Senin, 28 Desember 2009

Top Ten Gluten-Free Recipes on Gluten-Free Goddess

Best Gluten-Free Recipes from the Gluten Free Goddess blog
Reader's faves: the top gluten-free recipes on Gluten-Free Goddess blog.


As the first decade of the new millennium chugs to a long slow finish like the spunky little engine that could, top ten lists are sprouting up everywhere. Top ten movies, top ten playlists. Which begs the burning question for celiac survivors. Hello! Where is our own gluten-free top ten list? Where is our shining and sparkly Top Ten Gluten-Free Goodness? It's a new year. A spanking new decade. Let's party.

So without further ado, here is my own humble contribution to the Best of the Best in the expanding gluten-free recipe universe.


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Minggu, 27 Desember 2009

Boxing Day Delight



For some people, the holidays are a time to relax and unwind, gorge themselves on cakes, cookies, and chocolate, and take long naps on the couch watching re-runs of the 90210 Christmas special. Whatever works for you. Personally, I see it as a time to get down to business and cook some really special food for my family and friends, and sneak in that extra workout (sorry, it’s true).
So that’s just what a I did on boxing day – cooked up some super delicious tempeh and kale with sweet potato rice, after my aerobics DVD was over. Tee hee. I have never used tempeh in any of the recipes on My New Roots yet, mostly because I am pretty much off the soy wagon. But, I was in the mood and thought I would seize the opportunity to use up what’s left in the pantry (and to slather yet another dish with my Green Giant Cilantro Pesto. HELLO!)

What’s the deal with tempeh?
A while back I mentioned that I was trying to cut back on soy products, specifically soymilk and tofu, since they are a very processed bunch of edibles – not what a I would call “whole foods”. Tempeh (pronounced TEM-pay) on the other hand, is quite the ingenious little treat, made from whole soybeans and rice (or another type of grain). It is much higher in fiber than other soy products because it is includes the whole bean. It is also higher in protein than tofu, contains more vitamins and is easier to digest due to its fermentation process, which preserves the nutritional value. Did I say fermentation? I sure did friends and we all know that that means probiotics. Holy cow, could it get any better?!

Why the heck does it look so weird?
Yeah, yeah, it looks like a cake made of brains, but appearances do fool. To make tempeh, whole cooked soybeans are blended with rice or grains, injected with a culture and fermented for 18-24 hours to form a dense, chewy cake. It should have veins, a gray-ish white, thread-like substance resulting from the fermentation that binds the tempeh together. Black patches on the surface of the tempeh do not indicate spoilage, just that the good bacteria are still at work (trim this part off before cooking).
You can find tempeh in the refrigerated section of natural food stores (and often in the freezer). Use it in the recipe below, or as a meat substitute in chili, stews, fillings for potpies, stir-fries – be creative! The only real suggestion I make is that you cook the tempeh a little bit first before adding it to the rest of the dish you’re making. The flavour is not as strong if it is steamed, simmered, or browned before making its grand entrance. And much like tofu, it takes on the flavours that you use in the cooking process. Anyone who says that tempeh is gross is cooking it wrong – it only tastes as bad as the way it is prepared!

Orange Pan-glazed Tempeh with Kale and Sweet Potato Rice
Ingredients:
1 cup freshly squeezed orange juice (3-4 large juicy oranges)
1 tablespoon freshly grated ginger
2 teaspoons tamari (or soy sauce)
1 1/2 tablespoons mirin or brown rice vinegar)
2 teaspoons maple syrup
1/2 teaspoon ground coriander
2 small garlic cloves, crushed
roughly 10 ounces of tempeh (or extra-firm tofu)
1/2 bunch of kale, sliced into very thin strips (dinosaur kale pictured. mmmm...)
2 tablespoons olive oil
1/2 lime
a few spoonfuls of Green Giant Cilantro Pesto or a handful of cilantro (coriander) leaves.

Directions:
1. Put the orange juice in a small bowl. Add the grated ginger, tamari, mirin, and maple syrup, ground coriander, and garlic. Mix together and set aside.
2. Cut the tempeh (or tofu) into thin-ish, bite-sized pieces, and if working with tofu, pat dry with a paper towel.
3. Put the olive oil in a large frying pan over medium-high heat. When the oil is hot but not smoking, add the tempeh and fry for 5 minutes, or until golden underneath. Turn and cook the other side for another 5 minutes, or until golden. Pour the orange juice mixture into the pan and simmer for 10 minutes, or until the sauce has reduced to a lovely thick glaze. Turn the tempeh once more during this time and spoon the sauce over the tofu from time to time. Add sliced kale and cook until just wilted.
4. Serve the tempeh drizzled with any remaining sauce and a squeeze of lime, with the coriander scattered on top. Set on top a bed of sweet potato rice (of course, this is optional) or use any other cooked grain you have on hand.

Sweet Potato Rice
Ingredients:
1 cup brown rice
2 cups water
1 small sweet potato
2 cloves garlic
Pinch of sea salt

Directions:
1. Rinse rice very well until water runs clear. Put in pot with 2 cups pure water and salt.
2. Scrub sweet potatoes well (leave skin on for maximum nutrition!) and chop into small cubes. Slice garlic roughly. Add sweet potatoes and garlic to rice pot.
3. Bring pot to a boil, reduce to simmer and cook until tender 45-50 minutes, typically.




Don't be a wuss. Go get some tempeh and try it. Right after your aerobics DVD is over.

Recipe source: 101cookbooks.com

A Bevy of Gluten-Free: Fruit and Vegetables

Photograph of fresh fruits and vegetables at the farmers market in Santa Monica
Jewels at the farmers' market -- naturally gluten-free.


Walking the Santa Monica Farmers' Market beneath dove gray December skies I fell in love with the quiet beauty of seasonal fruits and vegetables protected under netting. There is something so poetic, so archetypal about it. So shy and evocative. Seductive and beckoning. So downright bridal. So understated gorgeous. So rather than waxing all Emily Dickinson on ya and conjuring words for the experience I thought I might use my camera instead.

And let my pictures do the talking.

Karina

Rabu, 23 Desember 2009

Kaspersky Anti-Virus Scanner 7.0.1.325 & 8.0.0.523 Multilingual




Anti-Virus Scanner without installation.

