Peace Is Every Bite

 

A forum addressing an 'ongoing nutritional conversation'

helping individuals along their paths 

to wholeness and PEACE.

 

 

Second Tuesday of every Month from 7-9 pm

at the Resource Center for Non-Violence

515 Broadway Street, Santa Cruz, CA

What to expect: 

*  Current NUTRITION EDUCATION from progressive leaders and

    researchers in lifestyle medicine

*  Healthy lifestyle STRATEGIES on how to navigate through an

    other-than-supportive culture; Tasty samplings of innovative 

*  RECIPES and culinary delights; YUM!!!

*  SUPPORTive forum for understanding individual concerns 

    and interests.

March: Tips on Planning Healthy Meals; Favorite Recipe Makeovers; and Great Ideas for Snacks aka Mini-Meals. 

Led by local nutrition educator and consultant, Sandi Rechenmacher.


Recipes are simply formulas that offer ideas and suggestions about putting ingredients together. When our ancestors gathered wild plants from the natural landscape they didn't think much more about designing a recipe, than laying out their bootie only have it devoured in minutes. Due to supply and demand some seasons offered little, if any, options to these distant relatives.


As for living in the 21st century, we actually are inundated with choices! Drawing from those plants that offer the highest nutritional value per caloric intake (plant-based ingredients), we can actually design meals that are both truly scrumptious AND have a most appealing presentation. With access to a means of storage and preservation (refrigerators and freezers unknown to our great grandmothers) we can conjure up just about any delicacy at any time of the year.


Now here comes the challenge: if we wanted to lessen our carbon footprint and eat those plants that are grown closer to home (cutting food transportation/petrol costs), we might want to sharpen our skills at redesigning favorite recipes by thinking within the season.

 

It's nigh February, the dead of winter, and I come across a well-loved pie recipe. It calls for pineapple and blueberries. The only blueberries that I can get my hands on at this time of the year would be a package of frozen ones from the neighborhood market. And aside from jumping on a flight to Maui or Cabo, pineapple just isn't grown in my hometown at any time of the year! So I set out to explore 'local lovelies,' hummm...apples and persimmons.

 

Per the following recipe, Blueberry Special, I replace the pineapple with 3-4 chopped apples and 1 1/2 cup apple juice; add1 /2 teaspoon cinnamon, (allspice, or pumpkin pie spice); then substitute blueberries with fresh Hachiya Persimmons, mashed (uncooked, drizzled as a topping); lastly, I garnish this delight with chopped walnuts (or pecans if you are living in Georgia). Winter, at least where I live, bestows her abundance with a plethora of alternatives.

 

Lucky? You bet we are!

 

I hope I've encourage you to put on your creative/thinking cap and let your mind wander your neighborhoods and farmer's markets where winter's blessings come in the forms of: citrus (oranges, tangerines, tangelos, mandarins, grapefruit, lemons, kumquats), apples, pears, kiwi, persimmons, dried fruits, greens, broccoli, cauliflower, cabbage, roots (carrots, beets, potatoes, sweet potatoes, onions, turnips, ginger, parsnips), nuts, seeds, beans, lentils, grains, mushrooms ... Yummers!!!

 

Blueberry Special

Servings: 8

Preparation Time: 15 minutes

Cooking Time: 18 minutes

 

Crust:

1 1/2 cups Grape Nuts cereal

3/4 cup frozen unsweetened apple juice concentrate, thawed

1/2 teaspoon vanilla

 

Filling:

1 8-ounce can unsweetened crushed pineapple, undrained

1 cup frozen unsweetened apple juice concentrate, thawed

1/4 cup quick cooking tapioca

5 cups fresh or frozen blueberries

 

Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Place cereal in a Ziplock bag and crush with a rolling pin. Combine apple juice concentrate and vanilla. Mix cereal and apple juice mixture together. Press into bottom and sides of a 10-inch pie pan. Bake for 12 minutes. Cool.

 

Meanwhile, place pineapple, apple juice and tapioca in a medium saucepan. Bring to a boil. Cook and stir until thickened, about 3 minutes. Add blueberries. Cook an additional 3 minutes. Pour into crust. Cool and serve.

   -----

Recipe from The McDougall Program - Regain your lost health and appearance


Warm up with a stew that is very simple to make.

To this you might add your own personal signature...

a favorite seasonal veggie, some leafy greens, a touch of miso,

or a specialty hot sauce.

