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Category: Food, Health & Wellness

Easy Baked Polenta

Posted in Food, Health & Wellness

Cornmeal is a wonderful, healthy grain! High in fiber, low in fat, and gluten-free; it is also abundant with B-vitamins and minerals to ground you! When you are looking to make an easy side dish, don’t discount polenta. Long regarded as difficult, because it required endless stirring, this recipe couldn’t be easier to make. And it beats the packaged tubes of supermarket polenta HANDS DOWN.

Polenta is a staple of Northern Italian cuisine, but you will find it an excellent side dish for any meal. It’s also wonderful for babies and children.

Make sure to always buy organic Polenta corn grits. Corn is a genetically engineered crop (GMOs). Cornmeal comes in a variety of grades, fine (corn flour for baking), medium and coarse, so be sure to buy the medium grade appropriate for Polenta!

The Pride of Puglia: Polpette di Melanzane (Eggplant Meatballs)

Posted in Food, Health & Wellness

While traveling through Puglia, Italy, this summer, researching and writing about their delicious and healthy cuisine, I was especially taken with these vegetarian poplette. Crusty on the outside and creamy on the inside, they are delectable little bites of flavor: garlic, mint and basil, cheese and eggplant. In no more time than it takes to make traditional MEATballs, you can assemble these. The recipe comes to me compliments of Anna Maria Chirone Arno, but I have been able to adapt it for a two person serving by using one large eggplant and one egg, 3/4 cup of cheese. Go hefty on the dried spices. Serve with a plate of orecchiette and you will swear you were in Puglia. Well, wishful thinking anyway. Buon appetito!

Quinoa Veggie Burgers

Posted in Food, Health & Wellness

Making Veggie Burgers at Home is Easy!

I love veggie burgers. They are a quick meatless dinner and good source of protein, grains and vegetables. But for quite a while now I’ve been eschewing store-bought veggie burgers, even if the label says they’re organic and GMO-free, because I’m uncomfortable with the ingredient list. Soy fillers, even non-GMO soy, are not a good food choice, nor are the high levels of sodium these burgers can contain.

Still, making my own seemed daunting. A lot of steps at the busy dinner hour.  I’ve long been collecting recipes in the hope that one day, with a bit of time and the appropriate ingredients, I would concoct my own. Not only was the result delicious, the process was a cinch! Better yet, I was able to use a bunch of leftovers I had in the fridge – which I love to do, because I hate to waste food (I buy organic, and it’s expensive!). You can devise the recipe to make it your own, too, based on what you have on hand.

Eating Gluten-Free While On Vacation

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Vegan Chocolate Mousse

Posted in Food, Health & Wellness

See these avocados?
They are the key to an incredibly healthy and delicious chocolate-y  dessert! Generally I can pick out any ingredient in a recipe, but the first time I ate this even I couldn’t guess what it was made from…only that it was luscious!
Avocados are heart healthy, high in fiber and have more potassium than bananas. A little known fact is that avocados are an anti-inflammatory food, similar in make-up to olive oil.1  If you have kids who are picky eaters, this is a great way to get healthy fats into them! So gather up your ingredients and blender (food processor or nutri-bullet works just as well), and whip up this delicious, and nutritious, treat! 

The Nutcracker

Posted in Food, Health & Wellness

 

For the longest time the nutcracker sat unused in my kitchen gadget drawer. Sturdy mahogany and shiny metal, inherited from my mothers’ kitchen, it sat dormant for a decade; maybe even two. It wasn’t that nuts weren’t eaten in our home, oh no! They were always front and center in the snack cabinet and baking pantry. And I regularly used them in my main course fare as well: ground nuts in my lentil loaf, whole cashews and peanuts in stir fries. But somewhere along the line I got lazy about my nuts, reaching for the cellophane bag of shelled nuts at the supermarket, and freely pouring from it at home. In the far recesses of my mind I recalled cracking nuts as a child, and even hand-chopping them for recipes. However, I admit the advance of pre-chopped was a convenience that I relished. What could be easier…and neater, too?

