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Recipes and Posts

Boost Your Immunity with Sauerkraut

April 13, 2020 Louise Carr
Red Cabbage and Apple Sauerkraut

So often in nutrition I notice that everything old is new again and this definitely true of this recipe for Red Cabbage, Apple and Ginger Sauerkraut.
Preserving vegetables with salt is how my colonizer ancestors stored their home grown vegetables over the cold winter months right here on the prairie where I live. Their health throughout the winter would have depended on the bountifulness of your home garden and the time you dedicated to preserving the vegetables they grew.
The science of nutrition has moved on since these pioneer farmers first made their homes on the prairie across North America and there is now so much that we know about the vitamin content of fermented vegetables, our microbiome and the importance of vegetables and fibre in our diet.
Sadly in this same time we have seen our Western diet become eroded with the advent of fast food chains, processed foods, farming subsidies for wheat, soy and corn, chemical fertilization and the extensive use of glysophate in the farming and combining of crops We also live in a society where there is a general feeling that life is too busy to care for our own basic nutritional needs and we do not have time to cook. Our personal health has eroded over time in tandem.
So let’s bring these thoughts and timeline together and then jump into this incredibly easy recipe.

What have we discovered…

What our ancestors did not know, was the nutritional powerhouse that lay in the vegetables that they fermented to store through the winter. Science has told us that…

  1. Vegetables that have been fermented increase their vitamin C content by 300%

  2. Foods that have been fermented provide a powerful dose of probiotic friendly bacteria for our microbiome.

  3. Our microbiome (the ecosystem of friendly bacteria that lives inside our digestive tract) is heavily involved in boosting our immune response, boosting our mood, promoting the health of our digestive tract, balancing our hormones and keeping us at our ideal weight.

So that is health benefits from easily prepared fermented foods that impact our immunity and resistance to bacteria and viruses, the joy that we feel life and the happiness we feel daily, the ability of our bodies to receive nourishment and digest foods without symptoms of gassiness and bloating and the impact of peri-menopause on our bodies in the shape of uncomfortable symptoms

What we have lost…

  1. We have lost our collective palate for foods that are sour or acidic and crave the sweetness of corn syrup as it is an ingredient in most of our foods from the liquids we drink to our meat, breads and prepared meals.

  2. We have eroded our microbiome as it has taken multiple hits from over use of antibiotics, from prescribed and over the counter medications, from excessive sugar and from the role of the digestive system disruptor, glysophate as a desiccant for grains on the stalk to improve yields for the combine, resulting in this chemical appears in our food in unhealthily large quantities.

  3. The erosion of the nutritional content in general in the foods that we consume as our soil become depleted, as animals are raised in unhealthy systems and in general as we eat foods that impact our bodies in a negative nutritional fashion as they are so packed with chemicals and sugar that our bodies need a disproportionate amount of nutrition to cope.

And here we find ourselves in the middle of a global pandemic and needing to deeply nourish our bodies, especially with vitamin C, build our microbiomes, address chronic underlying health issues and fire up our immune response
At this point in time, everything old is new again and this recipe is practically a life line.

So let’s get our hands into a bowl of cabbage and salt and make like our wise ancestors!

Healthy Fats and Fermented Foods Working Lunch

Ingredients

1 small red or green cabbage or half of a large cabbage

3 tart apples

1 thumb sized piece of raw ginger

1 tbsp sea salt

Instructions

Remove the outer leaves from the cabbage and reserve on one side
Chop the cabbage finely removing the stalk and place into a large bowl.
Chop or grate in the apple and grate in the ginger
Add the salt and using your hands massage the salt into the vegetables and fruit until the cabbage become bright red or green and is beginning to release water. Keep massaging for another five minutes.
This process allows the healthy and friendly bacteria from your clean hands and present on the ‘bloom’ of the cabbage, that cloudy texture on the surface of the leaf, to come into contact with all of the cabbage and begin the fermentation process. These bacteria are more varied than any probiotic capsule you can buy in the store and will increase in number to become more powerful for your microbiome than a store bought probiotic.
Once the cabbage is beginning to run with released water pile all of the vegetable and fruit into a large clean mason jar and pour in the liquid.
Press a reserved cabbage leaf over the top of the vegetables and place a weight on top to press down the vegetables.
Put a lid on the mason jar and place in a dark warm place on your counter.
Check on your jar a couple of hours later and if the cabbage is not covered with liquid, make a brine with an 8oz glass of filtered water and 1 tbsp of salt and pour into your jar to cover.
Leave your sauerkraut out on the counter for 24 hours and then allow to mature for 5 days in your refrigerator.
Eat with cheese and crackers, as a side with meat dishes or served next to fried eggs for breakfast.

Try and eat a small portion of fermented foods daily to rebuild your gut health and microbiome. You will notice the inclusion of fermented foods in the softness of your skin and as the antidote to constipation.
If you are looking for other ways to boost immunity you can read about Kukicha Tea here.

In Snacks

Heart Healthy Muhammara Dip

March 1, 2020 Louise Carr
Heart Healthy Muhammara Dip

This recipe comes often to my mind whenever I hear the complaint that eating healthy is tasteless, rabbit food or cardboard.
You seriously will not find a recipe with much more flavour than this!