Yield: Makes about 1 1/2 quarts

 

1/2 cup lentils

1/4 cup hulled or pearled barley

1 quart vegetable broth or water

1 medium onion

1 medium potato*

1-3 cloves garlic

1-2 carrots, diced

1 celery stalk, sliced

1/2 teaspoon oregano

1/2 teaspoon ground cumin

1/4 teaspoon red pepper flakes

1/4 teaspoon black pepper

1/2 - 1 teaspoon salt

1 heaping tablespoon miso*

Place all ingredients except salt into  large pot and bring to a simmer. Cover and cook, stirring occasionally, until lentils and barley are tender, about 1 hour. Ass salt to taste.

 

*My additions were one medium potato cubed and added at the start and then a heaping tablespoon of Shiro (yellow) Miso dissolved into 1/2 cup water, stirred in right before serving.

 

Note: Miso shouldn't be simmered or boiled to keep it's nutritional qualities alive.

 Recipe from Healthy Eating for Life for Children by Amy Lanou.

 

Persimmons come in many varieties. Two of my favorites: 

Hachiya (shaped like large acorns, and eaten only when very soft) and California Fuyu (shaped like little pumpkins, and eaten when frm-ripe, non- astringent variety). The following recipe features the Hachiya. Yummers!!!


Makes 1-2 servings


1 -3 fresh, SOFT, translucent Hachiya persimmons

1 ripe banana, peeled

Zest of 1/2 of a lemon

Sprinkling of cinnamon

1 Tablespoon fresh ground flax seed, or seed mixture (a fav optional)

1/4 cup almonds (optional)

Whirl persimmons in a blender. Stop and add a ripe banana, ground seeds lemon zest and cinnamon. Whirl again. If you want a little crunch in your drink, add the almonds right at the end and not for very long. Is this a drink or a pudding? Yes, you could enjoy this for breakfast, snack, or as a dessert!

Whichever way you eat it, you will benefit from one of Autumn's most delightful sources of the super health-enhancing nutrient, Beta-Carotene (our bodies make Vitamin A from this phytochemical).

This guacamole is enriched with fiber from the peas and cancer-fighting phytochemicals from the garlic, salsa, scallions and lemon. 

 

Makes 2 1/2 cups

1 cup frozen green peas or drained and rinsed canned peas

1 ripe avocado, peeled

1/2 cup mild salsa

1 clove garlic, minced, or 1 teaspoon chopped garlic

1 scallion, minced (optional)

Juice of 1 lemon

1/2 teaspoon cumin

1 Tablespoon fresh cilantro, chopped (a fav optional)

Salt and pepper, to taste

If using frozen peas, blanch peas in boiling water for 2 minutes, then cool with cold water and drain. Cut avocado into large chunks. Mash avocado and peas together using a potato masher or fork, or, if a very creamy texture is desired, in a food processor. Mix in salsa, garlic, scallion, lemon juice, cumin, and cilantro. Add salt and pepper to taste.

Recipe from The Survivor's Handbook: Eating Right for Cancer Survival, Neal Barnard.

 

Peace Is Every Bite is a place to discover one's inner and outer peace/balance/health for all the best reasons. 

Meetings are held every SECOND TUESDAY of the month from 7 - 9PM

at the Resource Center for Non-Violence, 515 Broadway Street, Santa Cruz

 

Next Meeting is November 11, 2008

 

This forum gathers around an 'ongoing nutritional conversation' helping individuals on their paths to wholeness.

What to expect: Current cutting-edge NUTRITION EDUCATION from the leaders in progressive medicine and research. Healthy lifestyle STRATEGIES on how to navigate through an other-than-supportive culture; Tasty samplings of innovative RECIPES and culinary delights; SUPPORTive forum for understanding individual concerns and interests.

What are our topics of interest?  email: simplynutritious@gamil.com

See you there!

In this 'Age of Information,' we live amidst MORE MIS-INFORMATION THAN EVER. And generally speaking, I find that the general public gets its nutrition information from advertisements. Oh dear!

Our culture's style of eating, known as the Standard American Diet (S.A.D.) is based upon a plethora of assumptions. One of the biggest, unquestioned beliefs is that corporations are looking out for our general health and welfare. To the contrary, most corporations are focused on their bottom line, simply put making $$$ at whatever cost. 

