Posts Tagged ‘organic’
Book Review: Healthy Eats Here
I was pleased to see today, after getting my computer working again, that I won the give-away for the Health Eats Here eBook. Having some serious food allergies and also a great commitment to eating healthy at all times, including traveling, this book is a great help to me.
The eBook is easy to read. The layout makes it easy to find just the information you need and the introduction to the book includes some important information on the definitions of healthy foods as well as a brief explanation of why they are healthy. Term like grass-fed beef have little legal meaning, thanks to the USDA, but understanding what your local farmers mean by grass-fed is helpful. The author also stresses that important aspect of healthy eating, knowing the farmers… face to face! This isn’t easy to do when traveling so you have to rely on the chef and restaurant owners to have this relationship for you and the beauty of this eBook is if the author let’s you know just which restaurants operate like this and what farms they are working with.
The restaurant guide section is listed first by state then by city giving you easy navigation and a quick find when you are on the go. She lists average prices of meals which helps a great deal when you are on a budget. One thing I’d like to see is a simple coding for gluten free options or vegan options that can be seen at a glance. Those of us with very restrictive food requirements are always facing the dread of trying to find somewhere to eat that won’t make us sick so a guide that can make that just a little bit easier is priceless.
I enjoyed viewing the delicious photos and her reviews on not only the health of the food but how it tastes. Let’s face it, healthy isn’t worthwhile if the food tastes like cardboard or worse.. .a witches brew!
I would love to see information also on what oils the restaurant cooks with mostly or if there are options to choose. Those of us following Weston A Price Foundation guidelines want to avoid canola, soy corn and other vegetable oils and we would definitely freak to find a good restaurant cooking in healthy, organic coconut oils or pastured lard (non hydrogenated of course!). I’m not sure such a restaurant exists but more and more are using ghee, real butter and at least olive oil which is a boon.
The Author’s guide on eating seafood is definitely helpful especially to those who didn’t realize before all the ecological issues surrounding seafood. She explains in a friendly manner why it’s important to avoid certain fish because of mercury toxicity, others because they are farm raised (thus hormones, poor diets etc) and how to make smart choices when eating out.
There is a real credit given also to the heritage pork farmers of America. Heritage animals are facing serious threat of extinction and though it sounds odd the best way to save them is if we all start eating them! It will increase demand, farmers will be able to raise them again and we can preserve them. And the best part is these heritage breeds are typically healthier food and lead happier lives out in the sun and fresh air enjoying the old fashioned farm life.
The author offers a further reading list but I am disappointed to see a lack of some of the most important natural/sustainable health books out there including one I consider to be the most important Nourishing Traditions: The Cookbook that Challenges Politically Correct Nutrition and the Diet Dictocrats. Though it is a cookbook it is full of important information on healthy eating, definitions and guidelines and also a great resource on just how unhealthy most premade food is in today’s world. This is always the first book I recommend to people who are discovering healthy eating.
The last, yet perhaps the most important thing about this eBook are the tools it gives the reader. If you can’t get to one of the listed restaurants or maybe the city you are in isn’t covered you still have tools available to you to help you pick the smartest, healthiest choice available. Sometimes it’s a situation of choosing the lesser of evils but every little bit helps when your only obvious options are microwave, fast food from chemically laden, confinement raised animals loaded with MSG and corn syrup. Find a local, non-chain restaurant. Ask the locals for help. And if you can’t be sure the meat is healthy go veggie because at least the pesticides can be washed off vegetables.
We give this eBook 4 stars out of 5.
Recipe: Chicken & Dumplings – Gluten Free
(Gluten Free, Dairy Free, Soy Free)
This is our favorite Chicken & Dumplings Recipe adapted to be gluten free, dairy free, and soy free. If you can eat dairy pastured butter/ghee and raw pastured milk are excellent in this recipe. Always opt for organic vegetables, herbs and spices to avoid irradiation and toxins. To make it ultra Texan add a kick of cayenne or chili powder to the dumplings and a few pinches of jalepeno pepper flakes to the soup base with the dried herbs. The sky’s the limit!
