Monday, November 29, 2010

ADHD and Pesticides

A study earlier this year examined the relationship between organophosphate pesticide exposure in children ages 8-15 and the incidence of ADHD.

The "findings support the hypothesis that organophosphate exposure, at levels common among US children, may contribute to ADHD prevalence."

You can read the article here, though it is quite technical.

This is a good reason to eat organic, especially now that there are so many GMO crops used in processed foods. The use of pesticides on GMO crops is far heavier than on non-GMO crops because the GMO seeds are engineered to withstand high levels of Monsanto's Roundup pesticide.

Click here for help with healthy eating.


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Do You Take Your Water With Or Without Lemon?

Silly question? You decide ...

A study done in 2007 found that 2/3 of the lemon slices served at 21 different restaurants were contaminated with bacteria that had the potential to cause disease.

Does that make you want a slice of lemon in your next glass of water?

Read more here.


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Healthy Eating Forums - Ask Your Healthy Eating Questions Here

Welcome to our Healthy Eating Forums! This is where you can ask all your questions about any aspect of healthy eating.

There's no need to sign up or register, just find the healthy eating topic that interests you and ask or answer questions, or make comments and suggestions. It's easy and free, and everyone is welcome to join in!

Knowing what's healthy and what isn't can be hard, so come here and ask for guidance. Together we can sort out the good from the bad, and get on track to a healthier, tastier diet. To take part in our forums, simply click on the topics below. These take you to our forum pages where you can start straight away to ask questions or read what others have said.

If you'd like to suggest a topic that we don't cover, please click here. Or scroll down to see what topics other people have come up with.

This is the main part of our Healthy Eating Forum. This whole section is dedicated to your comments and questions about healthy diet.

If you have a question to ask, just scroll down and complete the form. Or take a look and see what other people have been asking.

This weight loss forum is where to share your favorite weight loss tips, or pick up some inspiration for your own bid to lose weight.

You can share your experiences, set goals or ask for help or support. It's easy, so make yourself comfortable and join our weight loss forum.

How many times have you asked that question? See what other people are serving up this evening - and add your own healthy meal suggestion. Got a recipe your kids love? Or are you a kid who wants to eat healthy and has an idea or recipe to share?

Tell us all about it - it's easy, and it's fun. Join in, with our Healthy Kids Recipes forum.

Stop by and tell us what's your biggest Healthy Eating Challenge. We'll do our best to help! Love cook books? Tell us about your favorites by publishing your very own cook book review.

It's great to share news of all the wonderful healthy cook books out there, so please join in and tell us which one you take from the shelf when you want healthy eating inspiration!

Is there a healthy eating subject you'd like us to cover in our healthy eating forums? Make your suggestion here.
If enough people are interested, we'll create a new forum page just for you. And simply posting your topic here will create a mini-forum - make sure you tell your family and friends about it!

What Other Visitors Have Said

Click below to see contributions from other visitors to this page...

Gluten Free  Not rated yet
An estimated 1 in 33 people should be on a gluten "light" or gluten free diet. Gluten is quickly becoming recognized to cause many different health problems....

Fresh Healthy Vending Careers  Not rated yet
While other businesses are shrinking, Fresh Healthy Vending is expanding and currently has career opportunities nationwide. Help us change the way America ...

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Laying off the chocolate!

by Bean
(Sydney)

Just love it...can't say no to chocolate!

Answer
Hi Bean - I know, it's hard - but there are ways and means to curb your sweet tooth. Sign up for our course Get the Healthy Eating Habit for more information.

all the best
Elizabeth


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Healthy Sandwich Ideas for a Healthy Lunch

The best sandwich ideas and healthy sandwich recipes for a healthy lunch. ADVERTISEMENT

Chicken salad sandwiches, egg sandwiches, tuna sandwiches and more. What makes a great healthy sandwich?

First, consider the type of bread you choose. The same filling can taste quite different when it's in a soft white bap, to when it's tucked into a hearty wholemeal roll with seeds on top.

Truly healthy sandwich recipes will always avoid white bread because it's lacking in fibre. If you really love white bread, look for a variety that has half-and-half white and wholegrain flour - kids will often accept this compromise for their favourite white bread.

Otherwise, always start with good, fresh, wholemeal bread or rolls, or try wholemeal pittas or wraps instead.

Check out these healthy lunch box ideas for 10 healthy sandwich ideas.

For healthier sandwich fillings, avoid processed meats like salami and pastrami which have been implicated as being unhealthy in the cancer prevention diet.

If you do go for meat, choose lean varieties, cut off any visible fat and avoid cheap ham which has been reformed from other cuts and is likely to contain added fat, water, salt and sugar.

Poultry is an excellent choice. Try this Chicken Salad Sandwich Recipe, or go for an easy turkey sandwich from these Leftover Turkey Recipes.

You'll find other great ideas here:

Egg Salad Sandwich How to make a succulent egg salad sandwich.

Vegetarian Sandwiches Sandwiches to keep veggies happy, from cucumber, through peanut butter to avocado.

Good Food Matters

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Pumpkin Soup Recipes perfect in a healthy diet

Warming pumpkin soup recipes, perfect in your healthy diet.

Pumpkin lends itself perfectly to soup making. The colour is appetising, and the subtle flavour blends with well with other vegetables.

For variety, try herbs ? chives or parsley ? or spices, like cinnamon, nutmeg or ginger.

This selection of recipes includes a very simple pumpkin broth, as well as a creamier, richer recipe for pumpkin soup. The thinner soups are perfect healthy soup recipes for weight loss

Use vegetable stock for all these recipes, either home made or from bouillon powder.

Quick and Easy Pumpkin Soup
A homely and simple soup, with a surprisingly full and creamy texture, easily put together from basic ingredients, and truly satisfying.

Quick and easy pumpkin soupServes 6: Peel and de-seed half a pumpkin, and cut into chunks. Put in a pan with enough water to just cover. Simmer until tender, drain thoroughly and puree in a blender or food processor. Dilute the puree to the consistency you like, using water, or part milk, part water, or soya milk. Grate in a little nutmeg and season lightly with salt and pepper. Warm through to serve.

Pumpkin and Turnip Soup
Make the best of another fine winter vegetable, turnip, with this straightforward recipe.

Serves 6: 2 leeks, well-cleaned, trimmed and shredded, 1 large onion, chopped, 2 small turnips, peeled and diced, 1 kg (5 cups) cubed and peeled pumpkin.

