Saturday, January 30, 2010

RECIPES FOR DAIRY-FREE and GLUTEN-FREE COOKING

                                                                                                                           JAPANESE FOODS

The Japanese have a long and beautiful tradition of healthy and delicious foods. From cold water fish, such as tuna and salmon,  high in Omega-3’s, to rice (opt for whole grain when you can) and soy-based tofu, seaweed, vegetables, ginger and that oh-so-irresistable green Wasabi paste- a Japanese horseradish.  I love the diet!  They do not herald carb-heavy breads or crackers or cakes in their menus, as with American and European diets. And other than a nod to ice cream, with green tea or ginger sorbet, they pretty much exclude dairy products. 

So if you are going dairy and gluten free, this countries designer style foods are an easy transition, requiring little thought.  Here are a few suggestions. You can find the ingredients in the ethnic aisle of your supermarket, a specialty health food grocery, or an Asian market. You will get used to the terms and names of things, so don’t shy away!

                                                                                                                                   MISO SOUP

INGREDIENTS

4 cups water                                                                                      

4 shitake mushrooms, sliced 

1/2 oz. Bonito dried fish flakes/granules   

6 oz.(1 small box) firm tofu, cubed

1 tbsp Sake’ (optional, but nice)

4 tbsp miso paste, or shiromiso

1 tbsp Tamari wheat-free soy sauce 

 2 scallions, sliced fine

1 nori (seaweed) wrapper, cut in strips

2 tsp white sesame seeds, toasted

DIRECTIONS

Add water to a pan, heat, and add bonito fish flakes. Stir in sake, soy sauce, and salt to taste, if desired. Add cubed tofu and sliced mushrooms, allowing to simmer gently for about 3 minutes. Now add miso paste and stir until it has dissolved. Turn off heat, add the sliced scallions, and divide between four bowls. Sprinkle 1/2 teaspoon of the toasted sesame seeds over each bowl, and serve!  Serves 4.

                                                                                                                       YAKITORI CHICKEN

2 chicken breasts, cut into 24 chunks

4 scallions, cut into 18 pieces

6 wooden skewers, soaked in water

1/2 cup yakitori marinade (see below)

DIRECTIONS

Soak the skewers in water for 20 minutes. This prevents burning! Meanwhile, make the marinade. Pre heat the broiler to high. Thread 4 chunks of  chicken and 3 pieces of scallion, alternately, onto each skewer. Brush the skewers with marinade, then cook under broiler for 4 minutes on each side, brushing again with yakitori when turning. Plate the skewers, sprinkling with the remaining marinade.  You may also choose to provide a small dipping dish of the yakitori sauce with each serving. Makes 6 skewers, for 2 or 3 servings, depending.

                                                                                                                                 YAKITORI SAUCE

 6 tbsp Tamari wheat-free soy sauce

 4 tbsp sake

 6 tbsp mirin (sweet rice vinegar)

 2 tbsp superfine sugar

Put soy sauce, mirin, sake and sugar in a small pan and bring to a boil. Reduce heat and continue to simmer for one minute. Remove pan from heat and cool. Reserve some of this sauce for drizzling over finished chicken. You may want to double the ingredients if you want to provide personal dipping sauces of Yakitori with each serving. 

                                                                                                                                       SUSHI ROLLS

Don’t be intimidated by the idea of rolling your own sushi!  I learned at home, with a friend, so the embarrassment of too large and loosely pressed rolls was spared me, and surpassed by the intoxicating flavor and taste of freshness. With practice, you just get better.  You will need a bamboo stick sushi rolling mat, and a wide wooden sushi rice spoon.  You can buy these affordably in sets in some specialty groceries or kitchen supply stores. Also, keep plastic wrap on hand for the inside out-rolls. Nori strips are those flat dark green sheets of pressed seaweed that are used to roll up your sushi. And if you can locate it, I prefer the tiny orange fish eggs, known as flying fish roe, for topping the cut pieces, or rolling the inside-out rolls in. This section begins with making sushi rice, then onto rolls. Compai!

                                                                                                                                            SUSHI RICE

1 1/2 cups sushi rice, or short to medium grain rice

2 tbsp rice vinegar

1 1/2 cups water  

1 tbsp sugar, 1/4 tsp salt combined

Rinse rice under cold water until the water runs clear. Strain, then place in pan with water (or use a rice cooker and follow directions). Cover pan and bring rice to a boil. Reduce heat, and simmer for 10 minutes. Remove from heat, let stand for another 15 minutes,  do not remove the lid!

Turn rice into a wide, flat-bottomed, non-metal bowl. Pour over the sushi rice seasoning (rice vinegar, sugar & salt, combined). Using quick, cutting strokes, cut the seasoning into the rice, fanning it as you work. You can do this in front of an actual fan, of hold the spoon up high and let the rice drop down into the bowl.  DO NOT STIR as this may break the grains. Keep cutting and fanning until the rice is room temperature and looks shiny.  Keep it covered with a cloth, and use immediately.  It is reccomended you do not refrigerate mixed sushi rice.

