Friday, September 27, 2013

Secret Ingredient Beef Stew...

Ah, the season of soup has arrived. I love stew in many flavors. This week, I made this beef stew and we enjoyed it very much. I especially enjoyed the no-fuss way of making this in the crockpot overnite and waking up to its wonderful aroma filling the kitchen when we woke the next morning. (oh, but then we had to wait til lunch time to eat it!)
 
 
Secret Ingredient
Beef Stew
 
Into a large crockpot, place 2 quarts shredded zucchini
(I took mine from the freezer, the delightful fruit of summer harvest)
1 quart crushed tomatoes
(I had some diced tomatoes in the pantry that I pulse/chopped in the blender)
1 T salt
1 t black pepper
1 T chili powder
sautéed onions, peppers, mushrooms and garlic
(I think I did a large onion, about 2 c. chopped mushrooms, 1 large bell pepper, and 3 cloves garlic)
1 or 2 lb beef stew meat, browned
3 cups potatoes, cooked but not soft
4 cups carrots, cooked but not soft
 
Stir. Cook in slow cooker on low for 10-12 hours.
 
Enjoy with crusty whole wheat garlic bread and a plate of veggies and hummus.

Thursday, September 19, 2013

Of Emily Boller and Other Things...

I have struggled with weight issues ever since I was 10 years old. I am a classic example of what is happening in America in the form of premature puberty in adolescent girls (among other things). I went from the cabbage soup diet, to different pills that promised weight loss, to the Atkins diet, etc with no lasting results. It was so discouraging to watch my weight just mushroom and the scales go up every year instead of down, as I had hoped.

Then I discovered plant-strong eating and its long-term help in losing weight and maintaining a healthy weight. For the first time in my life, it made sense. And the many thousands of people that Dr Joel Fuhrman and many other doctors like him have helped to reach and maintain a healthy weight has encouraged me greatly.

I have lost slowly the past six years, as my body healed from other issues. But in the past year, as I've employed more of Dr. Fuhrman's recommendations for weight loss, I have enjoyed increased success in losing the pounds I have carried unnecessarily for 17 years. And I am excited!

God used Emily Boller to be the final boost I needed a few years ago to do something positive for my weight problem. Read her story here. If you struggle with excess weight, be encouraged that a few changes now will yield positive results for a life time.

 


Being overweight is not a good thing. It puts stress on your organs, your skeletal system and your immune system, which leads to diseases that are totally preventable and greatly reduces your quality of life.

Feeding the body good foods, exercising regularly and avoiding excessive amounts of oil, salt, sugar, and animal products = healthy weight and healthy body.

If you want to lose weight without starving yourself or counting calories, while feeding your body nutritiously, here is Dr. Fuhrman's recommended plan which has worked for many:




Wednesday, September 18, 2013

The Food Pyramid...

If you are from my generation and older, you very likely have been taught nutritional 'balance' from the food pyramid that looks like this:

 
 
 
But that is a bit 'off'. I understand that this pyramid was produced
to give business to the meat and dairy industry,
but it has not stood the test well as we look around us
at the diseases that have increased along with the teaching of this
eating style.
 
As I said yesterday, I am not a vegan.
I am not against eating meat and dairy in moderation,
moderation NOT meaning once a day, but more like
two or three times a week in moderate portions
like for flavoring a bean stew, or something similar.
 
When I began studying nutrition, I was given this food pyramid
which makes much more sense, given that our bodies actually
fuel themselves the best from whole, raw plant sources.
 
Check out this pyramid from my favorite doctor,
Dr. Joel Fuhrman:




I love my veggies!
And I love what they have done in healing me,
and thousands of people who were worse off than I was!

Random thought:

Check out the first food plan,
given in Genesis 1:29.


So the idea with Dr Fuhrman's pyramid is that
you eat a large salad (or its equivalent) at every meal
and then fill in with whole grains (sparingly),
potatoes (russet, red and sweet, preferably),
and cooked vegetables.
About a cup of beans in some form every day is a
 good source of protein.
For dessert, or a snack later, eat whole fruit.

Fruit juices as a whole are not good for you
to consume in large amounts.
I only consume fruit juice as an addition to vegetable juice
in the form of Juice Plus once or twice a day.

Whole plant foods are easy on the body,
and give it the fuel it needs to produce healthy cells.

Did you know that 50,000 of the cells in your body
will die and be replaced with new cells,
all while you have been reading this sentence?!
That's a lot of cells to maintain and fuel with clean fuel!

I encourage everyone to read up and learn how to protect
this wonderful gift of health that our Maker has given us!

 

Monday, September 16, 2013

Why I Do What I Do...

photo credit: my beautiful friend Judy Krahn
I should be used to it
 by now...
but every time
 it happens, it always takes my breath away
for the ignorance
 that surrounds
 our society
about the human body and how it is made to function well on
clean fuel from
 raw foods from
 the Garden,
and then I realize anew just how far from understanding basic good eating habits we have gone through the generations.
Yesterday was one
 such day again,
as the words I said were taken in a way that unlearned people often take them, and I was left feeling like
"what is the use?
 People don't get it anyway."