Simmer all the vegetables gently in 1.5 litres (6 cups) vegetable stock for 15-20 minutes, or until the pumpkin is tender. Puree in a blender or food processor.

Pumpkin and Ginger Soup
Fresh ginger is a great addition to many vegetable soups. In this recipe, it gives the pumpkin flavour a real lift.

Serves 4: 1 tbsp olive oil, 1 onion, finely chopped, 2 cloves garlic, crushed, 2.5cm (1 inch) piece root ginger, peeled and grated, 650g (4 cups) peeled and chopped pumpkin flesh, 850ml (3 cups) vegetable stock

Sweat the onions gently in the olive oil for 5 mins, add the onion, garlic, ginger and pumpkin and cook for 5 mins more. Add the water or stock and simmer for 15-20 mins, until the pumpkin is tender. Puree the soup in a blender or food processor and thin with a little extra stock, water or milk if necessary.

Velvety Pumpkin Soup

This healthy recipe uses soy milk and yogurt rather than cream to give the soup a smooth, rich texture.

Serves 6: 500g (3 cups) pumpkin cubes, 350ml (1 ? cups) vegetable stock, 1 sliced onion, 2 diced carrots, 1 tsp ground cinnamon, 750ml (3 cups) soya milk, 10mml (1/4 cup) soya yogurt.

Place the vegetables and stock in a large saucepan, bring to the boil and simmer for 15-20 mins until the vegetables are tender. Blend or process until smooth. Return to pan, add the cinnamon and soya milk, stir gently and simmer for 10 mins. To serve, add a spoonful of soya yogurt to each portion.

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Green Smoothie

This is a healthy drink to start off your day or for a refreshing snack.

1/2 - 3/4 cup fresh or frozen mango, cut in chunks
1-2 tablespoons fresh or frozen pineapple
2-3 tablespoons melted coconut oil
1 raw egg, organic, free range
1 cup plain, whole milk yogurt, organic, hormone and antibiotic free
2 cups of fresh, organic greens, just the leafy part (kale, chard, spinach, collards, dandelion, etc.)

Thaw frozen fruit overnight in the refrigerator. Before blending the ingredients, warm the fruit to room temperature or above 76º F.

Add coconut oil to the fruit. Above 76º F, the coconut oil will be liquid. Mix the fruit and coconut oil together until the oil remains liquid.

Warm the egg to room temperature.

Put the raw egg into a blender or VitaMix (A VitaMix is much quicker than a blender).

Add the fruit and coconut oil mixture. Blend till creamy.

Next add the yogurt. Blend till completely mixed.

Last, add the greens. If using a blender, make sure the greens are broken into small pieces. If using a VitaMix, they can be added whole.

If you use a blender, it will take a bit longer to blend completely to a creamy consistency. With the VitaMix, it's pretty quick.

With the amounts of fruit and greens in this recipe, you can taste the greens a little. I like it that way. However, if you would prefer not to taste the greens, you can add more fruit. You can vary the types of fruit according to your taste.

Enjoy!

This is a great way to get these healthy greens into your family's diet.


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Sunday, November 28, 2010

Green Kitchen: Golden Shredded Brussels Sprouts

Green Kitchen is a bi-weekly column about nutritious, inexpensive, and ethical food and cooking. It's penned by the lovely Jaime Green.
Dear readers, for those of you not living in the Northeast, let me tell you something I just learned: it is FALL! Sure, Utah was having snowstorms two weeks ago, but whatever. In my little world, the seasons just started changing, and hard.

When I told my boyfriend that I could see my breath this morning he was like, “Why are you so excited about it being freezing out?”

“I don’t know.” I thought for a moment. “I guess I really like November?”

It shouldn’t be too much of a surprise. Two weekends ago I texted a few friends a picture of the fall’s first Brussels sprouts at the farmers market, along with the word, “first!”

I know that summer is the season of produce bounty or whatever, and I have enjoyed it. I ate sweet cherry tomatoes like grapes, munched on every color of bell pepper, enjoyed berries and peaches and plums. It was great.

But fall is my favorite season for produce. The first few apples I saw just reminded me of late-winter apple fatigue, but now I’ve been making batches of spicy apple sauce that I’m frankly addicted to. I’m roasting sweet potatoes and sautéing broccoli and there’s a butternut squash on my kitchen table with a date with a (hopefully) sharp knife.

And then there are Brussels sprouts. O, Brussels sprouts, I love them so. I can’t tell how far into the popular consciousness their adoration has spread. It’s like a rumor, passed friend to friend, or admission to the Secret Brussels Sprouts Appreciation Society. “Have you tried roasted Brussels sprouts?” “If you brown them in a pan, they’re better than bacon.” “My mother used to steam them and they smelled like trash, but cooked hot and salty they’re— Oh, sorry, I’m drooling down my shirt.”

So, I want to make sure you’ve heard. When steamed or boiled, Brussels sprouts are gross, deserving of their putrid reputation. But roasted or sautéed, browned and salted just right, they’re— Oh, sorry, I’m drooling down my shirt again.

Beyond that, Brussels sprouts are also a good source of Vitamin A, Vitamin C, Thiamine, Folate, Iron, and fiber. They come into season (at least in the Northeast and other similarly climated regions) in mid-October, and last past the frost. Their relatives include cabbage, collard greens, broccoli, and kale, and they do indeed look like tiny cabbages (or brains). They grow on stalks, and sometimes you can buy them that way at the farmers market, and it looks CRAZY.
And that was Brussels sprouts fact-time! Yay!

My go-to Brussels sprout recipe, and what originally converted me to their cult, is Heidi Swansson’s Golden-Crusted Brussels Sprouts. The cheese is superfluous but the method is perfection – cook halved sprouts with oil and salt, sautéing until they’re carmelized and browned. Crispy outsides, melty insides, addictive throughout. I served them as a side dish when I cooked Thanksgiving at my mom’s house a couple of years ago (everything but the bird), and converted my family in one go.

Sometimes, though, I just don’t have the patience to make sure the cut sides are browned, to find the right balance between thorough cooking inside and out. (Cooking Brussels sprouts too slowly lets the insides steam, giving you that nasty, almost horseradishey flavor.)

(You can also roast these babies in the oven – tossed with oil and salt, laid out on a baking sheet, shaken around once in a while, until browned and delicious. But I’m still living in the land of No Gas to the Kitchen, and a meager few toaster oven-roasted Brussels sprouts is just not enough for my fix.)

So here’s my new favorite way to cook Brussels sprouts – it gives you the pan-sautéed flavor without any of the finicky work.

