Yummy Nutty Cookies: No Baking Required!

I’m really no good at baking, mainly due to the fact that I like improvising in the kitchen and substituting ingredients (I always seem to be missing something, especially if the list is longer than 5 items), which is really a recipe for disaster when it comes to baking.

That is why I LOVE these raw nut cookies which are so easy to make and delicious.

Plus, no baking is required – it’s just mix and eat!

This will really save you time and energy; plus they are ideal dessert in the summertime (other than ice-cream, of course), when you don’t want to be using your oven.

To make your cookies, nuts are bound together with the stickiness of the dates. If your cookies are too crumbly, just add a few more dates to the mix. Or you can add a tablespoon of water, agave syrup or olive oil, to add more moisture that will help keep the dough together, if needed.

Basic Raw Nut Cookie Recipe

Ingredients

  • 3 cups nuts, such as hazelnuts, Brazil nuts, or walnuts
  • 1 cup dates, pitted and chopped
  • 1/2 cup raisins (optional)
  • pinch of sea salt (optional)
  • 1 tablespoon vanilla extract

Place the nuts and seeds in a food processor or Vitamix and break down nuts into chunks. Add the rest of the ingredients and process until the nuts bind together with the sticky fruit. Process until you reach the desired consistency. It you don’t want chunky cookies, blend until almost creamy.

Test the batter by taking a handful and squeezing to make sure it holds together. If it’s not sticky enough, you may add a few more dates, some water, agave nectar and/or olive oil until it holds together. Using your hands, roll the mixture into ping-pong-sized balls.

For additional “wow” effect, dip in shredded coconut or cocoa.

Serve as is, or cover and refrigerate before serving until thoroughly chilled for a more solid consistency.

Once you get the hang of the basic recipe, have fun experimenting with various ingredients:

  • nuts: hazelnuts, Brazil nuts, almonds, cashew or walnuts
  • seeds: sunflower, pumpkin, chia
  • dried fruits: dates, apricots, raisins, cranberries
  • spices: cinnamon, nutmeg, cloves, ginger, vanilla extract, shredded coconut, carob/coconut, etc.
  • sweeteners: agave, maple syrup, honey, etc.
  • oatmeal or granola
  • shredded coconut and cocoa for added cuteness
Vitamix: Making of No Bake Cookies

Peeking into my Vitamix: The Making of No Bake Cookies

Date Nut Cookies

Date Nut Cookies: No baking required, ready in 10 minutes or less

But aren’t nuts and seeds high in calories and fats?

Yes they are, so don’t go crazy on me with these cookies (they are delicious!)

Nuts and seeds average about 175 calories an ounce, and one or two ounces a day would provide 15 to 30 percent of a daily caloric intake from the fat range.

However, judicious regular consumption of nuts and seeds is highly beneficial for health, but also for weight loss and even diabetes.

Studies on nuts indicate an inverse association between frequency of consumption and weight, contrary to the situation with oil or other fats. Several studies have confirmed that, even though raw nuts and seeds are not low in calories and rather high in fat, eating them may actually help suppress appetite – and thus help lose weight or even get rid of diabetes.

Of course, it doesn’t mean that we should binge on these foods in an effort to lose weight, as this can easily backfire. Eat about 2-4 ounces per day, but only an ounce of nuts per day if you are trying to lose weight.

Nut Cookies Recipe

Nut cookie balls can be a quick and easy, healthy desert! Plus, they look cute, too.

Benefits of Nuts and Seeds for Health

Raw nuts and seeds are packed with nutrients that provide a variety of health benefits. Nuts and seeds are high in fat and protein, but their effects on the body are completely different when compared to animal fats and protein, or processed vegetable fats and oils. They have been demonstrated in hundreds of medical studies to dramatically extend life and protect against disease.

Eating too many wrong fats or too little fat is a bad thing. Too little fat in the diet leads to dry skin, thinning hair, muscle cramps, poor sleep, high triglycerides, and poor exercise tolerance. Too little fat in the diet can also compromise the absorption of fat-soluble vitamins and phytochemicals. Eating more healthy fats – such as these in nuts and seeds, supplementing with DHA, the long-chain omega-3 fats, and eating fewer processed foods helps relieve these problems.

When you eat seeds and nuts with your meals, the fatty acids supplied significantly increase the absorption of micronutrients. For example, when you add nuts and seeds to your salad, you will absorb more of the micronutrients in the raw vegetables. More than 10 times as much of certain nutrients is absorbed, according to some studies. It’s worth to note that the same effect was NOT observed when a fatty dressing was used.

Remember that it is best to eat nuts and seeds raw or only lightly toasted. The more nuts and seeds are cooked, the more nutrients are destroyed.


For all my blending recipes I use Vitamix. If you don’t already own a VitaMix, I strongly encourage you to check out what this machine is capable of! For more information about VitaMix you can go directly to the VitaMix website. You may also want to read my post about the Best Blender.

I LOVE my VitaMix and highly recommend investing in one if you are ready to make serious changes to your diet. I have had mine for almost 5 years and use it daily!

If you decide to purchase Vitamix – be sure to use Promotional Code 06-004554 to get free shipping.


No Bake Nut Cookies

No Bake Nut Cookies: Easy to make, delicious to munch on!

Questions? Comments? Suggestions?

If you have a favorite recipe, why not submit it here in the comment section of this smoothie recipes blog for others to enjoy too!

I also welcome any comments, questions and suggestions. Thanks!


Veggie Sushi Wraps Recipe, Plus 2 Compelling Reasons To Skip Fish In Your Sushi

Green smoothies is just one way to eat your greens. I love smoothies because they are easy and effortless, but don’t stop there. Get creative. Get fancy.

Why not use them in veggie wraps and veggie sushi rolls.

Why Veggie Sushi?

Sushi is all the rage these days, and vegan sushi is certainly nothing new.

If you love sushi, like many people do, you may wonder, Why vegetable sushi? Why not just have the real thing.

All of us heard about the benefits of eating fish, especially for their Omega-3 content. Plenty of publications have been written about the wonders of fish and fish oil – not to mention the various brands of dietary supplements that are now available in every health food store and pharmacy.

So, why veggie sushi? Well, aside the fact that this is a veggie-centered site, there are some important reasons why I’m going to try to convince you to skip the fish in your sushi.

One is health risks due to rising fish toxicity. Fish is one of the most polluted foods we eat, and it may place you at increased risks for various cancers. Due to increasing pollution, fish may contain significant levels of methylmercury, polychlorinated biphenyls (PCBs), dioxins, and other environmental contaminants. On top of that, if you are eating fish to get Omega-3s, you need to know that farm raised fish is usually fed artificial diet and as a result no longer contains the Omega-3s that you wanted.

The second reason to skip the fish is the collapse of entire marine ecosystems due to overfishing. What few people know about is that approximately 90% of the ocean’s fish have disappeared in the recent years. That’s right, a decline of 90% of the population of many marine species – especially the large fish species, such as sharks, tuna, and other – has been well documented.

Global fisheries are collapsing. Just as an example, millions of sharks and rays are discarded as “by-catch” each year. An estimated 300,00 dolphins, porpoises, and whales also die as by-catch each year, as they are unable to escape when caught in nets or drift-lines. Fish and other sea creatures are intelligent, sensitive animals who suffer terribly when caught in fishing nets.

For every pound of seafood that ends up on market, over 10 pounds may be thrown away as by-catch.

So what’s a health-conscious person to do, who is also compassionate and cares about the environment?

What most people don’t realize is that no fish actually makes omega 3 fatty acids themselves. And, therein lies the biggest fallacy of all. Omega 3 fatty acids are found in microalgae or plants, which every fish has to eat in order to obtain them.

Since not one fish produces Omega-3s on their own, why not just go to the source. Plant sources of Omega-3s include nuts, seeds, and beans, such as flaxseed, walnuts; soybeans; green vegetables; as well as algae, like spirulina or chlorella. The algae supplements are grown in clean environment, so they don’t contain toxic pollutants.

Veggie Sushi Wraps

OK, back to veggie sushi rolls.

They are a fun dish to prepare with your kids, which makes them more likely to eat their veggies.

So, get your veggies and a sharp knife and you’ll have an impressive-looking appetizer that is easy to put together in minutes!