Download Portable KAV 7.0 En-Fr (no base) on RapidShare (7.4 MB)

(md5: 06adbf6735830e6a1a4ed5fc18e90935)

Download Portable KAV 7.0 Multilingual Online on MediaFire (0.5 MB)

Download Portable KAV 2009 En-Fr on RapidShare (61 MB)

(md5: 0e0ae1bae74e88295781ee7f33441c03)

Bases updated on 2009/12/20.

Download Portable KAV 2009 Multilingual Online on MediaFire (0.5 MB)


Extract and run KAV*Portable (both versions in same folder).

Integrated in shell explorer while running: scan with a right-click on a file, folder or drive.

Only scanner: no monitor.

Clean infected files when no reboot needed.

Not activated but you can update bases after each launch.



KAV 7.0 can update bases from a folder, so it is faster to download cumul, weekly or daily bases, extract to a folder and choose this folder as Update source in Update settings (Add) before Updating :.



Multilingual Online will download setup and extract files.

7.0: Czech, German, English, Spanish, French, Croatian, Hungarian, Italian, Korean, Dutch, PortugueseBR, Polish, Portuguese, Russian, SerbianLatin, Swedish, Turkish.

2009: Arabic, Czech, Danish, German, Greek, English, Spanish, French, Italian, SpanishInternational, Dutch, PortugueseBR, Polish, Portuguese, Romanian, Russian, Slovak, Serbian, SerbianLatin, Swedish, Turkish, TradChinese, SimpChinese.

Language set by launcher according UserDefaultLang. If interface is not in expected language, search the name of the folder in App\KAV8\Skin\loc (or App\KAV7\Skin) and write Localization= this name in KAV*Portable.ini.

Selasa, 22 Desember 2009

Chocolate Quinoa Brownies- Gluten-Free and Vegan

These gluten free chocolate brownies are vegan and egg free
Vegan gluten-free brownies made with quinoa flakes.

Your stubborn and chocolate obsessed gluten-free goddess has been working overtime. In between shooting photographs of the holiday lights and skaters in Santa Monica and battling the return of the flu I fought off some weeks ago (I believe in recycling, Darling, but this is a wee bit ridiculous) I have been utterly possessed. Haunted by the ghost of chocolate brownies. Vegan chocolate brownies, to be exact (because I've already served up the best egg-based gluten-free brownie I can think of, so if you haven't tried my Dark Chocolate Brownie recipe or the Chocolate Brownie made with pecan meal, Darling- Go!).

Baking failures do not sit pretty with yours truly. Especially when I am achy and voiceless and my head feels like a giant damp wad of gluten-free dough with too much xanthan gum added (you gluten-free bakers know exactly what I'm talking about). I feel like the goddess of sticky, thick and dull. And there ain't no cure. Except maybe a hot toddy. Or three.

Lucky for me I have a husband who likes to bake. A husband who says (as his brittle, grumpy hot-flashing wife is muttering expletives and scraping another gooey not-in-a-good-way gluten-free vegan brownie failure into the perky polka dotted trash can), So. 

How can we make this work?

For a split second I panic and think, He's over it. He's finally tired of living gluten-free. Living without baguettes and bagels and croissants out of love, a sense of duty, or comradeship and support. 

He's done. Finished. He's out the door, no looking back.

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Total Uninstall Professional 5.4.2 & 4.10 Multilingual




Installation monitor and advanced uninstaller without installation.

Download Portable TotalUninstall 5.4.2 from RapidShare (5.0 MB)

Download Portable TotalUninstall 4.10 from RapidShare (1.4 MB)


Extract and run TotalUninstallPortable or TotalUninstall4Portable.

Language set by launcher (2nd start) according Windows localization: English, French, PortugueseBR, Croatian, Czech, Dutch, German, Greek, Hungarian, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Norwegian, Polish, Portuguese, Romanian, Russian, Serbian, Slovak, Spanish, Turkish. If you don't want, edit TotalUninstall.ini (you should have to register again).

Settings of installed TotalUninstall should be preserved.

Senin, 21 Desember 2009

Happy Winter Solstice!

Tree Stars

Wishing you and your family 
the warmest of winter greetings 
for a safe, healthy and beautiful holiday season.

xox

Karina



Kamis, 17 Desember 2009

Jewels at the Santa Monica Farmers Market

Gorgeous fresh picked carrots in a rainbow of colors.


This week at the Santa Monica Farmers' Market the jewels of the season glow. Among my favorites? The rainbow carrots in orange, ruby, purple and gold. Some roots were so young they were the tiniest of crooked fingers, delicate and naturally sweet. These carrots make wonderful crudities for hummus.

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Roasted Red Pepper Hummus Recipe

Red pepper hummus - a fab gluten-free vegan snack.


Get your hummus on. It's party time! The holiday season is upon us and that means it's time to whip up your favorite hummus and dip recipes. After all, the days are still getting shorter (my personal excuse for partying). And Winter Solstice- also known as the shortest, darkest day of the year- is only days away.

Then it's here comes the sun, Baby. So. Huzzah! Let's celebrate. To help in such a worthy cause, here's one of our favorite hummus recipes.

Let the sun shine in.


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Rabu, 16 Desember 2009

Green Giant Cilantro Pesto



Needing an infusion of brightness as we head into the darkness of winter? Here’s your fix: Green Giant Cilantro Pesto. I call it giant because the flavour of this luscious sauce is so enormous it will knock your wintery woolen socks off. Promise.
And the bonus is that it’s totally versatile: I fold it into quinoa salad, add it to soups (it is especially good on my four corners lentil soup), spread it on top of hummus for an extra zing, pour it over hot whole grain pasta, slather it on beans and rice, use as a dip, or take it by the spoonful if my taste buds are bored. Ha. I might be joking.

Surprise! Cilantro is also very good for you!

Cilantro (sometimes called coriander or Chinese parsley) is the leaf of the herbaceous plant belonging to the carrot family. Corriander is actually the seed of the plant, which is also a popular seasoning in many international dishes.
But as commonly used as it is, cilantro is also a powerful and natural cleanser, shown to effectively help remove heavy metals and other toxic agents from the body.

The chemical compounds in cilantro actually bind to the heavy metals, loosening them from the tissues, blood and organs. Cilantro's chemical compounds then aid to transport these harmful substances out of the body through elimination.

