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Recipes and Posts

Pumpkin Chai Overnight Oats

August 19, 2024 Louise Carr
Pumpkin Chai Overnight Oats

Fall is coming and this usually means a change in schedule with many of us getting busier as our lives and our kids schedules ramp up.

We know from the research that what you eat in perimenopause has a huge impact on how you will feel in your body at this stage of life.

Diets high in protein, fibre and healthy fats, rich with plenty of anti-inflammatory foods are going to reduce and eliminate your menopausal symptoms so you can feel calm, confident and comfortable in your own body as you move towards menopause.

Busy schedules and deeply nourishing nutrition often go head to head in the Fall.

Here is a recipe for a ‘grab and go’ breakfast that is going to free up your mornings whilst ensuring you start your day with a meal that balances your blood sugar level so you are not plagued with hot flashes and supports your thyroid health so your metabolism stays active and your have boundless energy for your day.

These overnight oats are flavoured with my Homemade Chai Spice, a warming blend that supports your thyroid health and boosts your metabolism.

Pumpkin Chai Overnight Oats with Blueberries are jammed full of flavour and anti-inflammatory nutrition to eliminate hip and shoulder aches and pains.

Ingredients
1/3rd cup oats

1 tbsp Hemp seeds

1/3rd cup pumpkin seeds

1/3rd cup pureed or oven baked pumpkin

1/3rd cup fresh or frozen blueberries

1/2tsp Chai spice

2tsp coconut milk

1/3rd cup Hemp Milk

Instructions
Add all ingredients to a jar and place in refrigerator until ready to eat.

In Breakfast, Snacks

Fennel Apple and Radish Salad

May 23, 2024 Louise Carr

One thing your doctor will not tell you is just how much power you have on your plate to influence and supplement your hormones in menopause, using food and nutrition. There are multiple reasons why we do not have easy access to this information but the two biggest are…

  1. We live in a profit driven, capitalist society and like it or not, the role of doctors has become to drive pharmaceutical sales. This is why we are becoming both more medicated and sicker as a society and also why much of the research carried out into women’s health is funded by the pharmaceutical industry, with a view to pharmaceutical sales and not necessarily so we know more about our own bodies.

  2. Many of our medical professionals are not trained in nutrition to promote health. They just do not have the knowledge or skills to advise.

Nutrition is seen as a complementary medicine. It is here to offer you complementary tools and information so you can make educated decisions about how you manage your health. It offers options you can safely use alongside or with the health care you are offered in midlife.

So let’s talk about fennel, a delicious vegetable, packed with fibre and also, importantly a food that is a powerful source of phytoestrogen.
There are numerous studies showing that babies whose mothers drink fennel tea to promote the production of breast-milk after their birth, can prematurely grow budding breasts, both boys and girls, such is the effectiveness and absorption of the phytoestrogen found in the fennel bulb.

When we are in peri-menopause we can use the estrogenic power of foods like fennel to drip-feed ourselves gentle phytoestrogens and reduce our uncomfortable symptoms whilst protecting our bone, brain and heart health.

Let’s first talk about what it feels like in our body when we are short on estrogen in peri-menopause and full menopause because our body is talking to us all of the time and the symptoms we feel, whilst tough to read, are really useful guidance and information about our bodies. Tune in to your body and put a check-mark by each of the symptoms you are experiencing.

Irregular periods
Vaginal dryness and painful sex
Tender and painful breasts
Trouble concentrating
Low libido
Mood swings and irritability
Osteopenia
Hot flashes and night sweats
Dry and itchy skin
Aching hips and shoulders
Weight gain around the middle as cortisol our stress homone starts to dominate
Difficulty getting to sleep or sleeping through the night, again as cortsiol our stress hormone takes over and dominates in the absence of estrogen.

When we understand our symptoms, it becomes easier to know where we are and what we are experiencing in peri-menopause. Are we in an estrogen spike or crash and what foods can we eat to support our bodies where we are at.

The women in my online course, Menopause U are learning the language of their symptoms, the nutritional knowledge they need and the science behind what is happening to their bodies so they can step into their power and manage their menopause experience using nutrition and lifestyle as their first line of defence.