Walnuts form the base of this delicious dip so the dish is packed with vitamin E, healthy fats and fibre which are all supportive of our heart health.
It also contains two large cloves of garlic. The allicin compound found in garlic, that is responsible for the smell of garlic breathe, has been shown in clinical trails to lower blood cholesterol levels. Certainly when you are eating this dip, you are going to want your Boo to be eating with you and both of your hearts will be stronger when you do!

The walnuts are simply blended with roasted red peppers, I used jarred peppers to make this recipe in 15 minutes flat, garlic honey, spices, olive oil 9more healthy fat right here) and the secret ingredient pomegranate molasses.

You can buy pomegranate molasses at Middle Eastern Stores and large supermarkets in the ethnic aisle.

I would serve this rich and tangy dip with oat cakes for another heart healthy fibre.

This is how we should be eating in mid-life ladies! Easy and delicious, nutrient dense dishes that excite our taste buds and support our bodies deeply through the peri-menopausal experience.

P.S. If you are looking for another great dip/spread that makes a nutrient dense and filling lunch option, click here for my recipe for Sardine Paté. Packed with protein and omega 3 fatty acids, it is a fabulous choice to support midlife brain and heart health.

Heart Healthy Muhammara Dip

Ingredients

11/2 cups raw walnuts

I jar roasted red peppers drained

2 cloves garlic

1/2 tsp ground cumin

1/4 tsp chilli or chilli flakes

1 tsp raw local honey

2 tbsp Pomegranate Molasses

1 pinch of salt to season

Enough olive oil to make a dip consistency

Instructions

  1. Add all of the ingredients apart from the olive oil into a high speed blender.

  2. Blend the ingredients and pour enough olive oil through the hole in the lid to make a dip consistency. It will be about 3 -5 tablespoons

  3. Serve with oat cakes and savour.





In Snacks
1 Comment

Beet, Celery, Apple and Ginger Smoothie

January 28, 2020 Louise Carr
Beet, Celery, Apple and Ginger Smoothie

I want to eat healthy and I want to feel good at 52. What does that look like for me?

1. I want to feel energized everyday and fully capable to power through the activities I plan for myself.

2. I want to feel joyful when I wake up in the morning and excited for my day - no matter what life throws at me.

3. I want to feel resilient and strong in my mind and body and comfortable in my own skin. I don’t need to be perfect but I want to love myself when I look in the mirror.

I want to build the health that I am planning on enjoying until I am 90 years plus.

As a Certified Holistic Nutrition Consultant, I believe that the food I eat has the power to make to manifest this fabulous health and that the habit of taking the very best care of me, using food and nutrition, is also the perfect way to help myself through my menopausal experience.

Wahoo! This is exciting and empowering stuff right here ladies!

I do not have time for extensive meal prep, expensive ‘superfood’ ingredients or bullshit unachievable health goals that put me in a competition with my sister to be skinnier or ‘younger’ looking. Those days are over.

This recipe right here is, for me, the epitome of how simple everyday ingredients can build our health.

Beets are supportive of our liver function and we need that support in peri-menopause when our liver is working hard to de-conjugate (break-down) excess hormone in our bodies and carry it out of the body.

Celery is anti-inflammatory and supports our digestive health and blood sugar balance.

Apples are rich in vitamin C and pectin, a fibre that binds with everyday toxins and supports their removal from the body (think of your hot flash, night sweat and excessive bleed promoting excess hormone again ladies)

Ginger is highly anti-inflammatory, may help to reduce muscle pain (including menstrual cramps) and can help with osteoarthritis. Ginger aids chronic indigestion and claims have been made that it can reduce blood sugar levels and cholesterol levels. Excitingly, studies in midlife women have shown that it can help to prevent Alzheimers disease. https://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC3253463/

All of these everyday ingredients can be found easily in the store and only take 5 minutes to chop roughly and blend.
There is nothing magical, expensive or arduous here! Just a simple smoothie that delivers easily absorbed nutrition into your daily meal plan, adds valuable fibre to your diet and supports your precious microbiome in the process…and a healthy microbiome equates to better immunity; 80% of our immune response is housed in the gut ladies and an improvement in your everyday mood. 80% of the serotonin-our happy neurotransmitter- is made in the gut ladies.

Hold up; Are the health benefits compounding with the benefits they provide to our fibre starved microbiome? This is the power of vegetables people!

Let’s do this thing Ladies!

Let’s bring a smoothie into our daily routine and in this simple step take a stand for our own longterm health.

Ingredients

1 apple washed and quartered

1 large beet washed and roughly chopped

2 sticks celery washed and roughly chopped

Juice of 1 lemon

1 thumb sized chunk of fresh ginger chopped

1 12oz glass filtered water

Instructions

Place all of the roughly chopped ingredients into a blender and add the water

Blend until smooth

You should make enough for two glasses of smoothie. Place 1/2 in a glass in your refrigerator and drink tomorrow. Look at that! You are ahead for tomorrow!

P.S. If you enjoyed this nutrition packed smoothie, click here to try my recipe for a Daily Mineral Dense Green Smoothie

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In Breakfast, Snacks, Smoothie
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