There is also a large amount of literature suggesting that cilantro could be one of nature's best chelation agents, particularly for individuals who have been exposed to heightened levels of mercury. Mercury excess is a common problem that may be the result of metallic teeth fillings or over-consumption of predatory fish. Many people suffering from excess mercury report that the feeling of disorientation resulting from the poisoning can be greatly reduced through consuming large and regular amounts of cilantro over an extended period.
So, got some silver fillings in your chompers? Run and make this sauce to combat the
mercury!

Green Giant Cilantro Pesto
Ingredients:
4 bunches fresh cilantro
1 peeled medium sweet onion
Juice of 3 lemons
¼ cup toasted pine nuts (optional)
¼ tsp. ground chipotle pepper (or cayenne)
2-3 Tbsp. olive oil
1 Tbsp. agave nectar or honey
Salt to taste

Directions:
1. Trim ends off cilantro bunches and place them in a large bowl of fresh water, dunking them several times. Drain water and repeat once more to be sure that all of the dirt has been removed.
2. In a blender, puree onion in lemon juice.
3. Add cilantro (both leaves and stems), and remaining ingredients to blender and blend until mix is uniformly green.
Salt to taste.

If a thinner sauce is desired, add olive oil. If a thicker sauce is what you're after, add pine nuts (or macadamia or walnuts). Blend until sauce is desired consistency.


This stuff is good with everything! If there was a ever a condiment that really gets my fired up, it's this one. It wakes up just about anything you can throw at it, and breathes new life into those dishes you've made a million times. Invite the green giant over for a bite!

info source: http://www.globalhealingcenter.com/cilantro.html

Senin, 14 Desember 2009

Thumbprint Cookies with Buckwheat Flour + Brown Sugar

Gluten-free thumbprint cookies made with buckwheat flour + brown sugar.

'Tis the season for baking cookies. So I feel no guilt at all tempting you with my latest gluten-free baking success. What kind of gluten-free goddess would I be if I didn't keep conjuring up cookie recipes? I ask you. Not a goddess worth her salt- er- sugar. So I am not going to apologize for the calories, or the fat or the organic golden brown sugar in this recipe. Goddesses do not apologize for their cookies. Not during cookie season, anyway. And besides, Sweetcakes, a treat should be a treat. Life is short. Daylight is dwindling.

Live a little.

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Senin, 07 Desember 2009

Guitar Pro 5.2 MultiLingual




Tablature Editor Software for Guitar, Bass, and Banjo without installation.

Download Portable Guitar Pro on RapidShare (9.4 MB)

(md5: 8a1f851f80f18a6f0246f4e5ae5d0545)

Realistic Sound Engine (RSE)

Download Guitars Pack RSE on RapidShare (143 MB)

(md5: 2e8d57493cde45c6b91f21aea7e298c8)

Download Bass Pack RSE on RapidShare (41 MB)

(md5: c21805fd0a4303fa1668b7198061b22f)

Download Drums Pack RSE on RapidShare (80 MB)

(md5: 137f6cece0e904ddcb46652312a5448c)


Extract and run GuitarPro5Portable.

Drive letter updated in path.

Language set by launcher according UserDefaultLang (if you don't want: write UserDefaultLang=false in GuitarPro5Portable.ini) Catalan, Czech, SimpChinese, Croatian, Danish, German, English, Spanish, French, Greek, Hebrew, Italian, Japanese, Korean, Macedonian, Hungarian, Dutch, NorwegianNynorsk, Polish, PortugueseBR, Russian, Serbian, Slovenian, Slovak, Finnish, Swedish, Thai, Turkish.

Settings of installed GuitarPro5 should be preserved.

TablEdit 2.69 a3 Multilingual




Tablature Editor for up to 16 instruments of from 3 to 12 strings each without installation.

Download Portable TablEdit on MediaFire (3.3 MB)


Extract and run TablEditPortable.

Language set by launcher according UserDefaultLang for English, French, German and Spanish (if you don't want: write UserDefaultLang=false in TablEditPortable.ini).

For other languages, edit TablEditPortable.ini with UserDefaultLang=false and CustomMenu=... Bulgaria, Chinese, Czech, Danish, Dutch, Esperant, Finnish, Greek, Italian, Japanese, Norwegian, Occitan, Polish, Portugue, Russian, Slovak, Swedish.

Drive letter of path updated in ini file and registry.

Settings of installed TablEdit should be preserved.

Jumat, 04 Desember 2009

Twice-baked Cantuccini Heaven


As if one needs another excuse to curl up with a steamy, cup-of-anything-hot this season, I’m giving you another: home made cantuccini. And yes, by that I mean ‘biscotti’, sure. But in Italian, biscotti simply means cookie, whereas cantuccini are the twice-baked biscuits we all know and love from coffee houses and stuffy tea parties. (Hey, if I can’t be a master Italian baker, at least I can be gastronomically accurate.)

This inspiration for these actually began months ago on a trip to Italy (weird, eh?). My husband, the insatiable coffee drinker, mentioned how nice it would be to have these cookies kicking around the pantry from time to time, as he would get one on the side of every espresso order and loved the combination of smooth, rich coffee and sweet, crunchy nibbles. I thought I would indulge him when we returned but I was disappointed to discover a severe lack of vegan recipes, as eggs play a major role in the traditional version. I put the idea on the back burner until recently, when I baked something at work using applesauce instead of eggs. It worked perfectly. The cantuccini spark was reignited and now we do have these kicking around in the pantry, much to our delight.

Applesauce instead of Eggs
Let’s be up front: I got nothin’ against eggs. However, I am forever curious about finding substitutes for certain ingredients as I have to cater to vegan diets, or food allergies, or the weight-conscious, at the restaurants I work.
Substituting eggs is a slightly tricky matter in baking, as eggs take on different roles depending on what you’re making. In a cake, for example, the eggs serve as a leavening agent, helping to make the cake light and fluffy. In baked goods such as cookies and muffins, the eggs add moisture and act as a binder, gluing all the other ingredients together.
In this case of cantuccini, applesauce is a great choice because it’s naturally sweet and it will act as the necessary “glue”. The baking soda is in included to help leaven the dough, as the cookies would be rather flat otherwise.
To replace the eggs in this cookie recipes, simply use ¼ cup applesauce per egg. This type of cantuccini recipe typically calls for 3 eggs, so I have substituted them ¾ cup of applesauce.