This workshop explores the high price we are paying to keep corporations alive, which in turn are threatening the health of Americans( & world). It's time to sort things out and re-balance our focus, intention, and daily actions to align with a healthy us and a healthy planet. 

PEACE IS EVERY BITE educates attendees, providing options so that one can make informed choices that WILL AFFECT his/her  (and family's, and planet's) bottom line, a peaceful, balanced and healthy life! 

There are so many super ways to peel this banana! With more and more scientists, doctors, health professionals, business people, farms, and stores present to the cause, the journey is very exciting.

With support and validation for living closer to nature we come to know PEACE/balance/health literally WITH EVERY BITE 

Sincerely,

Sandi

Many clients tell me, "I eat healthy food." My mind instantly conjures up menus of fresh, seasonal fruits and vegetables dressed in savory sauces and I wonder why their blood pressure is high or why they have heart disease. With a bit of investigation I often find incongruencies between their and nature's definition of 'healthy'. I find that in this 'Age of Information,' we live amidst MORE MIS-INFORMATION THAN EVER. And generally speaking, I find that the general public gets its nutrition information from advertisements. Oh dear!


Our culture's style of eating, known as the Standard American Diet (S.A.D.) is based upon a plethora of assumptions. One of the biggest, unquestioned beliefs is that food stores sell only foods that will nourish, strengthen, and protect our bodies. To the contrary, most food items sold in supermarkets these days are laden with synthetic, man-made substances that the body so desperately tries to assimilate. Artificial, refined, and concentrated, these 'foods' give rise to systems dysfunctions, like what you might expect of your car's performance after putting lemonade in its gas tank. At some point the body counters with, "I'm a natural organism and I can no longer tolerate man-made chemicals without due recourse!" These plastic foods cause imbalances that show up as dis-ease. With corporate advertisement being the undisputed guide Americans walk through the supermarket aisles, doctor-bound. Unless.... like Dr. Seuss' Lorax warns, "UNLESS someone like you cares a whole lot, nothing is going to get better. It's not."

 

Although now and again we may witness supernatural occurrences, our natural process follows Mother Nature's first law, the Law of Cause & Effect. EVERYTHING that we ingest COUNTS, affecting our health in either a positive or a negative way. "Eat well, be well," so the saying goes. Note here that PREVENTION is the master key and bite-by-bite we choose our destiny. Maneuvering through one's day can be very tricky at times, deciding between eating wholesome or convenient items when hunger presents itself. So, true it is that a person must 'care a whole, WHOLE lot' and earn his/her health.


There are so many yummy ways to peel this banana! Putting an old adage to work, 'An apple a day keeps the doctor away,' we look to natural wisdom to find a treasure of wonder and brilliance that is our best medicine. Know that Mother Nature has given us a natural landscape (fresh fruits, vegetables, grains, and beans) that is complete with every nutrient that we need to be healthy. If we properly fuel our body as designed, it will respond accordingly. Yet, to be successful, a STRATEGY is a must. With many resources available, the journey is not only exciting, but also offers a healthy and exuberant quality of life.


Be healthy, wealthy (one's health being the best wealth), and EAT WISE."

Presentation handouts will share dietary strategies. Fall menus, and recipes to reduce blood pressure, foster a healthy heart, address diabetes, and offer cancer protection.

 

Sincerely,

Sandi

  • Wednesday, October 1, 2008, 7PM - 9PM
  • Resource Center for Non-Violence
  • Complimentary Workshops (first of four) discussing latest nutritional findings that 
  • lend themselves as support in creating peace in our bodies and on the planet.
  • Enjoy a multi-media presentation
  • Sample savory treats
  • Meet others who support healthy, peaceful lifestyles.
  • Limited seating. Call to reserve a place: 425-0438

  • Tuesday, October 7, 2008, 6-8PM at Women Center at UC Santa Cruz
  • Monday, October 20th & Tuesday,  November 4th; 7-9PM at Central Library, Santa Cruz
  • Tuesday, Nov 4th (Noon- 1pm) & Thursday Nov 6th (7-8:30 pm) Walnut Avenue Woman's Center, Santa Cruz,  Walnut Avenue Women's Center
  • Join us for this entertaining & educational program where you'll learn about a delicious style of eating that offers optimum health and weight loss. 
  • Presented by Sandi Rechenmacher, HHP, CNC, MH, a certified nutritional consultant.