Veggie Sushi Recipe

Veggie Sushi Wraps

Veggie Sushi Wraps

Ingredients

  • Veggie Sushi Recipe

    • 1 cucumber or raw zucchini, thinly sliced
    • 1 red bell pepper, thinly sliced
    • 1 large carrot, thinly sliced
    • 1 tomato
    • 1 avocado
    • 1 fresh lemon
    • 1 tablespoon (or more) of grated ginger root
    • a few large collard green leaves, washed, deveined and dried really well (or untoasted nori sheets)
  • Other ingredients to experiment with:
    • Dulse flakes
    • Toasted sesame seeds
    • Alfalfa sprouts or other sprouts
    • Fresh cilantro, dill or other herbs
    • Fresh fruit, such as mango or pineapple, thinly sliced
    • Brown rice, basmati rice or quinoa
    • Cooked sweet potatoes
    • Tahini

Instructions

  1. Just as with smoothies, experiment with different ingredients that you may have in your kitchen. Collard greens work great, but if you don't have any, other leafy greens, such as cabbage leaves, may do the job.
  2. General rule is to add some juicy ingredients (e.g., tomato), creamy ingredients (avocado) and some crunchy ingredients (carrots).
  3. Cut the veggies (carrots, zucchini, bell peppers, tomatoes) into long strands using a knife or julienne slicer. (If you have time you can marinate the veggies for a few hours in a mixture of rice vinegar with some sesame oil).
  4. Mash the avocado with lemon juice and ginger into paste. If desired, sprinkle a small amount of dulse flakes over the avocado for a salty, seafood flavor rich in minerals.
  5. Or, you can make veggie "rice" by shredding the entire zucchini into small rice-size pieces. Next, squeeze a some lemon juice or a lime over the pile of rice and add about a tablespoon of dulse flakes. You can also use kelp powder or other sea vegetable, and/or sesame seeds. Toss with the rice with a fork to mix the juice and dulse. To make the sticky rice, mash 1/4 avocado into the zucchini rice with your hand and mix well.
  6. On a half of collar leaf (the tough stem removed) matte side down, smear some avocado mash and arrange the vegetables on the end closest to you. Then, tightly roll it away from you.
  7. If using nori sheet, roll tightly and seal the roll by dipping your finger in a little water and rubbing it along the edge of the seaweed and then seal.
  8. Slice the long roll with a sharp knife into individual pieces.
  9. Repeat until your ingredients run out.
https://greenreset.com/veggie-sushi/

Okay, so my sushi picture is not impressive, but I promise to work on my sushi technique and post some better photos soon.

Veggie Sushi Rolls: Turn a collard green wrap into sushi using this method for a healthy and pretty appetizer!


No doubt, this recipe requires some precision cutting, wrapping and patience. It’s not the usual throw-it-into-a-blender-and-drink-it-5-minutes-or-less recipe.

But that’s not a good enough reason not to try it.

Quite the opposite. Let’s use this recipe as an excuse to get educated.

While you are working on your veggie rolls, with or without rice, I want you to download and listen to this amazing podcast about Fish Consumption and By-Catch. Listen to the podcast here.


Cook and Listen

Cook and Listen


New Ebook: Truth About Eating Fish and Fish Oil

You may be rolling your eyes at another “truth” being exposed, but I challenge you to read my new ebook and tell me you did not learn something new.

Fish-R-Friends-Cover

The Truth About Eating Fish Or What Your Doctor Never Told You About Fish & Fish Oil Supplements. Fish Are Friends Not Food Ebook

Coming soon to Amazon Kindle!

Questions? Comments? Suggestions?

If you have a favorite recipe, why not submit it here in the comment section of this smoothie recipes blog for others to enjoy too!

I also welcome any comments, questions and suggestions. Thanks!


How Much Protein Do We Really Need?

If you are worried about getting enough protein when drinking green smoothies, I want to tell you that there is no reason to worry!

You don’t need to be adding any expensive protein powders to your smoothies, munching on protein bars, or loading your salads with “lean protein” to boost your protein intake.

Our entire society is on a protein binge, brainwashed with poor information. We live in such a “must have enough protein” society (thanks to the meat industry and let’s not forget those Atkins and Paleo diet proponents), that few of us actually realize how harmful and unnecessary that is.

How Much Protein Do Humans Really Need?

Protein is an essential macro-nutrient that provides the building blocks for our bodies. However, the amount of protein that we need is greatly overestimated.

Despite the advertising hype of the meat and dairy industries, humans require an extraordinarily low amount of protein in their diets.  The primary function of protein is growth, which is negligible in adults, as well as repair from injury and replacement of worn-out cells. 

We need only 2.5 to 10% of our calories from protein, according to official sources. Many official groups, including the World Health Organization suggest that eating a mere 10% of our total calories as protein is sufficient. Protein deficiency is extremely rare in developed countries, even for those on strict vegan diets.

If you think that this is not enough, consider this: our greatest need for protein is when we grow the most, i.e., in infancy.  An infant practically doubles in size during the first 6 months. The ideal food for a baby is mother’s milk. Therefore, breast milk can be used the “gold standard” for nutrition – including protein content.

Mother’s milk provides on average approximately 6% of calories from protein (far less than cow’s milk, which has 22% of calories as protein). This is the maximum concentration of protein we will ever need in coming from our food.

It should be obvious that adults do not require more protein per calorie than this, as infants, with their extremely rapid rate of growth have the highest need for protein per calorie of all humans.

So even though meat has more protein than vegetables, it doesn’t matter, because the amount in vegetables is already much more than you need. If you’re shopping for a car and one goes 200 miles an hour and the other goes 300, it doesn’t matter, since the maximum speed limit in the U.S. is 80 mph. Two hundred mph is more than enough for a car, and 22% protein from vegetables is more than enough when your protein needs are only 2.5 to 10%.

The extra protein isn’t better, it’s actually harmful.  Too much protein – especially protein coming from animal sources – is dangerous and has been linked to various serious health conditions, including heart disease, cancer, strokes, hypertension and osteoporosis.

Most American’s get way TOO much animal protein. The average American eats over 100 grams a day – an unhealthy amount. Most adults only require 30-50 grams of protein a day. Still, many of us, including athletes, fitness enthusiasts, bodybuilders, dieters, and the overweight are obsessing about their proteins and turn to meat, dairy, protein powders, protein drinks, and nutritional bars in a quest for even more protein.

Myth: “People Need 20% Protein—and Animal Protein Is Best”

Many people still believe that protein is only available from meat and animal sources and we will get sick, weak, lose all muscle mass, or even fall over dead without animal protein! They even use “meat” and “protein” interchangeably, as if plant foods had no protein content at all!

(Once you realize that protein is a nutrient that is present in most foods we eat, you will see how the MyPlate recommendations make no sense, since vegetables, fruits and grains all have PROTEIN!)

Protein needs according to MyPlate.gov

Protein on MyPlate.gov - what is wrong with this picture?

If you are worried about protein deficiency, you need to know that plant foods contain protein too, for example, rice is 9%, potatoes are 8%, corn is 11% and spinach is about 30% protein per calorie.

People often comment they know sickly vegetarians to justify daily meat eating as a healthy lifestyle choice. But of course, not all vegetarians eat a healthy diet or live a healthy lifestyle: although they don’t eat meat, they might eat white bread and cotton candy for breakfast, and avoid exercise like plague! Have you ever seen a sickly gorilla? He eats plants all day and gets plenty of physical activity.

The truth is, taking too much protein – especially animal protein – is not a small matter. It contributes to many diseases, ages you prematurely and can cause significant harm.

While vegetable foods are alkaline, animal products are acidic foods, and they require huge amounts of hydrochloric acid from the stomach to digest them. This acid needs to be neutralized, at the expense of our bones. The excess protein you are not using isn’t stored by the body as protein; it’s converted to fat, or eliminated via the kidneys. Eliminating protein leaches even more calcium and other minerals from the bones and breeds kidney stones.

How Can We Get Enough Protein?

When a diet is centered around WHOLE unprocessed foods (vegetables, whole grains, beans, nuts & seeds), the diet automatically contains a healthy amount of protein. It does not need to be a concern. No protein counting is necessary.

A typical assortment of vegetables, nuts, seeds, beans and whole grains supply about 50 grams of protein per 1000 calories. And don’t forget, some green vegetables are almost 50 percent protein, and when you eat more green vegetables, you are getting your protein with a ton of other super-nutrients for optimal health.

Many factors determine how many calories and how much protein you really need: age, size, growth, activity level, digestion, metabolism, body type, genetics, culture, geography.

By eating a variety of these foods, you are getting much more than protein. Plus, you are priming your body to be disease-proof.

It’s easy to build muscle even on a completely plant-based vegan diet

And if you want to build muscle, let’s remember that exercise, not extra protein, builds strength, denser bones, and bigger muscles. Loading on various protein powders and other muscle building supplements may lead to higher body  mass; however, excessive body mass, even excessive muscle development from over-consumption of animal products, is a risk factor for heart attacks and other diseases later in life.

Animal products may lead to quick muscle mass, but eating lots of animal flesh is a Faustian bargain: short-term gain for a steep long-term price.

So, if you are wondering if you should I add protein  powders to your smoothie after your workout, the answer is ‘No.’  As an athlete, your body needs carbohydrates at each meal to fuel your muscles, as well as vitamin C, antioxidants and various other nutrients, to neutralize the free-radicals created during the workout; and green smoothies are great for that. There are no antioxidants or vitamin C in meat.