But a good chat with my bestest sister who has taught me many things in life, including that good nutrition is not found in eating the Standard American Diet, nor is it found in bandaids such as pharmaceutical drugs or herbal/vitamin supplements, had me encouraged and making sense of the senseless again. This sister has been one of the main reasons that I have stuck with the hard parts of changing from the SAD to the plant-centered way of eating. After talking with her yesterday, I was encouraged that of course we do not argue with people and get into tense moments of disagreement but that we share where we can and live every day the blessing of having the knowledge that we reap what we sow.

Then I read this article by a man who inspired me in my early days of discovering how God made our bodies and what maintains the good health He provided for us. This man, George Malkmus, has blessed me in many ways and I have learned ALOT from him and from others whose research and findings, completely independent of one another, agree and prove themselves over and over again by the millions that they have helped through the years.

So I started pondering. Why do I do what I do when it comes to plant-strong eating? And here is what I came up with:

1. God used sickness to show me His plan that has been in place for thousands of years already: we are made to sustain His gift of health by nutrition from plant foods.*
2. The results of thousands of studies are overwhelmingly clear to me: garbage eaten results in garbage out (disease). I am not going to stand here arguing the facts. I choose to be taught, and to unlearn what I have learned that was false information (like: we need protein from animals to have good health and that milk is good for your bones and teeth). I will just do what I understand to do regardless of who does or who doesn't.
3. I can't go back now. I was privileged to find healing from changing my lifestyle because God graciously showed me the way to change before my body was too diseased and shut down to make a difference anyway.
4. I do not want to be involved in the gluttony and eating-for-pleasure mentality that is running rampant in society around me. I cannot conscientiously eat meat that comes from feedlots, drink milk from factory farms, eat preservatives and altered foods that are known to produce disease. God gave me health. I cannot compromise it with indulging in the garbage that many around me enjoy. I have chosen to maintain that gift God gave me the way He intended for it to be cared for.

In saying all that, I want my friends to know that I do not stand in judgement of them for the way they choose to treat their bodies. I cry for you sometimes, especially when you don't get what I try to tell you from things I have learned. But I love you and bless you however you choose to live your lives.

However, I really do wish that you would choose a lifestyle conducive to preventing the diseases that have been proven by many doctors and others to be totally preventable. Do it for your sake. Do it for your family's sake. Not to 'love your life' selfishly but to care for the gift of good health that God has given you, and to allow yourself quality of life to do the work He put you here to do.

This is why I do what I do. I have been graciously healed and given knowledge. I cannot keep it to myself. I have to pass it on.

He who has ears to hear, let him hear.

Your friend,
Marcia

*plant foods must comprise the majority of the food we eat. Having said that, however, I do believe that animal products that have been raised properly can be a 'flavor' part of our meals. If I hear the word moderation (like I did yesterday!), I agree in as much as it means:

**no dairy milk;
**a teeny bit of cheese (such as today for lunch we had whole grain flat bread to go with our soup. I took about 2 T of shredded cheddar and put it over an 11x15" pan. Very  minimal amount compared to the amount of the bread) for flavoring,
*meat in small amounts and not every day (it takes a few days for meat to pass through your digestive system, not to mention that animal fat is a huge culprit in clogging the arteries and creating stroke and heart diseases besides aiding in obesity, something that touches more Americans than it doesn't; minimal amounts of meat would mean like my 15 quart batch of taco soup that calls for 7 qu beans, 7 qu of corn and 7 qu tomato juice for 3 lb of meat. That results in not much meat per serving, but gives flavor to the dish)
**sugar in very low amounts (we work this out in our family by having special desserts that pass the whole grain/low oil and butter test on Friday nights when we have our special family night. Any leftovers may be eaten over the weekend)
**very little oil and salt
**NO white flour, sugar or salt!

Saturday, September 14, 2013

Now Thank We All Our God...

The view inside my back entry these days...


Autumn. Need I say more? One of my favorite seasons of the year with all it's jewel tones and fields overflowing with stores of ripened grain.

Today there is a nip in the air in our beautiful Fingerlakes of NY and I do believe it stayed below 60* all day...the perfect kind of day to pull on some leggings and a sweater and head on over to the Windmill, a kind of flea market that appeals to many kinds of shoppers, including a plant strong 'locavore of sorts' such as me...

 


We came home with evidence of plant strong shopping, too!



Broccoli, cauliflower, pumpkins, butternut squash, spaghetti squash, famous New York grapes in three different varieties, plums, garlic, onions, potatoes, peppers, and even some teeny little munchkin pumpkins and gourds for decorating. Ah, what a fun trip that was! We shall be enjoying the fruit of harvest for days to come!

On another note, after canning 200 qu of tomato products the past 2 weeks, I am officially finished harvesting my garden for winter. There are a few tomatoes for fresh eating, red beets for a meal or two, a row of sweet corn to enjoy a few last times before winter snows arrive, and a few rows of broom corn for my feathered friends.



The past 6 weeks, we put away harvest for two families: 200ish quarts green beans, 280 quarts corn (for more than 2 families), 100 quarts peaches, about 10 pints pickled pepper strips, 150 qu tomato juice, and 50 qu ketchup. I am officially tired, but very happy to have all that food put aside for winter's use. I thankful that I am well and could even bless my family in this way, something that I could not do for many years.

 
 
 


And I am especially grateful to my Father God, the Creator of all, who daily loads us with benefits, and Who brings us rain in fruitful seasons.