Orange Cranberry Hazelnut Cantuccini
Ingredients:
• 3 cups flour (I use spelt)
• 1 tablespoon baking powder
• 1/2 teaspoon salt
• 1 – 1 1/2 cups Sucanat or unbleached cane sugar (depending on how sweet you like your cookies)
• 3/4 cup smooth unsweetened applesauce
• 1-3 tablespoon sunflower or olive oil
• Zest of one organic, un-waxed orange
• 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
• 1 cup hazelnuts, toasted and chopped
• ½ cup dried cranberries


Directions:
1. Preheat oven the 325°F.
2. Line two cookie sheets with baking paper.
3. In a large bowl, whisk together the flours, baking powder, and salt.
4. In a medium bowl, whisk together the sugar, applesauce, oil (1 TBS for a hard biscotti, 2-3 TBS for a softer biscuit), and orange zest.
5. Stir the sugar mixture into the flour mixture, add the nuts; finish mixing with your hands.
6. With floured hands, shape the dough into three, 3-inch wide "logs" about 3/4 inch thick, with the ends squared off.
7. Place these on the cookie sheets.
8. Bake the logs for about 25 minutes.
9. Remove the pans and reduce the oven heat to 300°F.
10. Cool the logs on a rack for 15 minutes.
11. Cut the logs carefully with a sharp knife straight across into 1/2 inch wide slices.
12. Place the slices cut side down on the cookie sheets.
13. Bake 5-10 minutes, or until golden on the bottom.
14. Turn the slices over and cook 5-10 minutes more, or until golden on bottom.
15. Cool on racks, then store airtight for up to two weeks.


I made my cantuccini with cranberries, orange, and hazelnuts because these flavours compliment one another well, and also have a “holiday” feeling to them. If you don’t like these ingredients, try the following, or any combination that suits you:
- almond lemon
- ginger apricot
- pistachio honey
- chocolate orange
- cashew orange
- cinnamon raisin
- double chocolate walnut

If you’re really feeling naughty, dip one side of the cookie in high-quality dark chocolate.
These cantuccini make a really nice gift for the holidays – take a batch to a party and watch them disappear into coffee cups and smiling faces. Or keep them kicking around your pantry – for a very short time.

Selasa, 01 Desember 2009

Gluten-Free Chicken Soup for Body and Soul

Gluten free Chicken Soup: The Cure
A gluten-free chicken soup to cure all ills...

We've been living on soup since Sunday. No, not turkey leftovers soup. Jewish penicillin soup. You see, Steve- that ordinarily upbeat and tenacious husband of mine- has been feeling a tad under the weather these past few days. In truth, more than a tad. He's caught a nasty cold. The kind of cold where you ache all over and do nothing but lay in bed watching a marathon of Lost on your laptop because to even zombie-walk to the sofa loveseat too-small-to-lay-on requires functional navigation skills and balance beyond your sinus-throbbing capacity.

Poor guy.

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Rabu, 25 November 2009

Gluten-Free Pumpkin Scones with Maple Nutmeg Icing

Gluten-free pumpkin scones with maple icing are tender and delicious with tea
Gluten-free pumpkin scones with maple nutmeg icing.


Take a deep breath. Stop. Sit. I understand. I get it. And I know what you're craving. Because I'm craving it, too. After all the pre-Thanksgiving hubbub, after scouring the Internet for gluten-free recipes, after all the planning, the lists, the shopping at six different markets because one store never has everything you need (that would be too simple), the label reading, the patience (dug from somewhere deep and zen and maybe even vaguely transpersonal) to explain (again) why scraping the pumpkin filling off a wheat pie crust does not a gluten-free dessert make, what you crave (besides alone time with a freshly cracked book and your favorite mug filled to the brim with your beverage of choice) is something indulgent.

But not overly indulgent.

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Kamis, 19 November 2009

Roasted Acorn Squash Risotto

Acorn squash risotto recipe that is vegan and gluten free

A delicious acorn squash risotto that is vegan and gluten-free.

Looking for a perfect fall side dish? Or a vegetarian knock-your-socks-off bowl of creamy goodness? Risotto might fit the bill. This is one of my all-time recipe favorites. In fact, it was the first dish I turned to eight years ago when I discovered I had to live gluten-free.

Way back then (insert hazy slow-mo flashback) I would add freshly grated Parmesan to the cooked risotto. Shaved Reggiano, to be exact. But these casein-free dairy-free days I enjoy this risotto strictly vegan. No cheese. And guess what? I don't feel deprived. Seriously. The flavors hold their own without the whole moo cow cheesy thing.

In fact, this risotto is so creamy-good and comforting I only think one thing as I taste bite after velvety bite: How could anything so simple taste so unbelievably good? Well, that, and, Who the heck needs cheese or butter, anyway?


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Rabu, 18 November 2009

Roasted Roots



I received an email from a reader recently, asking for my suggestions on a raw food “trial” diet, since her and a few friends thought that they would like to give the lifestyle a whirl.

Here’s my suggestion: don’t do it!
The reason: it’s cold outside!

Raw food diets are a fabulous idea when the weather is hot, sunny, and what you’re eating is local. Coming into December? Not so much.
You see, the foods we choose to eat, send messages to our bodies internally, about the season and the weather, which in turn allows our bodies to be prepared physically for what we are facing externally. Why do we instinctively turn to soups and stews in winter? Because hot, slow-cooked foods prepare our systems for the cold, and keep us healthy and strong. And just as the foods that are in season in the autumn and winter will warm your body, so will the cooking methods that cold-season foods require. Consider the vegetables that are in season now: sweet potatoes, turnip, squash, onions, beets, and carrots – foods that necessitate long cooking times. Compared that to the warm-season foods, such as leafy greens, tomatoes, peas, asparagus, etc. we can see how these foods require very little, if any cooking at all. A lot of the foods harvested in the spring and summer are even best eaten raw, and the body responds well to that type of diet at that particular time of year.

This demonstrates how eating with the seasons not only benefits the environment, but also our bodies. Cooked food in the winter is easier to digest, and helps the body build up and maintain heat. This lessens the work our bodies must do to keep warm and alleviates stress – and we could all benefit from that!

