YOUR HEALTHY PLATE: Cabbage-a-Go-Go Salad

Cabbage has a tendency to seem kind of boring, but I think it’s just the name that’s so blah. The truth is that it is a fabulous and nutritious vegetable with strong and complex flavors. You can develop those flavors by braising it in a hot frying pan with a little olive oil, for example, the simplest possible way to bring out its complex sweetness and deliciousness.

 

But you can dress it up, too. Cabbage is wonderful with the strong flavors of toasted nuts and sesame oil, the acid of rice vinegar and lime, and the excitement of cilantro. Here they are, all together, in this recipe:

  • 1 small-medium cabbage, shredded finely (remove core and outer leaves)
  • 3 medium carrots, peeled and shredded coarsely
  • 1 cup cilantro, finely chopped (use parsley if you prefer)
  • 1 cup almonds, toasted and chopped
  • 2 tablespoons olive oil
  • 1 tablespoon toasted sesame oil
  • 2 tablespoons brown rice vinegar
  • 2 tablespoons lime juice
  • 1 tablespoon tamari (wheat-free soy sauce)
  • 1 teaspoon honey (optional)
  • 1/2 teaspoon salt

Mix together all the liquids in a small bowl. Then mix the shredded cabbage, carrots, salt, and half the almonds in a large bowl. Pour the dressing over the cabbage mixture, mix well, and sprinkle the top with the remaining almonds. This is a great salad to take to a potluck, by the way. And it might not seem like it, but it’s great for leftovers.


Spheres of Good Health

When I think about being healthy, I think about three intersecting spheres. They are 1) eating patterns (notice I did not call it a diet), 2) activity patterns (not exercise), and 3) rest and relaxation.

Not only is each of these essential on its own, but each also affects the others, such as when, to our collective benefit, we eat homegrown tomatoes in the fall after having potted a few tomato plants back in the spring, or we sleep better after having gone for a long hike.  Or when, like a pile of puppies, we all lie around on the couch after Thanksgiving dinner.

The words “diet” and “exercise” carry a lot of baggage.  Diet and exercise are things we feel we’re supposed to be doing, let’s say, instead of things we want to be doing.

Walking instead of driving, taking the stairs instead of the elevator, brushing your teeth on one foot, stretching our your low back for a minute after your shower, standing at your desk, or walking while meeting with a co-worker — instead of sitting — are all ways to increase activity without signing up for an exercise class.  You could also wear a pedometer, which is said to increase one’s daily steps by 1,000 simply by putting it on.  Sometimes when I’m behind the wheel I feel like I’m driving around on my living room couch, and I don’t like it.  Powering my own engine by walking on my own two legs is a great feeling.  Activity can be incorporated unobtrusively into your life with a little less fanfare than exercise.  Exercise seems like it’s more of an investment.  So stick with the former if that helps.

Where do I even start with “diets”?  First, they don’t work.  Secondly, they don’t work.  What does?  Replacing stripped carbs (corn starch/syrup, white flour, white rice, sugar) with intact carbs, like vegetables, beans, fruits, and grains.  Replacing trans fats and refined oils with nutritious oils like avocados, olives, fish, nuts and nut butters.  Replacing processed foods with whole foods.  That works.

Rest and relaxation means something different to each of us.  First and foremost, it means a regular bedtime with an adequate amount of sleep.  But that’s not all.  We recharge our batteries not just while we sleep, but during our waking hours, too.  Rest and relaxation can be photography, or soccer, or cooking, or book club, or training a dog, or knitting, or painting, or hiking or backpacking, or gardening, or being with friends, or writing, or editing, or holding a kitten, or dancing, or playing piano, or meditating, or yoga, or woodworking.  It could be LEGOS, or reading, or a regular afternoon nap on the weekend, or seeing a play, or hearing a concert, or listening to wind chimes.

The last thing I want to say about these spheres is that while each of them is important in its own right, there is a special kind of synergy where they intersect.  A hike to a picnic grounds, preparing a special dish to share with friends, taking a yoga class that incorporates both movement and relaxation, scheduling your mammogram together with a friend and going out for lunch afterward, gardening with grandchildren — all of these are examples of what I mean.


Scoop at the Coop, and More!

