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Thursday, May 26, 2011

Another Lentil Soup...

The following recipe is taken exactly as it appears in a book entitled Prevent and Reverse Heart Disease, written by Caldwell B. Esselstyn, Jr., M.D. I believe that his wife, Anne, compiled the recipe portion of the book. Caldwell is the famous father of Rip Esselstyn, who has been made mention of earlier in this blog.

"Marrakesh Express Red Lentil Soup"

Makes 6 servings

"An amazing man who said he's been a practicing vegan for thirty years walked into our son Rip's firehouse in Austin, Texas. He described himself as a retired traveling bum with talents as a cook and a counselor,and he shared the following recipe. He had adapted it from a vegan cookbook, and have adapted it slightly more. But his words best describe it: "It is a one-pot meal with flavors that are completely transporting. You might imagine lying on embroidered cushions in a Mororccan pavilion, a warm breeze perfumed with spices gently billowing the sheer draperies around you. Bright flowers bloom nearby. You feel warm and relaxed." It makes the kitchen smell wonderful, and it tastes delicious.

1 onion, chopped
4 rbs celery, chopped (1 cup)
water or broth
1 bay leaf
1-2 tablespoons fresh ginger, chopped
1/2 teaspoon ground cinnamon
1/2 teaspoon ground turmeric
6 cups vegetable broth
4 plum tomatoes, chopped
1 cup red lentils
1 15-ounce can chickpeas, drained and rinsed
2 tablespoons lemon juice
1 bunch cilantro, chopped

1. Stir-fry onion and celery in water or broth in a large souop pot until tender.
2. Add Bay leaf, ginger, cinnamon, turmeric, vegetable broth, tomatoes, lentils, and chickpeas.
3. Bring to a boil, lower heat, and simmer, covered, for 45 minutes, until lentils are tender. Stir occasionally.
4. Right before serving, add cilantro and lemon juice.




Monday, April 11, 2011

The China Study in the News...

The following was taken from Dr. T. Colin Campbell's website, tcolincampbell.org. A visit to this site might be time well spent.

Plant Based News

In a recent interview with Wolf Blitzer on CNN, former President Bill Clinton officially addressed the circulating rumors surrounding his dramatic weight loss and change in eating habits. When asked to describe the type of diet he was on, President Clinton explained, “The short answer is I went on essentially a plant-based diet. I live on beans, legumes, vegetables, fruit…no dairy”

The former President credits both Dr. T. Colin Campbell, and his son, Dr. Thomas Campbell, authors of The China Study, as well as Drs. Caldwell Esselstyn and Dean Ornish for their pioneering work in the field of plant-based nutrition.

President Clinton went on to say that while a major reason for his transition to a plant-based diet was because of the prior cardiac events he experienced, with emotion behind his voice, he revealed the true motivation for this healthier lifestyle was that he and his wife, the current Secretary of State, Hillary Clinton, “would like to be around if there’s grandkids…”



The following comes from nytimes.com:

Nutrition Advice From the China Study

books

Six years ago a small Texas publisher released an obscure book written by a father-son research team. The work, based on a series of studies conducted in rural China and Taiwan, challenged the conventional wisdom about health and nutrition by espousing the benefits of a plant-based diet.

T. Colin CampbellT. Colin Campbell, Ph.D.

To everyone’s surprise, the book, called “The China Study,” has since sold 500,000 copies, making it one of the country’s best-selling nutrition titles. The book focuses on the knowledge gained from the China Study, a 20-year partnership of Cornell University, Oxford University and the Chinese Academy of Preventive Medicine that showed high consumption of animal-based foods is associated with more chronic disease, while those who ate primarily a plant-based diet were the healthiest.

Last fall, former President Bill Clinton evencited the book in explaining how he lost 24 pounds by converting to a plant-based diet in hopes of improving his heart health. The president gave up dairy, switching to almond milk, and says he lives primarily on beans and other legumes, vegetables and fruit, although he will, on rare occasions, eat fish.

