Posts Tagged ‘produce’

Just off the vine – STRAWBERRIES!

Saturday, May 29th, 2010

Back in the day, like in 1997, the supermarket produce section was a veritable wasteland, at least when it came to fruit. Between the months of October and April selection was limited to oranges, apples, bananas and maybe grapes.

May was always a celebration for me, for with the arrival of late spring came a plethora of  sweet, colorful, gorgeous, taste bud seducing fruit – blackberries, raspberries, cherries, peaches and STRAWBERRIES.

Over a decade later it’s a different world. Due to agreements like NAFTA, the World Trade Organization and other bilateral trade agreements Americans’ consumption of imported fruits and vegetables has more than doubled since 1993. Summer fruit is available in the year round due to imports from Latin American countries like Chile and Mexico.

There are a host of political, ethical and health debates surrounding these imports. I’m not going to get into those issues here, I’ll just say that there’s nothing like a fresh, locally grown strawberry.

The health benefits of strawberries are many. Strawberries are high in Vitamin C -with a 1 cup serving giving you  136% of the RDA for Vitamin C. Strawberries are also a good source of fiber and contain the powerful antioxidants anthocyanins type 2 and ellagitannins which give strawberries their rich red color. Several studies have shown that anthocyanins help prevent the development of cancer and cardiovascular disease. Anthocyanins also have anti-inflammatory properties. In addition to their antioxidant properties, strawberries help protect against age related macular degeneration.

Local strawberries are usually available from May through mid-July. Look for berries that are vibrant in color and have their leaves attached.  Berries spoil quickly, so be sure to purchase them no more than a fews days in advance. Store berries unwashed in your refrigerator.  After 2-3 days your best bet is to trim, wash and freeze the berries. Frozen berries will keep up to 1 year.

In you live in Delco or on the Main Line go to the Oakmont Farmers’ Market (Wednesdays), the Bryn Mawr Farmer’s Market (Saturdays) or Linvilla Orchards (they have a Strawberry Festival on June 5th), where you can pick your own.

Check out this great recipe for a Strawberry and Arugula Salad from EatingWell.com




Walmart vs. Whole Foods?

Tuesday, April 20th, 2010

Interesting article on Walmart’s foray into the organic/buy local marketplace. Is the same retailer that’s been accused of pushing out the little guy (farmers and small businesses alike) motivated by a desire to support those same little guys while supplying us with affordable healthy produce  or the desire for profit? You be the judge.

Side note – In my previous life as an opera singer, I did several tours in the town that the writer mentions at the beginning of the article. His friend was right; the Super Walmart is definitely “one of the sights” in Natchez, MS.




Baked Kale

Thursday, March 18th, 2010

African Americans like greens. OK, that’s a total generalization but to be fair greens are an important part of soul food cooking – collards, turnip greens, mustard greens and even kale.

Growing up my mother extolled the virtues of greens, but I wasn’t buying what she was selling. I didn’t develop my appreciation for the somewhat bitter (by the way, when cooked properly greens lose their bitter flavor) hearty green until my 20’s and then I was hooked.

I recently “discovered” kale. Kale is a member of the Brassica family – a group of vegetables known to fight disease, including cancer. In addition to its disease fighting properties, kale is high in vitamins A and K, calcium and fiber.

Try out my tasty Baked Kale recipe. It’s not soul food but it sure is yummy.

What you’ll need -

  • 1 bunch kale
  • 1 T Olive oil
  • 1 T Parmesan cheese

-Preheat oven to 350 and lightly oil a cookie sheet with olive oil. Thoroughly wash kale and remove leaves from stems. Rip the kale into bite-sized pieces. Place kale on cookie sheet and drizzle with olive oil. Cook for 15 minutes. Remove kale from oven, flip to other side and sprinkle with 1 tablespoon Parmesan cheese. Continue to cook for 10 minutes, making sure that you don’t burn the kale. It should be slightly crispy. Serve as a side dish.

Go here for more information on the health benefits of kale.




WEGMANS! I think I’m in love…

Monday, March 8th, 2010

Is it possible to love an inanimate object?  What about an edifice and all of it’s gastronomic delights?

I was in West Chester this weekend and decided to take a detour on my way home to check out the Wegmans in Downingtown. I’d heard people rave about the grocery chain for years and wanted to see what all the buzz was about.

Up (or was it down?) Route 30 I went for what I thought would be a short side trip. I foolishly entered the store sans shopping cart or basket; after all I intended to do a quick walk through and then head home to Delco.

What I found inside was a combination Whole Foods/Tevana/Bed Bath and Beyond/Giant/cafe – talk about one stop shopping (my shopping trips usually involve a 3-5 store marathon). At Wegmans  I found groceries, organics, natural food items, specialty items as well as non-food stuffs, many items with prices on par with or cheaper than Giant – my supermarket of choice. My favorite buys were salmon sausage, loose leaf Chocolate Chai tea (can you say yum?!) and Kosher ground turkey (more about my journey to the meaty side in a later post).