You shred some sprouts. You heat oil in a pan. You sautee them until they’re done.

Oh, you wanted an actual recipe? Okay. Enjoy. Welcome to the club.

~~~

If you think this looks good, yer gonna love:

~~~

Golden Shredded Brussels Sprouts
serves 2-3


1 lb Brussels sprouts (3-4 cups shredded)
1/8-1/4 t salt
dash of red pepper flakes (optional)

Note: if increasing recipe, cook in batches – an overfull pan of sprouts will steam rather than brown.

1) Trim ends and loose leaves off of sprouts. Cut (lengthwise) into thin shreds.

2) Heat olive oil in a wide sauté pan over medium-high heat. Add sprouts and toss with salt and red pepper.

3) Sauté until sprouts are browned in places, about ten minutes.

Approximate Calories, Fat, Fiber, Protein, and Price Per Serving
129 calories, 7.5g fat, 5.6g fiber, 5.2g protein, $1.51

Calculations
1 lb Brussels sprouts: 132 calories, 0.9g fat, 11.7g fiber, 10.4g protein, $3.00
1/8-1/4 t salt: 0 calories, 0g fat, 0g fiber, 0g protein, $0.01
dash of red pepper flakes: 0 calories, 0g fat, 0g fiber, 0g protein, $0.01
TOTALS: 258 calories, 14.9g fat, 11.7g fiber, 10.4g protein, $3.02
PER SERVING (TOTAL/2): 129 calories, 7.5g fat, 5.6g fiber, 5.2g protein, $1.51
PER SERVING (TOTAL/3): 86 calories, 5g fat, 3.9g fiber, 3.5g protein, $1.00 Stumble Upon Toolbar

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Top 10 Links of the Week: 11/12/10 – 11/18/10

No time to waste! Let’s get right to it.

1) The Kitchn: 10 Things to Buy in the Next 60 Days to Save You Money
Supermarket are holding some huge sales right now, meaning you can stock up on food used all year-round. Butter it up, everybody.

2) Casual Kitchen: Organic Food, Chemicals, and Worrying About All the Wrong Things
ComPLETELY agree with Dan here. Sometimes, our fears are amplified so much by hype, we get distracted from the real issues. Case in point, pesticides.

3) 344 Pounds: Discrimination Against Fat & Obese People
Interesting viewpoint on prejudice leading to an even more eye-opening discussion thread.

4) Divine Caroline: 10 Sugary Cereals to Avoid
Marshmallow Froot Loops are 48 PERCENT SUGAR? Are you JOSHING ME? It’s one of those things you knew, but don’t really know until someone translates it into a stat like that. Yowza.

5) Public Radio Kitchen: What Not to Get the Cook on Your List
Um, not that we’re ungrateful. But … yeah. Lots of cluttery tools out there.

6) Chow: Best and Worst Recipes You Made From a Cooking Show
Oo! Fun, huge thread. Paula Deen's Gooey Pumpkin Bars represent very, very well (with good reason).

7) Mama Says: School Lunches
A glimpse into modern cafeteria cuisine.

8) Jezebel: What Fast Food Really Looks Like
Ooo … reality bites. Entertainingly so.

9) Obama Foodorama: Huge BiPartisan Coalition Urges House to Pass Childhood Nutrition Legislation in Lame Duck
Damn right.

10) The Simple Dollar: Some Thoughts on a Plant-Based Diet
Updates on Trent’s vegetarian experiment. Insightful. A spreading trend, perhaps?

HONORABLE MENTIONS

Gawker: The Internet Has Killed Cooks Source
It will live to “edit” articles no more.

Obama Foodorama: Improved Nutrition Labels on Food Packages Coming Very Soon, Sebelius Says
We’ll see, Sebelius. We'll see.

Plixi: The Windows at Barneys
I had a dream like this once.

stonesoup: Defrosting 101 – The Quickest and Safest Methods Without a Microwave
Behold: THE SUN! (Just kidding.)

THANKSGIVING

AND ALSO

Gawker TV: Tina Fey’s Famous Friends Pay Tribute at the Mark Twain Prize for American Humor
Does Jon Hamm ever stop being so dreamy? Seriously now. Oh, also, Fey is my hero. (Well, her and Ina Garten. If they ever combined forces to produce Barefoot 30 Rock, my life would be complete.) (P.S. Alec Baldwin as Jeffrey. It could work.)


Thank you so much for visiting Cheap Healthy Good! (We appreciate it muchly). If you’d like to further support CHG, subscribe to our RSS feed! Or become a Facebook friend! Or check out our Twitter! Or buy something inexpensive, yet fulfilling via that Amazon store (on the left)! Bookmarking sites and links are nice, too. Viva la France! Stumble Upon Toolbar

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Top Ten Links of the Week: 10/22/10 - 10/28/10

Happy Halloween, sweet readers! Today, we delve deep into the anthropology of candy, the downsides of fundraisers, and the benefits of soup and vegetables.

Oo! Also! Movie suggestion! If you haven't seen 2008's Swedish vampire movie Let the Right One In, rent it for the 31st. It will move you and scare your pants off at the same time. I'm dead serious. Those (we) Scandinavians know horror. And the luge. But mostly horror.

1) New York Times: Is Candy Evil or Just Misunderstood?
By day, Dr. Samira Kawash is ludicrously well-educated administrator, mom, and jellybean addict. By night, she’s CANDY PROFESSOR, a blogger exploring Americans’ cultural relationship with jujubes, lollipops, and Gummi bears. It’s a sweet article, in every sense of the word.

2) The Atlantic Food: The Meanings of Halloween Candy Psychopath Stories
All Hallow’s Eve approaches, my pretties. This year, don’t fear razor-bladed Snickers or poisoned Mary Janes. They’re pretty much an unsubstantiated myth, fostered by our fear of contamination and the unknown. Who knows? CANDY PROFESSOR knows. (Seriously. She wrote this.)

3) Oregon Live: Soup swaps help stock your freezer and foster friendships
Ooo! Wanna procure a variety of delicious, nutritious meals for pennies? Hold a soup swap. This piece gives you the guidelines, along with six good-looking recipes.

4) The Atlantic: The Dark Side of Benefit Dinners
Porchetta chef Sara Jenkins is leery of benefits for two reasons: 1) They often seem more like self-congratulatory parties for their respective parent organizations, and 2) She’s repeatedly expected to buy, prep, and serve a massive amount of food for free. It’s a reasonable argument, and one worth exploring if you're planning, funding, or attending a fundraising dinner anytime soon.

