possible.  I’ll be sure to take my camera and let you know how it goes.

Speaking of stress, I’ve got a lot less of it now that my wife’s garden is producing.  No need to go to the farmers market and fight the crowds.  Check out the spinach patch!  Guess what I’m using in my green smoothie today!  Going to be a brown smoothie though. Spinach + orange = brown.  Ah well, it’s still good for me.

Rejuvelac

April 15, 2010
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rejuvelac

Rejuvelac - Courtesy Rejuvenation Company

I usually make my own Rejuvelac.  It’s easy, although it’s not instant (learn how here).  It takes a day or two to sprout the grains and wait for the fermentation process to take its course.   I’ve been meaning to make up a batch since I found my motivation by partnering up with my friend K.  I take probiotics in my usual supplement stack but as somebody with IBS symptoms, I can use all the help I can get.

Yesterday I found bottled Rejuvelac from  the Rejuvenation Company at my local Whole Foods.  It’s not cheap (about $2.83 for 8 fl oz), especially compared to making it from scratch (pennies a serving!).  It is, however, a nice option when you’re waiting for a home made batch to cure or if you’re on the road.

I’ve been making Rejuvelac for years.  I’ve never tasted it made by any body  else so I was eager to compare the commercial version with my own.  Verdict? More tart and effervescent than home made.  It’s likely due to the fact that it’s a “live food.”  Things which ferment just keep on fermenting.  Over time the taste will become stronger.  Apart from the acid-tang the commercial version tasted the same.  Rejuvelac is pretty neutral and mild in flavor.   It’s good to know I’ve been making mine right.

I’d recommend this brand with a caveat.  I’d prefer if the bottles were glass instead of plastic.  At least they “hand-blow” their bottles themselves which they claim reduces carbon emissions from having bottles shipped for manufacture.  They also point out the the type of plastic they use (PETE 1) takes less energy than glass to recycle.  That may be true but I re-use glass bottles (so no energy taken at all) and I’d rather not have the potential, no matter how small.,  for toxic compounds to enter my body from the plastic.

There’s no getting away from pollutants in this modern world so I’m not letting the plastic bottle stop me from drinking this.  I’m going to keep it to a minimum, however.   Besides, it’s just way more fun to make my own.

Rawk on Baltimore!

April 13, 2010
By

Homemade Buckwheat Granola

It’s easy to be raw vegan on a business trip to Baltimore, MD — at least if you’re staying in the harbor area, as I am currently. There’s a Whole Foods literally 50 feet around the corner from my hotel and a vegetarian/vegan/raw restaurant within a 15 minute walk.  I’ve eaten at Liquid Earth both days of my trip, and it was fabulous.  Of course, I brought plenty of raw staples to tide me over on the plane ride here (hummus & veggies, an apple, almonds, raisins, and some home made sprouted buckwheat granola).

It’s been as simple as replenishing my fruit/veg/nuts/hummus supply at the market and wandering into a restaurant and ordering up the goodies.    If only all business trips would be this easy (I’m looking at you Detroit!).

I’ve enjoyed two amazing juices.  The “O.C Loco” was a super yummy combo of carrots, celery, apple, parsley, and spirulina.  I declined the salt-rimmed glass since I was taking it to go.  It was very sweet and I imagine a salty balance would make the juice even better.  “X-ray Eyes” consists of carrot, spinach, beets, and parsley with liquid multi-vitamin.  It was also super-sweet (no surprise with carrot AND beet).

I also had their seaweed salad, a simple mix of cucumbers, hijiki, enoki mushroom, Asian radish and shredded carrot dressed simply in oil and tamari (that’s all I could taste, at least).  I liked it and wished I could have squeezed on some of the sliced lemon garnish.   I saved those for my plane ride home.  I grabbed a kale and hemp seed salad from the Whole Foods and I know I’ll want lemon on it.

The service at Liquid Earth was friendly and efficient.  They even gave me a to-go shot glass of lemon juice for me to supplement the lemon slices I had palmed.