An hour, $27 and 3 shopping bags later I exited the store.

Unfortunately for me, the closet Wegmans is in Downingtown; 40 minutes from my house on a good traffic day. I’ll have to hold out hope for Malvern (opening slated for June) and King of Prussia (opening TBD). In the meantime The Husband and I have planned a field trip to Downingtown and supermarket utopia next weekend.

I say Delco needs a Wegmans! Letter writing campaign anyone?




Living in a Paleo World but am I a Paleo girl?

Monday, February 8th, 2010

I started the Paleo Diet Challenge, the team challenge that I doing with the folks at CFDV, on January 4th.

I broke the news about The Challenge to The Husband on Christmas Eve while we were in Giant doing our food shopping for Christmas dinner.

“So, I guess I should tell you now… I’m doing this thing with CFDV called The Paleo Challenge. I can’t eat grain, legumes, dairy, sugar or alcohol for 7 weeks. I’ll probably be a total bitch.”

Looking at me as if I head 7 heads he said (actually, he yelled), “Why do you do these things? You’re crazy!”

It’s week 6 of The Challenge. I haven’t been bitchy (no more than usual), I haven’t lost my mind and The Husband has been extremely supportive.

Giving up grain, legumes, dairy, sugar and alcohol hasn’t been as difficult as I thought; although sometimes when I’m at the store I do find myself gazing longingly at the fancy cheese. The biggest challenge of The Challenge has been all the meal planning and food prep. I’ve long had a Sunday routine of boiling some eggs and cooking a huge pot of oatmeal for the week’s breakfasts and snacks, but Paleo takes this prep to a whole ‘nother level.

Lost is the convenience of whipping up a protein shake in the car or when I get home after a long morning of appointments. No more oversleeping and leaving the house without snacks and with the certainty that I can run into Wawa or Whole Foods and get a protein bar or bag of peanuts.

Paleo = Planning and Preparation. Preparation that begins with marathon grocery store trips. Produce Junction after Saturday’s workout. Whole Foods, Trader Joe’s and Giant or Acme on Sunday.

Then there’s the food prep (and did I mention the planning). The Paleo diet calls for a significant consumption of protein (meat, chicken and seafood), unlimited vegetables and some fruit and nuts.

My Sunday afternoons have been reserved for vegetable prep – washing, peeling, chopping and in some instances cooking. All so I don’t have to think or have to opportunity to stray each night when I get home and it’s time to make dinner, and so I have vegetables for breakfast, lunch and snacks.

Then there’s the eggs. Since I don’t eat meat – no poultry or red meat – I’m left with eggs and fish for protein. Pre-Paleo my main sources of protein were fish, tofu and other soy products, wheat gluten and dairy. Did I mention that I hate eggs? Did I mention mercury poisoning from over consumption of fish?

Thank God for Mark’s Daily Apple and his awesome recipe for omelet muffins.

And the fish – I don’t think I’ve ever eaten so much fish in my life! Because of mercury concerns (the jury’s still out on whether it’s hype or fact), I’ve had to take care to select low mercury fishes – Tilapia, flounder, salmon, shrimp and sardines (fillets sans heads, tails and bones). Hopefully, I haven’t turned into a thermometer; my post-Paleo mercury blood test will tell.

So what are the results so far of the 7 week challenge? Well, according to my friend, H., my skin is clearer. Not sure what that means since I’ve always had clear skin.

In terms of body composition, I’m down 2 inches around my “true” waist (in spite of what Old Navy thinks, that’s above the belly button, not around the butt crack), 1.5 inches around my belly button and at last week’s “weigh-in” I was still down 11 pounds. I couldn’t bear to weigh myself this morning; I had my only major cheat last night with Indian food. Yum!

All in all I feel great and my jeans are fitting, if not loose. Thank you, Paleo Man!

What about when the challenge ends in two weeks?

First, I have a date with some Thin Mints and a bottle of Grey Goose. Just kidding (OK, not really).

Through The Paleo Challenge I discovered that I was definitely consuming too much sugar – a little Agave in my coffee, a little honey in my Fage, the added sugar in some of the low fat products I ate. My intake was nothing like the average American but too much for the healthy lifestyle that I advocate.

Although I’ve been a vegetarian for over 10 years my vegetable intake was no where near the levels of the Paleo Challenge. I have veggies with breakfasts (collard greens), my morning snack (leftovers from the night before or peppers and onions), lunch (usually salad greens and other assorted veggies) and dinner (Brussels sprouts, broccoli, spinach and kale to name a few). Definitely a habit worth keeping.