5) Casual Kitchen: Cooking Up Advantages Out of Disadvantages
Love this piece about accidental innovation when you’re too busy to do it on purpose. Aren’t we all more productive when we’re busy?

6) The Simple Dollar: Can Once-a-Month Cooking Really Work?
Personal finance guru/home cook Trent details the beginnings of his family’s OaM experiment, which will be employed full-force when his wife heads back to work. Can they pull it off? Will the meals become too repetitive? Is it something they can do consistently? Read on and find out.

7) HuffPo: Screamin’ Grocery Store Deals: 16 Cheap, Organic Foods
Fab organic deals in somewhat irritating slideshow form. Take a glance if you don’t mind the extra clicking. (Does anyone else loathe slideshows? Man, they make me crazy. HuffPo is a constant culprit.)

8) The Independent: Excessive Meat Eating Kills 45,000 Each Year
You know, you see a lot of articles pinning metabolic syndrome on obesity and poor diets, but you rarely see them specifically blame meat consumption. This is a UK publication, is probably why it's allowed to happen here. Interesting read.

9) Gen X Finance: 8 Ways to Save Money When Going Out to Eat
I love any frugality piece acknowledging that leaving the house is necessary to maintain one’s sanity. Also, food is good. So, um, read this.

10) USA Today: Food allergies more likely in kids born in winter
It’s understood that these claims are legitimate, but don’t they sound a little like obscure baseball stats? Like, kids born in winter after the seventh inning on days ending in 3, 7, or 8 are more likely to have a shellfish intolerance and less likely to hit for the cycle? Am I watching too much of the World Series? Answer me, Tim Lincecum!

HONORABLE MENTIONS

Cooking Manager: Interview with Cheap Healthy Good Kris
The lovely Hannah graciously asked to interview me earlier this week. These are the squash-tastic results

The Guardian: Global food crisis forecast as prices reach record highs
Oh, crud. Not again. Imagine 2008’s crisis, but make it much longer.

HuffPo/Eating Well: How to Save $2,997 on Food Without Even Trying
Standard but solid roundup on common ways to cut back on your food expenditures. If you’re new to this, it’s definitely worth a gander.

stonesoup: 7 Things You Should Know About Eggplant
I didn’t know about #2. As Gram used to say, "You learn something new everyday, and could you please turn up my Lawrence Welk Show? Thanks, dear."

Time.com: Lardcore – Southern Food With Hardcore Attitude
The article is incidental. Whoever came up with “lardcore” should be kissed on the mouth. Somewhere, Henry Rollins is eating fried chicken and angrily smiling.

Wise Bread: How to Save $1500 on Coffee
Should you buy an espresso machine? Believe it or not, it might be a solid investment if you’re a joe-holic.

AND ALSO

Electric Company: Morgan Freeman as Count Dracula, Taking a Bath in a Casket
Happy Halloweeeeeeeen!

(Banana and candy pics from Wiki commons.)

Thank you so much for visiting Cheap Healthy Good! (We appreciate it muchly). If you’d like to further support CHG, subscribe to our RSS feed! Or become a Facebook friend! Or check out our Twitter! Or buy something inexpensive, yet fulfilling via that Amazon store (on the left)! Bookmarking sites and links are nice, too. Viva la France! Stumble Upon Toolbar

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Lose Weight Rapidly With Hypnosis

Lose Weight Rapidly With HypnosisDr. Zubin Mistry will begin to direct your subconscious mind to change your eating patterns the very first time you listen to your CD! As your eating patterns change and the pounds melt away, you will make healthier food choices and eliminate bad eating habits and it will feel completely natural. It will be as though eating healthier becomes second nature. You will eat less and still feel full and satisfied.

Your hypnotic CD will promote weight loss by eliminating poor eating habits that you're not even aware exist. You'll eliminate needless snacking and eating out of boredom. Emotional eating will become a thing of the past overnight!

By listening to your CD often, you will begin to feel better physically. You'll be eating healthier and you'll have more energy and feel more active.

SOME POTENTIAL PROBLEMS YOUR ALTERSCAPE HYPNOTIC CD MAY HELP SOLVE OR AVOID:
- Endless Dieting
- Eating Disorders (Anorexia & Bulemia)
- Binge Eating
- Over-Eating
- Diabetes
- Obesity
- Hypoglycemia
- Heart Disease
- Food Addictions
- Compulsive Eating
- Childhood Obesity

POTENTIAL BENEFITS OF YOUR ALTERSCAPE HYPNOTIC CD:
- Healthy Eating
- Weight Reduction
- Healthier Outlook on Life
- Enhanced Self-Image
- More Energy
- More Active Lifestyle
- Prolonged Life

Listen and begin to lose weight today! Embrace the power of hypnosis to lose weight and alter your life.

This product is manufactured on demand using CD-R recordable media. Amazon.com's standard return policy will apply.

Price: $15.95


Click here to buy from Amazon

Weight Loss Revelations

Find Out How You can Loss Weight Safely And Easily While Keeping It Off For Good. The Ultimate Guide To Losing Weight Quickly, Safely And Permanently!


Check it out!

Best Foods List to Plan an Antioxidant Rich Diet Menu with Recipes

Antioxidants are nutrients which slow the damage caused when the cells in our body metabolize oxygen. During this metabolism, molecular bonds can weaken and split, resulting in free radicals, roaming by-products which quickly try to attach themselves to the nearest stable molecule, potentially causing damage.

Free radicals are normal to an extent, sometimes triggered by the body’s own immune system, but the presence of too many free radicals or too few antioxidants, as well as environmental exposures like smoke, herbicides, radiation, and pollution, can all play a role in tipping the balance, resulting in oxidative damage to the cells.
berries antioxidant
Oxidative damage contributes to a host of diseases. Antioxidants can prevent and repair the damage of free radicals, and may also help build the body’s immune system, as well as reducing the risks of Alzheimer’s and Parkinson’s diseases, rheumatoid arthritis, asthma, cardiovascular conditions, macular degeneration, and cancer.

Many vegetables and fruits contain antioxidants, along with nuts, whole grains, and fish. Even red meat and chicken, both rich in Selenium, contain antioxidants, as do spices such as cloves, cinnamon and oregano.

However, finding the top ten or top twenty antioxidant rich foods is not merely a matter of assessing the total antioxidant capacity of any one particular food. Factors such as digestion and absorption, as well as food preparation can affect the potential benefit of antioxidants.

Following a proven diet such as the Mediterranean diet can be an easy, simple way to work antioxidants into an every day lifestyle. Since the 1940s, studies have consistently shown the health benefits of adapting the traditional diets of the Mediterranean culture.