I’m a happy gal.  I haven’t really eaten well since partnering up with my friend K to get more accountability in my diet  I’ve eaten so cleanly for the three days of this trip that my usual get-over-the-initial-hump period has been painless.  I’m so busy with work meetings I haven’t had the time to feel my typical grouchy detox .

Now I need to consider motivational rewards.  If I keep going like this I think I’m going to get my reward at the next two-week check-in.

My supplement stack

April 10, 2010
By

My typical supplements

Supplements are an interesting concept. I’m a bit skeptical about “superfoods.”  I’ve no doubt that there are healthy nutritious benefits in cacao, maca, sprirulina, etc. etc. etc.   Ideally we should be getting as many vitamins, minerals, phytonutrients and so on via good whole food.  Supplements and superfoods are expensive and they are rarely locally produced products

The problem, is that our soil and air are denatured.  Pollution rules the day (especially here in L.A.).  Socio-political issues hinder the availability of good whole food (see the concept of food deserts).  Circumstances make it so our diets are less than complete.

Also, supplements can be useful when people have pre-existing health conditions.  Depression, for example, can be helped with doses of essential fatty acids.

I do use a few supplements regularly because I have some health issues.  Here’s my favorite “stack.”  I typically add these to my daily green smoothies.

MSM – methylsulfonylmethane – great for joints and tendons.  I have suffered painful bouts of tendonitis and MSM has really helped me.

DHA purity – a great vegan source of essential fatty acids.  The science indicates it’s deficient in people with depression.  That’s me.   Nobody likes it when Laura doesn’t take her happy juice.

E3 live – Aphanizomenon flos-aquae blue-green algae (AFA for short) – full of chlorophyll, protein, amino acids.  It has Phenylethylamine which is believed to have anti-depressant effects, and Phycocyanin (the blue part of the blue-green) which is believed to have anti-inflammatory properties.

Bee Pollen – not strictly vegan.  I’m a beegan.  There are methods of collecting pollen which do not hurt the bees. Bee pollen is a good source of carbs and protein.  It adds a nice sweet flavor to foods.  It can help allergy sufferers. It works like allergy shots – you get a small dose of the irritant in order to build up immunity.  The wife and I do suffer allergies.  L.A. pollution makes it worse.   We get local pollen from local apiaries at our neighborhood farmers market whenever possible.  The jar in the photo is a brand we get when we can’t get regional pollen.  There isn’t a lot of science behind the health claims but, it tastes good, and it can’t hurt.

Acidopholus – good flora.  Friendly bacteria which aids digestion.  I’ve got IBS and every bit of gut help I can get is welcomed.  It also helps combat candida, if you’re prone to that.

I also take a multi-vitamin and a vitamin D/calcium supplement in addition to the stack of stuff I add to my daily smoothie.  The multi is an insurance policy since I may not be eating a wide variety of foods and there is that whole soil depletion thing. The vitamin D is due to the depression – it’s low in depressed individuals.   It’s also critical in maintaining the calcium balance in your bones.  Calcium supplementation alone is not enough.   I have a high risk factor for osteoporosis (mom’s got it, I’m of Northern European extraction with a fine bone structure).

I do use so called super-foods from time to time (especially cacao — chocolate smoothies anybody?).  I use them as food rather than supplement though.  It’s purely a matter of taste.

Using supplements is a bit expensive.  It does seem to help.  If money became an issue I’d surely focus on eating more greens and getting more exercise.  As long as I can afford it and it doesn’t cause harm I’ll continue using my stack.

I hab a code ginger ale

April 4, 2010
By

I‘m not getting my reward for round one of this challenge.  The cold I wrote about on day one of this renewed commitment has totally kicked me in the behind.  I spent several days off work with a high for me 100 F fever and killer sinus headaches.  All I wanted was ginger ale.  Not any old ginger ale.  It must be Canada Dry ginger ale when I’m sickly.  It’s what mom gave me as a kid and when I want comfort nothing else will do.

So much for staying sugar free.

Plus the spouse got me some ice cream for my sore throat.  Oops! There goes the vegan thing.