I’ve also discovered that I don’t “need” my Friday night (or Saturday night or Sunday morning) cheat meal, but it did provide me with something to break of the routine. That Friday night cheat meal will definitely be reintroduced but will be much less gluttonous.

Dairy products (Fage, milk in my coffee or tea) will be the other non-Paleo habit that I’ll reintroduce. I think I’ll take the same attitude with cheese that I have with chocolate – nothing run of the mill; only select and savor the highest quality.

In terms of soy and wheat gluten, I’ll have the occasional veggie burger, soy sauce when I go out for sushi and Chinese and wheat gluten a few times a year at vegetarian restaurants.

Outside of those few, perhaps infrequent deviations, I think that I’ll remain a modified-Paleo girl; much to The Husband’s chagrin.




New Year’s shopping list

Monday, January 4th, 2010

Ah, January 4th. The first Monday after the New Year. The reset button has been pushed; time to get back to routine.

Most people are headed back to work for the first time in a few days, if not weeks.  And let’s not forget the daily workout – a routine that some haven’t engaged in since before Thanksgiving.

According to a survey by the marketing research firm, Harris Interactive, 63% of Americans have resolved to lose weight this year. Other surveys show that 75% of those resolving to lose weight will have fallen off the wagon by February.

Most people likely fail because they don’t have a strategy. The typical “loser” doesn’t realize that when it comes to weight loss and maintenance, nutrition is 85% of the equation. You can workout all you want but if you’re stopping at the drive-thru on the way home, your weight loss efforts will be in vain.

Here’s my shopping list to help you with that 85%:

McCann’s or 365 Brand (Whole Foods) Steel Cut Oats

Greek Yogurt (fat free or 2% – Fage, Chobani or Oikos)

Omega-3 enriched eggs (Eggland’s Best or Land-O-Lakes)

Eggology Egg Whites

Raw honey

Agave Nectar (low glycemic sweetener)

Crazy Richard’s Natural Peanut Butter

Skippy Natural Peanut Butter (no mixing required)

Trader Joe’s Almond Butter

Pumpkin seeds

Raw almonds

Wild Alaska or Pacific salmon

Chunk Light Tongol Tuna

Tilapia

Chicken breast

Lean cuts or grass-fed beef

Extra firm tofu

BSN Lean Dessert Protein Powder (The Vitamin Shoppe)

Nectar Protein Powder

Broccoli

Cabbage

Dark leafy greens (Spinach, Kale, Swiss Chard, Collard Greens)

Salad greens (dark)

Tomatoes

Sweet Potatoes

Berries (blueberries, raspberries, blackberries, strawberries)

Apples

Grapes

Oranges

Peaches

Ezekiel Bread

Quinoa

Low-fat cottage cheese

Extra Virgin olive oil

Avocados

Jane’s Krazy Mixed-Up Salt




It IS easy being green

Friday, October 23rd, 2009

I find that many of my new clients have trouble getting in the recommended 3-5 servings of vegetables a day, not to mention the recommended 3 servings a week of green leafy vegetables. My clients are no different from most Americans. According to surveys conducted by the CDC only 27% of adults get the recommended amount of daily vegetable servings. Whether it’s lack of time or knowledge or simply preference, most of us find it hard to be “green”.

Enter Green Smoothies. They’re packed with vitamins (C, K and several of the B’s), minerals (calcium, potassium and iron) and phytonutrients (beta-carotene).  Try the recipe below from my friend Ruth Harp from Whole Foods Market in Wynnewood.

I have to admit, I was skeptical at first because of the color of these smoothies, but they’re actually quite tasty. Have the smoothie as an evening snack, complement to lunch (I’ll have leftover smoothie when I don’t have time to make a salad) or post-workout (just make sure you add some protein to the meal).

Green Smoothies (taken from the Whole Foods Wynnewood newsletter)

2 bananas

2 cups pineapple chunks

1/3 – 1/2 bunch greens (Kale, Collard Greens, Swiss Chard) washed and chopped into large pieces

Water 

  • Place bananas in blender. 
  • Add pineapple and then greens. 
  • Fill blender with water/ice mixture to about 2 inches below the top. 
  • Blend well.

Green Smoothies can be stored for up to 3 days in the refrigerator. 

  1. Green smoothies are very nutritious. Use about 60% ripe organic fruit mixed with about 40% organic green vegetables.  They taste like fruit but have all the nutrition contained in dark leafy greens.
  2. Green smoothies are very easy to digest. When blended well, all of the valuable nutrients become easy for the body digest.
  3.  Green smoothies, as opposed to juices, are a complete food because they still have fiber.
  4. Start with less greens and don’t use the stems at first as they can be bitter.  Let your taste buds adjust and build up your ability to drink a smoothie with more greens!