Easy Spinach Salad

Easy Spinach Salad

When people picture “healthy food”, chances are high that the first food that comes to mind is salad, especially nutrient-rich spinach salad.  According to Traditional Chinese Medicine, raw foods require more digestive “heat” to break down and, therefore, are not recommended in the winter, unless accompanied by warming spices, or soups and stews.

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Slow Oats for a Rushed Morning

There are few things as comforting as being greeted by a steaming bowl of warm oatmeal on a cold winter morning.  Unfortunately, who has the time to prepare a pot at 6:30 in the morning?  Isn’t it a shame that we can’t all have our own personal chef who prepares a warm, nurturing and filling breakfast for us everyday?

Actually, there is a way that you can have your own personal chef that works while you sleep: dust off your slow cooker!

Slow Cooked Steel Cut Oatmeal with Apples, Cinnamon and Nutmeg

Steel cut oats are a minimally processed form of oat that usually takes 15-30 minutes to prepare (by simmering in a pot of water).  They have a chewy texture and are low on the glycemic index (therefore a better option for those who are diabetic or pre-diabetic).  They are slowly digested, gradually releasing sugar into the bloodstream, which helps keep you feeling satisfied for longer into the morning.  Oats are a good source of fibre, which has been linked to a decrease in the incidence of heart disease, stroke, diabetes and certain cancers.  Steel cut oats also contain soluble fibre, which has been shown to lower cholesterol levels.

Adding apple, cinnamon, nutmeg and ginger to steel cut oatmeal not only adds more fibre, a serving of fruit, but also adds a serving of healthy spices that regulate blood sugar (cinnamon), aid digestion (nutmeg) and warm the body on a cold morning (ginger).

Here’s how to make steel cut oatmeal in a slow cooker:

In the evening add to your slow cooker:

– 1 cup steel cut oats

– 4 cups of water

– 4-6 apples of your choice, cut into small pieces

– 1 tbsp of cinnamon (or more)

– 1/2 tbsp of nutmeg

– 1 piece of sliced ginger

Set slow cooker to LOW and allow to cook overnight (approximately 8 hours).  In the morning, turn it off and serve oatmeal hot.  Serves 4 people.

I often make enough Slow Oats to feed me for the week.  I refrigerate the leftovers and microwave my portion in the morning.

Here’s to easy, delicious winter mornings where you can enjoy a hot morning meal while watching the snowfall and waiting for the rest of the world to wake up.

Spicy Thai Peanut Soup

One of my favourite dishes for the cold, sluggish winter season is this hearty and invigorating peanut soup.  This delicious soup is easy to make and is better (and cheaper) than going to a Thai restaurant.  I guarantee you’ll serve yourself a second bowl.  Elimination or Paleo dieters can substitute the peanut butter for almond or cashew butter.
Speaking of peanuts, if you’re looking to stock up on ingredients for this recipe, don’t hesitate to buy them online. Redskin peanuts, in particular, are perfect for making a rich, nutty soup base. Their earthy flavor brings an added depth to the dish, and I always find that keeping a bag of them in the pantry is a lifesaver when cravings hit.
Here’s how to make it:

Spicy Thai Peanut Soup

You need:
  • 1 tbsp olive oil
  • 2 medium onions, cut into large pieces
  • 1 large green pepper, cut into large pieces
  • 1 large red pepper, cut into large pieces
  • 2 pieces of garlic (cut into fine pieces)
  • 1 can whole tomatoes, cut into quarters, use the juices
  • 10 cups chicken broth
  • 1/2 tsp ground black pepper
  • 1/2 tsp chili pepper flakes
  • 3/4 cup uncooked quinoa
  • 1/2 cup natural unsalted peanut butter

In a large soup pot, heat oil over medium-high.  Sauté onions, bell peppers and garlic for about 5 minutes, or before the garlic and onion begins to brown. Reduce the heat to medium, add tomatoes and cook for 5 to 10 minutes. Pour in tomato juice and chicken broth, add black pepper and chili pepper flakes. Bring the pot to a boil over medium-high heat, add quinoa, then reduce heat to low. Simmer, partially covered, 45 minutes. Add peanut butter all at once, stirring until it melts. Bring soup to a simmer.  Enjoy!