Plant foods supply plenty of protein even for athletes and those trying to build muscle. Remember, the largest land animals in the world, elephants, are exclusively vegetarian.  Your body can assemble all the amino acids from a plant protein source to create quality muscle mass.

Eating more calories usually supplies the extra protein for building muscle mass. Carbohydrates are better for supplying extra energy for strenuous activity.

What About Pregnancy and Breast Feeding?

Increased protein needs during pregnancy and breast-feeding are usually met by the extra calories from eating more food.

Plant-Based Diet (and Protein) For Better Health

Even though nutritionists seem to disagree on many topics, most agree that plant-eaters tend to live longer and healthier lives than do meat eaters. In every way, the brocolli-munchers tend to be healthier than the meat-eaters:

  • Plant eaters have a lower incidence of cancer, especially colon, stomach, mouth, esophagus, lung, prostate, bladder, and breast cancers.
  • Plant eaters have a lower incidence of cardiovascular disease, namely heart attacks and stroke.
  • Plant food is better for your heart, since it is low in cholesterol and saturated fat, and high in fiber.
  • Plant eaters are much less likely to get diabetes than animal eaters.
  • Plant eaters tend to weigh less than meat eaters, even those who skin their chicken and trim the fat off their steak.

Even the U.S. Department of Agriculture’s dietary guidelines recommend eating more vegetables and grains and less meat, despite pressure from the politically-connected meat industry to promote meat.

Green Smoothies are Naturally Rich in Protein

No, really.

They are chock full of amino acids because greens contain lots of amino acids. Your body uses these amino acids to produce protein. The more greens you eat, the more amino acids that you provide your body with.

Dark green leafy vegetables contain similar or larger amounts of amino acids than the Recommended Daily Allowance (RDA). However, because of the confusion between vegetables (roots) and greens, we are told that vegetables, including greens, are a poor source of amino acids. Dr. Joel Fuhrman wrote in his book Eat to Live: “Even physicians and dietitians… are surprised to learn that …when you eat large quantities of green vegetables, you receive a considerable amount of protein.”

I like the explanation provided by Victoria Boutenko on her blog:

Let me explain the difference between complex proteins found in meat, dairy, fish, etc. and individual amino acids, found in fruits, vegetables, and especially in greens.

It is clear that the body has to work a lot less when creating protein from the assortment of individual amino acids from greens, rather than the already combined, long molecules of protein, assembled according to the foreign pattern of a totally different creature such as a cow or a chicken. I would like to explain the difference between complex proteins and individual amino acids with a simple anecdote.

Imagine that you have to make a wedding dress for your daughter. Consuming the complex proteins that we get from cows or other creatures is like going to the second hand store, and buying many other people’s used dresses, coming home and spending several hours ripping apart pieces of the dresses that you like and combining them into a new dress for your daughter. This alternative will take a lot of time and energy and will leave a great deal of garbage. You could never make a perfect dress this way.

Consuming individual amino acids is like taking your daughter to a fabric store to buy beautiful new fabric, lace, buttons, ribbons, threads, and pearls. With these essential elements you can make a beautiful dress that fits her unique body perfectly. Similarly, when you eat greens, you “purchase” new amino acids, freshly made by sunshine and chlorophyll, which the body will use to rebuild its parts according to your own unique DNA.

Contrary to this, your body would have a hard time trying to make a perfect molecule of protein out of someone else’s molecules, which consist of totally different combinations of amino acids. Plus, your body would most likely receive a lot of unnecessary pieces that are hard to digest. These pieces would be floating around in your blood like garbage for a long time, causing allergies and other health problems. Professor W. A. Walker from the Department of Nutrition at the Harvard School of Public Health, states that, “Incompletely digested protein fragments may be absorbed into the bloodstream. The absorption of these large molecules contributes to the development of food allergies and immunological disorders.” Source: Raw Family Blog

What About Adding Protein Powders To A Smoothie

As I have explained above, green smoothies already contain all the proteins that you need. A protein powder is a highly processed food, and I don’t recommend adding any to your green smoothies. If you decide to do it, choose high quality plant-based powder.

If you wish to add more high-protein foods to smoothies to make them more filling, I recommend adding a handful of nuts or seeds, such as pumpkin or sunflower seeds.  Adding ground nuts or seeds to your smoothie not only adds protein, but boosts the healthy fat content which makes a green smoothie more satisfying and keeps you full longer. Nuts and seeds are also mineral powerhouses and will make your smoothie not only high in vitamins and antioxidants, but also rich with minerals.

Try small amounts of raw nuts such as almonds, cashews, walnuts, Brazil nuts or macadamia nuts. Sunflower, pumpkin, sesame,  hemp, flax and chia seeds are all excellent when ground up and added to smoothies. You can also add a tablespoon of raw nut butter, or substitute water with almond milk.

Just don’t overdo the fat content of your smoothie or else bloating, gas and digestion problems may result.

What About Milk?

While milk does contain protein, all of our smoothie recipes are dairy-free. I do not recommend using milk or yogurt as a base for smoothies, especially green smoothies. Consuming dairy has been linked to a variety of health problems and can get in the way with your ability to lose weight and obtain optimal health. For more on dairy, click here.

Resources:

World Health Organization (http://www.who.int/nutrition/publications/public_health_nut9.pdf)

http://michaelbluejay.com/veg/protein.html

 

Questions? Comments? Suggestions?

If you have a favorite recipe, why not submit it here in the comment section of this smoothie recipes blog for others to enjoy too!

I also welcome any comments, questions and suggestions. Thanks!


5 Arguments For Plant-Based Diet

This is an issue I’ve been struggling for many years now time now. I’ve been trying to switch to 100% plant-based diet, but I have to admit it’s been difficult. It’s hard to change if you’ve been eating this way for over 40 years, with my entire family against it, considering me crazy and irresponsible (as a mother) for even trying to give up meat, so it’s been a struggle.

I did manage to significantly reduce how much meat we all eat – which makes me somewhat happy – but I’m making a new commitment to limit it even further, and to become 100% vegan myself.

Here is why.

4 Compelling Reasons To Switch To Vegan Diet


1. Plant Eating for Health

Let’s start with what concerns us most – our own healthy body.

There seems to be a lot controversy surrounding the issue of whether or not animal foods are good for humans. Those who are in favor argue that meat and dairy have been an important part of the human diet for thousands (if not millions) of years.  While it’s certainly true, many scientists argue that our anatomy, physiology, biochemistry, and psychology all indicate that we are not carnivores.

A simple test about our true nature would be to put a child in a room with a lamb and a banana. Note which one he plays with and which one he eats.

“To say that carnivores eat meat does not accurately portray such creatures. Animals that live on other animals usually eat raw meat, straight from the carcass, devouring the muscle meat, organs, and sucking up the warm, fresh blood and other bodily fluids. They even crush, split and eat the smaller bones and their marrow. Most people don’t salivate at the idea of crushing the life out of a rabbit with our bare hands and teeth, and the thought of eating one in a freshly killed state is repulsive.  The vast majority of people agree that if they had to kill the animals in order to eat, they would not eat meat ever again.” (from 80/10/10 by Douglas Graham).

Today, animal foods have a central place in the Western-style diet. Meat and dairy have grown into big industries, so there are also many interests at stake here – big corporations fighting for huge profits.  These industries have successfully lobbied and influenced the government, resulting in favorable laws and subsidies – and resulting in advertising and marketing propaganda being fed to the general public of all ages, starting with children.  They have been selling us the mistaken idea that we need meat dairy and eggs in order to be properly nourished.

Many of us have been raised believing that “we need our protein” and “we need calcium for strong bones”, as if that protein and calcium could only be obtained from one source: animal products.  We even often use “meat” and “protein” interchangeably, as if they are one and the same, which of course, they aren’t.

Protein is a type of nutrient that can be obtained from various sources, not just animal products, but most (if not all) plant foods contain protein too.  Some plant foods, such as greens or beans, contain a lot of protein that is easily available and healthy for humans.

There is lots of research out there that proves beyond a doubt that plant based diet is what humans were originally *designed* by nature to eat, and that these foods are actually best for our health.

Many scientific studies confirm that the plant based diet helps prevent many types of cancer, cardiovascular diseases, diabetes, and other degenerative diseases, as well as slows down aging.

In addition to causing heart disease and cancer, animal products contain harmful contaminants—including bacteria, arsenic, dioxins, and mercury—that can affect our health both in the short and long terms.

Here is an excerpt from an interview with Dr. Esselstyn, one of the world’s leaders in heart attack prevention, where he gives some interesting examples illustrating this issue:

“It is quite striking that even today if you are a cardiac surgeon and you are going to hang out your shingle either in rural China, New Guinea, Central Africa or the Tarahumara Indians in Northern Mexico, just forget it. You better plan on selling pencils because you are not going to have any cardiovascular disease because there is none. These cultures by heritage and tradition are fully plant based.

