Archive for September, 2009

should you cut skin off fruits and vegetables?

Facebook Pinterest Twitter Linkedin Email

My sons Kincade and Tennyson hate peaches because of their fuzzy skin. I tell them they’re crazy, because inside the fuzzy skin is one of the most fabulous foods on this planet, when they’re in season. (My mom soaked sliced fresh peaches in orange juice overnight—it’s wonderful, and even my peach-skin-haters love it.)

I refused to indulge the “cutting the skin off” thing, even when my kids were little, and I highly recommend you young moms avoid starting that habit. Do it just ONCE and your little ones have been trained to refuse to eat the skins of fruit.

I thought about this because I was with my friend Jean this week, and 9-year old Tennyson came to me and asked me what he could eat. I recommended a peach out of the big box I had on the counter. He whined about the skin and Jean offered to peel it for him. I wasn’t about to deny her this sweet gesture, but I thought, “Ohhh, here we go.”

Why does this matter? The skin of fruit has higher concentrations of antioxidants and fiber (with lower sugar) than the rest of the fruit. (I know, pesticides, too, but wash your produce well, and cut out the top and bottom divots in apples, because that’s where pesticides collect.) Remember that all the studies showing massive health benefits from eating fruits and vegetables are done with conventional produce. And remember that animal protein has a much higher concentration of pesticides than even sprayed vegs and fruits do.

The minute you cut the skin off the apple or peach for a child, you have consigned yourself to a lifetime of making the world’s fast foods a great big hassle. You won’t always be there to cut the skins off. Wouldn’t it be better to train them to eat the whole thing, so they can, in future years, come home, wash the apple in the bowl on your counter, and eat the whole, nutritious thing? Remove the peel and the food isn’t quite as “whole”—less fiber is slowing down bloodstream sugar absorption.

I’m hoping to get you thinking, young moms, so you don’t get this started. Don’t cut whole-wheat bread crusts off bread, either. We’re teaching our children to not use their jaws, causing devolution (the opposite of evolution) of their palates and jaws, and they need those strong muscles and wide palates to break down fibrous whole foods.

Gluten Free Live Granola & Breakfast

Facebook Pinterest Twitter Linkedin Email

When I first got the recipes for the 12 steps, I was a little disappointed that the Live Granola contained oatmeal (my wife is gluten sensitive). I know many on this forum avoid gluten, so I thought I’d post the granola recipe we developed, as well as our favorite breakfast. Hope you enjoy them as much as we do! ~Jason (jayroo)

Sprouted Buckwheat Granola (gluten free)

This was inspired by a granola we found at the Ecopolitan, a raw restaurant in Minneapolis, MN. We go through a batch every week.

  • 4 c buckwheat groats, rinsed, soaked overnight, rinsed well (or soaked 15 minutes and sprouted 24 hours)
  • 2 c raw seeds (e.g. sunflower & pumpkin), soaked overnight, rinsed
  • 2-3 c raw nuts (e.g. almonds & pecans), soaked overnight, rinsed
  • 3 T cinnamon
  • 2-4 T raw honey, softened over medium-low heat
  • Optional: 1 T virgin coconut oil
  • 2 c dried fruit (e.g. raisins and goji berries)
  1. Optional: briefly pulse the larger nuts in a food processor (I leave them whole)
  2. In a large bowl, mix buckwheat, seeds, nuts, cinnamon, honey and coconut oil.
  3. Spread on dehydrator trays with mesh, teflex, or fruit leather sheets. Dehydrate at your preferred temp for 6-8 hours, mix, continue dehydrating until crunchy. The amount listed fills 4 trays in my Nesco dehydrator.
  4. Mix in dry fruit and store in a sealed container at room temp or in the fridge.
  5. Yields 10-12 cups

Sprouted Buckwheat Cereal (gluten free)

This was the first gourmet raw meal that my wife actually enjoyed and asked for again. She once told me I could make it for her every day.

  • 1 cup buckwheat groats, rinsed, soaked overnight, rinsed well (or soaked 15 minutes and sprouted 24 hours)
  • 1 banana, chopped
  • dash of maple syrup
  • optional: raw pecans or almonds, soaked overnight, rinsed, chopped

Process buckwheat, banana, and maple syrup in a food processor until creamy. Top with nuts. Serves 2.

Agave Nectar

Facebook Pinterest Twitter Linkedin Email

http://www.naturalnews.com/024892_fructose_food_health.html

This is an article about agave nectar, saying it is not safe to use…. does anyone know anything about this?

Alternative for Soy Milk

Facebook Pinterest Twitter Linkedin Email

I have read the China Study and know that we should not consume animal protein or at least keep it at 5% of the daily intake.   I also have read that soy products are not what they seem, so if we should stay away from animal products and soy is not that good, what would be an alternative for milk?

Thanks.

Intestinal Distress!