Recently, I spoke with T. Colin Campbell, a co-author of the book and professor emeritus at Cornell University, about the success of the book, the research behind it, and why he thinks the nation’s health woes can be solved by plant-based eating. Here’s our conversation.

Q.

How did you end up writing this book?

A.

I have been in the field for a long time and had a major research program at Cornell. We published a lot of research over the years. My program had a good reputation. I’d finally gotten to a point where we’d discovered a lot of things that were very exciting, things that were provocative. Finally I sat down to write the book, to tell my story.

Q.

What was so unusual about your story?

A.

In the beginning of my career I was teaching nutrition in a very classical sense. Nutrient by nutrient. That’s the way we did research, that’s the way I taught it. I came to believe, after doing the work we did in the Philippines and China, that there was a very different world of understanding nutrition. I ended up with a view now that is almost diametrically opposed to what I had when I started my career.

Q.

How have your views changed?

A.

I was raised on a dairy farm. I milked cows. I went away to graduate school at Cornell University, and I thought the good old American diet is the best there is. The more dairy, meat and eggs we consumed, the better. The early part of my career was focused on protein, protein, protein. It was supposed to solve the world’s ills. But when we started doing our research, we found that when we start consuming protein in excess of the amount we need, it elevates blood cholesterol and atherosclerosis and creates other problems.

The problem is that we study one nutrient out of context. That’s the way we did research — one vitamin at a time, one mineral, one fat. It was always in a reductionist, narrowly focused way. But I learned that protein is not quite what we thought it was. We’ve distorted our diet seriously through the ages, and we have all the problems we have because of that distortion.

What loomed large for me was that we shouldn’t be thinking in a linear way that A causes B. We should be thinking about how things work together. It’s a very complex biological system. The body is always trying to restore health every microsecond of our lives. How do we furnish the resources for the body to use? In order to try to understand that, we shouldn’t be giving ourselves individual nutrient supplements. We shouldn’t be trying to discover which gene causes what. But those two areas have become the major focus of research over the years.

Q.

So how should we be eating?

A.

I don’t use the word “vegan” or “vegetarian.” I don’t like those words. People who chose to eat that way chose to because of ideological reasons. I don’t want to denigrate their reasons for doing so, but I want people to talk about plant-based nutrition and to think about these ideas in a very empirical scientific sense, and not with an ideological bent to it.

The idea is that we should be consuming whole foods. We should not be relying on the idea that genes are determinants of our health. We should not be relying on the idea that nutrient supplementation is the way to get nutrition, because it’s not. I’m talking about whole, plant-based foods. The effect it produces is broad for treatment and prevention of a wide variety of ailments, from cancer to heart disease to diabetes.

Q.

Do you advocate a 100 percent plant-based diet?

A.

We eat that way, meaning my family, our five grown children and five grandchildren. We all eat this way now. I say the closer we get to a plant-based diet the healthier we are going to be.

It’s not because we have data to show that 100 percent plant-based eating is better than 95 percent. But if someone has been diagnosed with cancer or heart disease, it’s smart to go ahead and do the whole thing. If I start saying you can have a little of this, a little of that, it allows them to deviate off course. Our taste preferences change. We tend to choose the foods we become accustomed to, and in part because we become addicted to them, dietary fat in particular.

If we go to a plant-based diet, at first it might be difficult, but it turns out after a month or two our taste preferences change and we discover new tastes and feel a lot better, and we don’t want to go back. It’s not a religion with me, it’s just that the closer we get to a 100 percent plant-based diet, the better off we’re going to be.

Q.

Have you been surprised by the success of your book?

A.

I have been a little surprised. When I finished writing the book with my son, who had just finished medical school, I didn’t know how well it was going to do. We had an agent who shopped the manuscript around, and the publishers all wanted 60 to 70 percent of the pages to be recipes. I said, “That’s not my shtick.” They wanted me to dumb it down.

