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Posts Tagged ‘whole foods’

Well… happy Sunday!  How the heck did that get here so fast?!  If you’ve been following my Facebook page, you’ll have seen me posting my daughter Jessica’s lunches this week.  She’s 10 now and apparently has outgrown Tinkerbell.  When I asked her at dinner tonight how she liked her Tinkerbell that I put in her lunch, she kind of shrugged and gave me this look I am quickly becoming to understand is on par with the look you give your grandma when she brings out her new atomic clock that she ordered through Publisher’s Clearing House.  I am the uncool parent that tries really hard, and gets sympathy points for that, but when push comes to shove, Tinkerbell’s shoved to the bottom of the lunchbag.  She saw my fallen face and quickly reassured me that “Don’t worry, Mom, nobody else saw it.  I took it out of there really fast.”  So.  Tinkerbell is on the D-list with the purple peace sign set these days.  Ah well.  The rules change hourly, at times.

Monday’s lunch is whole wheat waffle heart-shaped sandwiches with cherry cream cheese filling, cantaloupe/kiwi/pineapple salad, and turkey and string cheese cube kabobs on a bed of sprouts. Two organic gummy worms grace the heart compartment. Her snack is in the Wexy bag, and it’s a blend of dried unsweetened coconut flakes, dried cranberries, roasted pepitas and sunflower seeds, and a (very) few Ghirardelli dark chocolate chips.


Tuesday’s lunch is whole wheat wraps with my herbed bean spread, sprouts, and ham. Abby’s wrap has avocado but Jess doesn’t like avo. Odd child. There are also grape and cheese kabobs, and a blobby of the cherry cream cheese as a dip for
celery. A few kiwi hearts and some jellybeans are in there for color. I’m not sure why, but a lot of these lunches are coming out orange and green. They’re sorta monochromatic, but at least they’re not just different shades of brown like the processed food lunches available at school.

Wednesday’s lunch is two whole wheat banana pancakes cut into beehives and stacked on romaine leaves and a few sprouts; cheese bees and hearts; pineapple pieces rolled up in Applegate organic ham; a cherry cream cheese dollop surrounded by apple pieces; and two organic sour gummy worms. For snack there is a Wexy bag with some dried coconut flakes, raisins, and toasted seeds.


Thursday’s lunch is organic garden vegetable soup (in the blue Thermos), which I will heat up in the morning so it’s still hot at lunch. The sandwich is organic ham and cheese on sprouted 7-grain bread, with organic corn, peas, strawberries, and two sugary little gummy worms. Snack is a smoothie freeze pop. It is really important to us to only buy organic strawberries. The laundry list of pesticides used on conventional strawberries is criminal.

Friday’s lunch is leftovers from tonight’s dinner. In the blue Thermos there will be refried beans, taco meat, and melted cheese, all kept nice and hot til lunch. Then in the big compartment there is lettuce on the bottom with 4 mini-tortillas cut from one large tortilla. With the scraps from the big tortilla, I cut out hearts, brushed them with coconut oil (the only oil that’s ok to heat) and sprinkled a little sea salt on them, and baked them for about 10 minutes at 375 degrees F. Chips! Then there are also strawberries and carrots, and fruit leather.

So what do you pack in your kids’ lunches?  Do they help choose, or do you surprise them with little things?  Do you include a treat every day, or once a week?  I look forward to hearing from you!

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This recipe is adapted from an Ina Garten Chinese Chicken Salad recipe to accommodate what we had on hand, to contain less fat (not because of calories, but just because the texture was too oily), and to include less salt (again, the original recipe was overpoweringly salty).  If you don’t like using peanut butter, you could certainly substitute any other nut butter.

This is a quick and easy weeknight recipe for us.  It’s great cold, and if you’re in a hurry and your chicken doesn’t cool all the way down, it’s great warm too.  I put the leftover bit in the fridge for my lunch tomorrow.  It keeps very well for another day or two, and it will be delicious on toasted bread with spring greens to cushion it.

We have always put this over a big green salad because it’s a main dish, a protein, and a dressing all in one.  Served with a bowl of watermelon chunks on the side, it’s just about the perfect hot summer night meal!