While nuts naturally grow in their own little packaging, at some point cracking the shell off became a lost ritual and the shelled, packaged nut industry really began to take off. Nuts began to appear in cans, jars and cellophane bags, to the delight of the consumer and the baker, who no longer had to crack them by the dozen. Cashews were always an exception to this trend; they always were and will be sold shelled. This is because the cashew shell itself is toxic, which is why it must be removed before it goes to market. Pistachios alone continue to hold the allure of being cracked open as part of the ritual, although they, too, are now being marketed as shelled, and the trend is catching on, with the unshelled pistachio nut called a kernel. However 80% of pistachios in America are still sold in-shell, this opposed to approximately 10% of walnuts and just 2% of almonds! According to The Almond Board of California, in-shell sales (as the industry refers to it) only rise slightly around the Christmas holidays. Conversely, 17% of export sales are in-shell, mostly to India and China.At home in most diets from vegan to paleo, the health benefits of nuts are manifold. Depending on the specific nut, you have a wonder food providing protein, with a host of micro-nutrients such as magnesium (almonds), phosphorus (walnuts), copper and manganese (pistachios), to name a just a few of the minerals nuts contain. A source of “good” fats, such as coveted omega-3’s, nuts are naturally gluten-free, high in fiber and anti-oxidants, and low on the glycemic index. The Harvard School of Public Health Nutrition Study cited nuts as one of five food categories associated with weight loss over time, as they contributed to an overall feeling of satiety.


Healthy Blueberry Corn Muffins

Posted in Food, Health & Wellness

Stuck in on a snow day – or any day – is a perfect time to bake a batch of muffins! Not the
cupcake-y kind, full of sugar and unhealthy fats, but this healthy redux of corn muffins. They will immediately become a favorite!

Healthy Blueberry Corn Muffins

Ingredients

  • 1 cup organic cornmeal
  • 1/2 cup whole wheat flour
  • 1/4 cup wheat germ
  • 1 and 1/2 tsp baking soda
  • 2/3 cup plain, whole fat yogurt
  • 1/4 cup plus 3 tbsp organic apple juice concentrate, defrosted. (You can save the remainder in a tupperware in the refrigerator)
  • 2 eggs
  • 1/8 cup organic canola oil
  • 1 and 1/2 cup fresh or frozen organic blueberries

Instructions

  • Preheat oven to 400 degrees.
  • Combine the cornmeal, flour, wheat germ and baking soda in a mixing bowl.
  • Beat the yogurt, juice concentrate, eggs and oil in a separate bowl.
  • Add the liquid ingredients to the dry ingredients and blend well with a few quick strokes.
  • Fold in the blueberries quickly until distributed evenly.
  • Spoon the batter into 12 muffin tins (I line with paper liners). Bake until lightly browned, about 20 minutes. Remove from tins immediately.

Notes

Adapted from What To Expect When You're Expecting, 1986 edition.

My Path To Organic Gardening

Posted in Food, Health & Wellness

It was, ironically, the death of my father that led me to organic gardening. Dad was an avid gardener and one of the last things he requested I do was plant – not vegetables –  but  “…flowers,” he said. “You need to plant a lot of flowers.”Six months went by and one day in the dark of winter, struggling in my despair, I took myself to the library to find a way to fulfill his request. I hadn’t a clue how to plant anything. It was December, 2001, just three months after 9/11. I was six months into my grief. The country was depressed, I was depressed. Since I had no spare land to grow on, I leafed through some dated, black and white books on the topic of container gardening. They had long been gathering dust on the shelves. What caught my eye and sparked my interest though, that dismal December afternoon, were the books about growing vegetables. To me, these seemed to have a point. After all, you could eat vegetables. Containers and vegetables. I lugged a stack of books home.

Already “into” nutrition and healthy diet, I decided this would be an acceptable substitution for flowers and Dad would understand. I had to mail-order organic seeds, since none were readily available at the time. The High Mowing Seeds catalogue, when it arrived in the mail, was like Christmas for me. I ordered more varieties of tomatoes, eggplant, and peppers than made sense, then ordered about 15 more packets of other vegetable and herb seeds. I really just couldn’t limit myself. I also ordered warming pads for the seedlings, and any other contraptions that looked “necessary.” I was honestly like a kid in a candy store.