Pumpkin Treats! Low-Fat, Oil-Free, Wheat-Free, Guilt-Free!

I’m all about the pumpkin.  It’s one of the many things I adore about fall.  I love the look of those orange beauties, and the flavor of anything pumpkin.  I only wish the pumpkin bread, scones and pumpkin spice lattes at Starbucks were healthy!  Oh well, these little treats, along with my Pumpkin Pancakes (see Recipes), and Pumpkin Pie Minis (recipe coming soon) will suffice.  They do contain chocolate chips, taking the healthy factor down a notch, but it’s a small amount and just enough to make you feel like you’ve been treated.

Potatoes in a Taco = Super Delicious!

When I was on Maui last week, we ate at a cool restaurant called Monkey Pod.  They had an interesting menu filled with varieties of different foods, all using sustainable, local ingredients.  I was super excited when I saw Potato Tacos on the menu.  I wasn’t super excited to see, when the server brought them to the table, that they were made with french fries.  Yikes!  As you can imagine, they were very greasy (don’t worry, I didn’t finish them, and I picked out many of the potato pieces).  The wheels immediately began turning in my head as I thought about how best to recreate a healthy version of the dish.  Here’s the recipe!  It was delicious, even made without french fries.  See what you think!

Cheats & Treats: When Being “Bad” is Good (or at least acceptable)

This past week I was lucky enough to be on vacation with my family in Hawaii.  On the way there I spent time writing what I was planning on posting as my Vacation Edition Blog.  I wrote about how horrified I was at the way those around me on the plane were eating, before even having arrived at their vacation destination (I kept thinking, “Why would you waste the calories and fat on airplane food?!?!”); I listed all the healthy foods I brought along knowing there would be little for us to eat on the 5.5 hour flight (PB&J, carrots, bananas, dried fruit, Lara bars, healthy whole-gran, homemade muffins); and I wrote that I would be documenting everything I ate while away to prove the point that eating right while on vacation could be done.

The documentation didn’t happen.  I started it, honestly I did.  But after day 3, I just didn’t feel like it anymore.  And ya know what?  I “cheated” more times than I was willing to admit and still call it healthy.  I went into the trip with the plan to eat super healthy, knowing I’d treat myself here and there, no big deal.  Ok, so I treated myself probably more than here and there, and I did feel some guilt about it.  But then I realized, my bad is better than a lot of people’s best, not to toot my own horn.  My good: oatmeal with fruit every morning; veggie burger or wrap for lunch; fruit for snack; lots of water; plenty of veggies and a salad each day.  My bad: I had an average of 2 cocktails a day (one at the pool, one with dinner – as I watched fellow vacationers drinking from sunup to sundown!); I had coffee every morning; I ate way more fruit and juice than I should have (fruit is healthy but a lot can be too many calories); I had a few onion rings and some French fries; I ate some Maui onion potato chips (God, I love those); I had single meals made with more oil than I’d consume in a week (since I normally consume very little oil, if at all, and only while dining out.  Mind you I asked for no/light oil each meal but apparently most of the chefs didn’t get the memo); I had several servings of sugary sorbet; and I worked out more than half the time but not as often/hard as I normally would.

Know what else I realized?  So what!  I was on vacation.  Granted, that shouldn’t give anyone the excuse to be gluttonous.  However, in my mind, some “treating & cheating” is warranted, as long as there is an understanding between you and your plate that it’s temporary, and that a balance is still necessary, even while on vacation. Many people have difficulty finding this balance, on vacation or day-to-day, I get that.  It takes awareness – in order to avoid mindless eating; willingness – to stay away from things you ‘feel’ like for the greater good (i.e. health), and consistency – sticking with it the majority of the time.  What matters the most, and I can’t stress this enough, is the every day habits.  Day-to-day, the foods we consume need to be nourishing to our bodies, leaving little to no room at the table for the bad. I ate plenty of really healthy food while on vacation, but I included some bad.  That’s one of the defining differences between vacation and everyday life…that and being served by cabana boys, no chores or work, and somebody making your bed and straightening up your house every day.

Take home point: Do your best most of the time – the payoff is huge and totally worth the effort.  The rest of the time, enjoy the little treats here and there.  As an added bonus, you may realize they don’t taste as good as you once thought, or that it takes a very small amount to “hit the spot”.  Be good to yourself, your body, and others each and every day.  Mahalo and Aloha!  Smile

Pumpkin Pancakes – Cinnamon, Allspice, Cloves…Oh My!

pumpkinpancakes2I know it’s not officially Autumn yet, and it’s still miserably hot outside, but I’m longing for fall, dangit!! These pancakes hit the spot, and made me look even more forward to my favorite holiday – Thanksgiving!  I’ve seen several recipes for pumpkin pancakes out there but the difference between them and mine is the amount of spices; I tend to be heavy-handed in this recipe.  The stronger the flavors of cinnamon, allspice, cloves, nutmeg, etc., the better!  I’m tempted to crank up the AC, put on a sweater, and eat these by the fire.   Make these!  They’re easy and delish!  Let me know how you like ’em!