Chinese Chicken Salad

Serves 4

INGREDIENTS

  • 1 lb. chicken thighs, boneless and skinless
  • 1/2 lb. asparagus, ends removed, and cut in thirds diagonally
  • 1 red bell pepper, cored and seeded
  • 2 scallions (white and green parts), sliced diagonally
  • 1 T white sesame seeds, toasted

DRESSING

  • 1/4 c. extra virgin olive oil
  • 1/4 c. Bragg’s apple cider vinegar
  • 2 T. low-sodium tamari
  • 1-1/2 T. toasted sesame oil
  • 1/2 T. honey
  • 1 clove garlic, minced
  • 1/4 t. powdered ginger
  • 1/2 T. sesame seeds, toasted
  • 1/4 c. natural nut butter
  • 1 t. sea salt
  • 1/2 t. freshly ground black pepper

DIRECTIONS

Grill the chicken ahead of time or set aside freshly grilled chicken until cool enough to handle.  Shred the chicken in large bite-sized pieces.

Steam the asparagus for 3 to 5 minutes until crisp-tender.  Rinse under cold water to stop the cooking.  Drain.  Cut the peppers in strips about the size of the asparagus pieces. Combine the cut chicken, asparagus, and peppers in a large bowl.

Whisk together all of the ingredients for the dressing and pour over the chicken and vegetables. Add the scallions and sesame seeds and season to taste. Serve cold or at room temperature.

Shared on Food Renegade’s Fight Back Friday

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What follows is a parade of real food we cooked and enjoyed on our vacation a few weeks ago.  Now, we were on vacation, so we strayed a bit from the real food path at times.  Wine, tortilla chips, and salsa were devoured (don’t panic, they were organic).  Hot fudge sundaes were relished (soooo not organic).  Squeaky-fresh cheese curds were munched (who the hell cares, they were so fresh they squeaked – exceptions must be made).  On the way home in one last hurrah at a gas station, I ate Twinkies.  TWINKIES.  Two of ‘em.  They cost me $1.19 and my processed food sobriety chips.  I am proud to say, however, I have been back on clean food since then.

Is there anything pictured that you’d like the recipe for?  Leave a comment and I will happily oblige.

Pastured beef burgers and watermelon

Veggie sandwiches on sprouted 7-grain toast and peaches

Bourbon steak-topped stuffed portabellas with smoked mozzarella

Chicken Sandwiches

Whole wheat pancakes with real maple syrup, and a glass of strawberries and blueberries

Whole wheat bread, pastured butter, apple slices, broccoli and cauliflower salad, and charcoal-grilled chicken pieces

Thick-rolled oatmeal made with whole milk, maple syrup, walnuts, yogurt, and fresh blueberries

Sprouted 7-grain toast with pastured butter, and scrambled eggs with broccoli

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These are the last five of the ten questions I posted as my biggest hitters when people ask me about food.

6.  How did you find this information about food, like what to eat and what not to eat?

We have streaming-only Netflix for $8/month, and Hulu Plus through a Roku for $8/month.  There are lots of great documentaries on food, bees, and just about anything else you could want to see a documentary about.  Here is a list of the food documentaries we have watched in the last couple of months:

  • Food, Inc.
  • Food Matters
  • Forks Over Knives
  • The Future of Food
  • Fat, Sick, and Nearly Dead
  • Fresh
  • King Corn
  • Ingredients
  • Get Vegucated!

I also read.  In the last few months I’ve read the following food-related non-fiction books:

  • Fair Food (Hesterman)
  • Fed Up!  (Wu)
  • The World According to Monsanto (Robin)
  • Turn Here Sweet Corn:  Organic Farming Works (Diffley)
  • The Omnivore’s Dilemma  (Pollan)
  • Food for Life  (Barnard)

I regularly read blogs that have great recipes with real food and/or offer information while referencing their sources.  Here are a few of my favorites:

Every one of these sources of information leads you to another source.  It’s a pretty “organic” process.  Ha ha.

7.  Really?  You only drink water?

Yes.  I have lots of opinions about this.  I’m sort of a pain in the ass that way.

8.  How do you get your kids to eat all those veggies?

This one’s pretty simple.  Richard or I make one dinner, and that’s what’s for dinner.  I tell them if they don’t like it, there are apples and carrots in the fridge.  Go nuts.  Sometimes they choose the apples and carrots, but not very often.  They almost always eat some of everything, and if they really don’t like it they might go for a carrot after dinner.  We only allow dessert (ice cream) on Tuesday and Friday nights, so we save ourselves the trouble of repeating the mantra ”Eat your veggies if you want dessert!”  No bargaining.  I don’t care how much they do or don’t eat on Tuesday and Friday nights.  They get their dessert regardless.  It takes a lot of stress out of the equation.  Kids aren’t going to starve themselves.  If they know there aren’t going to be chicken nuggets or macaroni and cheese featured on the regular menu, they’re not going to hold out and go hungry waiting for those things.