So, why is this simple Fennel Salad recipe such a powerful support to our midlife bodies? Let’s take a deeper look.

We have just learned that fennel is packed with gentle and easily absorbed phytoestrogen that can drip feed our bodies a top up for the hormones we are naturally missing at this stage of life.

Fresh mint has been found to increase natural levels of estrodial in the body, making it a valuable food to eat in peri-menopause and a recommended food for tackling PCOS. It is also refreshing and delicious in this salad and helps to push the pleasure buttons in our taste buds!

Peri-menopause is a fluid stage of our lives where we experience both spikes and crashes in our hormone levels as our ovaries work their way to a resting state. This changeability in hormone levels is why you can take HRT and find it is a miracle cure for your symptoms for a while, until it is not, because something has changed in your body. The clue is in the name…it is hormonal CHANGE!

When you use food and nutrition to manage your menopause experience, you can also add balance to the phytoestrogens you are adding into your diet that help you better cope with fluctuations and changes occurring in your body.

The pectin fibre in apples is perfect for dragging excess hormone out of the body via your daily detox or poop. We excrete most of our excess hormone in our poop and it is important in peri-menopause to avoid constipation so as to avoid the recirculation of excess estrogen. The pectin in apples is perfect for the job and remember that beautiful phytoestrogen we are feeding our body in fennel? It comes wrapped up in fibre so if we experience a fluctuation to excess estrogen, it is easily removed from the body and our uncomfortable symptoms are reduced and blunted.

This salad also contains radish and lemon juice and both are deeply supportive of your liver health. It is your liver that takes on the role of de-conjugating or breaking-down excess hormones in the body. A healthy liver helps you to reduce your symptoms and remove excess hormone more easily in your daily poop.

Again, with the nutrition in this delicious salad, we are are offering the body the phytoestrogen it craves in an estrogen crash, alongside the fibre our bodies need to handle an estrogen spike. In this way we can climb off the debilitating and stressful hormone roller-coaster and dramatically reduce and manage our uncomfortable symptoms.

Nutrition is holistic. It impacts all areas of our joined-up bodies. The fibre in this easy to prepare salad is going to protect your heart health and help to reduce your risk of colon and breast cancer. The whole dish is anti-inflammatory, helping again to reduce your menopausal symptoms as well as reducing hip and shoulder pain and helping with inflammation in the digestive tract.

Above all else, this pretty little, pink and green salad is going to spark joy every time you load it onto your plate; and I am all about midlife women’s joy and pleasure, in all of it’s shapes and forms.

Ingredients

1 head of fennel
1 crisp apple cored and halved
8 pink radishes thinly sliced
1 bunch mint
Juice of 1 lemon
Olive oil
Salt and pepper to taste.

Instructions

  1. Finely chop the fennel bulb including some of the fronds, discarding the woody root, and add them to a large bowl.

  2. Dice, grate or finely slice the apple into thin batons and add to the fennel.

  3. Thinly slice the pink radishes and add the diecs to the bowl

  4. Finely chop a bunch of mint and toss in with the vegetables and fruit.

  5. Squeeze the juice of a lemon over the salad and toss through all the vegetables and the apple to keep them fresh

  6. Drizzle olive oil to taste over the salad before serving. (This heart healthy fat helps the body to absorb more of the nutrition from the salad.)

Oven Baked Risotto: Make It Your Own

May 17, 2024 Louise Carr
Oven Baked Risotto

When I started my health journey to manage my peri-menopausal symptoms, I was aged 46, and I was drained, fried, exhausted, chewed up and spat out by life!

I had just been gaslit by my doctor that I should ‘expect to feel this way at my age’ and I was desperate to find a solution for my anxious broken sleep, my daily sense of dread and overwhelm on waking and my sweaty and exhausting sudden weight gain, which left me feeling like I was dragging my body around all day and rang the death knell for the cardio workouts i relied on to ‘stay thin!’.