                                                                                                                                 PHILLY ROLL

Ingredients:

2 oz. fresh, sushi grade salmon, cut into  1/2 ” strips   

2 sheets nori (seaweed wrapper)

1  cup sushi rice  

@2 oz. Tofutti/dairy free cream cheese

Wasabi paste, soy sauce, pickled ginger, as garnish

 Directions:

Lay a sheet of  nori wrapper flat on top of your rolling mat. Divide the rice into 2 equal portions. Wet your hands, and spread one portion of rice over the nori, as evenly as you can. Re-wet your hands as often as needed. Leave a 1/2 inch border at the top edge, for sealing the roll.

Dip a finger into your wasabi paste, and drag it across the length of the rice/wrapper. Place a line of the sliced salmon strips, then another thin strip of the cream cheese above that.

Pick up the nearest edge of the rolling mat. Slowly roll the mat away from you, to wrap the nori over and around the fillings. Use light pressure, lifting the mat out of the way as you roll. Press the roll into the bare border of nori. To seal the roll, it helps to dip a finger in water, run it over the edge of the seaweed wrapper, roll and press to seal.

Transfer your roll onto a cutting board or smooth surface. Taking a very sharp knife, wet it under running water, shake off the excess, and cut the roll in half.  Wet again, if neccessary, between slices, and cut each half into 3 equal pieces. Repeat with the second half, for 6 pieces. Repeat, making another roll, cut into 6 more pieces.

Arrange your Philly salmon roll pieces on a plate (preferably a square, japanese style plate, for visual effect!). Serve with a shallow dipping dish of soy sauce, a dollop of wasabi paste, and a pinch of pickled ginger.  Enjoy!

                                                                                                                                     CALIFORNIA ROLL

Ingredients:

@ 1 cup sushi rice 

 2 nori sheets

1/2  avocado, sliced thin    

2 long slices cucumber, seedless

2 lengths of crab leg  or imitation crabmeat                                       

Flying fish roe or toasted white sesame seeds

Tamari wheat-free soy sauce, wasabi paste, pickled ginger

Directions:

Divide sushi rice in half.  Place a sheet of nori wrapper on top of your rolling mat. With wet fingers, spread half the rice evenly over the wrapper, leaving at least 1/2 inch border at the top. Dip a finger in wasabi paste, and drag it across the length of rice on the bottom of the roll.

Lay a line of avocado strips, followed by a strip of crabmeat, and thin strips of cucumber sticks, de-seeded.               

Pick up the nearest edge of the rolling mat, and slowly roll away from you, gently pressing as you wrap the nori around the filling.  Lift the mat  out of the way as you roll. Take a wet finger and run it across the end border of the nori, and finish rolling, pressing the edge against the finished roll to seal it.

Transfer the roll to a cutting board, seam side down, and cut in half with a very sharp, wet knife. Cut again, for four larger pieces. Turn onto a plate, flat side up, and spread the tops with flying fish roe or toasted sesame seeds. Transfer to a presentation platter, adding a dollop of wasabi, a fat pinch of pickled ginger, and serve soy sauce in shallow dipping bowls.

                                                                                                                                    INSIDE-OUT ROLLS

Inside out rolls reverse the ingredients of a sushi roll, with the green nori sheet being rolled up backwards and inside the roll, rice on the outside.  Lay down your nori sheet on the sushi mat, and spread with rice, as described above.  Now cover the rice with a sheet of plastic wrap.  Lift and flip the wrapper over, so that the plastic covered rice surface is now pressed against the mat, and the green nori wrapper is facing up.  Spread with a thin line of wasabi, and add your ingredients, as above.

 Now you begin to roll away from you, lifting the plastic covered mat away from you as you go.  Press the nori border into the rice as you finish, giving the roll one final gentle squeeze to hold its shape.  Pull up the remaining plastic to reveal your inside out roll.  Sprinkle sesame seeds over a wide plate, and roll the rice covered sushi roll in this, coating it with sesame. Transfer to a cutting board, and cut in half, then in half again, for four pieces.  Repeat, with the remaining ingredients, for another roll.  Plate these, and garnish with the usual dollop of green wasabi paste, pickled ginger, and serve with soy sauce.

[Via http://autismrox.wordpress.com]

Tuesday, January 19, 2010

Night Sweats – Hot Flashes

At the beginning of my thyroiditis I had horrible sweats I had been having typical peri-menopause type night sweats lightly for years not bad enough to even really wake me up but enough to be aware they were happening.  During the first few weeks of the thyroiditis they were 24 hours a day and at one point about every 20 minutes.  I know there was a viral aspect as I was so sick but when that aspect subsided the hot flashes continued I assumed they were menopause related since my cycle had been erratic and I had missed a few period on more than one occasion.    Someone on the yahoo list suggested to get 800 IU of vitamin E.  I had been on 400 IU mixed E.  So I upped the dose and in about a week the hot flashes were gone.