Plus, our kids ROCK.

9.  Monsanto?

BAD.  Very bad.  Very scary.  I get a little tongue-tied on this one because it’s so big.  I’m not going to write about it because others have done it better.  I’m pretty sure Monsanto information is in all of the documentaries and books I listed above.  Just google “Monsanto GMO” and you’ll be reading for hours.  ‘Nuff said.

10.  How do you find time for all this stuff?

Usually between 8:30 pm and 11:00 pm, after the kids are in bed.  I also read a book while eating my lunch at work, or sometimes read blogs on my phone.  Richard and I are fortunate enough to be able to have a “date night” every Friday night, and we’ll usually do some grocery shopping and/or check out a new food source.  When the farmers markets start up we’ll be taking the kids to them every weekend and there’s always lots of information there.

So that’s pretty much it.  What do you think?

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I made this for the girls for lunch on Saturday.  They are both hardcore salad dressing abstainers; however I sneaked a little of this vinaigrette onto their salads and they raved about it.  Who would have thought?  I had one myself and I must say, this is the most inspired thing I’ve made in quite a while.  It was so simple, too.  I wanted something sweet, tangy, easy, and quick.  Fait accompli!

Strawberries are also one of those items I must buy organic.  The flavor alone is worth the extra cost.  They were on sale this week, so that extra cost was $.25.  The organic strawberries were $3.00, and the non-organic were $2.75.  Too good to pass up, and their flavor is unsurpassed.  Their sweet, bright flavor makes me think of the tiny, sweet, sun-warmed strawberries in my mom’s garden when I was growing up.

Strawberry Walnut Salad with Honey Vinaigrette

Serves 2

Strawberry Walnut Salad

  • 3 c. spring greens
  • 1/2 c. raw walnut halves/pieces
  • 1 c. sliced fresh strawberries

Honey Vinaigrette

  • 1 T. raw honey
  • 1 t. balsalmic vinegar
  • 1 t. lime juice
  • tiny dash of sea salt
  • 2 t. water

DIRECTIONS

  1. Arrange the spring greens in a bowl and toss the strawberries and walnuts on top.
  2. In a small bowl, whisk together the vinaigrette ingredients.  Drizzle over the salad, or toss with it if you wish.

Enjoy!

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In this post I’ll tackle the first five of the ten questions I posted as my biggest hitters when people ask me about food.

1.  You’ve lost a lot of weight.  How did you do it?

Richard and I made the decision to cut processed foods and chemical additives out of our lifestyle, and eat only whole, organic foods.  This means organic produce, legumes and grains, as well as humanely raised and pastured meats and eggs,  We drink plain water, and occasionally Richard has an herbal tea.  We eat dairy, but much less than we used to.  We try to keep dairy consumption to under 15% of our diet.  We do have “junk food” occasionally, such as whole wheat bread and whole wheat cookies, but only if we make them.  At this point, I’m usually getting an unbelieving, slightly horrified stare.

2.  How did you get started on this kick?

After about six months of seeing the documentary Fat, Sick and Nearly Dead available on Netflix, I finally watched it.  It was an eye-opener.  It is about a guy from Australia who was feeling sick, and fat, and unhealthy, and decided to go on a juice fast for 60 days.  It chronicles his journey through the 60 days from fat and sick to healthy and bright-eyed.  The message made sense, deep inside me.  It’s such a simple concept:  What you eat MATTERS.  I urged Richard to watch it.  After he watched it, we decided to juice fast for a week.  We made it four days, and in that time we had reevaluated our entire food lifestyle.  We finally got clarity, and joined forces to steer our family toward decades of good health and mental vibrancy, and away from decades of steady, incremental decline in health.

3.  Did you start doing this to lose weight?

We initially started our juice fast to kick-start our weight loss, but by the end of four days we had gained a vision of a food lifestyle that didn’t include counting calories or fat grams.  It was so much simpler than that.  Eat lots of plants.  Eat local, humanely raised meat, where you know the conditions the animals live in.  Eat dairy in the same manner.  We are finding as we embrace plants more, we eat less meat, and less dairy, naturally.