I enrolled in nutrition school, as an act of desperation and a need to save my own health, then I started making changes to the food I ate each day, as fast as I could… believe me these were just baby steps in the beginning because, did I mention, I was already in overwhelm!!!

One thing I knew for sure was that I did not have the energy to drag my sceptical husband and three, stroppy teens along with me on my health journey. So, I took and two pronged approach to this problem.

1. For the first time in my family life, I started making food just for me. Easy to prepare, nutritionally dense smoothies and elixirs, snacks and soups, that I could eat for/in addition to my breakfast, lunch and daily snack, so that I was nourishing my midlife body to balance my hormones and regain my energy around our family meals.

2. I started compiling a list of family friendly meals, easy to prepare, with accessible flavours and/or cheese, that I knew my family would love. Meals that contained dense nutrition, so well disguised and hidden that not one of my little lawyers would start a debate about eating it!

Full disclosure, This was not easy!

Enter the baked risotto, in all of it’s beautiful iterations.

The recipe below is perfect for Spring and contains peas and asparagus but I encourage you to riff off the method and through a risotto containing Italian chicken sausage and cherry tomatoes into the oven or go rogue with softened leeks and bacon or diced sweet potato and leftover rotisserie chicken.

Basically, whatever vegetables your family will eat and be chopped and thrown into this basic recipe.

So why is this recipe such a nutritional power house?

  1. The back bone of this dish is bone broth. The mineral dense elixir that supports your adrenal health at a time when your adrenals are taking on the additional task of drip feeding your ‘juicy’ hormones after you ovaries get some rest. Bone broth, packed with collagen for digestive, joint, bone and skin health, (good-bye gassy bloat, wrinkles and aching hips). Bone broth, packed with the amino acids, glycine and arginine which are anti-inflammatory and support your liver to manage and breakdown the spikes of excess hormone we experience in peri-menopause thus reducing our symtoms.

  2. This recipe is a vehicle for vegetables and studies show that women who eat more fruits and vegetables daily experience fewer symptoms of menopause. Fibre is the midlife woman’s best friend as fibre supports a healthy microbiome and helps you to poop. 95 % of all women in North America are deficient in fibre. AND WE WONDER WHY MENOPAUSE IS SO UNBEARABLE! Both the health of your microbiome and pooping daily will directly reduce your uncomfortable symptoms of peri-menopause. COME ON! If we do nothing else when we feel our symptoms of menopause, can we please just switch things up to eat enough fibre?

  3. You can add more mineral-dense, live, green nutrition to this dish and call it a garnish! A risotto is just calling out to be garnished with parsley, basil or oregano. It’s what your Nonna would do! Every-time you go the extra Italian mile, you are adding even more mineral dense, gut-healing fibre to your meal.

And then don’t forget the CHEESE! I could always guarantee a meal would go down easy with three teens if it was smothered in cheese. Grate a ton of cheese and let them help themselves, then try and keep a poker face when you see your family chowing down on all the nutritious goodness, underneath the cheese on their plate!

Oven baked risotto, an EASY and deeply nourishing recipe for the peri-menopausal woman and also a recipe for happy family times!

Springtime Oven Baked Risotto

Ingredients


1 leek finely chopped
1 bunch asparagus cut into 1' lengths
1 cup frozen peas
2 slices of back bacon
2 cloves garlic finely chopped
3 tbsp organic butter
11/2 Arborio rice
3 cups organic beef or chicken bone broth
1/4 cup pecorino cheese grated
1/2 bunch parsley finely chopped
rind of 1/2 lemon grated
salt and pepper to taste.

Instructions

Pre heat the oven to 400F, 200C or gas mark 6
Add all of the ingredients into a frying pan that can be placed in the oven. (no plastic handles) and sautés the vegetables gently in the butter.
Add the rice and toss it in the buttered vegetables until it becomes a little transparent.
Add the broth and place the vegetables and rice that are swimming in the broth into the preheated oven.
Cook for 20 -25 minutes or until the rice is cooked through.
Stir through the cheese, parsley and lemon zest and season with salt and pepper.
Serve with a tomato salad drizzled with olive oil.

 

In Main Meals
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