Here is some of the excitement that has happened recently in and around our home:

Last weekend, we were the recipients of three “rescued” Easter chicks. The rescuers were very happy that we agreed to take them; human mothers were getting impatient and the chicks had been banished to their basements. The group consists of a golden buff, a black australorp, and a barred rock. We kept them indoors on the chilly nights this past week, but they slept outside last night when the weather report finally predicted temperatures in the low 50’s. I put them near, but not with, the big girls in a separate, empty, parallel pen with a door that opens to a common sheltered area.

Very early this morning we heard a big ruckus outside. I prayed a short prayer that none of the babies was turning into a rooster, and promptly fell back asleep. But when I woke up later and dressed, a quick inspection revealed that the inside door to the pen holding the chicks had opened, and several of the big girls were throwing their weight around and reminding the little chicks of their place in the pecking order.

We had been planning to keep them separate until the chicks were close to adult-sized, but they have been holding their own today, so I am going to ditch those plans and let the groups intermingle. I continued my morning chores. I got the wheelbarrow and brought it around to the coop for the weekly cleaning and bed changing, but when I threw open the door I actually discovered a black Wyandotte right in the middle of laying her egg. I closed things up and went back later. I always take all the old straw and dump it in a corner of the garden. Over time, it turns into nutritious mulch. What I really love most of all is how the chickens turn weeds into eggs and poop, and nature turns poop and straw into mulch, and the garden turns mulch into vegetables, and weeds, and so on.

Speaking of eggs, today I collected 2 eggs. That’s not very many. There may be more later. We got 8 eggs yesterday, but the dog stole them all when I wasn’t looking. This happens from time to time. We have a lot on our minds; she is a one-trick puppy. Even though she is 10 years old, she still has a gorgeous, shiny coat. I wonder why.

I did a lot of weeding this morning, and of course I carried the large bunches of weeds back to the chicken coop for all the girls to enjoy. And they did.

I’ve been getting some potatoes ready for planting. Last week I cut them up so each had an eye, and then I left them on the counter to “harden.” Today I filled a drainage-friendly garbage pail 1/3 full with dirt and recycled straw from the coop (last year), and then buried all the potato pieces. I also planted a couple of onion sets nearby. Next weekend I think I’ll plant some tomatoes and lettuce seeds.

Best of all, this morning I found my first asparagus spear! It was thick and white, not yet emerging from the recycled straw that I sprinkled around the asparagus bed back in the fall. In the process of weeding, I broke it off by accident. So I had to eat it.

I also made onion soup today, which I have not done for years. In the past two weeks, our CSA has delivered a couple of large bags of onions, and they need to be eaten. So I peeled and then sliced 7 large onions very thinly, tossed them into a pot with hot olive oil, and let them caramelize on low heat for about an hour. I stirred the pot every 10-15 minutes to prevent sticking. Then I added a dozen small turkey meatballs (leftovers from Friday night dinner) to enhance the flavor, but these are not necessary unless you already have some in the refrigerator. I also added a few minced garlic cloves, some white wine, 8 cups of hot water, one-quarter teaspoon dry thyme (or one-half teaspoon fresh), 10 shakes of pepper, and 3 shakes of coarse salt. Easy-peasy. I can’t think of a single reason why it took so long to get around to making a pot.



Taking it On the Road

Most people say that a lack of time is the main obstacle to preparing something whole and nutritious to eat. This gets even more complicated when you are at work or on the road. We’re always trying to whittle down the amount of time we need to make meals, while at the same time keeping it real. So if you regularly find yourself in an office or a lunch room or a hotel room that has a microwave oven, I’ve come up with a few unusual and creative meal ideas for when you are away from home. Transportation security will not stop you for traveling with quinoa or sweet potatoes or a spork.

Each of these recipes takes just one minute to gather the ingredients, but read the instructions carefully, because preparation and cooking times vary greatly. Actual cooking times range from 30 seconds to 20 minutes. All these recipes are designed to serve just one.

Idea #1:  Sweet potatoes and peanut butter. 10 minutes from start to finish.

  • Ingredient gathering: Rinse a small-medium sweet potato and wrap it in a paper towel. Pack it up along with a jar of peanut butter (unless you already keep one at your office like I do), or spoon some peanut butter into a small container suitable for travel.
  • Preparation/Cooking:  Dampen the paper towel in which your sweet potato is wrapped, and place it in the microwave oven. Cook at 100% power for 5-6 minutes, and go check your messages. Once the potato is soft, remove it from the oven, slice it open, and spoon into it 1-2 tablespoons of peanut butter. If the potato is hot enough, sometimes the peanut butter melts a little and gives it an extra layer of added flavor.