4.  Organic’s so expensive.  Do you really think it’s worth it?

I think this question usually assumes an apples-to-apples comparison.  It’s not quite that simple, at least it wasn’t for us.

Before we started on this new lifestyle I went out for lunch at work everyday; subs, chinese, pizza, local restaurants, etc.  When we grocery shopped we’d always buy a couple of frozen pizzas for my mom to feed the kids when Richard and I went on our Friday date nights.  Abby likes crackers so into the grocery cart they’d go, as well as tortilla chips, goldfish crackers, fruit snacks, and always some sort of candy.  We’d also get some fresh produce (half of which usually went bad before we used it), 3 gallons of milk for the week, pre-shredded cheese (more expensive than a block of cheese), canned vegetables, and processed breakfast cereals.  Tortillas made it easy to have a build-your-own-taco night.  Richard and my Friday night date nights always included a dinner out.

So, now we compare that to our usual activities and purchases.  I bring a lunch everyday at work, and it’s usually a green salad or leftovers from the dinner the night before.  Today it was two organic small red potatoes to heat in the microwave at work, with a little pastured butter, organic sour cream, and finished with pink sea salt and pepper.  I brought an organic orange, an organic apple, a small container of raw walnuts, and my two juice bottles for the day.  So that’s the sort of thing I do for lunches now.  It doesn’t cost me anything but leftovers or produce on hand.

When we go out on date nights, we eat at home first.  We have our family meal of good whole foods, and leave afterwards to go do something fun like visit a book store, or see a movie, or scout out new organic grocery sources in the area that maybe we’ve heard about but never visited.  We spend a lot less money and have just as great a connecting evening together as we ever did before, and our kids aren’t eating the frozen pizzas.

Crackers, bread, goldfish crackers, fruit snacks, tortillas, pre-shredded cheese etc. are all processed foods and don’t get into our cart anymore.

All of these changes together have made ample room (and room to spare) in our budget for organic produce, and to obtain meat and dairy from local and sustainability-minded land stewards.  This year we joined our first CSA (Community Supported Agriculture) farm and are looking forward to forging more relationships in the concious-eating community.

As for the organic products themselves, and what benefits they offer:  I think it’s worth it if for no other reason than to detox your body in the intial stages of this change.  I felt like I had been deluging my body with chemicals, unhealthily-raised meat, processed foods, and so many other terrible foods, that I needed to detox all the pesticides and junk that had built up over the decades.  We still juice veggies and fruit for two of our meals, which we consider a medicine.  The nutrition we get from the juices helps our cells work optimally to process the food we consume.  I also think that organic is especially important for kids, because the ratio of what they eat compared to their body size is much different than that of an adult.  They also can’t process toxins as efficiently as an adult because they’re physically smaller and less developed.  I realize that being certified USDA Organic does not erase the problems created by that very certification, but even factory farms that are certified organic are more sustainable than non-organic.

5.  So, what IS ok to eat?

I love this question, because then I get to talk about all the wonderful things we are eating now.  Changing to this food lifestyle is a bounty; it in no way feels like any deprivation such as you might experience on a typical restriction diet.  I feel like we have the best food we’ve ever eaten, every single day.  These days, going out to eat is the almost unavoidable result of obligation (usually work or family related), resulting in a struggle to find something to eat, and it’s frustrating and irritating to be spending more money on less nutritional quality.  Dissatisfying in every way, except the time spent with good company.  Given the choice between big-farm organic or small-farm local non-certified organic, but who take their role as stewards of land, animal integrity, and sustainable agriculture seriously, I’d take the non-organic local product any day of the week.

I know this post is a little rambly, but I’m still figuring out what makes sense for me and my family, and putting it into publishable-quality form isn’t my goal.  It’s to try to convey our sense of purpose, and our struggles, in a way that might resonate with you.

Let me know what you think; leave me a comment.  If you’re on this food train, why and how?  If you’re not, what do you think about that?  Where are you on the spectrum of interest in this lifestyle?  Or are you just overwhelmed and enjoy reading about it but know you’d never find the iron will it would take to change all of these things at once?  Just curious.  Let’s have a dialogue.

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For the first time ever, I had a green salad with avocado and a quinoa cake WITHOUT DRESSING.  Just had to share.  When I shared this breakthrough with a coworker, she said, This is the breakthrough?