I could have done better.  I also know that making a big change while you’re feeling super sick is incredibly optimistic.  So we begin again Finnegan.

Meanwhile, I ponder how I can avoid getting tripped up next time I’m sick.  I can make sugar-free ginger ale myself!

I hab a code ginger ale

Ginger syrup
1 inch piece of ginger (or to taste)
2 cups water
stevia (to taste)

Put water in pot.  Shred ginger.  Add to water.  Bring mixture to boil.  Simmer liquid down for at least 15 minutes.  It’s ideal to let it lost about 1/3rd of its volume until it the liquid gets thicker.  Add stevia to taste.   Remove from heat.  Let the syrup cool.

Add some syrup to some sparkly mineral water and mix.

Voila! Gingery ginger ale without the sugar crash.

I like to put my syrup over ice cubes and pour the mineral water over the top (slowly so it doesn’t lose any fizz).

Better than Canada Dry my friends!

Silly rawhabit (motivational) tricks

March 29, 2010
By

Howdy PardnerI’m regaining my momentum. Remembering that it’s not how many times you stumble, but how many times you get up. I’ve been using some old stand-bys for motivation (reading my raw books, reading blogs, etc.) but have also added something new – directly partnering with a buddy to keep myself accountable.

I’ve put my goals and intentions out for the world to see on this web site, but that hasn’t really kept me accountable. Despite the commenting facility on this blog, it really is a one-to-many broadcast-type medium. There isn’t anybody out there willing to kick my ass if I don’t do what I promise to do. Enter my friend K.   When I complained about being on-again off-again with my goals, she suggested partnering up.  Wow! How nice! I can’t refuse an offer like that.  So I didn’t.

We’re going to check in every two weeks to see how we’re doing.  If we’ve sustained our commitment, we get to have a reward.   Mine is a new bag to carry my work gear around.   To get it I’ve got to exercise 30 mins per day at least 5 days per week.  And eat Phase 1 ETL style.  Religiously.

So far so good.  It’s yet another “first day” of eschewing addictive foods.  I’m home with a cold and haven’t felt like eating much.  A blessing in disguise: I can’t feel detox because I’m already feeling cruddy!

Breakfast was: a big shot of E3 live and a fruit salad with 1 tbsp ground flax seed (1 banana, 1/2 cup blueberries, 2 mandarin oranges)

Lunch was: 14 oz of salad (yes, I weighed it.  yes, I am a dork).  Mixed baby spring greens with shredded carrot and red cabbage.  4 tbsp of Newman’s Own Light Honey Mustard dressing.  I take my Fuhrman supplements after eating.  2 Osteo-sun and 1 Gentle Care multi-vitamin.

The dinner plan is to do black bean burritos.  The family gets to have flour tortillas.  I’m wrapping my fillings with a big old romaine lettuce leaf.   The beans are my wife’s specialty – done Cuban style with lots of cumin, onion, garlic.  I’ll be adding shredded lettuce, avocado, and salsa fresca.  Plus hot sauce, naturally.

If I’m up to it, I’ll walk the doggies later to get in my 1/2 hour.

I’m going to write up a separate post about rewards.  I’m trying to figure out things which will entice me to carry on with the two week reward/check-in cycle.  I’m especially interested in free and low-cost rewards.  Most of the things I’ve thought of so far require cash outlay.

Navel gazing

March 25, 2010
By
my lap

My lap

I’m still here.  Not doing so well, so I haven’t posted in a couple of weeks.  I’ve got some posts in reserve from the bounty of the South Central Farmer’s CSA box.  The amount of produce was overwhelming for this family of three and I did end up returning some of the bounty to the mother (that’s what they call composting at Living Light).    My compost may be expensive but the nutrients it returns to the soil will be superior!!

I’m a bit discouraged by that.  I treat it as a learning experience.  Next box we get will be shared with another family.  Or we’ll forgo boxes and purchase our South Central Farm produce from the farmers’ market in smaller batches.