I went to a small publisher in Texas who let us do what we wanted to do. I didn’t want to proselytize and preach. I didn’t want to write a book that says, “This is the way it has to be.” It’s a chronology. Here’s how I learned it, and let the reader decide. I say, “If you don’t believe me, just try it.” They do, and they get results. And then they tell everybody else.


Wednesday, March 23, 2011

Get to know Rip Esselstyn


Rip Esselstyn... Author of The Engine 2 Diet: The Texas Firefighter's 28-Day Save-Your-Life Plan that Lowers Cholesterol and Burns Away the Pounds

I LOVED THIS BOOK!


Rip Esselstyn Interview

Monday, March 21, 2011

Three Bean Chili...Two Thumbs Up

Three Bean Vegetarian Chili
From the Williams-Sonoma Kitchen Library: Beans & Rice

This recipe has been edited to be more family friendly. Now, not unlike a movie that has likewise been edited for family friendliness, it is perhaps more fit for small children.

Serves: 6 (I, of course, tripled the recipe to allow for a larger crowd and leftovers)

Ingredients:
3/4 cup dried pinto beans
3/4 cup dried red beans
3/4 cup dried black beans
2 Tablespoons olive oil
1 extra large "costco sized" yellow onion, or 3 smaller yellow onions, chopped
1 fresh jalapeƱo pepper, seeded and minced
6 large cloves garlic, minced (I used 1 rounded tablespoon bottled minced garlic)
2 tablespoons chili powder (the original recipe called for 6 tablespoons)
3/4 tablespoon cumin (the original recipe called for 2 1/2 tablespoons)
3/4 teaspoon dried oregano
4 cans (14.5 oz each) petite diced tomatoes

3 yellow onions ( I used 3 extra large "costco sized" yellow onions for the triple recipe)

*this recipe is still under construction

Saturday, March 12, 2011

How to make a meal out of Salsa...

I will get to that, but first let me give a little back ground and explain how to make it...

After spending a considerable amount of time preparing amazingly delicious food with some latino friends, I have come to appreciate the value of Jalapeno Peppers. Where as I almost never used them, and was in fact sort of afraid of them, I now like to make sure that I always have them on hand when I am making any kind of salsa.

The other day I did a demonstration on how to make salsa for a group of young women. We made a basic Pico de Gallo first. They all tried it and liked it. We then proceeded to add a variety of different ingredients and they continued sampling as we went along. I let them make suggestions about what it might need more of, and what we should put in next, etc. They loved it all and pretty much cleaned up everything that we made. It was a lot of fun for me and I think they liked it too, as several of them have since made it themselves.

I did not specify any amounts. Just ingredients, as everyones preferences are different and what you have on hand to make it will vary from day to day.


Pico de Gallo

Roma Tomatoes, Chopped
White onions (or Oso Sweet, or Vidalia or whatever sweet onions you can find), Chopped
Cilantro, chopped
Fresh lime juice (if you do not have fresh lime, you can also use a little bottled lime or lemon juice, or of course fresh lemon)
Jalepeno Pepper, finely minced (remove the seeds and white membrane from inside. I actually like to use latex gloves to handle the peppers, because no matter how many times I wash my hands, it seems the chemicals from the peppers stay on my skin and for about the 12 - 24 hours I burn my eyes if I rub them with my fingers, and I always forget...)
Salt
Pepper


Expanded version
Try adding some of the following:
Canned Black Beans (rinsed and drained)
Canned whole kernel corn
Chopped red bell pepper (or green or yellow or orange)
Avocado (chop a little bigger that other ingredients, and stir in gently)

Or, make it a fruit salsa, by adding either diced mango, or diced peaches or both.
My sister in law does this and then adds a little bit of jalapeno jelly. Nice touch.


