Invest In Your Health: Apple Cider Vinegar

Posted by: Krystal  :  Category: whole foods

In our society we are frequently lacking many minerals and vitamins that our bodies need to be able to function properly. We can help our bodies by making small changes in our diet. Eating whole foods is an investment in our health. Everything we eat should be filled will vitamins, minerals and as many live enzymes as possible. If we are filling our bodies with processed foods, refined sugars and flours we are eating empty calories that can not help our bodies do much more than survive.

It is very important to make small changes that can stick instead of trying to radically alter everything we eat at one time. One such change we can make is adding Organic Raw Apple Cider Vinegar to our diets. Raw Apple Cider Vinegar (that still has the mother in it) is high in potassium, acetic acid and live enzymes. ACV aids digestion and supports a healthy immune system and has been credited with alleviating arthritis, poor circulation, and weight loss.

Adding ACV to your diet is very easy to do. When eating a salad instead of reaching for a bottle of dressing from the store why not make the recipe below? Do you have problems with heartburn? Instead of reaching for your bottle of antacids drink a cup of ACV Tonic. Whenever you are making something that calls for vinegar use ACV instead of distilled white vinegar. Use it in your favorite marinade recipeLook for ways to add this wonderful food to your diet.

Recipes:

ACV Tonic

1-2 teaspoons Bragg’s Organic Raw Apple Cider Vinegar

1 teaspoon Raw Honey

4-6 ounces water

Mix together and enjoy!

Salad Dressing

1 clove of Garlic, minced

1 teaspoon sea salt

1 tablespoon Dijon Mustard

1 tablespoon Raw Honey

1/2 Cup Organic Raw Apple Cider Vinegar

1/2 Cup Extra Virgin Olive Oil

Whisk ingredients together and serve on your salad.

RECOMMENDED RESOURCES:

To Learn More about Apple Cider Vinegar here are some resources:

Amazing Apple Cider Vinegar by Earl Mindell

This book details the history of apple cider vinegar and its many uses.

Folk Medicine by Dr. D.C. Jarvis

Originally written in 1958, this great book shares what Dr. Jarvis found to be great folk remedies in Vermont including the use of honey and apple cider vinegar.

Whole Grain Breakfasts

Posted by: Krystal  :  Category: investment cooking, recipe, whole foods

Are you looking to add more whole grains and vitamin filled foods to your diet? Breakfast is one of the easiest meals to increase your intake of whole grains and wonderfully healthy and delicious foods. The biggest dilemma with incorporating whole foods into your breakfast menu is planning. If you are used to pouring yourself a bowl of processed cereal eating and going it is going to take some effort on your part to change but it is so worth it! You will feel fuller and get so many more vitamins and minerals from preparing your own food. Plus you can control how much sugar and other items go into your food.

Using whole grains for breakfast can stretch your budget while adding vital nutrients to your meal. There are lots of choices: barley, cream of brown rice, buckwheat, cornmeal in the form of Polenta, cracked Kamut, cream of millet, oatmeal, steel cut oats, quinoa, cream of rye, whole spelt, or whole wheat. This is a great way to expand your grains. The grains can be cooked whole, cracked, rolled, as flakes or as a flour. They contain lots of B vitamins, folic acid, vitamin E, zinc, iron, potassium, calcium and more! Talk about taking a multivitamin and these are a lot easier to swallow too!

In order to get the most nutrition from your cereal both Sue Gregg and Sally Fallon recommend soaking, fermenting or sprouting your grain before eating them.

Here is what Sue Gregg has to say about it:

Soaking, fermenting, or sprouting the grain before cooking or baking will neutralize the phytic acid, releasing nutrients for absorption. This process allows enzymes, lactobacilli and other helpful organisms to not only neutralize the phytic acid, but also to break down complex starches, irritating tannins and difficult-to-digest proteins including gluten. For many, this may lessen their sensitivity or allergic reactions to particular grains. Everyone will benefit, nevertheless, from the release of nutrients and greater ease of digestion.

The first stage of preparation in making whole grain porridges or baked recipes, is to soak the whole grains or whole grain flour in an acid medium such as buttermilk, yogurt, or other cultured milk, or in water with whey, lemon juice or vinegar added. As little as 7 hours soaking will neutralize a large portion of the phytic acid in grains. Twelve to 24 hours is even better with 24 hours yielding the best results.

The easiest way to do this is to start the night before. If you want to have oatmeal for breakfast after dinner measure out the oats, water and salt then add a tablespoon of whey* put a lid on it and leave it for the morning. In the morning add raisins and cinnamon if desired and cook the oats until finished. The oats cook up quicker and you can attain the most nutrition from your breakfast. (Don’t forget to serve them with a pat of butter, raw milk or some yogurt for the protein and fat to keep you fuller longer and add the yum factor.)

Sue Gregg’s Breakfasts cookbook contains several recipes for cooking the whole grains for breakfast and the two stage process for the hot cereal, pancakes, waffles and muffins. Read her Talking Pages report on the Two Stage Process that you can find at: http://www.suegregg.com/about/c.htm for more information.

I hope you will add whole grain breakfasts to your meal rotation!

*You can get whey from yogurt or raw milk by letting the yogurt or milk separate and then pour it into a strainer lined with cheesecloth set over a bowl. Tie the cheesecloth to a wooden spoon placed over the bowl. The whey (the clear liquid) will run into the bowl. Let it stand until it quits dripping.

Use the whey as a starter culture for lacto-fermented fruits and vegetables, soaking grains and legumes. The solid is cream cheese. We like to mix it with flavors like pineapple juice, cinnamon or honey or spices and serve it on crackers or celery sticks.

Recipes:

Baked Oatmeal is mostly prepared the night before and tastes delicious with the lemon curd recipe that follows.

Baked Oatmeal

2 cups  oatmeal
2 cups  milk
4 eggs
1/2 cup oil — (I use Virgin Coconut Oil)
1/4 cup honey
2 teaspoons baking powder
1 teaspoon salt
cinnamon — to taste

dried fruit — to taste
nuts — to taste

Mix ingredients except baking powder and cinnamon together and pour into a greased 9 x 13 pan. Refrigerate overnight. Add the cinnamon & baking powder just before cooking

Bake at 350 for 45 minutes until edges are golden brown.

Serving Ideas:  Serve with milk, cream, applesauce, lemon curd or other fruit topping.

Lemon Curd

We make this delicious topping with lemons grown in our own backyard.

5 large egg yolks

2 cups sugar (I use Succant)

1 cup lemon juice (juice of 4 lemons)

Finely grated zest of the 4 lemons (I use a microplaner to help do this job)

¼ pound (1 stick) butter cut into pats

Combine all ingredients except the butter in the top of a heavy double boiler and place over a pot of boiling water. (Make sure the top pan doesn’t touch the water.) Whisk ingredients constantly or use a rubber spatula to scrape the bottom until thickening begins to occur. (About 15 minutes)

Remove from heat and whisk the butter in one pat at a time. The curd should coat the spoon at this point.

Strain the curd into a cool bowl. Cover with plastic wrap and chill. (It will thicken as it chills.)

This keeps well for 2 weeks in the refrigerator.

Serving Ideas: Eat on biscuits, toast, make tarts, or serve on baked oatmeal.