Idea #2:  Red quinoa with raisins and almonds. 25-30 minutes from start to finish.

  • Ingredient gathering: Measure 1 /2 cup quinoa into a microwave-friendly (e.g., glass) jar with at least a 2-cup capacity, along with 1 tablespoon each raisins and almonds. Close tightly, and pack it up to take on the road.
  • Preparation/Cooking:  Fill the jar with approx. 1 cup water. Do not replace the jar lid. Cover with a paper towel, and cook in a microwave oven at 100% power for 5 minutes. Now the quinoa must rest for 15 minutes to absorb the water. If you are staying at a hotel, this is the time to brush your teeth, practice a few yoga positions, and shower. Then check your meal. Except for the very top layer, which will remain dark, almost all the grains will have turned translucent with a visible white ring. If they have not, cook it for 3 more minutes, let it sit for 5 more minutes, and get dressed in the meantime. Now you can enjoy your quinoa. Just one word of warning: If you use white quinoa, be prepared for it to cook a lot faster.

Idea #3:  Oatmeal (steel-cut). 8 hours (all day or all night) from start to finish, but with the least prep/cook time.

  • Ingredient gathering: Measure 1 /2 cup steel cut oats into a microwave-friendly (e.g., glass) jar. Add any of these, as you like: 1 tablespoon of dried apples or apricots, 1 teaspoon of chia or flax seed, one shake of cinnamon, 1 tablespoon peanuts. Pack it up to take on the road. Take along a restaurant packet of white or cider vinegar, or measure a very small amount into a very small travel-friendly container. You must REMEMBER TO TAKE the vinegar.
  • Preparation/Cooking: If you would like to eat your oatmeal for breakfast, then do this next part the previous evening, before you go to bed. If you plan to have it for dinner, then do it in the morning before you leave your hotel room. Add 1 cup water to the jar, along with approximately 1 /4 teaspoon of vinegar. Let it sit uncovered at room temperature all night (or all day) long. The acid in the vinegar will cook the oats without any need for heat. The sugars in the dried fruit will slowly seep into and sweeten the oats. When you are ready to eat, heat up your oatmeal in the microwave for 30-60 seconds, and enjoy. You can add more sweetener if you like.

If you have other ideas, please share them below!


YOUR HEALTHY PLATE: Incredibly Delicious Almond Butter-Ginger Sauce

It is my pleasure to share this incredibly delicious sauce adapted from fellow Cleveland blogger, Healthy Girls Kitchen. You know, you can make a nice brown rice bowl with steamed vegetables and cubes of tofu or chicken, and then sprinkled with a little sea salt.  Or you can turn it from great to unforgettable with this unbelievable sauce. The sauce is also great on salad. Or straight from a spoon if you’re desperate.

  • 1/3 cup pitted dates
  • 1/2 cup almond butter
  • 3 Tbsp rice vinegar
  • 1 1/2″ piece of raw ginger, peeled and cut into chunks
  • 1 Tbsp tamari
  • 2 cloves garlic
  • 1/2 cup water

Put the dates in a shallow bowl, cover them with warm water, and allow to soak for 10-30 minutes. Then put all the ingredients, including the date liquid, into a blender or food processor and liquefy. If necessary, add more water by the teaspoonful to thin the sauce to the desired consistency.

This sauce is just incredible. It’s sweet, it’s salty, it’s sour, it’s spicy, it’s umami, it’s everything.


YOUR HEALTHY PLATE: Shelli’s Avocado Soup

This soup is an inspiration. It was invented by a co-worker who was generous enough to share it with YHIOYP.  It is most unusual, and we are very lucky to have the recipe.
 
  • 2 medium-large avocados (peeled) 
  • 2 cups almond milk
  • juice of one-half lemon
Using a high-speed blender, blend together the avocados, almond milk, and lemon juice until smooth.  Pour into a large soup pot and set aside. 
  • 1 cup chopped rainbow carrots
  • 1/4 cup onion, chopped
  • 1-3/4 cup water
In a separate, medium-sized saucepan, boil the chopped carrots and onion for approx 10 min in the water. 
  • 2 medium tomatoes
  • 1 handful fresh parsley
  • 1/2 teaspoon each salt, pepper, and garlic powder.
Now add the tomatoes, parsley, salt, pepper, and garlic powder to the saucepan and continue cooking approx 10 more min. When the carrots are just beginning to soften, transfer the contents of the medium-sized pan into the large soup pot and stir well. 
You could eat this soup right away, while it is still warm. It will be good. But if you can wait, then chill it overnight and serve it cold the next day. As a cold soup, this is really spectacular.