Yet by way of contrast when we look at the autopsies of our twenty year old GIs in Korea and Vietnam, fully 80% already had gross evidence of coronary disease that you can see without a microscope, though not enough to have their cardiac event yet. That study was repeated about forty years later in 1999. This time it was done in this country looking at young women and men between the ages of 17 and 34 who had died of accidents, homicides and suicides. Now the disease is ubiquitous. Everybody at that young age already had the foundation of coronary disease. So it is very discouraging to think that when you graduate from high school in this country, not only do you get a diploma but you also get a foundation of coronary disease.

We really have been doing some things wrong.

I think this is further accentuated from a very interesting phenomenon that occurred during World War II when the access powers of Germany overran the low countries of Holland and Belgium and they occupied Denmark and Norway. It was characteristic that the Germans would take away the livestock from these cultures, namely their cattle, their sheep, their goats, their pigs, their turkeys gone.

So now suddenly these Western European nations during the war years were deprived of animal food and dairy. It was quite striking to see the report in The Lancet, England’s premier medical journal, in 1951 by Dr.’s Strom and Jansen who reviewed the Norwegian experience with heart attack and strokes during those war years. It was quite striking from 1939 to 1945 deaths from stroke and heart attack in Norway absolutely plummeted, just plummeted.

As soon as there was a cessation of hostilities immediately back came the meat, back came the dairy, back came the heart attacks and back came the stroke.”

Although even most mainstream experts agree that most Americans would benefit from eating a more plant-based diet, meat and dairy producers successfully block any effective campaigns aimed at reducing the amount of animal products consumed, including actively interfering with the USDA Pyramid, and now “My Plate” recommendations for the American public, or suing public figures who dare to suggest people to eat less meat (Oprah comes to mind).

2. Plant Eating to Lower Your Environmental Footprint

Many people don’t concern themselves much about the climate change and the environmental destruction that is happening before our very eyes. We don’t really think about it on a day-to-day basis and there is precious little information about these issues in the mainstream media.

However, let me ask you this question:

Why concern yourself with staying healthy, brushing our teeth, exercising, and other trivial tasks, if we destroy the only planet we know that is inhabitable for humans?

Or, why do we even worry about our children not drinking sodas and saving them from obesity, diabetes, and a host of other diseases – if we keep destroying this planet? Where will they go – is there a plan B?

Did you know that our entire food production system – from growing crops and raising livestock, through distribution, and waste removal – is responsible for approximately one-third of all man-made greenhouse gas emissions?

While most people are well aware that meat and dairy consumption are associated with heart disease, cancer and diabetes; few of us realize that raising animals for food is one of the top contributors to the worst environmental problems around the planet at every level – from local to global.

Here are a few more facts for you it’s worth to know about:

– Livestock production alone is responsible for as much as 18 percent of the global climate change.

– Animal agriculture is a greater contributor to global warming than transportation, according to the United Nations. And due to their high methane output, cattle are one of the worst offenders of all farmed animals.

– The livestock sector is responsible for 18 percent of greenhouse gas emissions, about 40 percent more than the entire transport sector – cars, trucks, planes, trains and ships – combined (according to the UN).

– Nearly 10.2 billion land animals were raised and killed for food in the US in 2010. Globally, the number of land animals killed each year for food has exceeded 65 billion. Approximately 53 billion aquatic animals were killed for food in the U.S. in 2010.

– Animal agriculture uses enormous quantities of water, monopolizes land that could be more productive for crops, and contributes to deforestation of critical rainforest and other habitats.

– It takes over 5,000 gallons of water to produce one pound of meat.

– 55% of our fresh water is being given to livestock.

– Over 70 percent of the grain in the US is fed to livestock.

– 70% of rainforests have been slashed and burned in order to raise livestock.

– One acre of land, if used for vegetables, grain, and/or legumes, yields 10-20 times the amount of food in pounds than if devoted to meat production.

– Omnivores contribute seven times the volume of greenhouse gases that vegans do.

The UN summarized the environmental effects of the meat industry this way: raising animals for food (whether on factory or traditional farms) “is one of the top two or three most significant contributors to the most serious environmental problems, at every scale from local to global.  [Animal agriculture] should be a major policy focus when dealing with problems of land degradation, climate change and air pollution, water shortage and water pollution and loss of biodiversity. Livestock’s contribution to environmental problems is on a massive scale. ”

3. Plant Eating for Ethical Treatment of Animals

Animals suffer much more today than they did in the past. Up until the invention of modern farming, chickens would wander around the village, cows grazed the fields. The introduction of the factory farm changed all this. Today, the life of most meat animals is unimaginable suffering.

Welcome to Concentrated Animal Feeding Operations (CAFOs). CAFOs are animal feeding facilities that confine animals for more than 45 days in an area that does not produce vegetation during the growing season. In a CAFO, animals are crammed by the thousands or tens of thousands, often unable to breathe fresh air, see the light of day, walk outside, peck at a plants or insects, scratch the earth, or eat a blade of grass. They are notorious breeding grounds for disease and thus overuse antibiotics, and they pollute the environment in terrible ways. I won’t go into this in more detail, but if you are not aware of the conditions in factory farms, you should be.

Factory farms get away with it, not just because most of us don’t care very much where our food comes from. Many people know that things aren’t quite right with the factory farming, however, the conditions on these farms are so horrific that most people just don’t want to know. It’s easier to turn away, and our silent permission allows the horror to continue.

Here is what John Robbins says about our schizophrenic attitude that we have about animals: “On the one hand most of us love animals. We treat our pets very well in this country for the most part. We feed them. We pay for their food. We pay for their vet bills. They sleep on our beds very often. We consider them part of our families. We lavish our affection on them.

On the other hand though we call other animals livestock. We call them food animals. And we feel entitled to treat those animals with any manner of cruelty just so long as it lowers the price per pound.

There are laws in every one of the 50 states prohibiting some degrees of cruelty against animals. But in every one of the 50 states that legislation specifically exempts animals destined for human consumption.  So if you are a meat producer or a dairy producer, you can treat your animals with any manner of cruelty that you wish and there are no legal restrictions on it as long as it’s considered standard farming practice the degree of suffering that the animals endure is not a factor in whether or not that is going to be allowed.

So routinely now factory farms treat animals with a degree of cruelty that if you did that to a dog or cat you would be put in jail but it’s called routine farming practice in industrialized factory farming. ”

That’s right. Farmers have carte blanche to treat animals cruelly as long as the animal is intended for the sale of food and the actions are considered common practice.

On top of that, several states are considering bills that make it illegal to film or photograph inside factory farms without permission. You can be named a terrorist and go to jail for exposing cruelty to animals!

Animals are much more intelligent and complex than most people realize, and scientists are providing more and more evidence of this all the time.  They have a capacity to feel, form friendships, play, and suffer. They display personality, emotion, and though process. Pigs have the cognitive abilities to be quite sophisticated – more so than dogs, and more so than three-year-olds. Pigs can even play video games and are fond of walking distances of one to three miles per day. Chickens are inquisitive, have intelligence and can solve problems.  Cows form complex social relationships, very much like dogs, licking their companion (animal or human) with their tongues out of love and comfort. Like all animals, cows form very strong maternal bonds with their children and therefore, on dairy farms and cattle ranches, mother cows can be heard crying out for their calves for days after they are separated.

I encourage everyone to read Eating Animals by Jonathan Safran Foer. This book will make you cry.

4. Plant Eating To Help End World Hunger

Study after study shows we can feed more people on a plant-based diet than on a Western diet that is centered around meat, eggs and dairy products.

The demand for animal products in developed countries drives resource depletion in developing countries as well as exacerbates poverty and hunger.

82% of the world’s starving children live in countries where food is fed to animals that are then killed and eaten by more well off individuals in developed countries like the US, UK, and in Europe. One fourth of all grain produced by third world countries is now given to livestock, in their own country and out.

Globally, even with climate change issues and weather extremes, we are producing enough grain to feed two times as many people as there are in the world.

Conversion to plant based food systems for local regions in developing countries would feed more people more nutritiously with more efficient use of their resources, improve long term soil fertility, create economic opportunities, all of which would provide a path toward breaking the poverty and hunger cycle. Read more http://comfortablyunaware.wordpress.com/

The first step to switching to a plant-based diet is finding a good reason to do so.

The reasons I just gave you are something to think about deeply. This is something that shouldn’t be taken too lightly. Changing your eating habits can really have a big effect, so you need to consider why you are doing it. Those with good reasons are often able to stick to this change better than those without solid intentions.

The next thing to do is read up and do some research. That includes questioning the conventional wisdom about diet, the authors say. Don’t just accept recommendations from health authorities, the food industry, or the government, they advise. There are different levels of being a vegetarian and it takes different amounts of effort. Find out what it is all about and what you need to know about it. By learning these things you can brace yourself for what you are about to take on. It will also help you clear any questions that you might have and offer a good amount of guidance for you as well. During this time it will be good to look for forums or support groups which you can turn to during the process of becoming a vegetarian.