Well.

Unimpressed coworker notwithstanding, I just may have finally broken a lifelong addiction to salad dressing, and you were here to see it.  If you need me, I’ll be up on the mountain top over yonder, dispensing whole food wisdom.

Follow-up:  I had another salad for dinner, but this one didn’t even have avocado.  Lettuce, tomatoes, cucumbers, radishes, cauliflower, and a quinoa cake.  CAN I get a witness?!

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Well this was something different.  I’m a pretty hardcore recipe kinda gal, but every once in a while I just spread those wings, let loose a couple of squawks, and take off a’ runnin’.  My brief but exhilarating flight often ends in a bruised pile of feathers and bemused indignation.  You sort of have to understand why recipes work in order to start playing with them, and I leave that whole understanding thing to the experts.  In this case though, I think I actually cleared the fenceline without snagging a primary feather.

The key here is to hover over the pears.  Poke them, move them around, hear how their sizzle is sizzling.  Smell to make sure it’s smelling caramel-y and not smoke-y.  Really let your micro-management skills come alive and to the forefront.  Those borderline OCD tendencies love them a front-row seat; hand them a spatula or fork and watch them tremble with anticipation.

Maple-Caramelized Pears Over Spring Greens

Serves 3 adults and 2 fairly disinterested kids

INGREDIENTS

  • 3 pears peeled, sliced into sections, and cored
  • 1 T. grapeseed oil
  • 3 T. real maple syrup

BASE

  • 1 lb. spring greens
  • 1-2 heads butter lettuce or romaine, chopped
  • 2 avocados, pitted and cubed
  • 1/2 c. walnuts
  • strong-flavored cheese that pairs well with sweet fruit, grated finely and used sparingly

DIRECTIONS

  1. Get a frying pan nice and hot and add the grapeseed oil.  Lay the pear sections in carefully.  Listen to the sizzle.  It should be audible but not alarming.  No panicky pears, please.
  2. Peek under the pears after a few minutes of poking and fretting.  If they’re a bit caramely and browned, flip them.  Wait a few minutes for the new side to caramelize.
  3. Adjust the heat down several notches, to low.  Wait a minute or two for the pan to come down in temperature.  Add the maple syrup.  Swish the pears around in it, flipping them to coat all sides as much as possible.  Now let them simmer about another 10 minutes.
  4. For those final minutes, let your freak flag fly and prod, poke, peek, and just generally be in those pears’ faces until you are satisfied that you have a glistening, caramelized, melty-warm finished product.  Spoon them and their glistening sauce sparingly over the base salads.  Sprinkle with freshly grated cheese (don’t make me tell you what’s in the pre-shredded stuff.  Just grate.)

Savor.  Press your chin glands in satisfaction (Watership Down, anyone?  Anyone?)

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Simple, healthy, and flavorful, this baked fish is a palette for whatever seasonings you like best.  We keep it simple with sea salt, black pepper, garlic powder, and onion powder.

Brown Rice with Vegetables

Serves 4

INGREDIENTS

  • 3 c. cooked brown rice
  • 2 carrots, chopped
  • 2 stalks of celery, chopped
  • 1/2 onion, chopped
  • 1 c. broccoli florets

DIRECTIONS

  1. Steam carrots for 4 minutes.  Add the onions and celery to the carrots and steam 2 more minutes.  Add broccoli florets and steam for 2 more minutes.
  2. Fold vegetables into the rice, and allow flavors to blend for a few minutes before serving.

Enjoy!

Simply Baked Pollock

Serves 4

INGREDIENTS

  • 1-1/2 lbs Wild Alaskan pollock (fresh or thawed)
  • 3/4 t. sea salt
  • 1/4 t. black pepper
  • 1/2 t. garlic powder
  • 1/2 t. onion powder

DIRECTIONS

  1. Preheat oven to 400 degees.  You’ll use the middle or upper middle rack.
  2. Whisk seasonings together in a small bowl.  Spray a shallow baking dish or jelly roll pan with cooking spray.
  3. Lay fish an inch or two apart on pan.  Sprinkle a pinch of seasoning evenly over each piece of fish, altogether using half of the total seasoning mixture.
  4. Bake fish for 10 minutes.
  5. Flip the fish, then sprinkle with remaining seasoning mixture.  Bake another 10 minutes.

Enjoy!

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