Facebook Pinterest Twitter Linkedin Email

Please help with advise. I love green smoothies but they are not agreeing with my intestines. I have painful, very painful, gas and bloating about 2 hours after drinking one, and lasts until the next morning. I’ve made them for about a week now and I’m no stranger to greens. I love all dark greens, even the bitter ones and usually make a huge salad every day. But blending them into a smoothy has changed everything. I don’t want to give this up! What’s going on with my body and what should I do? Also, does anyone out there get a sore throat after eating chard?

sometimes even GreenSmoothieGirl is “normal”

Facebook Pinterest Twitter Linkedin Email

I went to the store with my kids last night to let them buy whatever they want to host a movie party  for their friends. They put the Starbursts, chips, and microwave popcorn on the conveyor belt. I was, of course, looking around furtively, hoping that no GSG reader (or neighbor, family member, or friend, for that matter) sees this egregious (and rare!) breach of protocol. My kids, however, are staring at the conveyor belt, lost in thought.

Ever wonder what your kids are thinking when they look like that?

In this case, I didn’t have to wonder, because my daughter leaned over and pointed at the loot, and whispered,

“Mom! It’s kind of like we’re a NORMAL family!”

LOL! (But, too bad that this is what “normal” now looks like!)

One part of my transition, 15 years ago, to feeding my family exclusively whole foods (almost all plant foods, 60-80% raw or more) was getting comfortable with the fact that some people don’t see me as “normal.” I say this a lot, but I think it bears repeating: remember that if you do this long enough, some of the same people who are rolling their eyes at you right now will be people coming to you for advice and help years from now. It’s Ecclesiastes 11:1, which will help you trust in karma, that if you do right and help others, good will be returned to you:

“Cast thy bread upon the waters: for thou shalt find it after many days.”

Scuppernong/Muscadine Grapes

Facebook Pinterest Twitter Linkedin Email

Has anyone tried these in a smoothie? After rinsing, I added quite a bit of them to my green smoothie -delicious!

I am not sure about posting information from other sites – hope it’s acceptable here. The information below is rather interesting.

“The oldest cultivated grapevine in the world is the 400 year old scuppernong “Mother Vine” growing on Roanoke Island, North Carolina. The scuppernong is the state fruit of North Carolina.

Eating this whole grape also has health benefits. The hull adds a significant amount of fiber to the diet. When chewed, the seeds provide a grape-seed extract which, it is claimed, can aid in improving memory and other functions.

——————————————————–
Muscadine grapes contain some of the highest levels of antioxidants found in any tested fruit or vegetable. Unlike common vinifera wine grapes, which cannot survive the harsh climate of the southeastern US without the aid of chemical pesticide sprays, Muscadine grapes naturally grow and thrive in the hot, humid and disease-prone climate of the southeastern US.
Just like our immune system, which produces more antibodies when under attack, Muscadine grapes produce more disease fighting phenolic compounds (antioxidants) when under stress from disease. Muscadine grapes contain a powerful and unique combination of resveratrol, ellagic acid, gallic acid, opcs and Quercetin, which has been found to be a chemopreventative, very effective as a cholesterol reducer, along with being anti-osteoporotic, and anti-diabetic, and highly anti-inflammatory.

The muscadine grape has significantly more antioxidant power than other grapes. Research shows that muscadines have been measured as high as 6,800 per 100 grams, compared to 739 per 100 grams for any other grape. The grape skins alone have about 6-8 times as much antioxidant power as whole blueberries.

Antioxidants and Anti-inflammatory Agents
Many of the phytonutrients (health-giving properties in plants) present in the muscadine grape are powerful antioxidants and anti-inflammatory agents. Antioxidants can reverse the damage caused by free radicals. Anti-inflammatory agents ease the pain from arthritis and injuries.

Most well known, resveratrol, is only one phytonutrient contained in the muscadines. Here’s an extensive list of more.

Phytonutrient contained in muscadines

Ellagic Acid Resveratrol
Catechin Epicatechin
Kaempferol Vitamin C
Caffeic Acid Quercetin
Myricetin Piceattanol
Gallic Acid Pectin
Anthocyanidins

These phytonutrients are well-known in the scientific and health community for their beneficial effects. Quercetin benefits the heart and other organs. Ellagic Acid has been linked to anti-aging. Piceattanol (pie-see-at-a-nall) is a known anti-cancer agent. Resveratrol is the most well-known of the nutrients.

The power of antioxidants
“The finding that muscadine grapes are naturally high in healthful antioxidants has led to an expansion of the industry. Antioxidants help protect the body from the damaging effects of oxygen free radicals, which can contribute to degenerative diseases.” *

*Source: College of Agriculture and Life Sciences, North Carolina State University, Raleigh, NC

Muscadines_small

Another cute little green smoothie drinker!

Facebook Pinterest Twitter Linkedin Email

This is GSG reader Bill’s grandson Jack—does he look happy and healthy, or what?   Bill says it’s easier to get his grandkids to drink green smoothies than his adult kids!   True, that: start them young!