5. Plant Eating To Increase Food Safety

There are 76 million cases of food borne illnesses each year; 4 million caused by salmonella, 93% of which are caused by meat, poultry, milk and eggs. The remaining 7% of cases are from shellfish, fresh fruits and vegetables. (Data according to : CDC – Center for Disease Control) The outbreaks are always reported in regard to which food source it was associated with. Typically, it is meat products, which is far under-reported or minimized. But there are many cases that involve plant-based foods, such as melons, tomatoes, salad mix, spinach, peanuts, and …sprouts.

Plants can only be contaminated by coming into contact with polluted water through irrigation, animal fertilizers, and using animal or human feces.Vegetables and fruits can become contaminated if placed in close proximity to or mixed with raw poultry, meat, or eggs, and unpasteurized milk, as all of these products have supply bacteria contaminants on them naturally.

Animal flesh and secretions used for food have a high propensity for distribution of pathogens, because they are found naturally on and within the animal itself during its life, as well as during the slaughtering process. This applies to all animal products, whether it is from livestock, dairy, or fish. This just adds to the ways that eating animals creates a depletion of our health.  (Source: Comfortably Unaware, by Richard Oppenlander)

How to Switch to Plant-Based Diet?

Whether you go vegan for the environment, for your health, or for animals, you have the power to change the world, simply by changing what’s on your plate.

With so many great vegan options, eating green has never been more delicious. Protein and calcium can be obtained from beans, broccoli, sesame seeds, and green, leafy vegetables. Include high-fiber foods in your diet. Whole-wheat bread, brown rice, oats, flax seeds, and vegetables supply fiber, which helps lower cholesterol.

The good news is – if done right –  there’s no calorie counting to worry about with this vegan diet regimen. You can eat all the organic fruits, veggies, whole grains, and natural food you want. If you skip meat, fish, dairy, eggs, sugar, artificial sweeteners, refined flour, caffeine, diet sodas, and anything that contains chemicals that you can’t pronounce – you are likely not just to lose weight and improve your own health, but significantly reduce your environmental footprint as well.

Guilt-Free Pasta That’s Actually Good For Your Waist! (Plus, It’s Gluten-Free)

Sometimes it seems to me that we all are on a constant grain binge: pastas, doughnuts, breads, bagels, buns, cookies, crackers, breakfast cereals, cakes, pastries – there is no escaping or hiding from grain-based foods.

Most of us are aware that these foods are not ideal (to put it mildly), so many people are switching to “whole grains” as a more healthy alternative to heavily processed white grains.

Although the U.S. government (heavily influenced by industry lobbyists), as well as many nutrition experts, promote a high intake of grains, following this strategy actually sets up a lot of people for serious health consequences.

Pasta is often touted as “health food.” Highly processed cereals are promoted as “cholesterol lowering” foods, and whole grains are promoted as a way to prevent digestive diseases and cancer. This brainwashing is certainly working. We now consume so much grain products, that for many children cereal is their main source of vitamins!

To stay healthy and maintain ideal weight effortlessly, we should eat far fewer grain products than most of us consume today; and some of us should eat no grains (not even whole grains) at all!

Even the “whole grains”, although an improvement over the refined grains, should be limited, as they are still a processed foods with very low nutrient to calorie ratio. Read my post the Dark Side of Grains here.

So, what should we be eating instead?

More vegetables, fruits, greens, mushrooms, beans, nuts and seeds.

The best way to limit the amount of grain products, and – for those that are gluten intolerant – to get rid of gluten from your diet completely is to eat only unprocessed plant foods. All unprocessed food (obviously, with the exception for the unprocessed grains that contain gluten) is gluten-free, high in nutrients, while naturally low in calories.

Giving up grains requires a major paradigm shift for most of us. To make it easier for yourself, you may want to think about changing your diet as moving to another country and culture. You may attempt to bring all your old habits with you, and struggle to get all of the ingredients that you are used to to create the meals you are used to, or you can gracefully, and with a sense of adventure try the new cuisine.

So, without further ado, here are some ideas on how to substitute vegetables in pasta dishes.

How to Make Zucchini Pasta

Not zucchini with pasta…Zucchini as pasta!!!

Figure on one medium large zucchini per person.

If you have a mandolin slicer or spiral vegetable slicer, any of these will be perfect for the job, and you can hook up the julienne attachment for perfectly formed noodles.

Spiral vegetable slicer in action

Spiral vegetable slicer in action

If you’re like most people, you probably don’t have any of these, so you can either use a vegetable peeler or a knife. The peeler method will give you long flat noodles, and if using a knife, just cut the veggies into thin slices, stack up, and cut again lengthwise into thin strips.

By the way, you don’t have to limit yourself to zucchini. Use whatever you have: kale, collard greens, butternut squash, red bell pepper, and beets, would all be great to use as “noodles.”

Check out the pictures here Rainbow “Pasta” with an Almond Tumeric Sauce

Now, if you are ready for a hard-core raw pasta, just toss your noodles with the sauce of your choice, such as pesto or tomato, and you are done! (You may want to salt the noodles and rinse after 20 minutes to soften them a little bit).

However, many of you will probably prefer the pasta cooked.

So, just boil some salted water, and add the noodles to the water to cook for about 1 minute. Remove from boiling water quickly and immediately blanch in cold water, to stop cooking.

– or –

Skip the boiling and toss the noodles on a frying pan for a few minutes with some olive oil and your favorite pasta sauce: tomato, pesto sauce, garlic, whatever you wish.

Do not overcook! You don’t want to the zucchini to over cook and get soft.

These noodles can be tossed with any of your favorite sauces, but tend to work better with a simple, and non chunky style sauce.

Zucchini Noodles with Pesto Sauce

Pesto Sauce Recipe

1 bunch of fresh basil (bunch could be as big or as little as you like)

1 cup of pine nuts

4-5 cloves of garlic

2 tablespoons of olive oil

2 tablespoons of lemon juice

1 salt and pepper to taste

Blend all ingredients until thoroughly mixed.

Variations

1. Substitute all or part of basil with other greens, such as parsley, dandelion, arugula, watercress, spinach, cilantro to give the recipe a unique flavor.

2. Substitute pine nuts with walnuts, almonds, basil nuts, etc.

3. For a creamy pesto sauce, add 2 avocados.

4. Toss in some sunflower or pumpkin seeds for more nutrition.

Zucchini pasta is perfect for dieters, gluten intolerant people, diabetics,… and of course for everyone who loves their veggies!

Buy Vegetable Slicer on Amazon

World Cuisine 48297-99 Tri-Blade Plastic Spiral Vegetable Slicer

Just check this vegetable slicer it seems like the perfect tool for the job. This tool is great for making fancy spiral vegetable garnishes for salads as well as making curly fries from potatoes. I haven’t tried one myself, but it looks like a neat tool to have in your kitchen.

It includes three sets of blades: one with 1/8-inch spacing, one with 1/4-inch spacing, and one straight blade for ribbon cuts or curly, ribbon-like slices. It measures 12 by 10 by 6 inches (LxWxH) and is dishwasher safe. Backed by a 1-year warranty. About $30 on Amazon.

Raw pasta recipe - vegetable slicer

Raw pasta recipe – vegetable slicer

Questions? Comments? Suggestions?

If you have a favorite recipe, why not submit it here in the comment section of this smoothie recipes blog for others to enjoy too!

I also welcome any comments, questions and suggestions. Thanks!


Pesto Recipe: How to Make Pesto Sauce From Scratch?

I love fresh basil and pesto pasta is one of my favorite dishes. Fresh basil has a delightful pungent aroma and an incredible flavor that is a cross between licorice and cloves.

Fresh pesto sauce is easy to make and a addition to pasta dishes, vegetable noodles, or as a veggie dip. Why not expand on this recipe a bit and transform with different greens and nuts combinations. Try to experiment with a various ingredients to find your personal favorites.

The traditional way of making pesto is with a mortar and pestle. As much as I enjoy trying traditional methods, I usually just reach for my Vitamix and blend the sauce in a matter of minutes. If you don’t have a Vitamix, use a regular blender or food processor.

The sauce should keep for 2 – 3 days in the fridge but freezes well if you want to keep it longer. Cover and refrigerate until you are ready to use it.

Basic Pesto Sauce Recipe

1 bunch of fresh basil leaves (bunch could be as big or as little as you like)

1 cup of pine nuts

4-5 cloves of garlic

2 tablespoons of olive oil

2 tablespoons of lemon juice

1 salt and pepper to taste

Blend all ingredients in food processor until thoroughly mixed. Do not over-process – it should have a nice chunky texture. Serve like you would any pesto, with pasta, veggies, etc.

Variations

1. Substitute all or part of basil with other greens, such as parsley, dandelion, arugula, watercress, kale, spinach, cilantro to give the recipe a unique flavor.