If you want to get the most warming effects from you food, slow down the cooking process. For example, braising, simmering on the stove top, crock pot cooking, and roasting, are suitable methods that impart a great deal of heat into the food, which you receive back through eating and digesting. The longer and slower foods cook, the more warming effect they will have on your body.
Roasting is a wonderful way to bring out the intense flavours in vegetables that typically get lost in the steaming or boiling process. And as a bonus, the vitamins and minerals will remain intact, as they are typically lost in the cooking water we pour down the drain! The roasting process slightly caramelizes the vegetables bringing out their natural sweetness, without a lot of added fat or calories.

Roasted Roots
Ingredients:
2 Tbsp. extra virgin olive oil
8 cloves garlic
3 small beets
4 small sweet potatoes
4 carrots
½ head cauliflower (only if it's local!)
good sea salt

Dierctions:
1. Preheat oven to 400 F.
2. Mince the garlic and add to olive oil. Let sit.
3. Cut the vegetables into similar size pieces (this will ensure that they cook at the same rate). Place on large baking sheet.
4. Pour oil and garlic mixture over vegetables and toss well to coat. Sprinkle with salt.
5. Roast vegetables in the oven for 45 minutes - 1 hour, removing pan from oven every so often to toss. Cook until the vegetables are soft and caramelized.
6. Garnish generously with sea salt and your favorite herb.

Serve the roasted vegetables alone as a side dish, or on top a bed of quinoa or rice with a protein source for a complete meal. You can even cool them down slightly and use them in a salad of rice or cous cous with dried herbs and lemon dressing. No matter how you choose to eat them, you will be doing your body a huge favour by feeding it with heat! It’s one delicious way to keep the cold out this winter, and stay away from those bananas!

Minggu, 15 November 2009

Delicious Gluten-Free Bread Recipe - dairy-free and rice-free, too

Delicious Gluten-Free Bread Recipe - dairy-free and rice-free, too
My best gluten-free bread recipe. Note: The loaf pictured has eggs.


Man shall not live by bread alone, so the famous saying goes. In other words, we need ideas to feed us, too. We need awareness. Conscious action. An expression and celebration of the spirit.

And yet (here's the sticky part, folks) almost every spiritual tradition includes the bread we shall not solely live by, whether it be a hand-torn loaf, a paper thin wafer, a piece of matzoh, a curve of naan, or a sprinkle of cornmeal. Breaking bread and sharing grain is a cherished and beloved symbol for community, celebration and tribal nourishment. From Holy Communion to the Super Bowl gatherings around an elevating principle or a family milestone (from birth to marriage to funerals) include the simple but connecting gesture of sharing food.

Because cooking makes us human.

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Jumat, 13 November 2009

Sweet Potato Pie

Gluten free sweet potato pie that is dairy free and vegan
Gluten-free sweet potato pie- and vegan, too.

The afternoon sun is spinning the seaside air that particular autumn gold, burnished and warm and chilly all at once. Delicious. And gone too soon. The sun will officially set tonight at 4:50. I feel as if I am running out of time. There is so much I want to do- and never get done. I surrender my expectations day after day. The pile of choices snipped free by my dwindling energy is gathering a bulk and momentum akin to the dirty laundry (I’m still waiting for the post-menopausal zest promised by Margaret Mead).

But Santa Monica does not fade after dark. Her charms only deepen. So we walk after dinner to the Third Street Promenade and listen to the brave souls who risk their ego and their artistry (the unkind among us might quip, questionable talent) crooning songs or plucking violins or juggling. Palm readers and skateboarding bulldogs aside, it takes guts to stand in public and offer up a tune or a dance.

I come home inspired.

I am thinking a lot about my life these days. And what I want to do with the rest of it. Moving here is a new beginning (well, yeah, obviously). I am reinventing the woman I used to be. Spinning my own autumn magic from bits of bone and history.

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Selasa, 10 November 2009

Masala Chai Tea Time



Who’s cold and cranky? Who’s damp and dreary? I am!
I know that the autumn weather on the Canadian side of the world is not so bad, but across the pond in Denmark, it is endlessly gross. The sun poked its head out for about 45 minutes on Saturday, but save for that scarce glimpse, it’s been over 10 days now. Help!

To pull myself out of this lousy-weather-induced slump, and warm myself up, I have developed a rather brilliant innovation: Chaice-cubes! Like Chai tea and ice put together…chaice! Allow me to explain:
At one of the restaurants where I work, we make a huge pot of chai tea every single day. It starts with boiling all kinds of delicious and aromatic spices, then adding black tea, milk and honey. The first part is essentially creating a concentrate, which got me to thinking: what if I made this amount of concentrate at home and froze it for chai-on-demand! So that’s precisely what I’ve done. This recipe will allow you to have a chai supply for weeks without the waste of tea bags, with optional caffeine, and you can even custom spice it to suit your taste!

Not just for warming up
Chai is a centuries-old beverage originating from India. In fact, the word chai, is the generic word for “tea” in Hindi, where as in the west we are referring to “masala chai” or spiced tea, when we ask for this beverage at a café.
There is no fixed recipe or preparation method for masala chai, so where ever you drink this beverage in the world, chances are it won’t taste the same way twice!

The health benefits of chai are numerous, considering the many spices it is made of. Below is a list of the spices I have included in my personal version of masala chai, and their medicinal qualities.


Ginger: aids digestion; decreases arthritic swelling; destroys bacteria and viruses; lowers blood pressure; aids circulation.

Cardamom: aids digestion and remedies gas, relieves asthma and bronchitis; stimulates the appetite.

Black pepper: aids digestion, remedies gas; has antioxidant and anti-bacterial qualities.

Fennel: aids digestion, and kidney and bladder function; relieves asthma, bronchitis, coughs, nausea; prevents gas; good for treating food poisoning.

Cloves: aids digestion; kills intestinal parasites; relieves abdominal pain; has anti-inflammatory effect on rheumatic diseases.

Cinnamon: aids digestion, relieves nausea, vomiting, diarrhea; has antiseptic properties; beneficial for the heart, lungs, and kidneys; aids insulin’s ability to metabolize blood sugar.

Star anise: aids digestion; relieves cough, bronchitis, and asthma; good for treating rheumatism.