An antioxidant rich Mediterranean menu might consist of a breakfast of berries and yogurt, with whole grain bread, drizzled with honey. Whole wheat pita bread provides a quick and easy base for both lunch and dinner when paired with Roasted Vegetables or Meatballs with Spanish Sauce. Serve a fruit rich in antioxidants like mangoes, cantaloupe and watermelon, for desert.

Roasted Vegetables
¼ c. extra-virgin olive oil
1 T. red wine vinegar
1 T. minced garlic
1 t. basil
1 c. olives
1 c. chopped tomatoes
1 c. chopped yellow bell pepper
1 c. chopped green bell pepper
1 c. chopped red onion
¼ c. chopped parsley
Salt and pepper to taste
1 c. crumbled feta cheese (4 oz.)

Mix and spread onto baking sheets.
Bake 450°F for 30 minutes.
Crumble feta on top.

Meatballs with Spanish Sauce
Meatballs:
1 lb. ground beef
½ c. bread crumbs
½ c. minced onion
1 egg
½ c. yogurt
Salt and pepper to taste

Combine ingredients; shape into balls
Place on baking sheet
Bake 375°F for 15 minutes

Sauce:
¼ c. olive oil
1 diced onion
1 diced green pepper
1 bay leaf
2 cloves
1 t. sugar
Salt and pepper to taste
1 piece whole wheat bread, cubed
1 lb. canned tomatoes

Mix and simmer for 30 minutes, using cubed bread to thicken sauce to taste.
Add cooked meatballs; simmer 20 minutes.


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Preventing weight gain

by Pat
(Midlands, Uk)

I'd like to lose weight - or at least stop myself gaining more weight.

Answer
See this page on eating healthy to lose weight, Pat, you'll find some great tips on keeping that weight off.

all the best
Elizabeth


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8 Easy Stews from Martha Stewart

Top Features in Recipes & Menus:

» See More Recipes & Menus

Cooking with Cupcake Pans »

Martha Stewart shows there’s "muffin" to it when it comes to making other treats in your trusty cupcake pan.

Video: World Champion BBQ Recipes »

Two world champion grill masters, Ed "Fast Eddy" Maurin and Chris Lilly, show you how to barbecue chicken and ribs the winning way.


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Saturday, November 27, 2010

Brussel Sprout recipes, Healthy Eating Recipes

You can use these brussel sprout recipes right through the winter for healthy eating recipes.

Brussels sprouts are an essential part of the Thanksgiving and Christmas meals and are also a great little vegetable to use at any time.

They have a distinctive flavor, and are at their sweetest and best after the first frosts.

Choose small brussels sprouts, about the size of a walnut. They should be firm and the leaves bright green and tightly packed.

Avoid large ones, or any that are yellowing, or where the leaves are slightly open. Good, firm brussel sprouts will keep for 3-4 days loosely wrapped in the fridge.

How to prepare brussel sprouts
Trim off the end of the stalk and peel away any loose outer leaves. Prepare 8-10 sprouts per person. You can cut a cross in the end of the stalk if that's the way you've always done it, but I don't believe it makes any difference to the way they cook, and could even encourage them to lose shape.

Halve any sprouts that are on the large side. As you prepare each sprout, drop it into a bowl of salted water to bring out any beasties lurking inside. When all are prepared, drain and rinse well under cold water.

Brussel sprout recipes

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A Call for Guest Posts

Sweet readers! Hi there. It’s Kris. And I have a favor to ask yis.

First, some background: We’re all about life changes at the CHG Mansion lately. HOTUS and I are still cleaning up from the wedding. I started a new job last week. We’re buying a car, even though I’ve driven exactly once since 2004. Our cat barfed.

And now, the latest, most unexpected (but happy) development: we’re moving right after Thanksgiving.

As they say in France, LES YIKES.

Among many other fabulous things, this means there's not much time to blog, much less pack, much less see the new Harry Potter. (Crap!) Leigh and Jaime are taking up some of the slack, but we’re gonna need backup. So, I was wondering if any of y’all would be interested in providing it. With guest posts, I mean.

If you’re not interested, no worries. We’ll catch up over a few drinks later.

If you are interested, yay! I kiss you.

Here are the details: We’re looking for fun, original, grammatically sound recipe posts and CHG-esque articles. They can be personal accounts, experiments, Top 10s, or anything really, as long as the topics generally adhere to CHG's usual subject matter (cheap n' healthy food). Also, taking a look at this Guest Submission Guideline post from Get Rich Slowly might be a good idea.

In return, we can offer you a fair amount of publicity for your own blog, website, small business, or backwoods militia. Our RSS feed is up over 10,000 these days, and we’re getting between 4,000 and 5,000 hits off of various search engines and links daily. So there’s that.

Should this sound like a fun idea, shoot me an e-mail at


to discuss a potential post, as well as a few blogging rules and regulations (formatting, recipes instruction rewrites, etc.). We’ll take the best ideas and run with ‘em, and see how it all ends up.

If you don’t receive a reply within a few days, I apologize, and will hopefully get to everybody as soon as possible. In the meantime, thank you for being more wonderful than an evening with Ina Garten, Tina Fey, and Eddie Vedder combined.

Now, off to clean up some cat barf. Stumble Upon Toolbar

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Baked potatoes with tuna

by Elizabeth
(Healthy Eating Made Easy)

Baked potatoes with tuna are a simple winter recipe.

Scrub a medium potato for each person, prick the skin a few times with a fork and bake in a medium oven for about an hour until tender to the point of a knife.

Take them out of the oven, cut in half and scoop out the insides, being careful not to break the skin. Mash the potato together with drained, flaked tuna and seasoning. Add grated cheese if you like.

Scoop back into the skins, place on baking sheet and bake again for 10-15 mins until crisp and browned.

Serve with salad.


View the original article here

rice mixed with veggies

by jessica
(australia )

2 cups of rice
2 carrots (chopped thinly)
1 cup of peas
2 tbs of wine vinegar
4 small mushrooms
2 tbs of soy sauce
pinch of salt and pepper

serves 3

add ham if desired


View the original article here

Healthy food costs too much

by Mitch

My biggest healthy eating challenge money. Good food costs more than junk food.

Answer
Mitch, healthy eating doesn't have to be expensive. Check out the tips on these pages and see how much you can save!
Save money on groceries
Frugal cooking
Save money on food

all the best
Elizabeth


View the original article here

Roast Vegetables, Lentils and Halloumi

by Elizabeth
(Healthy Eating Made Easy)

Roasted vegetables - make enough for 4, using a roasting pan rather than a tray.