2. Substitute pine nuts with walnuts, almonds, basil nuts, etc.

3. For a creamy pesto sauce, add 2 avocados.

4. Toss in some sunflower or pumpkin seeds for more nutrition.

5. The basic recipe is dairy-free (vegan), but feel free to add some Parmesan cheese if you’d like.

 

Pesto Sauce Recipe


For all my blending recipes I use Vitamix. If you don’t already own a VitaMix, I strongly encourage you to check out what this machine is capable of! For more information about VitaMix you can go directly to the VitaMix website. You may also want to read my post about the Best Blender.

I LOVE my VitaMix and highly recommend investing in one if you are ready to make serious changes to your diet. I have had mine for almost 5 years and use it daily!

If you decide to purchase Vitamix – be sure to use Promotional Code 06-004554 to get free shipping.


Pesto Sauce

How to Make Pesto Sauce: Don't be limited by traditional ingredients!

Questions? Comments? Suggestions?

If you have a favorite recipe, why not submit it here in the comment section of this smoothie recipes blog for others to enjoy too!

I also welcome any comments, questions and suggestions. Thanks!


Watercress: Green Smoothie and Raw Soup Recipes

Watercress is a sharp and peppery tasting cruciferous vegetable. Like most greens, watercress can easily make it to the top of super-foods list, and it’s a perfect addition to your green smoothies.

Its amazing health benefits are due to its high levels of phytochemicals, the same disease fighting components found in broccoli and cabbage. By weight it contains more vitamin C than oranges, more calcium than milk and more absorbable iron than spinach.

Watercress greens help boost the immune system (contains Vitamin B6; vitamins C and E, which are antioxidants that provide protection form free radical damage; and vitamin A, which enhances white blood cell function and the resistance to infections and carcinogens), contains lutein and zeaxanthine, needed for healthy eyes; provides nutrients for strong, healthy hair and nails (iron, zinc, vitamin A), contains vitamins for beautiful skin; helps thyroid function; helps build strong, healthy bones (Calcium, Magnesium, Manganese, and vitamins A, C, and K), as well as boosts the detoxification function of the liver.

With all of these health benefits, it’s important to add more watercress to your diet!

Since watercress has a very distinct flavor, I recommend that most people use only a handful in a smoothie at a time or mix it up with spinach, if the flavor is too much for you in the beginning.
You can washed it up and store in a refrigerator (in a plastic bag with a piece of paper towel) or freeze it in single-sized servings.

For those who do not have a high-powered blender… watercress fits in the category of tender greens along with spinach and baby greens, as it blends quite easily.

Watercress Orange Green Smoothie Recipe

Ingredients:

2 ripe medium bananas

1 ripe pear or apple

1 cup orange juice

2 cups watercress, though stems removed (or 1 cup of watercress and 1 cup spinach)

1-2 cup water

Watercress Blueberry Smoothie Recipe

1 banana

1 cup frozen blueberries

1 small handful of watercress

1 large handful of spinach

1 cup water

Watercress Tropical Smoothie Recipe

1 cup frozen mango

1 cup fresh pineapple

1 small handful of watercress

1 large handful of spinach

1-2 cup water

Blend in blender until smooth! Enjoy!

Watercress

Watercress: Ready for the smoothie! http://www.flickr.com/photos/anjuli_ayer/3102132111/sizes/z/in/photostream



Watercress Pear Raw Soup Recipe

The difference between a soup and a smoothie is really insignificant: a soup is a thick smoothie, that you eat with a spoon from a bowl!

2 cups of watercress

1 Pear

1 cup of water – depending on desired consistency

Place all fresh ingredients in the blender and blend.

For more creamy consistency add 1/2 an avocado. Also, you can play with the flavor by either adding a few nuts, such as walnuts or almonds, or add a sprinkle of cinnamon or nutmeg.

If you fancy a warm soup there are two ways to heat the soup without cooking:

1. Use warm water and serve in a warm bowl.

2. If you have a high speed blender, such as a Vitamix, you can leave it running on high for a few minutes.

3. Heat it up on the stove top, but be careful not to boil it!

Watercress soup

Watercress soup: Just blend it! I have found this beautiful picture on http://www.flickr.com/photos/hills_alive/2752734262/


For all my blending recipes I use Vitamix. If you don’t already own a VitaMix, I strongly encourage you to check out what this machine is capable of! For more information about VitaMix you can go directly to the VitaMix website. You may also want to read my post about the Best Blender.

I LOVE my Vitamix blender and highly recommend investing in one if you are ready to make serious changes to your diet. I have had mine for almost 5 years and use it daily!

If you decide to purchase Vitamix – be sure to use Promotional Code 06-004554 to get free shipping.


Questions? Comments? Suggestions?

If you have a favorite recipe, why not submit it here in the comment section of this smoothie recipes blog for others to enjoy too!

I also welcome any comments, questions and suggestions. Thanks!

Dandelion Greens Recipes: How About Some Weeds In Your Green Smoothie?

Have you had your dandelions today?

For many people when they think of dandelions, their first thought is the weeds on their lawn. They view the common dandelion as a weed, and wage a small war to eradicate the plant from their lawns and gardens, but I want to encourage you to eat them!

Not everyone knows that dandelions are very healthy, and can be used in many recipes, including (of course) green smoothies.

Since they grow wild pretty much everywhere, you have a completely free food source right in your backyard or in the wild. Just don’t use the ones with the pesticides and herbicides on them! For those without access to organic lawns, dandelion greens are also available in farmers markets.

Health Benefits of Dandelion Greens

Dandelion greensAs all greens, dandelions are low in calories, but super-high in healthy nutrients, which makes them the ideal addition to green smoothies. In fact, this innocuous “weed” is one of the most nutrient-dense plants you can eat. Everything, from the flower all the way down to the roots, is edible.

Dandelions are great for detoxing the liver and gallbladder and to help support kidney function. They may help stabilize blood sugar (great for diabetics) and lower bad (LDL) cholesterol. They are also are an excellent source of vitamins A, C, E, K, calcium and iron, packed full of antioxidants, and contain copper, manganese, potassium, and magnesium. Just one half cup of dandelions contains more calcium than a glass of milk, and more iron than spinach. Studies have found that the regular consumption of dandelion greens can lead to a reduction in your risk of cancer and stroke.

The taste of dandelion resembles a slightly bitter green like arugula. Look for firm, fresh, tender, bright green leaves that aren’t discolored or wilted. When refrigerated in a plastic bag, they will keep for a few days. Like spinach, dandelion greens are commonly enjoyed raw, but they also taste fantastic sautéed, braised, or even stewed.

You can toss them into your favorite salad medley, eat them fresh in salads, or cook them on the stove. Wash, trim, tear, and toss in your favorite salad medley. Sauté with garlic and onions. Substitute spinach for dandelion greens in recipes, such as pesto sauce.

Dandelion Green Smoothie Recipes

Dandelion greens have slightly bitter taste which might be difficult to mask with fruit in a green smoothie, so start with adding small amounts and/or mixing them with other greens, such as spinach or kale. In general, the younger the greens, the milder the taste, so you may want to choose the younger leaves.

You can help mask the bitter taste by using strong tasting fruit and berries, such as pineapple, oranges, bananas, strawberries or other ripe berries. The other way is to process them with some sort of fat, i.e. nuts, oils, and avocados.

Personally, I enjoy slight bitterness in my smoothies, especially since I know that it’s so good for me! The bitterness actually stimulates bile production, aids digestion, and cleans pretty much every inner organ inside the body. I find that my taste buds get used to the flavor quickly and after the first couple sips and I soon don’t mind the flavor at all. But I guess it’s an acquired taste.

Dandelion Green Smoothie Recipe #1

1-2 cups dandelion greens

1-2 pears

2 dates

1-2 cups water or coconut water

Blend on the highest speed until smooth and creamy. Yield: 3-4 cups

Dandelion Green Smoothie Recipe #2

2 cups dandelion greens

1 lemon (peeled)

2 large apples

1 banana

1-2 cups water

Dandelion Green Smoothie Recipe #3

½ bunch dandelion greens

2 stalks celery

2 peaches

½ pineapple

½ inch fresh ginger root

2 cups water

Blend in blender until smooth! Enjoy!

Dandelion Green Smoothie Recipe #5

If you are worried about the fruit content, here are some savory options.

1/2 bunch dandelion greens

4 tomatoes

2 dates (optional)

2 cups water

Dandelion Green Smoothie Recipe #6

1/2 bunch dandelion greens

1 medium cucumber

½ avocado

2 dates (optional)

2 cups water

Blend in blender until smooth! Enjoy!


For all my blending recipes I use Vitamix. If you don’t already own a VitaMix, I strongly encourage you to check out what this machine is capable of! For more information about VitaMix you can go directly to the VitaMix website. You may also want to read my post about the Best Blender.

I LOVE my VitaMix and highly recommend investing in one if you are ready to make serious changes to your diet. I have had mine for almost 5 years and use it daily!