Licorice root: relieves asthma; has many anti-depressant compounds; relieves cold and flu symptoms, coughs; relieves dandruff and psoriasis; aids gingivitis and tooth decay.

Masala Chai Concentrate
(use spices to your own taste, and use what is available to you)
Ingredients:
5-6 inches fresh, grated ginger root
¼ cup whole cardamom pods
1/8 cup whole, black peppercorns
1/8 whole fennel seeds
scant ¼cup whole cloves
8 cinnamon sticks
2 star anise
2 sticks licorice root
3 ½ liters fresh water

Directions (and how to make Chaice Cubes!):
1. Place all ingredients together in a large pot.
2. Bring to a boil and then simmer with the lid off until the water level is reduced by a few inches (expect this to take 1 ½ - 2 hours)
3. Separate liquid and solids by straining the pot contents through a sieve into a measuring cup or bowl with a spout.
4. Pour strained liquid into ice cube trays to freeze, or into sterilized jars/bottles for refrigeration (concentrate will last for 2 weeks in the fridge)

To make Chai Tea with Masala Chai Concentrate:
1. Warm milk (dairy, soy, rice, oat, nut) in a saucepan on the stove and toss in a few chaice cubes! Or pour in some of the refrigerated concentrate (use an amount that suits your taste).
2. When mixture is very hot, add a black tea leaves, or a bag of your favorite black tea. Steep for indicated amount of time. Alternatively, you can drink the warmed chai concentrate and milk without tea, as I prefer, since it is caffeine-free (it's just as delicious!)
3. Add honey, maple syrup or agave nectar to sweeten (this is an important step as it brings out the flavours of the spices). Sip slowly, warm up and smile.


Even if the weather forecast looks dreary I can be sure that a cup of spicy warmth awaits me at the end of my day. A sachet of the spices, or a bottle of the concentrate would make a beautiful Christmas or hostess gift during the holidays. Spread the warmth and chai!

info source: Balch, Phyllis A. Prescription for Dietary Wellness.
New York, NY: Penguin, 2003.

Senin, 02 November 2009

Eating Compassionately


I had a rather upsetting experience a couple weeks ago.

I was driving down the highway somewhere outside of Toronto, overtaking a large freight truck, which from behind looked rather unremarkable. However, as I passed the cargo-loaded back end, I realized that the truck was filled with baby pigs. I could clearly see their little faces through the air holes in the metal wall, and there were even ears and snouts poking out, desperately sniffing the fresh air. I was so furious and upset, witnessing how cruelly restricted they were, and undoubtedly heading towards a slaughterhouse – if they would make it there alive.

Fortunately, three prominent Canadian animal welfare groups, Animal Alliance of Canada, the Canadian Coalition for Farm Animals (CCFA) and the World Society for the Protection of Animals (WSPA) are working to protect farm animals during transport, and they are championing MP Alexandra Mendès’ Private Members’ Bill seeking to improve farm animal transport regulations.
The existing transport regulations, part of the Health of Animals Act, state no limits on how long entire journeys must be, which means that animals are traveling by land, sea and air for days and even weeks. The intervals at which animals being transported must receive food, water and rest are far too long – with devastating consequences for the animals.

“People should be aware of what animals go through from farm to slaughter. It is inhumane to deprive an animal of food, water or rest for 81 hours and to subject them to such unhealthy and stressful conditions. Animals experience terror, pain and suffering. If the Minister of Agriculture can alleviate some of this suffering and make our food safer by reducing farm animal transport times, then this is something he should do. We are grateful to Mrs. Mendes for putting forward a bill that will protect both animals and Canadians.” Karen Levenson, Animal Alliance of Canada

My reasons for being a vegetarian have fluctuated over the past decade or so. I believe I took on the life choice for environmental reasons, then for my health, and I have recently discovered the joys of supporting the welfare of animals through my vegetarian diet, knowing that my choice will help spare the suffering of many lives. But this is not an article about vegetarianism.

My goal for this article was simply to plant a seed of awareness so that you can take action in your own way. I am not asking for you to make a major life change, as becoming a vegetarian is as such. But I am encouraging you to consider where your meat comes from, what it was fed, how it was raised, and brought to you. I realize that there is a great disconnect between the animal itself and the food on your plate, but bear in mind that every time you eat meat you are voting for, and supporting the kinds of conditions that that animal lived, good or bad. Choosing free-range meat that is raised organically is a good start towards standing up for animal rights, but choosing to cutback, or cut out meat consumption is of course, the strongest statement you can make.

After the pig truck experience, I went online to see how I could get involved. I was shocked to discover how many resources, support groups and advocates for animal rights specific to factory farming exist. After hours of research, I have narrowed the field down to what I believe are the most informative and useful links for you to visit!

- Website of The Animal Freedom Foundation: a portal for presenting articles and books about (the basics of) animal rights, healthy food in general and ways to end factory farming in particular.
http://www.animalfreedom.org/english/index.htm

- World Society for the Protection of Animals (WSPA): to build a global animal welfare movement.
http://www.wspa.ca/default.aspx

- Here is a link to the compassionate shopping guide – it’s free! : http://www.ciwf.org.uk/resources/shopping_guide/download.aspx

- World Animal Net: The world's largest database of animal protection societies, with over 16,000 listings and more than 10,000 links to Web Sites
http://worldanimalnet.org/new.asp

Please have a look, sign a petition or two, or better yet, get involved! The last link is the best way to find animal welfare groups in your very own city. Thanks.

sources: Quebec MP's bill to ease suffering on Canada's highways (2009) viewed Nov. 1 2009 http://www.wspa.ca/latestnews/2009/quebec_mps_bill_to_ease_suffering_on_canadas_highways.aspx
image source:uppompeii1.uppompeii.com

Senin, 26 Oktober 2009

WinImage Pro 8.50 Multilingual




Disk Image Management Utility without installation.

Download Portable WinImage on RapidShare (1.4 MB)


Extract and run WinImagePortable.

Language set by launcher according UserDefaultLang English, French, PortugueseBR, SimpChinese, German, Italian (if you don't want: write UserDefaultLang=false in WinImagePortable.ini).

Can mount CD-ROM and Floppy images in virtual drives with FileDisk, don't forget to unmount before leaving.

Settings of installed WinImage should be preserved.