OK FRIENDS... so this is how you turn the salsa into a meal...It is kind of like "Nail Broth" in that you need a few other ingredients.

Idea #1 Taco Salad

Ingredients:
Brown Rice, (left over works fine, I always make extra. Just warm in microwave)
Black Beans, rinsed and drained, and then warmed in a pot with a little vegetable broth (I make this with a little "Superior Touch Better Than Bouillon Vegetable Base" mixed with water. Follow instructions on jar.)
Romaine Lettuce, Chopped (I like to mix in gourmet spring mix lettuce, especially if it contains some arugula. You never know exactly what the mix will contain and in what proportions. Nice but not necessary.)
Pico De Gallo Salsa, simple, or with any combination of the additional ingredients.
Tortilla Chips, everyone can crush their own and sprinkle on top.
Ranch Salad Dressing, home made from a "Hidden Valley Ranch" packet, or bottled.

We just put out all of the ingredients and let people build their own. some of us put down a nest of lettuce first and then top with rice and beans. Others prefer the reverse. (Just my observation) My entire family thanks me when I make this relatively simple meal. It is fresh and satisfying. Also, because I do not mix the ingredients to serve, I store all left overs separately and then people come along for the next day or so and make more for themselves. This works great for hungry college students who happen to be home for lunch and ravenous boys just home from high school.

Idea #2 Really Simple Tacos

Ingredients:
*Corn Tortillas, as fresh as possible.
Avocado, sliced and ripened to perfection, if you don't mind...
Pico de Gallo Salsa, for this recipe it is nice if it includes some of the extras, like beans, etc.

Instructions: I'll explain later.....



* For some strange reason, my family prefers the really small tortillas like they use at the "street taco" stands. I have been picking them up at local latino markets.







Saturday, March 5, 2011

Mud beans...

Every once in a while my mother would make a lentil soup for our family....I always thought it was pretty good, but my older sister greatly disliked it and called it "mud beans". After this poor first impression, I am relatively sure that she herself has never prepared anything out of lentils in all the years that she has cooked for her own family. The following lentil dish, "Dal Soup" is so good that it might make a lentil lover out of my sister yet. I will have to get back to you on that.


Dal Soup - Dal is the name given to a delicious indian lentil dish

Serves 4

Ingredients:

2 Tbsp olive oil (the original recipe, called for butter here)
2 garlic cloves, crushed
1 onion,chopped
1/4 tsp turmeric*
1/2 tsp garam masala* (sold in a small bottle with all the other spices at the grocery store. Not all stores have it. I found it at Target.)
1/8 tsp chili powder*
1/2 tsp ground cumin*
2 lb 4 oz canned, chopped tomatoes, drained (I always prefer "petite" diced tomatoes)
1 cup red lentils (I use brown lentils, because that is what can buy in bulk and so it costs alot less than buying a tiny little bag at the grocery store and they work just fine.)
2 tsp lemon juice
2 1/2 cups vegetable stock (I mix mine from the Better Than Boullion paste that comes in a short squatty bottle
1 can coconut milk (1 1/4 cups)
salt and pepper
chopped cilantro and lemon slices, to garnish
naan bread to serve

1 On medium, heat the olive oil in a large saucepan. Add the garlic and onion and stir fry, stirring, for 2-3 minutes. Add the turmeric, garam masala, chili powder, and cumin and cook for a further 30 seconds.

2 Stir in the tomatoes, red lentils, lemon juice, vegetable stock, and coconut milk and bring to a boil.

3 Reduce the heat to low and simmer the soup, uncovered, for about 25-30 minuted, until the lentils are tender and cooked.

4 Season to taste with salt and pepper and ladle the soup into a warm tureen. Garnish with chopped cilantro and lemon slices and serve immediately with warm naan bread.

*I have changed this recipe a bit. The way that it has been written reflects all four spices cut to half their original amount. Because I have small children, I like to start out on the mild side and then add more later if I think it needs it.