This recipe can also be made in slow cooker, while you’re at your work or place of study.  Sauté the onion, bell peppers and garlic first, then add them to the slow cooker with the rest of the ingredients, except the peanut butter, and set to LOW. When you arrive home at the end of your day, add the peanut butter, and serve!

This is an adaptation of a recipe from: http://www.epicurious.com/recipes/food/views/Peanut-Soup-232423#ixzz1jXmC7TnH

Smoothie Move!

At my school, The Canadian College of Naturopathic Medicine, smoothie breakfasts are very vogue.  I personally haven’t fallen to the tradition, preferring to start my day with something more substantial and warm, like steel cut oats.  However, after the 2012 Supplier Show at our school, I ended up with a few single-portion packets of protein powder.  So, for one week, I decided to give smoothie breakfasts a try.

Here is a winning recipe I came up with:

Black and Green Chocolate Banana Smoothie

– 1 packet of chocolate protein powder by Cytomatrix (this is the product I happened to have a sample of, but you can choose your brand of preference)

– 1 ripe banana

– 1/2 cup of blackberries

– 1 cup of almond milk (unsweetened)

– 1/2 cup of water

– 1 tbsp of chlorophyll (can be replaced with 1/2 cup of raw spinach, kale leaves or any other green of choice)

Blend all ingredients together until smooth and enjoy!

The smoothie came out thick, dark and delicious!  I usually have breakfast around 6:30am in order to begin my morning commute to CCNM.  As a result, I end up feeling hungry around 10am, even with a substantial breakfast of steel cut oatmeal.  However, this smoothie got me through my morning acupuncture and pharmacology classes without so much as a hunger pang.  It’s also a fast, easy and delicious way to increase fruit and vegetable intake in the morning.

After this week-long experiment I’ll definitely be making more protein and antioxidant-rich smoothies to get me through my mornings!

Squash Pasta: Italy Goes Naturopathic

Squash Pasta: Italy Goes Naturopathic

Since beginning classes at CCNM, I’ve entered into a three-way conflict between knowing I shouldn’t eat gluten, knowing I love all things gluten and, well, my Italian grandmother, Nonna.

As most of you know, I live with Nonna and Nonna is not impressed with the evolving disdain the rest of the world is beginning to hold for her pasta, even if it is GMO-modified.  In her 84 years of life, I think she’d be hard pressed to think of a day she spent away from gluten.  Nonetheless, we’ve been experimenting with some variations of rice pasta and recently I’ve been trying with spaghetti squash pasta.

Although you’ll never fool an Italian with spaghetti squash, it does look surprisingly like spaghetti and produces some of that same, soft, pleasant mouth-feel that pasta gives us.  One cup boosts only 42 calories (compared to around 200 for a cup of pasta) and carries with it far more vitamins and minerals than any type of pasta (no matter how delicious) could ever hope to.  Nevertheless, I decided to feed Squash Pasta to a true Italian (Nonna) and see if it passed the test.

How to make it:

I bought one whole spaghetti squash from Fiesta Farms, sliced it in half, removed the seeds with a spoon, sprinkled a tiny amount of olive oil on its face and put it face down on a cooking sheet.  

Set the oven to 375 degrees and wait 40 minutes.

Take the squash out and let cool.  Then I scraped off all the insides (everything but the rind) into a bowl.

Add your favourite Italian sugo, or pasta sauce (more on that in another post), and serve with Insalata Della Nonna (radicchio, fennel, red pepper and lettuce, topped with extra virgin olive oil and homemade apple cider vinegar) e buono!

The verdict? Nonna decided to make her wheat pasta on the side, just in case.  She kept calling the spaghetti squash zucca (her word for zucchini).   She said “Chi mangia zucca e beve l’acqua, alza la gamba e la zucca scappa,” (He who eats zucchini and drinks water, lifts their leg and the zucchini escapes) meaning squash is water, not substantial, like, you guessed it, pasta!  Ok, Nonna.  She did say that she would never go so far as to make it herself, but she liked it.  That’s food critic speak for “The most delicious thing I ever ate!”  I award this recipe an Italian Pass!

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