Jumat, 23 Oktober 2009

Gluten-Free Apple & Pear Crisp

Easier than pie, a crisp makes a lovely gluten-free dessert.


Sweet, crisp apples and tender pears are sprinkled with a cinnamon and brown sugar crumble and baked to melt-in-your mouth perfection. This simple gluten-free dessert- worthy of excavation from the Gluten-Free Goddess® archives- evokes old fashioned autumnal comfort at its coziest.

Using a gluten-free pancake and baking mix- such as Pamela's Baking and Pancake Mix- makes this treat easy as pie easier than pie to toss together. Celebrate fall and winter with this classic homey dessert.

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Rabu, 21 Oktober 2009

The Canyon Premiere Video


Here's a sneak peek at last night's premiere of The Canyon at Grauman's Chinese Theater. It was the first time we saw the film on the big screen. In the video- shot by our son Colin aka Slighter, on his iPhone- you can catch a glimpse of Grauman's, Steve, son Alex, Beth Brunner, lead actress Yvonne Strahovski, director Richard Harrah, and producer Mark Williams. And moi.

An independent film distributed by Truly Indie, The Canyon will have a limited release in six cities, opening in West Hollywood and Denver on October 23; Minneapolis, Dallas, San Francisco and Cambridge, MA on October 30. I hope you get a chance to see it (though if you do not, rumor has it the DVD will have cool special features with behind-the-scenes interviews and deleted scenes).


Senin, 19 Oktober 2009

Gluten-Free Pumpkin Waffles and The Canyon

Gluten-free pumpkin waffles with maple syrup.

I haven't been baking much in our dorm-sized sublet. The Barbie scaled toy that pretends it's an oven (my lasagna pan- never mind my cookie sheets- won't fit) is totally, weirdly cattywampus. Pie plates slide to the rear and flip backwards like pancakes. And trying to fetch potatoes that have rolled off the back of the rack is often a futile act proving hazardous to your fingertips. I'm a slow learner. I burned myself twice. But I'm still smiling. For two reasons.

1. We found an apartment we love. I can walk to the beach. And the Santa Monica Farmers Market. And the Third Street theaters and shops and bookstore and cafes. Walk! As in, no car necessary. There isn't room to set up a painting studio (space is but a luxury so close to the beach) but. There is a brand new kitchen. With a shiny spankin' new stove. Virgin territory. Untouched by heinous proteins. This will be my first gluten-free kitchen, ever. We move in November first.

2. Then there is Tuesday. The premiere of The Canyon at Grauman's Chinese Theater. The first time we will see Steve's script on the silver screen. Larger than life. Edited to the director's vision. Am I excited? Of course. Am I nervous? Affirmative. Will it be the movie we dreamed of? Maybe it will and maybe it won't. The one thing I know for sure about movies is that film making is a magical, unpredictable process.

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Minggu, 18 Oktober 2009

Reader Request: My Favorite Recipe - Four Corners Lentil Soup


I have had so many requests for my favorite recipe, that it’s high time I make the big reveal! I have no idea how the idea for this delightful soup even got into my hot little hands, but I have always been a huge fan of Indian Daal (lentil soup) and I suppose I just figured out how to make my own version after devouring it countless times at restaurants.
This soup is always my “back-up” for when I have last-minute company over, since I can keep all of the ingredients on hand, and it is by far the most requested recipe whenever I serve it. And the reason I call it Four Corners Lentil Soup? Because I know for a fact that this recipe has been made on every major continent on planet earth. I have friends living all over the world, and each one of them cooks it on a regular basis! From the busy streets of Singapore, to the remote wilderness of northern Ontario, from the scorched deserts in the American southwest, to the rainy seasides of Denmark, this soup really has traveled the four corners! So simple to make, highly nutritious and packed with flavour, this lentil soup is an economical crowd pleaser that will warm the hearts of anyone you serve it to, most importantly, yourself!

For the Love of Lentils
Lentils are a great legume for impatient people! They cook in a very short amount of time and require no pre-soaking like other pulses do. They have a velvety texture and delicate flavour – perfect for purées and soups. I often add blended lentils to soups or stews to make them creamy without the cream! They are low in calories, virtually fat free, but very filling because of their high fiber content.

In addition to providing the body with slow burning complex carbohydrates, lentils can increase your energy by replenishing your iron stores. Particularly for menstruating women, who are more at risk for iron deficiency, boosting iron stores with lentils is a good idea – especially because, unlike red meat, another source of iron, lentils are not rich in fat and calories.

Four Corners Lentil Soup
Ingredients
1 cup red lentils, picked over and rinsed very well
1 large onion, or a couple leeks, chopped
5 cloves garlic, minced
1 Tbsp. minced ginger root
1 Tbsp. Ground cumin
¼ tsp. cayenne pepper
1 15 oz. can of tomatoes; or 4 large, fresh tomatoes, chopped
4 cups stock
salt to taste
1 un-waxed, organic lemon

Directions
1. Rinse the lentils very well until the water runs clear.
2. Heat oil in a medium pot and sauté onions, garlic and ginger for 5 minutes until soft. Add a pinch of salt.
3. Add spices and stir for another minute or so, until fragrant.
4. Add tomatoes, 3 slices of lemon and rinsed lentils, then add vegetable stock. Stir well.
5. Cover and bring to a boil. Reduce heat to simmer for about 30 minutes, or until the lentils are soft. Squeeze in the rest of the lemon juice.
6. Serve hot with some cilantro, green onions or parsley on top with a slice of lemon. Delicious!

Serves 4.


Hey...let’s keep this soup traveling! Let me know where you are in the world and maybe I’ll stop by for a bowl someday. It is my favorite, after all.

info source: whfoods.com

Rabu, 14 Oktober 2009

Gluten-Free Banana Corn Muffins Recipe

Tender and sweet corn muffins infused with the scent of banana


Apartment hunting is more than a little fun, right? It's big fun. You get to tour unfamiliar lobbies and prowl rooms old and new. You get to peek into kitchen cupboards and step onto balconies, turning your face toward the sun to imagine greeting the day in that one particular spot on Earth (mug of fresh brewed coffee and a crisp LA Times in hand).

You wade eagerly into conversations about whether you'd prefer looking out at a roof top or a wall or a neighbor's patio ringed with bamboo. Hunting is fun. But finding the right apartment is not as simple as you might think.