I’m also a bit discouraged with my attitude.  I haven’t felt like exercising or eating well so I haven’t.   I suffer from a mood disorder — I’m hesitant to use the labels the docs have applied over the years.  Let’s just say that I’ve had many many many bouts of major depression over the years.   Exercise and eating well are the best treatment.  I know it.  Yet I go through periods where I can’t dig myself out of  my navel gazing rut.   I am under medical care for this.  My dream is to someday get off of medications and treat this condition with healthy living food.   It.is.just.so.effing.difficult.

I’m very interested in how some people can decide to make a change and then they just do it.  Bang! Done! One day you’re eating a typical North American Diet and the next you’re not.  See for example Philip McCluskey or Terrence Lavin.   Then there are the people like me – utterly convinced that a high raw vegan diet is capable of miracles — yet still struggling to embrace it after five (yes 5!!) years.

I don’t know what to make of it.  Perhaps its a factor of the condition.  It’s a dark blanket that suffocates any motivation and replaces it with persistent despondent thoughts.  Why bother?  Perhaps its a factor of the time it takes to see any major changes.  If you’ve got significant health issues it can take awhile to feel better.  Indulging in addictive dairy, sugar, or caffeine provides instant gratification that trumps the fact that putting that stuff in your body will actually make you feel worse longer term.

It’s a perpetuating cycle.  Negative thought loops lead to bad diet chemistry lead to more negative thought loops and the worsening of the condition.  The only way I’ve ever done the healthy thing is  by hanging onto a strict eating and exercise regime with pure white knuckles.  Obviously willpower doesn’t work.  If it did, I’d have five years of clean living under my belt.

I start doubting myself.  I don’t want this space to be filled with on-again, off-again, reports.  I don’t need self-flagellation.  I don’t need a public confessional space.  It’s tiresome to read journals from people who repeat their behavior over and over and over again.  I stop writing rather than fill this blog with reports of my failures.

I suspect there are more of us who fall into the camp of gradual change with many set-backs.  The type of person who does sudden, complete, and sustained change is a rarity.  I shouldn’t doubt that there is an audience of fellow healthy wanna-bes.  I just can’t bring myself to keep telling everybody that I’m not doing well.

I will be spending some time thinking about new ways to motivate myself.  I’ve got my bag of tricks like doing  another 30 day challenge, reading ETL or  raw vegan books, using online support groups.    I could use those, but I feel very half-hearted about it. I suspect bio-chemistry is at play here and if I force myself to eat right and exercise for a week or so that I’ll feel so much better that I can implement other forms of motivation.  I’ve lost my will though.  I need help.  I’m seriously considering a retreat.  Perhaps if I get away from my usual surroundings I can re-set my body chemistry.  If I get a jump-start I might be able to find the motivation to carry on.

Rage against the green – Smoothie recipe

March 10, 2010
By
Strawberry Beet Green Smoothie

Strawberry Beet Green Smoothie

Sometimes green smoothies are not green!

I made this baby today and it was more than fabulous.  The color was so vibrant I almost needed to put on my sunglasses.  I don’t know how the color will render on your computer screen.  It was the color of Pepto-Bismol in real life.  Not that you need Pepto (honey, if your body needs to eliminate, let it eliminate whatever toxin it has to get rid of!).  The color was so intense, that it reminded me of Rage Against the Machine.  Hence the name.  Plus, I like me some puns. Even when they’re bad puns.

Rage Against the Green Smoothie

1 cup almond milk (or soy milk)
1 cup chopped beet green stalks
1 cup strawberries
1 cup frozen raspberries
Supplements (I like MSM, bee pollen, acidophilus, and a source of Omega fatty acids like flaxmeal, chia, or hemp seed)

Blend.  Serve with love.

Today I used ground flax (aka flax meal) as my source of omega fatty acids.  I tend to use it the most because it’s cheap, it’s easy to grind fresh, it doesn’t leave a taste like hemp seed does and it doesn’t make things as thick as chia seed.   I’m going to be getting two types of beets today in my 1st CSA box from South Central Farmers’ Co-op. I can’t wait!!!   Prepare yourselves for a lot of beet and kale recipes in the very near future.

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