While they're cooking, cook 150g red lentils. Cover with water, bring to a fast boil and cook for 10 mins. Turn the heat down and simmer until done, drain well.

When the roast veg are tender, add the cooked lentils, spreading them over the veg. Put slices of halloumi cheese (use halloumi light if you prefer) over the top and melt the cheese under a hot grill.

We ate this with chapatis and a lettuce/avocado/tomato salad.


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This Kid Really Gets It!

Watch this video and get inspired to get your kids and your whole family on the path to healthier eating.


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Friday, November 26, 2010

Do You Like To Snack?

Most of the snack foods on the market contain processed and refined sugars, grains and other harmful ingredients.

It's hard finding truly healthy snack foods. I've shared some of my favorite healthy recipes for snacks in this blog. However, frequently there just isn't enough time to prepare all the foods and snacks we want to eat.

So, now, I'd like to share a healthy snack food that you don't have to make yourself.

Click the link to check it out.

cassava bars, energy bar, chia bar


View the original article here

Thank You!

Sweet readers!

The response to yesterday's Call for Guest Posts, er, post has been really wonderful. There are a ton of great ideas, and it's going to take a little while to wade through all of them, but I can't wait to read the finished pieces. I think we'll have more than enough content moving forward.

Thank you so much.

Veggie Might coming soon! Stumble Upon Toolbar

View the original article here

Healthy Mediterranean Diet Recipes

Provides Mediterranean diet recipes to help healthy weight loss and minimise the risk of heart disease, osteoporosis, allergies, dementia and cancer. Delivered monthly and a full free report is provided to visitors.


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Green Kitchen: Mashed Cauliflower and Freezing Food

Green Kitchen is a bi-weekly column about nutritious, inexpensive, and ethical food and cooking. It's penned by the lovely Jaime Green.
Oh man, guys. I just had the best/worst idea for how to start today’s column.

It’s getting icy.

Brr, y’know, cause winter’s coming? But also because I want to talk about freezing food. Like, for storage.

I know, it’s awful. My dad would be proud.

I could also aim this in the direction of Thanksgiving sides. The recipe herein is an amazing Thanksgiving side, and I will be making it for my family next week. (Oh crap, next week?!) But the food-blog corner of the internet is already overflowing with Thanksgiving recipes right now, and they really just serve to make me panic about the fact that Thanksgiving is next week and how am I making two pies and four side dishes and cranberry sauce in half a day in my mom’s kitchen??!?

So, back to freezing.

As fall starts hinting that winter’s on its way, my mind turns toward my freezer. Not for the popsicles and other frozen goodnesses of summer, but because, like a squirrel with its acorns, I’m suddenly compelled to start putting food away. Every week in fall brings another visit to the farmers market, another fearful peek at the produce for sale, to see what’s gone out of season next.

In spring and summer, vegetables go out of season to be replaced by the next round of tasty produce – we go from asparagus to bell peppers to broccoli to kale, strawberries to raspberries to stone fruit to apples – but once we get to fall, foods end their season unreplaced. Or replaced by apples, onions, and potatoes. Piles and piles of apples, onions, and potatoes.

Now’s when I start to panic. What can I freeze? What can I save? Come February I’ll be wandering the supermarket aisles, pallid under the fluorescent lights, trying to decide between California kale and Mexican Brussels sprouts. I’ll make eggs with frozen spinach. I’ll mix frozen cherries into my yogurt. And I will feel sad, disconnected from my local growing season, like a poor steward of the Earth, and broke.

So I’m trying, this year, to shore up my stores of local, seasonal, cheap vegetables, to pack them away in ways they can last, and last tastily. (Let’s not talk about the frozen beet greens fiasco of 2009.) Sure, just about any home-frozen vegetable can feature passably in a soup, but I want food that actually tastes good.

The trick to freezing most vegetables is blanching. When you freeze raw vegetables their cell walls burst – thanks to waters magical expands-as-it-freezes-ness – and burst cell walls equal mush. Blanching vegetables – a quick boil or steam – eases that problem and neutralizes enzymes that can wreak havoc on icy goods. Unfortunately, I don’t like a lot of vegetables blanched – I rely on hot sautéing to make things like kale and Brussels sprouts delicious, and once you’ve blanched, you can’t go back. (Sorry, is that not an awesome new catchphrase?)

So far I’ve found two awesome recipes that freeze well. They’re easy to make in large batches, defrost without any degradation, and are preparations of these foods that I actually love. Points there. One is the spiced applesauce I wrote about a little while ago.

The other is mashed cauliflower.

Ignore any bad connotations it carries as a sad low-carb substitute for mashed potatoes; mashed cauliflower is delicious in its own right. It satisfied the creamy, salty, comfort food part of your heart/stomach/brain, but with a bit more flavor than plain potatoes. It’s still a great vehicle for anything mashed potatoes play with well, and, oh right, it’s a giant pile of super-good-for-you vegetables.

This is the time of year for cauliflower. At the big Union Square farmers market in New York City, giant 5-pound heads are going for two or three bucks each, and they’re fresh and gorgeous. I’ve got a stack of little one-cup containers of this stuff lining the back of my freezer (interspersed with apple sauce, of course). A few more weeks, a few more massive cauliflowers, and I should be set for winter.

I mean, set in terms of cauliflower. I can’t quite live on apples and cauliflower alone, though. So I ask you, dear readers – how do you freeze or store fall produce to last into the winter? Jaime-in-February-without-vitamin-deficiencies thanks you.

A note on this recipe: This is a very basic version. The options for embellishment are nearly endless. Anything you can do to mashed potatoes, you can do to this. Possible additions: roasted garlic, red pepper flakes, nutritional yeast, shredded cheese, olive oil, a little milk (cow, soy, or otherwise), paprika, scallions, roasted kale, sautéed zucchini, baked tofu, bacon, bacon bits, etc. I find that, just as with potatoes, a little fat goes a long way as long as the food’s thoroughly salted.

~~~

If you like this, get a load of:

~~~

Mashed Cauliflower
Serves 4
NOTE: The picture didn't come out too great, so this is an amazing facsimile taken from Flickr Creative Commons user roolrool. Needless to say, it's the stuff on the left.


1 large head of cauliflower (about 8 cups chopped)
1 Tablespoon butter
Salt and pepper, to taste

1) Chop cauliflower into florets.