Mock Chicken Salad

I used to love chicken and tuna salad sandwiches, but I’ve have had to do without since I happily gave up animal foods years ago.  Sure, there are plenty of faux-chicken and even tuna products out there but they are not what I’d call healthy since they are highly processed and contain oil.  Well, thanks to Lindsey Nixon, The Happy Herbivore, I got the idea for this tasty sandwich filling.  Her recipe is for tuna, but I’ve made a few changes to make mine more like a chicken-salad.  Both of them use….wait for it…..smashed garbanzo beans!! Weird, right? I thought so too, but seriously people, it’s good!  And since the mayo is fat free, it truly is a guilt-free, healthy treat!  Try it and let me know what you think!

Sweet-Spicy-Tangy Asian Noodles

AsianNoodles

I knew I wanted to make some type of noodle/stir-fry dish with a sweet-spicy-savory-tangy sauce, but I wasn’t thrilled about any of the recipes I came across.  So, I threw a few things together – paying attention to amounts and making notes in case it worked out and I wanted to share with you, and it worked out!  I love it when that happens!  Love it even more when I’m not the only one in the house who thinks it’s yummy.  For lack of a more creative idea, I’m calling these Asian Noodles.  Any configuration of veggies would work, and you could add tofu or tempeh as well for extra protein.  To make it super easy, Trader Joe’s sells packages of pre-shredded cabbage and carrots.  I’d use two packages of cabbage.  Typing this up makes me want to make and eat it again!

Non-Dairy Tapioca Pudding

I have always LOVED tapioca pudding. Actually, any type of pudding – I don’t discriminate!   Once I gave up health-harming dairy and animal foods however (best choice I ever made, btw), I figured tapioca pudding was a thing of the past since the traditional recipe calls for milk and eggs.  WRONG! I tinkered with a few ingredients and ended up with what I feel is a great alternative.  I try my best not to consume or prepare things with refined sugar, but I must confess  – I did use some here, the few times I made this.  Next time I will try date or coconut sugar, which aren’t refined in the highly processed way white sugar is.  They may alter taste somewhat, and color, but it’s worth trying.

UPDATE!!! I tried date sugar and it was an epic fail.  I do NOT recommend it.  I also tried Sucanat, which is dried sugar cane juice.  Much better result than date sugar but not nearly as good as white sugar.  It gave it a tan hue, and sort of a molasses flavor, which tastes nice but the texture ends up much thicker and not as creamy as white sugar. Next I will try raw/turbinado sugar, which I’m guessing will have the same result as Sucanat.   When choosing white sugar, organic is a must!  Not only is it free of pesticides, it is vegan.  Why do you care about vegan sugar?  Well, regular, refined white sugar requires the use of animal bone char in processing.  Gross?  Definitely.  Due to health concerns, the FDA prohibits the use of bones from the United States’ meat industry. Further, the bones are required to come from animals that die of natural causes. While this makes theoretical sense, the ridiculous reality is bone char is predominantly imported from countries like Brazil, India, Pakistan and Nigeria and there is no warranty to the American consumer that the bone char used is indeed from ‘clean’ animals.  I don’t know about you, but I like my sugar without potentially contaminated bone char! 

BBQ Jackfruit Tacos

BBQ Jack WHAT?!? If you’re thinking “She’s lost her mind.  What weird vegan food is she eating NOW?” bear with me!  Jackfruit, the young/unripened variety, is popular primarily in Asian countries.  It can be found in Asian grocery stores and is sold in cans.  It has a mild flavor and poultry-like texture.  I know it sounds weird; trust me, I was skeptical too, but it’s really good this way, and a heck of a lot healthier than pulled pork!  Can be made gluten-free when using a gluten-free BBQ sauce.

I enjoyed this dish off of the Seabirds’ vegan food truck and have done my best to recreate it here.  Tasted the same to me, only theirs was spicier (I’m a spice wimp so I didn’t use hot sauce).

Sprouting 101

Instead of a recipe, I thought I’d post instructions on how to grow your own sprouts.  Sprouts are super healthy, extremely economical and very easy to grow – in only 5-6 days!  Anybody can do it – no special skills required!

A sprout possesses all of the energy, vitamins and nutrients and power that enables it to be transformed from a small seed into a strong plant. At this stage its nutritional value is at its highest.  For instance, sprouted seeds can contain 400% more protein than lettuce and over 3900% more beta-carotene.

Also, due to their size and taste you are able to eat hundreds of sprouted seeds at a time. In so many sprouts, you are eating the equivalent of hundreds of fully grown plants all at once – when else would you be able to get the goodness of one hundred mature plants in one meal?!

Studies have also shown that broccoli and other types of sprout contain exceptionally high levels of a natural cancer fighting compound called sulforaphane (20 – 50 times more than in mature broccoli) which helps support antioxidants such as vitamin C and vitamin E.

I regularly sprout alfalfa for salads, wraps and sandwiches, and broccoli sprouts for my breakfast shake (honestly, I don’t care for them since I don’t like raw broccoli, but I know how good they are for me so I do my best to mask the flavor – if you like raw broccoli you may like broccoli sprouts). Smile