From the category archives:

salads

With all the picnics and outdoor bar-b-ques and joyful summer happenings abound, I thought I’d share this quick and tasty salad.

I made up the other day when meeting a friend for a picnic in Prospect Park (Brooklyn).

On a side note about BBQs and parties and keeping your summer figure, I employ a method I like to call:

“I’ma bring what I’m gonna eat. I’ll gladly share it with you.”

This way, I know if I show up and my only options are pulled pork, pig candy (please don’t ask), garlic bread, and a paltry salad, I’ve got myself covered with something that I know I want to eat, I know I enjoy, and I can share it with others. (You may recall my super bowl Sexy Pie post).

So here’s a refreshing summer salad for you to share with friends!

Oh! I almost forgot — the best part of this salad is that it is s u p e r quick to pull together. To recap, it’s the best becasue, it’s tasty, it’s easy to make, it appeals to many, and it’s good for your looks. I’m open to names for this one. Post below.

Best picnic salad. Ever.

Ingredients:

1 carrot

1 beet

1 cucumber

1/3 white onion (or bunch of scallions)

1 apple

1/2 -1 TBS Apple Cider Vinegar (raw)

1-2 tsps Extra Virgin Olive Oil

Celtic sea salt (most mineralizing salt) to tatse

Optional Fancy Stuff:

Chopped up fresh mint

Chopped up spinach

 

Directions:

1. Wash and peel all vegetables .

2. Grate all vegetables with cheese grater – use the larger holes

3. Also grate the onion. Don;t grate the green onions if that’s your onion source. Chop those.

4. Mix together.

5. Add vinegar, olive oil, and salt to taste.

6. Putt on a snazzy sun hat and waltz out the door.

Be the first to comment

Many people are feeling the winter blues. We’ve had a cold and precipitous winter, but take heart! In 2 months it will be April. The flowers will be blooming, the spring shoots will be coming up.

NOW is the perfect time to start readying yourself physically, emotionally and spiritually for spring. The days are getting longer, it’s all very exciting. So let’s get our bodies into shape for the burst of energy and joy that happens when spring finally breaks!

Here are 5 tools you can use to beat the Winter Blues, enjoy the last of winter, and prepare your body for spring.

1. Eat dark, leafy greens.

And if you’re doing that already? Eat more. Dark leafy greens promote light, flexible energy. They are nutritionally dense powerhouses and packed with chlorophyll.  Chlorophyll is created by soaking up the sun’s bright energy.

Chlorophyll is to a plant as  blood is to a human. When you eat greens in abundance during the cold, bleak winter months, you are summoning the essence of spring and summer.

Just look at all the pictures in this post. Which does the Bok Choy Recipe picture (below) remind you more of?

Flushing your body with greens is one of the most rewarding things you can do.

2. Make at least 51% of your food raw.

Many of us gravitate to cooked foods during the winter months, but if you eat a little over half of your diet in raw veggies, you can start to release weight, reduce inflammation and lower cholesterol (to a name a few things). Raw foods contain incredible enzymes and nutrients that get lost once we cook our food past 108º. The way I like to eat raw veggies in the winter is to take them out of the fridge well before I consume them – this way they are room temp, and not cold! Use raw foods to start the slimdown down, reduce inflammation, and get ready for spring.

3. Capture more time.

Consider winter a retreat. Winter is the perfect time to go inward and s l o w down. It’s a good time to do a gentle food cleanse (winter cleanse coming soon).  Use this time to connect with your spiritual side, start new habits, reflect, stretch, create new projects. If you’ve got kids that are going bonkers – start a project like building a birdhouse and readying it for spring.

4. Take a liquid Vitamin D supplement.

I’m not too big on supplements but there a few I reccomend. Vitamin D3 is one of them. Almost everybody is low in this hormone (it is not a vitamin) and recent studies suggest that Vitamin D deficiency can contribute to infertility, cancer and other diseases. Simply put, I find when I up my Vit D, I’m just happier.

5. Eat seasonally.

As you match nature’s rhythms, you sync up with them. Winter doesn’t feel so miserable and spring feels much closer.  Focus on soups, beans, winter greens, squashes, sweet potatoes, and warming teas. And don’t forget to eat 51% raw.

Here’s a surprisingly delicious recipe for baby bok choy and mushrooms. It tastes like it’s cooked, but it is raw, fresh and full of enzymes and nutrients that will give you a lift.

Bok Choy and Mushroom Salad

Serves 1

This is easy and quick — experiment with other vegetables

Ingredients:

1 head of baby bok choy – keep leaves intact, chop stems

1 handful of shitake, cremini, or oyster mushrooms – clean and slice to desired thickness

Dressing:

1/3 cup olive oil

1/4 cup wheat free tamari

2 cloves of garlic

Directions:

1. Wash, drain and prep bok choy and mushrooms

2. Add oil, tamari and garlic  to food processor or high speed blender and blend until smooth

3. marinate salad with half of the dressing (save the other half) and let sit for 15 minutes to a few hours. The longer the salad sits, the more wilted and cooked tasting it will become.