2) Steam cauliflower until very tender, about 8-10 minutes. (Alternately, bring a large pot of water to a boil. Add cauliflower, and boil until tender. Timing here depends on the power of your stovetop to bring the cauliflower and water back up to temperature. Maybe 15-20 minutes? Or maybe my stovetop is weak.)

3) Drain cauliflower, and let cool until not too hot to touch. Pat cauliflower dry with paper towels.

4) Return cauliflower to pot, or to a big bowl, add butter, and puree with an immersion blender until creamy. (Alternately, puree in food processor.) Add salt and pepper to taste.

Approximate Calories, Fat, Fiber, Protein, and Price per Serving
76 calories, 3.1g fat, 5g fiber, 4g protein, $0.54

Calculations
8 cups cauliflower: 200 calories, 0.8g fat, 20g fiber, 15.8g protein, $2.00
1 T butter: 102 calories, 11.5g fat, 0g fiber, 0g protein, $0.10
1 T salt: 0 calories, 0g fat, 0g fiber, 0g protein, $0.03
1 t pepper: 0 calories, 0g fat, 0g fiber, 0g protein, $0.02
TOTALS: 302 calories, 12.3 g fat, 20g fiber, 15.8g protein, $2.15
PER SERVING (Total/4): 76 calories, 3.1g fat, 5g fiber, 4g protein, $0.54 Stumble Upon Toolbar

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Tasty Veggie Dip

1 cup filtered water
2/3 cup raw sunflower seeds
1/2 teaspoon Celtic Sea Salt
1 thin slice fresh onion
1 clove fresh garlic
1 heaping teaspoon Italian Herbs
3 tablespoons raw, unfiltered, apple cider vinegar
1/4 cup extra virgin olive oil (optional)

Place all ingredients in a blender and blend until creamy and smooth.
Chill at least 30 minutes before serving.

This is great with all kinds of raw veggies and is a healthy alternative to Ranch dressing. It can also be used as a salad dressing.

Adapted from Sunny Salad Dressing in The Guilt-Free Gourmet: A Vegan Cookbook & Lifestyle Resource Manual


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Beef Tenderloin 7 Ways

Grilled Tenderloin of Beef with Spicy Fresh Herb Vinaigrette

If you like vinaigrette dressing, you'll love the vinaigrette that accompanies this beef tenderloin recipe. We infuse it with parsley, basil, mint, red pepper flakes, fresh thyme, and garlic. If you need to, you can prepare the dressing hours before you begin cooking the tenderloin.


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Pantry Pick: 13 Rice Dishes

Top Features in Recipes & Menus:

» See More Recipes & Menus

Cooking with Cupcake Pans »

Martha Stewart shows there’s "muffin" to it when it comes to making other treats in your trusty cupcake pan.

Video: World Champion BBQ Recipes »

Two world champion grill masters, Ed "Fast Eddy" Maurin and Chris Lilly, show you how to barbecue chicken and ribs the winning way.


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Celebrate Your Body!


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Measure Up Bowls In A Set

Measure Up Bowls In A SetProduct Description
Product Description Combination Measure Up Bowls The Classic Measure Up Bowl is great for measuring cereals, fruits, soups, chilis, pastas, rice, salads...Anything you eat of of a bowl! The Classic features 1/2, 1, 1-1/2 and 2 cups premeasured portions on the interior of the bow. The Small Measure Up Bowl is perfect for the calorie-dense, high-fat foods that have a smaller serving size. Nuts, granola and ICE CREAM, just to name a few. The Small features 1/4, 1/2, and 3/4 cup premeasured portions on the interior of the bowl. The beautiful porcelain construction makes them compatible with almost any dish set. Microwave/dishwasher safe

Price: $49.99


Click here to buy from Amazon

Thursday, November 25, 2010

101 Practical Weight Loss Tips

New! 101 Practical Weight Loss Tips was created by a male with no slimming experience. His method achieved a successful 3 stone weight loss. This great tips ebook will help anyone start losing weight today and effortlessly keep a healthy weight in future


Check it out!

Feeding the family healthily

by Cathy
(Michigan)

I have to cook every night for my family - husband and two kids. I run out of healthy meal ideas all the time.

Answer
Hi Cathy, I can really sympathise - it's hard to come up with a healthy meal every night of the week. Here's some inspiration for you - healthy dinner recipes. Lots of easy healthy dinner ideas there - take a look.

all the best
Elizabeth


View the original article here

Fresh vegetables for kids

I teach 4th grade, and am starting an afternoon garden club. I'd like to give students a survey about healthy eating - especially about vegetables they eat. This will be a pre and post survey to see if the garden activities affect their eating habits. Do you have any such surveys??
Thanks!

Answer
I'm afraid I don't have any surveys that I can give you, but I suggest you give the children some information about serving recommendations for fruit/vegetables (5 a day, here in the UK), and get them to keep a record for a period of time to see how many servings they are actually eating (for most, it will probably not be enough!). Then they could do the same things when you have grown some of your own vegetables.

You'll find information to help you on these pages:
Five a Day
Fruit and Vegetable Servings

Good luck with your project - it sounds like an excellent idea. If you'd like to share your results in due course, we'd love to hear about them - you can post them to the site here:
Healthy Eating Forums.


View the original article here

Junk Food Facts

The junk food facts: the disgusting truth about foods you probably eat every day. Learn to eat healthy diet.ADVERTISEMENT

How do you define junk food? It's high in calories, low in nutrition. And there's much worse, in the Junk Food Facts.

Junk food is everywhere. You and your family probably eat it every day. Sugar-laden breakfast cereals, snack bars, biscuits and cakes, crisps and chips, soft drinks, sweets, ready-meals, fast food like burgers - so much of what's on offer on the supermarket shelves is produced on the cheap (but not sold cheaply), full of unhealthy ingredients - it's not nutritious, it's laced with addictively tasty fats, sugars and salt, it just is not worth eating.

Junk Food - it's aptly named. Now, wise up on the junk food facts.

Good Food Matters

Go from Junk Food Facts to Fast Food Facts.

Go from Junk Food Facts to Healthy Eating Made Easy.

?2005-2010 healthy-eating-made-easy. All Rights Reserved


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Healthy Halloween Recipes - Healthy Halloween Treats

Healthy Halloween recipes: yummy, scary healthy Halloween treats!

ADVERTISEMENT

Over the years I?ve discovered that there?s no need to make elaborately decorated dishes for Halloween.

Simply create a suitably spooky atmosphere, turn off the lights, get a candle spluttering, and serve up some ghoulish monstrosities, for a fun Halloween celebration.