If you decide to purchase Vitamix – be sure to use Promotional Code 06-004554 to get free shipping.


Dandelion greens in green smoothies

Questions? Comments? Suggestions?

If you have a favorite recipe, why not submit it here in the comment section of this smoothie recipes blog for others to enjoy too!

I also welcome any comments, questions and suggestions. Thanks!


The Dark Side of Grains and the Benefits of Gluten-Free Eating

Grain based products are everywhere today: pastas, doughnuts, breads, cookies, crackers, cereals, cakes, pastries -there is no escaping or hiding from them.

Most of us grew up learning that grains were one of the four major food groups essential to a balanced diet, at least as important (if not more) than fruits and vegetables. We have been encouraged to eat six to eleven (!) servings of grains per day.

Why Are Grains So Ubiquitous?

In case you are wondering, one of the reasons behind this heavy promotion is that grain-based foods are cheap to make and offer great profits to the manufacturers. The markups on grains are huge, for example, bread is made from about 5 cents of wheat, but we usually pay at least one dollar per loaf.

Grain based products also have long shelf lives, so they don’t spoil easily; plus they are so nutritionally sterile that even insects wouldn’t bother infesting them! If you don’t think that food producers have any say on what the US government recommends in the official dietary guidelines, think again. It’s common knowledge that big food manufacturers are influencing what’s on our plate – big time. They also have the money for lobbying to receive subsidies for the production of even more grains, as well as heavy advertising that includes appealing to both children and adults with cute cereal names and toys in boxes of cereals.

For many children cereal is now their main source of vitamins! For adults, highly processed cereals are promoted as “cholesterol lowering” foods, and whole grains are promoted as a way to prevent digestive diseases and cancer.

gluten-free diet

The Dark Side of Grains

Problems with gluten tolerance occur much more often than most people realize, however it’s often unrecognized or misdiagnosed, as it can manifest itself by a host of seemingly unrelated symptoms. Gluten intolerance is often associated with IBS, depression, difficulties with your weight, aches and pains in bones and joints, and chronic fatigue. If you suffer from some or all of these problems and you consume foods that contain gluten, perhaps you are gluten intolerant.

As if that was not enough, we get hooked on grains on much deeper level. Grains have drug-like substances that create true food addictions and irresistible cravings in some, if not many people.

Grain allergies and addictions (especially to wheat) are very common and they are unrecognized contributors to the growing epidemic of obesity. Like true addicts, many people are strongly attracted to foods they are allergic to get a “high” from drug-like compounds in them. When the feeling wears off, they crave another “fix”, so they have to eat more of these foods. Unrecognized grain allergies and addictions lead to too-strong-to-resist cravings and overeating, which ultimately lead to weight gain.

Although the U.S. government promotes a high intake of grains, following this strategy actually sets up a lot of people for health problems.

To stay healthy and maintain ideal weight effortlessly, all of us should eat far fewer grain products.

Some of us should eat no grains (not even whole grains) at all.

If these statements come as a shock to you, challenging your beliefs about healthy nutrition, you are not alone.

The truth is grains have a dark side that few people seem to know about. Eating lots of them can potentially lead to virtually every problem in the medical book, including obesity, diabetes, heart disease, some types of cancer, chronic fatigue, digestive disorders, infertility, osteoporosis, and other.

We live in a society where wheat is eaten daily at almost every meal. Pasta, bread, and cereals are promoted as healthy food. They are centerpieces of many people’s diet.

However by loading up on these foods, you may be setting up for degenerative diseases, such as heart disease and diabetes, not to mention weight gain.

Even the whole grains, which are often recommended by nutritionists in place of refined grains, although they do contain more nutrients than their refined counterparts, they also have many anti-nutrients that interfere with good health. By interfering with absorption of many important nutrients they lead to nutrient deficiencies and may set the stage for osteoporosis and autoimmune disorders, not to mention anemia.

Gluten Free Diet: What we should be eating for health & perfect weight

For people suffering from wheat intolerance, the gluten-free diet is no picnic. The focus of a gluten-free cooking is often on replacing gluten flour in baked goods recipes with acceptable starches made from rice, arrowroot, potato, other legumes like chickpeas and wheat starch (all the protein has been carefully removed).

And it isn’t just difficult and inconvenient; but also expensive. For most people it means studying the labels for gluten that often shows up unexpectedly on the list of ingredients.

Fortunately, there is a better way.

The easiest – and best – way to get rid of gluten from your diet is to eat only unprocessed foods. All unprocessed food (obviously, with the exception for the grains which contain gluten) is gluten-free.

In many respects it is easier and nutritionally wiser to forgo the baked goods altogether and eat other foods. The task of changing your diet is very much like moving to another country and culture. You may try to bring all your old habits with you, and struggle to get all of the ingredients that you are used to to create the meals you are used to, or you can gracefully, and with a sense of adventure try the new cuisine.

Certainly, baked foods are delicious and tempting, but so are creatively prepared rice, vegetable, fruit, fish, legume, and meat dishes. Even with multiple exclusions, an appealing, varied diet is within reach if you are willing to change your eating style. The main thing is to be inspired to create and enjoy a new cuisine that will diminish your disturbances, sustain your interest in food, and provide balanced nutrition.

Here is the summary of recommendations for a healthy diet:

•At least 60-80 % of the calories consumed should come from fresh, raw fruits, vegetables, and leafy greens (essential!), as well as nuts and seeds. The important thing the bulk of your fruits, veggies, and greens should be eaten RAW. Raw foods have a wonderful effect on the body – giving you more energy and supplying essential nutrients in the completely unchanged, unprocessed form – just as nature intended them for us!

Since you already know how to make green smoothies, this is an easy part! In the morning, prepare a quart or more of green smoothie and drink it during the course of your day. Eating salads and green juices made with a juice extractor is also a great idea.

•The rest of what you eat during the day should be steamed or slightly cooked vegetables, legumes, and some gluten-free whole grains. Soup, stews, salads and various side dish recipes can be found that are completely gluten free. The following grains and grain-substitutes can be used: rice, quinoa, buckwheat (more closely related to spinach than wheat), corn, amaranth, soy, millet (a good substitute for couscous), potato and tapioca as well as flour made from them.

•Although unprocessed meat, fish, eggs, cheese, milk,are all gluten free, for optimum health it’s recommended to limit consumption of animal products to once or twice per week, or eliminate completely.

•Eliminate all processed foods from your diet – this will save you time studying the labels in the supermarket. If you decide to occasionally have them – read the label carefully. Many foods that may on the first glance seem like gluten free, may still have some quantities of wheat added.

Tolerable foods to eat:
Corn
Rice
Wild rice
Oats
Buckwheat
Millet
Arrowroot
Amaranth
Quinoa
Wheat grass
Tapioca
Taro
Barley grass
Vinegars: apple cider, balsamic, rice
Bean flours

Not OK/Intolerable foods and drinks
Wheat
Rye
Kamut
Teff
Spelt
Soy

Mango Salsa Recipe & Mango Gazpacho

I love mangoes and I buy whole boxes of them when they are in season. I usually just have them on their own – they are just so delicious!

But, why not experiment a little on a hot day and make a bowl of delicious mango salsa, mango smoothie, or soup.

Mangoes are refreshingly cool, sweet and tart at the same time that makes them perfect for hot weather dishes.

Here are some recipes for you to start with. Use them for inspiration and be bold!

Mango Salsa Recipe

1 ripe mango, diced

1/2 medium red onion, finely chopped

1 small cucumber, peeled and diced

3 tablespoons fresh lime juice

3 tablespoons fresh cilantro or parsley leaves, chopped

1 jalapeño chile, minced

Sea salt and pepper to taste

Mix all of the ingredients in a bowl.   Other ingredients that will go well with this recipe are diced red bell pepper and avocado.

Fresh mango salsa is easy to make and a perfect side dish.  Why not expand on this recipe a bit and transform it into a stand-alone dish – a delicious mango gazpacho soup.  Here are two versions for you to try.

Both are fantastic!

Sweet-n-Spicy, Asian Fusion Mango Gazpacho

In this recipe fruit is mixed with fresh mint, tart lime, spicy ginger and cayenne. Makes 4 servings.

2 cups cubed fresh mangoes

1 cup fresh orange juice

1 cup pineapple, diced into 1/2 inch pieces

1 cup of your favorite melon, diced into 1/2 inch pieces

1/2 cup mango, diced into 1/2 inch pieces

2 tablespoons chopped mint leaves

1 tablespoon lime juice

1 tablespoon minced fresh ginger

1/8 tablespoon cayenne or to taste

Process the cubed mango and orange in a blender until pureed. Transfer to a medium bowl, along with remaining ingredients. Refrigerate until ready to serve. Will keep for e days in the fridge.