Fast forward several months and I started to have mild night sweats again but not enough to interfere with sleep.  Then the last couple weeks they have ramped up and they are waking me up 3 or 4 times a night to throw off the covers until it passes, and now I they are hitting in the day time too.  My E is still at 800 IU so I really can’t raise that.  I hope it is just a hormonal adjustment as the Candida is dying off and Candida is well know for mimicking hormones.  It could also be the end cycle of the thyroiditis though as so little seems to be known about the process.  Yet it could just be a new round of the menopause process.  LOL  it is annoying especially when it wakes me up though.

[Via http://iodinehealth.wordpress.com]

Sunday, January 17, 2010

What Women Can Do For Controlling Weight Gain During Menopause | ArticlesBase.com

What Women Can Do For Controlling Weight Gain During Menopause | ArticlesBase.com

As women approach the age where menopause symptoms begin to appear, some will start to show signs of weight gain. This may be related to the coming of menopause, and it also may just be related to getting a bit older and slowing down in physical activity. Either way, it is not a welcome side effect, and most women want to find a way to stop the weight gain and get back to a slimmer figure if possible.

Read Full Article Here: http://www.articlesbase.com/women’s-health-articles/what-women-can-do-for-controlling-weight-gain-during-menopause-1735559.html

click here to read more

[Via http://dumpnewsspot.wordpress.com]

Tuesday, January 12, 2010

The Potential of Pomegranate

Pomegranate is the most powerful anti-oxidant of all fruits

It contains Potent anti-cancer and immune supporting effects

Pomegranate Discourages platelet aggregation that could cause heart attacks, strokes and embolic disease

Lowers cholesterol and other cardiac risk factors

Lowers blood pressure

Additional medicinal benefits of pomegranates:

Atherosclerosis – Due to its richness of flavonoids and antioxidant vitamins C and E, pomegranates prevent atherosclerosis. In a recent study, patients who took a glass of pomegranate juice every day felt better after 10 days of start taking it.

Degenerative illnesses – Due to its content of antocianines (pigments of red and blue color known as flavonoids) and vitamins C and E, pomegranates stop the aging process and appearance of degenerative illnesses.

Blood purifier – A long treatment with pomegranate juice detoxifies and regenerates the blood. Pomegranates are known as “the queen” of naturopath geriatrics; they are excellent nutrition for old people as well as children.

Diabetes – Pomegranates are an excellent fruit for diabetics because they do not raise blood sugar. They protect them against atherosclerosis and hypertension, two major risks for diabetics.

Menopause – Due to their content of estrogens, pomegranates are recommended to prevent discomforts caused by menopause. Japanese women eat this fruit to prevent such discomforts.

Anti-anemia – Because of its richness in minerals, vitamin C and copper, pomegranate juice is well known for is anti-anemia effects. Pomegranates improve anemia cause by iron deficiency.

Chronic inflammations – Pomegranate juice, taken before breakfast and half hour before meals is quite effective to fight laryngitis, sinusitis, and ear inflammation with suppuration.

Pomegranates are fast becoming known as one of the healthiest foods we can eat, largely because of their beneficial effects on cardiovascular health. The benefit of supplementing with pomegranate extract (rather than drinking the juice or eating the fruit) is that the extract, unlike the juice, contains virtually no sugar or calories, and requires no refrigeration to maintain optimal quality.

**Pomegranate is considered a dietary supplement, so make sure you talk to your doctor before you start drinking it regularly. Pomegranate juice may interact with some prescription medications, such as certain high blood pressure medications and statins.

[Via http://herbsvitamins.wordpress.com]

Sunday, January 3, 2010

A Funny Thing Happened at Walmart

I usually only blog once a day but this was just too good to pass up :) .. I was at Walmart on Christmas Eve with my honey and I ran in to a neighbor from up the road.  Hadn’t seen him in awhile .. so .. I’ll call him “Raymond” .. so anyway, Raymond and I stood and talked a few minutes while my honey was over in produce squeezing this & that.  After we finished talking Raymond started to walk away .. and I “kinda” yelled across to my honey to get his attention.  I said .. “Hey Honey .. can you come over here a minute?” .. Raymond had just walked away when I yelled hey honey.  His head whirled around so fast .. I’m afraid poor ‘ole Raymond might have whiplash!!

Oh well .. ’tis the holiday season .. it’s time to share some love!! .. LOL  .. the look in Raymond’s eyes was priceless .. he thought I was coming on to him .. loved it! .. it’s a mid-life thing!! .. LOL

[Via http://hrbsh97.wordpress.com]