Soup Base
3 – 4 quarts home-made chicken stock (pastured chicken stock recipe)
4 tbsp coconut oil (alternatively use pastured lard/tallow)
1 onion, diced
8 carrots, sliced
1 bunch celery, sliced
6 cloves garlic, diced
1 bay leaf
1 tsp ground pepper
2 tsp Celtic Sea Salt
1 tsp dried parsley
1 tsp dried thyme
1 tsp oregano
1 tsp granulated garlic
Meat from 1 whole roasted chicken*
¼ cup finely chopped flat leaf parsley
Real Celtic Sea Salt & Organic Fresh ground pepper to taste
Dumplings
2 cups Pamela’s Baking Mix
¼ cup coconut oil (substitute pastured lard or tallow if desired)
¼ cup coconut milk (substitute pastured raw milk or butter milk if desired)
1 tsp fresh ground pepper
1 tsp Celtic Sea Salt
2 pastured eggs lightly beaten
Melt coconut oil (or pastured lard/tallow, or if not dairy free pastured butter/ghee are delicious additions) in a deep pot over medium/high heat. Add onions, celery and carrots and sautee until slightly softened and onions are translucent. Add garlic and sautee a few more minutes more being careful not to brown. Add herbs, fresh ground pepper, and stir allowing the oils to release for a few minutes.
Add the chicken and stir to combine.* (see alternative method below)
Carefully add the chicken stock, at room temperature or heated. Stir and allow to come to a gentle simmer while making the dumpling mixture.
In a bowl combine salt, pepper and baking mix and combine. In a larger bowl mix lightly beaten eggs and half of coconut milk reserving some. Gently add melted, and cooled, coconut oil (or tallow/lard/butter/ghee) being careful to not scramble the eggs. Add the dry ingredients and stir carefully until it just comes together. Do not over mix. The dough should hold together but still be somewhat crumbly. If the dough is too dry add more coconut milk. Alternatively raw pastured milk works great in this recipe.
Any remaining coconut milk, including the remainder of the can, can be added to the soup base. Add the fresh parsley reserving some for garnish. Add Celtic Sea Salt and stir.
When the soup is gently simmering start adding the dumplings one small spoonful at a time being careful not to crowd the pan. Use another spoon to help scrap off the dumplings into the soup easily and quickly. Cover with a lid and cook for 15 minutes at a gentle simmer, do not remove lid until 15 minutes are up.
Turn soup off, vent lid and allow to sit for 30 minutes. Soup will be plenty hot and the dumplings will have had time to set. Serve in soup bowls, add salt and pepper to taste and garnish with remaining parsley. Serve with your favorite gluten free sides. For those not on a dairy free diet you can add a dollop of crème fraiche if desired.
*Use a previously roasted chicken to make this a delicious and easy recipe. We recommend always planning your menus to save time. By preparing a meal of roasted chickens the day before you will have plenty of bones to make a stock that night and meat from one of the chickens for use in the soup. If you are using stock out of the freezer and are making this on delicious soup on short notice that’s ok! Just use 4 to 8 chicken thighs, salt and pepper them and sprinkle on your favorite spice maybe some a pinch of yellow curry on each and brown them on both sides in the pan before you add the onions.
We use the pastured chicken stock recipe from Nourishing Traditions and the Weston A Price Foundation website but with a few twists.
Pastured chickens are ultra nutritious and delicious but usually cost more than your average store bought poultry so we love recipes that help us utilize every last bit of goodness. Don’t throw away the bones when you make fried chicken, roasted chicken or other meals. Save them in the freezer and make a weekly batch of rich bone broth. Your family’s health and vitality will shine thanks to all the amazing, bio-available nutrients in a real bone broth and your family’s food budget can be stretched even further. In fact when trying to eat naturally on a budget we highly recommend utilizing many bone broths, and various rich soups to fill bellies in lean times.
If you can’t afford pastured chicken in these hard times ask your local farmers if they have any stewing birds. Roosters and other older chickens that are culled are often too chewy for roasting but make absolutely fantastic, rich, nutritious and robust bone broths and the meat once cooked for so long becomes tender and delicious.
