Veggie Love

Written by Stefanie on April 3, 2008 – 3:28 pm - Add your Comment »


Eat More VegetablesWe all hear that we must eat more vegetables, but most of us find them a boring prospect. For a long time now I have also heard that it is not good to eat heated oil. I ignored this possibility, blissfully enjoying my sauteed greens. I have cooked for years with oil, but am now finding ways to avoid doing so. I found a way to cook yummy veggies without heating oil (I was never big on plain old steamed veggies):

You can use a steamer, but I prefer the following method:

I use a large (12 inch is good) cast iron skillet. These are perfect for some kinds of high heat cooking, quick cooking, and beginner cooks, because they are very durable in high heat. (thorough info about cast iron pans :) I found a random lid that fit well.
For kale, broccoli, zucchini, green beans, sweet peas 1/4 onion sliced very thin adds a nice flavor.
For consistent results, I have found that it is best not to overfill the pan.

I get the empty pan good and hot, but not too hot where it starts smoking. Then I transfer all veg quickly into the hot pan. It appears to me that the pan cools a little from the addition of the veggies. After pouring a mere 2 tbsp water over the vegetables I quickly close the lid. The idea is to steam the veggies quickly. The pan needs to be hot enough that a small amount of water should turn to steam.

After about 1 minute, I open the pan, stir and add another tbsp water, close again and wait one more minute.

At this point the veggies are still bright green, but cooked enough to eat, and I transfer them to a large bowl, toss with olive oil and a good quality salt a little ground pepper, and serve.

I made up this method in my insular little kitchen world — would love to hear feedback from readers.

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Further Food-Combining Adventures

Written by Stefanie on March 11, 2008 – 9:03 pm - 7 Comments »


The basic premise of proper food combining is that when foods are combined correctly, the absorb properly during digestion and they digest efficiently. When foods are combined incorrectly, they can’t be absorbed during digestion. Weight gain is very often a result of improper eating rather than of too many calories.

Proper food combining is based on the chemistry of digestion - simple physiological formulas. For example when you combine starches with proteins (like meat with potatoes) they each conflict with the digestion of the other, causing digestion to slow, and even not properly to occur.

We are told about all of these new digestive disorders that now have names “IBS” “Acid Reflux.” I just don’t believe in them. My guess is that maybe 1% have the actual disorder as doctors are defining it. But I have known people personally and there are thousands on the web that have cured these “disorders” or “diseases” by changing their diets. For people who suffer from gas, indigestion, acid stomach, constipation, diarrhea, cramping, bad breath, proper food combining is one of these simple approaches that can cause huge transformations.

Today’s food combining lesson: don’t combine starches with proteins. They digest differently, each causing the other to digest more slowly and improperly. This contributes to afore mentioned problems like bloating, indigestion, weight gain, and many more problems.

Avoid combinations like meat and potatoes, chicken and rice. Eat veggies with your meats: lots of them. If you have steamed veggies, put them in a bowl (after cooking) and toss with a little extra virgin olive oil and good quality natural salt and pepper. If you eat sandwiches, stick to vegetable only sandwiches like avocado and sprouts, portabello mushroom with roasted peppers. Stuff like that.

For a complete chart of food combining dos and don’ts check out http://www.thewolfeclinic.com/foodcombining.html

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