 

Spicy Mango Gazpacho

3 cups cubed mango

2 cups chopped tomatoes

1 small diced red or sweet onion

1/2 red bell pepper, finely chopped

1 seedless cucumber, cut into 1/4-inch dice

3 tbsp chopped fresh cilantro and/or Italian parsley

1 garlic clove, pressed or minced

2 tablespoons freshly squeezed lime or lemon juice

1/2 teaspoon chile powder

1/4 teaspoon cayenne

sea salt and freshly ground black pepper to taste

minced jalapeño to taste (optional)

 

Combine all ingredients in a large bowl and mix well. Transfer 2 cups of the mixture to a blender and blend on high speed for 20 seconds and return to the bowl. Mix, and if desired, chill for 30 minutes, otherwise serve immediately.

Mango Recipes

Mango http://www.flickr.com/photos/sarol/2402728217/sizes/z/in/photostream/


For all my blending recipes I use Vitamix. If you don’t already own a VitaMix, I strongly encourage you to check out what this machine is capable of! For more information about VitaMix you can go directly to the VitaMix website. You may also want to read my post about the Best Blender.

I LOVE my VitaMix and highly recommend investing in one if you are ready to make serious changes to your diet. I have had mine for almost 5 years and use it daily!

If you decide to purchase Vitamix – be sure to use Promotional Code 06-004554 to get free shipping.


Questions? Comments? Suggestions?

If you have a favorite recipe, why not submit it here in the comment section of this smoothie recipes blog for others to enjoy too!

I also welcome any comments, questions and suggestions. Thanks!


The GMO Battle is Heating Up

I just recently attended the Food Revolution Summit. It was a great event, with great speakers and informative presentations, including Jeffrey Smith who is the leading spokesperson on the dangers of Genetically Modified Organisms (GMOs).

Right now the GMO battle is heating up, big time.

It’s time to educate yourself and start taking action.

Now you can listen to Jeffrey Smith’s Presentation at the Food Revolution Summit on the truth about Genetically Modified Organisms (GMOs). He explains the health and environmental dangers of GMOs, and the politics behind it.
 
 

Take Genetically Engineered Foods Out Of Your Diet!

 

Here you can listen to three Food Revolution Summit interviews on the truth about Genetically Modified Organisms (GMOs).

A majority of Americans say they would choose not to purchase a genetically modified product if given the choice, and yet more than 70% of the foods in US supermarkets and restaurants contain genetically modified ingredients.

FDA scientists warned that GM foods could create unpredictable, hard-to-detect side effects, including allergies, toxins, new diseases, and nutritional problems. Yet despite their recommendations, there have never been any long-term studies conducted on humans.Label GMOs

Meanwhile, Monsanto-patented GM seeds are now planted on more than 90% of the US corn, soy, canola and sugar beet cropland. The company is making billions.

Approximately 90% of the American public supports mandatory labeling of genetically modified foods. And yet last week, when two states, Vermont and Connecticut, attempted to pass legislation to require extremely popular GMO labeling, it was legal threats from Monsanto that ultimately killed the legislation.

Knowing full-well that a GM label would have a profound impact on consumer choice and therefore on Monsanto’s profits, the company is threatening to hold states liable for any resultant loss in business.

Some of us, however, think that we should have a right to know what’s in our food. We want the opportunity to make informed choices about whether or not we consume GMOs.

A ballot initiative to require labeling in California, which is the world’s 8th largest economy, would effect packaging and ingredient decisions nationwide and even internationally.

The biotech industry is expected to spend $60 to $100 million trying to defeat the California initiative. They’ll say that it would raise prices, be bad for farmers, and subvert efforts to end world hunger. None of which is true.

But with 80% of Californians currently supporting the labeling initiative, Monsanto and its allies may have a tough time convincing a majority of the state’s voters that they should stay in the dark about what they’re eating.

California’s voters will go to the polls in November for what might be a watershed moment in the struggle. To stay informed, or to contribute time, talent, or treasure to the cause, visit labelgmos.org.

Two of the organizations at the forefront the GMO struggle worldwide are led by Summit speakers Ronnie Cummins (Organic Consumers Association) and Jeffrey Smith (Institute for Responsible Technology).

“The arc of the moral universe is long”, Dr. Martin Luther King, Jr., told us, “but I believe it bends towards justice.”

It doesn’t bend all by itself.

Toxic Chemicals and Disease: Are Our Children Canaries in a Coal Mine?

“Canary in a coal mine” is allusion to caged canaries mining workers would carry down into the tunnels with them. If toxic gases such as methane or carbon monoxide were present into the mine-shaft, the gases would kill the canary before affecting the miners. Signs of distress from the bird indicated to the miners that conditions were unsafe.

Hence, the phrase “canary in a coal mine” is frequently used to refer to a person or thing which serves as an early warning of a coming crisis.

Our environment contains a growing list of chemicals, many of which are known causes of human illnesses.

From the water we drink, to the air we breathe, to the food we eat, we are being exposed to hundreds to synthetic chemical compounds that are brand new to our planet that did not even exist 20 years ago.

Are our children like “canaries in a coal mine” in the increasingly toxic world we live in?

One thing that we can all do is to get educated and start taking action. Toxic Substances Control Act
Just like canaries, our children are significantly more vulnerable than adults, as these chemicals affect their developing bodies in more ways that are still difficult to fathom.

So, our children are growing up as a part of a giant experiment with potentially devastating consequences.

How will these chemicals affect their development, their health, their ability to achieve their full potential? Will our children end up paying the price for our negligence for the rest of their lives?

And is there anything that we do about it?

Step 1: Ignorance Is NOT Bliss

Step one is to get educated about the problem.

Ignorance is NOT bliss when it comes to our health. Not knowing about a disturbing issue will NOT cause it to go away!

Did you know that of 60,000+ chemicals that were grandfathered by TSCA law only about 200 were ever tested for safety directly by the EPA? 

The Toxic Substances Control Act (ToSCA) of 1976 mandated the EPA to protect the public from “unreasonable risk of injury to health or the environment” by regulating the manufacture and sale of chemicals. One might think that Environmental Protection Agency exists to protect the public from dangerous and potentially carcinogenic substances, but thousands of chemicals were never tested by the EPA because they were not considered an “unreasonable risk.”

So, contrary to what the name implies, TSCA does not separate chemicals into categories of toxic and non-toxic. Rather it prohibits the manufacture or importation of new chemicals that are not on the TSCA 60,000+ Inventory grandfathered when the law was passed!

As a parent I find it deeply disturbing, not to say scary.

Listen to the interview with a world-renowned pediatrician and environmental health expert Dr. Leo Trasande, who will explain how chemical exposures put our kids at risk, how much environmentally-mediated illness costs our nation, and what steps we can take to protect our children from harm.

Listen to the Green Street Radio or download the mp3 file here here.

Of course, there is huge money at stake for the manufacturers. The titans of the cosmetics industry are hard at work fighting common sense laws that would keep toxic chemicals out of everything from bubble bath, mattresses, clothing to lipstick.

But the costs to the society and the environment that we are all paying can no longer be ignored.

Step 2: Start Taking Action

Starting with the smallest action – “voting with your purse” and not buying the products that contain toxic ingredients. Many of the toxic cleaning products can be easily substituted with safer alternatives, for example, baking soda, vinegar, lemon juice are great for household cleaning needs.

But ultimately we can’t shop our way out of this problem.

Help spread the message – tell others about what you learned.

Write to the companies that are using toxic products to let them know your concerns.

Write to your elected officials demanding their support for the bills that promote positive change.

Join or support an organization working to increase public awareness and change the laws.

Our children are completely dependent on us to take action and make the right decisions for them!

More Resources:

Tell Congress to Stop Industry’s Trojan Horse Bill  “The Cosmetic Safety Amendments Act of 2012” was recently introduced by Representative Leonard Lance (R-NJ). According to the Campaign for Safe Cosmetics organization “This is a classic Trojan horse – it may sound like a step forward on the surface but the “fine print” inside the bill would allow industry to continue placing profits over public health.  This bill would put into law the current system that allows the industry to “self-regulate” the safety of cosmetics which has resulted in carcinogens in baby shampoo, lead in lipstick, formaldehyde in hair products, hormone disruptors in fragrance and mercury in face creams. It would also handcuff states from taking action to pass locally tailored policies to protect the health of their own state residents. ”

The Campaign for Safe Cosmetics – The Campaign for Safe Cosmetics is a coalition effort launched in 2004 to protect the health of consumers and workers by securing the corporate, regulatory and legislative reforms necessary to eliminate dangerous chemicals from cosmetics and personal care products.

EWG’s Skin Deep database: EWG’s Skin Deep database gives you practical solutions to protect yourself and your family from everyday exposures to chemicals.

Toxic Chemicals in the Enviroment

Toxic Chemicals in the Enviroment : How do they affect our kids and what can we do about it?

Questions? Comments? Suggestions?

If you have a favorite recipe, why not submit it here in the comment section of this smoothie recipes blog for others to enjoy too!

I also welcome any comments, questions and suggestions. Thanks!