Kids also enjoy it if you ask them to suggest foul names for their favourite foods - the yukkier the better! It's all part of the Halloween fun.

Here are some of our favourite healthy Halloween recipes for savoury snacks and dishes.

Healthy Halloween recipes: desserts

Enjoy these healthy Halloween recipes - and have a spoooooooky time! Go back to the top of Healthy Halloween Recipes...if you dare...

Good Food Matters

Go from Healthy Halloween Recipes to Healthy Holiday Recipes.

Go from Healthy Halloween Recipes to Healthy Eating Made Easy.

?2005-2010 healthy-eating-made-easy. All Rights Reserved


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Hypothyroidism Diet - Thyroid Weight Loss

A detailed eBook on how to lose weight despite an underactive thyroid - Hypothyroidism diet. Great niche!


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Health Benefits of Beets

Beets are a nutritional powerhouse. There is abundant nutrition in both the root and the leaves. They are especially helpful for the health of your liver and gallbladder. They are also anticarcinogenic and protective against heart disease.

Beet greens are an excellent source of beta carotene, calcium and iron. The young beet leaves are a rich source of betaine, which is important for liver health and helps your body to metabolize fat.

The beet root is a source of vitamin C, folacin and manganese, as well as many other nutrients. Fresh beets have greater amounts of the C and folacin.

Both the greens and the roots can be eaten raw or cooked. The greens can be used raw in salads or green smoothies. They can also be steamed lightly, for 2-3 minutes. Season with raw organic butter and Celtic Sea Salt®

The beet root can be shredded and mixed with lemon juice and extra virgin olive oil for a liver-gallbladder tonic or added to a salad. Beets can also be steamed or baked. They should be cooked whole and cut after cooking is complete.

Read more about the amazing benefits from eating beets.

Learn more about healthy eating.


View the original article here

Wednesday, November 24, 2010

Top 10 Links of the Week: 10/29/10 – 11/4/10

Today, it's lotsa food politics, a temporary (but sufficiently fabulous) Thanksgiving section, and a guest appearance from the greatest Scandinavian cook in history. (No, it's not Marcus Samuelsson.)

1) Christian Science Monitor: The End of Cheap Food
Fascinating, relatively short piece on world food economics, in which it’s explained why countries with improving qualities of life will ultimately drive up global grocery costs. The last quote kind of sums it up: “Americans have become accustomed to cheap and abundant food … They’re about to get a rude surprise.”

2) Chicago Sun-Times: Kids in kitchen are worth the trouble - Hands-on cooking at an early age can help foster mental, social skills
Mirror neurons, meaning, responsibility, higher-level learning, sensory learning, active learning, simplicity, skill building, and purpose. What do these things all have in common? Yes, they're words, spelled with letters. But they’re also qualities developed/enhanced when your kid helps out in the kitchen. Hand 'em some butter knives and get goin’, ‘rents!

3) Daily Mail UK: Eating fruit and vegetable peel could combat cancer
Banana peels: they’re not just for tripping up Yosemite Sam anymore. Turns out, garlic skin, pineapple cores, and … stay with me here … kiwi husks (yep) are superb cancer fighters. Sure, they need a little extra prep, but maybe it’s worth it? Maybe? Yeah, I need a minute to think about that kiwi thing.

4) Food Politics: The food movement’s new frontier: “ultra-processing”
This Marion Nestle piece has been all over the interweb this week, thanks largely to its neat summary of a larger article in the Journal of the World Public Health Nutrition Association (or, in journal acronym parlance, JWPHNAUIDOHFEUNSFUS). The author, Carlos Monteiro, devised a tri-level classification for processed foods. Level 1 is unprocessed, Level 2 is minimally processed, and Level 3 is ultra-processed, and includes almost every convenience product out there. Guess which is the unhealthiest? Yeah. It’s that one. Interesting stuff, not least because Nutritionism is highlighted as a veddy bad ting.

5) HuffPo: Whole Foods Doubles Net Income
Wow. You knew Whole Paycheck was doing well, but not this well. They attribute the growth to, “more competitive pricing and efforts during the quarter to appeal to its core customers' concerns about healthy eating, animal welfare and sustainable seafood.” Makes sense. Everybody, invest now!

6) Good Eater: For Young Locavores - Eating Local on a Budget
I’m trying to think of ways to describe this piece that don’t already appear in the title, but that headline pretty much sums it up. So, hey! Young locavores! Check this thing. It’s about eating local on a budget. But you knew that.

7) The Simple Dollar: Review – Cut Your Grocery Bill in Half
Trent lays out a chapter-by-chapter summary of the new book from the Economides (“World’s Cheapest”) Family, expanding on key theories within the text. Really, it’s kind of a primer for thriftier, healthier eating in itself, making it worth the read.

8) Serious Eats: Midterm Elections - Who Will Be the Next Chair of the Senate Agriculture Committee?
Agribusiness stalwart Blanche Lincoln (D-AR) is out (with a vengeance), so who’s to take her place? According to Obama Foodarama, it’s looking like Debbie Stabenow of Michigan, who may be in a position to challenge Big Ag on certain policies.

9) Wise Bread: 6 Plant-Based Diet Tricks for Carnivores
This dovetails nicely with Leigh’s piece from yesterday, if you’re looking to chop some meat. Er … cut some meat out of your diet. Oh, English language. How you confound me sometimes.

10) AOL News: Security Gourd - Man Fights Off Robber With Squash
Butternut squash: more effective than handguns, and only ten times as heavy. I'm thinkin' the NYPD might want to look into this.

HONORABLE MENTIONS

Chow: What’s the Difference Between Types of Oatmeal?
Don’t know your instant from your steel-cut? Now you do.

Money Saving Mom: What Meals Can I Cook Without an Oven?
As it turns out, many.

stonesoup: Knife Skills – How to Chop Like a Chef
I link to lots o' knife skills posts, 'cause they're important. Anyway, here’s another one.

THANKSGIVING

AND ALSO

The Swedish Chef: Cårven der Pümpkîn
I’m a week late on this, but is der Swedish Chef ever unwelcome? No. And there’s a chainsaw. Mork mork mork!

Thank you so much for visiting Cheap Healthy Good! (We appreciate it muchly). If you’d like to further support CHG, subscribe to our RSS feed! Or become a Facebook friend! Or check out our Twitter! Or buy something inexpensive, yet fulfilling via that Amazon store (on the left)! Bookmarking sites and links are nice, too. Viva la France! Stumble Upon Toolbar

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