Let me know what you think!

How do you beat the winter blues?

Be the first to comment

So, by now you’ve probably figured out that it’s my secret mission to help you feel great and get healthy without it being a big deal.

There are so many simple, small shifts we can make with our food that add up to a big difference.

This is one of my favorites…. wait for it…garnish… are you thinking orange slice? Tomato? Plastic grass from the sushi place?

PARSLEY!

Yep. Flat leaf, curly Italian, it doesn’t matter.

Parsley is packed with a ton of iron and is rich in copper and maganese.

We keep it in our refrigerator at all times. Just put the bunch in a glass of filtered water and snip off as you need.

What do you add it to, you ask?

Almost everything. I chop it fine and add it to eggs. I put it in soup. I add it to my green smoothie. I throw it on just about everything.

Quinoa, salads, cucumber and tomatoes, salsa fresca, pesto. Just add it everywhere and you’ll get all the benefits of this great, little herb.

There’s more:

Parsley is good for the reproductive system in both men and women.

It’s both a blood purifier and a blood builder.

You can use dried parsley as a tea for a diuretic effect.

It’s also good for the kidneys.

So add in parsley wherever you can and know that you are taking an easy but super-effective step towards radiant health.

Share your favorite parsley recipe, with us. Tabbouleh anyone?

1 comment

It’s asparagus season in the Northeast which means it’s time to eat and enjoy this early spring vegetable. Asparagus is a perfect  for the spring and summer seasons: It’s a diuretic and helps cleanse and strengthen the kidneys. It is rich in chlorophyll making it a terrific blood cleanser. It’s also known worldwide as a superior fertility food.

Plan on eating your asparagus soon after purchase, when it’s tastes are peak. Try these simple preparations and let me know what you think.

Roasted Asparagus

Prep Time: 3 minutes
Cooking Time: 7-9 minutes

Ingredients:
1 Bunch Fresh Asparagus
Olive Oil
pinch of salt

Directions:
1. Pre Heat Oven (or Toaster Oven) to 200 degrees
2. Wash Asparagus removing dirt
3. Bend stalk and let break naturally, discard woody stem and cut nicely to clean up the break
4. Brush or rub with Extra Virgin Olive Oil
5. Sprinkle with sea salt (I use Celtic salt for it’s high mineral content)
6. Place in a casserole dish in oven for 10-20 minutes

Fresh Asparagus Salad

For this fresh, bright, springtime recipe, you’ll want to use the asparagus raw, but slice it thin and on a diagonal. Peel the stem before you slice with a vegetable peeler to reveal the tender shoot.

Prep Time: 10 minutes if you’re feeling relaxed

Ingredients:

1 Bunch Asparagus
1-2 Fresh squeezed lemons (to taste)
Extra Virgin Olive Oil
Sea Salt
Freshly ground pepper

Finish with either:

Pine nuts coarsely chopped (my favorite)

or

1-2 oz wedge parmigiano-reggiano cheese

Directions:

1. Place the pieces in a bowl and toss with lemon juice, olive oil, and salt and pepper to taste
2. When ready to serve,  add the pine nuts and toss OR use a vegetable peeler to shave the cheese over the top
3. Serve at room temperature or slightly chilled.

Tonight, I’m adding fresh peas to the mix. I’ll Keep you posted.

1 comment

I’ve demystified this delicious dressing which accompanies most salads in Asian restaurants. Sure, we could buy it in a bottle… but why not make it fresh, quick, less costly and healthier at home? There are many ways to make this dressing. My goal? To use as few ingredients as possible for fast results.carrotginger1

Because you’re using the whole carrot, you’re getting the complete nutritional package including fiber. This dressing is a great way to make a salad of simple greens more delicious and nutritious. It will keep for about a week.

Mixed Greens & Butter Beans with Carrot Ginger Dressing

Prep time: 7 minutes
Yield: 4 servings

This salad is easy and quick to throw together. Enjoy!

4 cups mixed greens
2 cups butter beans (or your beans of choice)
1 avocado diced
½ sweet onion diced (yellow or white)
1/4 lemon

Dressing
2 large carrots peeled and chopped
1-inch fresh ginger peeled and chopped
2 Tbs oil (olive or toasted sesame)
2 Tbs vinegar (Ume Plum, Apple Cider or Balsamic)
¼ – ½ cup water (blend for consistency)
(Optional- finely diced shallots or garlic)

Directions:
1. First make the dressing by combining all the ingredients in a food processor, Vita-Mix or high speed blender
2. Chop all the salad ingredients.
3. Squeeze some lemon over the salad. Mix in a salad bowl. Add a little salt if you like. A little!
4. Bring the dressing to the table and toss salad with half the dressing before serving. Add additional dressing if desired.

Be the first to comment