YOUR HEALTHY PLATE: Peanut Butter & Jelly Smoothie

I found an amazingly unusual recipe on the Blendtec website last week.  I would never have thought of a peanut butter and jelly smoothie.  It would make a great snack, a great breakfast, a great treat, and even a great dessert.

Add to your blender in the following order:

  • 1 cup almond milk
  • 1 /2 a frozen banana
  • 1 tablespoon peanut butter
  • 1 tablespoon strawberry preserves
  • 3 strawberries

Add a few ice cubes for more freeze if you choose.

Tell me this isn’t awesome!


Magical Mung Beans

A couple of years ago, while standing on line in a grocery store, I saw the man in front of me place a huge sack of dried mung beans on the belt. The thick, white bean sprouts seen on salads in restaurants, salad bars, and so on are grown from mung beans.

I had never before seen so many mung beans in one place. You can make a big jarful with 2 tablespoons. “What are you going to do with all those mung beans?” I asked. He said he had seven kids. Oh.

The cost of nutritious food is an ongoing concern, and here is a great solution. You can cook little green mung beans like any other bean, in a pot of hot water or in a crockpot all day long with vegetables. You can mash them up a bit and pour them over grains, including brown rice, or roasted vegetables, like spaghetti squash. Or you can sprout them.

There are a few significant misconceptions about sprouting, and I’m about to dispel them. First, you don’t need a special expensive jar with a special, equally expensive lid. A few days ago I poured a couple of tablespoons of dry mung beans into a clear, medium-large glass jar. A recycled spaghetti sauce jar is perfect. You just want the jar to be clear so you can see the sprouting progress. Kids love this, by the way.

I filled the jar with water, and left it to sit on the kitchen counter all day (or all night if you prefer).

At the end of the day (or the next morning), I drained out the water through my fingers, filled it with fresh water and emptied it out again a few times. Then I turned the jar on its side with the damp, swollen beans spread out along the bottom of the jar. I returned it to its spot on the kitchen counter. The primary consideration is to place it where it won’t roll off the counter. You could use a kitchen towel for this, but there are plenty of other options.

Also, you don’t need to sprout beans in the dark. They don’t know if it’s dark or not. The plant won’t care about light until it sprouts its first leaves, which will not happen before it sprouts. Over the years, before I had this realization, I found many jars of moldy sprouts in the cabinet days to weeks after I had carefully placed them there. No more. I never forget now, because the jars are right in front of me, on the kitchen counter.

Next step: Twice a day, morning and evening, I rinse the beans, drain them through my fingers, and replace them on the counter. If you forget one time, or even two, don’t worry. Just fill the beans with water again for a few hours to rehydrate them, and then keep going.

Within 2 days, I see tiny white tails beginning to emerge from some of the beans. You can eat them raw now if you’d like, while they are still mostly bean. Within 3 days, the tails are really growing, and in 4 days, they are a couple of inches long. Now they are mostly sprout, and the jar is filling quickly. You can eat them at any of these stages.

I like to sprinkle bean sprouts on salads of course, but I also like to consider the sprouts the main part of the salad and add a few other simple salad veggies, like tomatoes or cucumbers. A sprinkle of salt and a splash of olive oil, and you’re good to go.

By the way, you can make the salad right inside the glass jar you used to sprout your mung beans, wrap it up, and take it to work for lunch. The sprouts won’t wilt like lettuce does. Cheap, delicious, nutritious, and filling. What more can you ask?


YOUR HEALTHY PLATE: Mushroom Pâté

Simple, yet elegant.  

  • 4 hard boiled eggs
  • 2 large onions, chopped 
  • 1 cup walnuts, toasted
  • 8-12 oz mushrooms 
  • 1 /2 tsp salt 
  • 1 /4 tsp ground pepper

Saute the onions in 2 Tbsp. olive oil until very, very soft and turning caramel in color. Rinse the mushrooms well, and add all ingredients to a food processor.

 

Pulse the mixture in the food processor several times until very well mixed but not pulverized. Serve on individual salad plates as follows: Scoop a couple of heaping tablespoonfuls of the mixture onto a large green lettuce leaf with a few whole-grain crackers on the side. And maybe a grape tomato or two, if you have. Looks fancy, tastes scrumptious.