Jack

Jack

raw food diet versus alkaline diet

Facebook Pinterest Twitter Linkedin Email

I was having this conversation on Facebook today with a reader, and since I’m sure not all of you are my facebook friends or check in there regularly, I thought I’d share here part of the discussion:

Dear GreenSmoothieGirl (condensed question): I was feeding my kids almond milk but read that overconsumption of nuts leads to mold in the blood. What else should I use?

Answer: The most restrictive diet I know of is the alkaline diet (Robert O. Young, etc.). Well, except for the candida diet, which is even tougher. Dr. Young writes extensively in his various books of mycotoxins (mold, fungus, bacteria, and their byproducts) in the blood from eating acidic foods.

I am highly supportive of this diet but based on observation of human behavior, I don’t feel that most people will undertake it, EVEN IF THEY ARE ILL. If you want to eliminate nuts and eat totally alkaline for a period of time to overcome health challenges, good for you. Your health will benefit. (The alkaline diet will also require that you get rid of grains and many fruits!)

I am very intentionally sitting in the middle of that big divide between folks eating the Standard American Diet and the all-alkaline or all-raw folks. Raw foodists will call what I am teaching “transitional.” I actually believe that a LONG-TERM commitment to eating what I teach, “high raw” or 60-80% raw and the remainder of the diet being whole foods (legumes, grains, cooked vegs), will prevent disease very well for a LIFETIME. I believe that it doesn’t have to be a “transition” to some kind of more pure or “ideal” diet. What I am teaching, I believe, is a common-sense approach that returns you to the basics, the way we were meant to eat, using foods God put on the Earth, but without tons of cooking. Like the vast majority of indigenous and ancient cultures have always done.

Raw goat milk is another good alternative to pasteurized, store-bought dairy milk. You can search this blog for more info.

By the way, I haven’t tested it yet, but at the suggestion of readers, we’ve added a search feature to the site.

Also, almonds are actually pretty alkaline (other nuts are more acidic, like cashews). And yes, eat nuts–but overconsumption will lead to weight gain, too. A quarter cup a day is enough, unless you’re an athlete, in which case you might eat half a cup. I have 1/4 cup cashews in Hot Pink Smoothie in the morning, and usually eat 1/4 cup of almonds, too, as a snack later. (Factor in that I play sports an average of 90 min. to 2 hours a day.)

Spreading the word!

Facebook Pinterest Twitter Linkedin Email

I just got off the phone with my mom and had some great news! Several weeks ago, I went to my step-sisters pool with my kids and mom. Of course, I toted along my big jars full of green smoothie. I got the usually, “What the heck is that?” comment. I told my step-sister all about them, gave her some simple suggestions and let her taste mine. She loved it. What I didn’t know is that now she is hooked!!! She and her oldest son have become green smoothie drinkers! She started telling my step-dad all about it and how much better they feel even after just a few days. Now, he wants to know more. The best thing is, my once unbelieving mom, is now extrememly interested as well. I would love to see her on start drinking green smoothies. She is a coffee/soda drinker, her diet is poor, she gets constant migraines, has fibromyalgia, and multitudes of other problems.

People think I am crazy when I start singing the praises of this super simple drink, but their minds are quickly changed when they feel it for themselves.

I have an older neighbor that lives next door. We talk occassionally and she tells me what’s going on in her life and health, she has not been well lately. She told me she was trying to lose about 15 lbs since her doctor told her she had to. She has been drinking the sugar free Slim Fast drinks. I asked her if I could come over and share with her a way that was much more healthy and more likely to help her regain her health and ideal weight. She agreed. I went over today and she is just so excited. Her son is to have his tonsels burned out!!???!!! because of bad allergies. Plus, he is about 50 lbs over weight. Her grandson and daughter-in-law are both very over weight as well. She wants to get all the information she can so she can share it with them too!

I love that I can freely share this love with some many people and see so many changed by such a simple drink and natural substance that we all take for granted!

One question I have…my neighbor is diabetic. How will the fruit smoothies affect her blood sugar? It’s hard for someone to drink a veggie based green smoothie when they are first introduced to the green smoothie concept. It’s easier to give them the sweeter drinks and let them work up to the stronger greens and no fruit green smoothies. Any advice on this would be greatly appreciated!

By the way, I have been religiously drinking my green smoothies everyday for 6 weeks. I drink from one to three quarts everyday. I eat a mostly a vegan diet and very high raw. I have lost 17.5 lbs. I have gained incredible energy. I can now run a mile and sometimes more, which I do every other day. My skin has cleared. My PMS is virtually gone, to the point that my cycle snuck up on me last month. My moods have leveled out and I don’t have severe mood swings anymore. I am so much more calm and things just don’t bother me like they used to. I haven’t gotten sick even though I have been around a lot of sickness. I am just amazed at the difference a whole foods diet is making in my life! :-)

Thanks yall,
Kari

 

Account