While you think it would be beyond groovy to live opposite the Santa Monica Library with a ficus canopy crowning your street level view, your Honey Baby Sugarness states said library proximity holds absolutely no charm for him and he urges you to reconsider your enthusiasm, siting 1. street level noise and 2. the stop-and-go energy of the bus stop.

He favors a bright and airy spot on 6th Street opening to a quiet common courtyard. But you can't get past 1. the spongy beige wall-to-wall and 2. the neighbor's clear and intimate view of your living room (hence, My Lovely, your sure to happen sooner or later morning-brained half naked sprint to fetch the ringing cell phone forgotten in your purse the night before--- not a pretty sight).


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Sabtu, 10 Oktober 2009

Roasted Eggplant Tapenade + Pasta Sauce

Tapenade made from roasted eggplant is so easy and delicious
Roasted eggplant tapenade also makes a delicious pasta sauce.

Yesterday was summery here in Southern California. In a Meg Ryan breezy kind of way- not in a sultry no air peel off your jeans, cowboy boots and socks Jennifer Lopez in U Turn kind of way. Nope. Sunny and warm it was- but not hot like New Mexico.

We've moved into our sublet (above one of Santa Monica's most famous vegan restos). The Honda is Cuisinart and bread machine and wooden spoon free again- after lugging armloads of bags and boxes (via elevator, thank goddess) up to our cozy fourth floor cutie. Yesterday we walked to the ocean, inhaling deep. In truth? I am exhausted. Running on gluten-free fumes. Too tired to shop or cook or make even the tiniest decision, never mind attempt to be clever and insightful and entertaining in a recipe post.

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Rabu, 07 Oktober 2009

Morning Glories



While cruising the aisles of my local grocery store recently, I stumbled across a serious abomination: Quaker Oat Breakfast Cookies. Now, the concept of breakfast cookies have been around for quite some time, as we have all found someway of justifying desserts to jump start our day: danishes, crepes, cupcakes without icing - a.k.a. ‘muffins’. However, these cookies take the cake, ahem, and have absolutely no redeeming value. In fact, I would go so far as to say that they are BAD for you. If you have a sec, go check out that ingredient list… Yowza! What were they thinking?!
High fructose corn syrup? Partially hydrogenated soybean and cottonseed oil? C’mon Quaker, get with times. That garbage is so 2005.

I can do way better than that. My version of the breakfast cookie, Morning Glories, are loaded with fiber, healthy fats, and get this…beans! But I promise, no bean taste. I promise. They are not only great for breakfast on the go, but sooo delicious at tea time, or a nutritious pick-me-up when that 4 p.m. tummy starts to growl.
Morning Glories are also a complete protein, thanks to their grain and bean combo. The perky lemon paired with the mellow, licorice-flavoured anise is totally unexpected and delightful. They are a bit little crunchy on the outside thanks to a healthy coating of calcium-packed sesame seeds, and so soft and chewy on the inside – you won’t believe it’s not cake!

The super fiber in Oats
The star ingredient in Morning Glories is oats, an energy-packed grain that is a familiar guest at the breakfast table. But did you know why oats are such a smart choice for you and your family?
Oats, oat bran, and oatmeal contain a specific type of fiber known as beta-glucan.
Beta-glucan has been shown to have beneficial effects on cholesterol levels by removing it from the digestive system that would otherwise end up in the bloodstream.
In laboratory studies reported in Surgery, beta-glucan significantly enhanced the human immune system's response to bacterial infection. Beta-glucan not only helps neutrophils (the most abundant type of non-specific immune cell) navigate to the site of an infection more quickly, it also enhances their ability to eliminate the bacteria they find there.
And Type 2 diabetes patients given foods high in beta-glucan or given oatmeal or oat bran rich foods, experienced much lower rises in blood sugar compared to those who were given white rice or bread. Starting out your day with a blood sugar stabilizing food such as oats may make it easier to keep blood sugar levels under control the rest of the day, especially when the rest of your day is also supported with nourishing fiber-rich foods.
You’ll be doing your busy body a real favour by noshing a couple of these cookies before you run out the door.

Morning Glories
Ingredients:
-2 cups whole, rolled oats (not instant oats)
-1 cup whole grain flour (I used spelt)
-2 tsp. aniseed, crushed in mortar and pestle, spice grinder, or use the bottom of a glass
-1 tsp. baking powder
-1 tsp. baking soda
-Zest of one, non-waxed lemon
-1/2 tsp. fine grain sea salt
-One 15-ounce can white kidney, great northern, or navy beans, rinsed & drained (or 1 1/2 cups cooked beans)
-1/4 cup olive oil
-1 cup evaporated cane juice (or brown sugar)
-1 large organic egg
-1 tsp. vanilla extract
-1/3 cup chopped dates
-2/3 cup sesame seeds

Directions:
1. Preheat your oven to 350F degrees and place a rack in the top third. Line a cookie sheet with parchment paper and set aside.
2. Pulse the oats in a food processor (or blender) until they resemble a very rough flour. Transfer the oats to a large mixing bowl and whisk in the flour, aniseed, baking powder, baking soda, lemon zest and salt.
3. Pulse the beans and olive oil in the food processor until they are creamy. Add the sugar, egg, and vanilla extract and pulse until smooth. Add dates and pulse a few times until chopped and incorporated. Scrap down the sides of the bowl once or twice along the way.
4. Pour the wet ingredients over the dry ingredients and stir until the ingredients start to come together. Stir until everything just comes together.
5. Place the sesames seeds in a bowl. With a tablespoon, scoop out some dough about the size of a golf ball, then roll it into a rough log shape. (Yes, the dough at this point is very wet, but it becomes very easy to handle once coated in sesame seeds.) Roll the log of dough into the sesame seeds, remembering to dip the ends too. Set each log on the prepared baking sheet and with the palm of your hand flatten the dough just a bit, into a bar shape. You want the bar to be the same thickness all the way through – do not make the ends flatter than the middle. Repeat with the remaining dough, leaving at least an inch or so between each bar - they'll spread a bit, but not much. Bake for about 15 minutes or until the sesame seeds around the bottom start to get golden.
Makes about 1 1/2 dozen cookies, give or take a couple.
Store in an airtight container for a week (if they last that long!).


Now, in an ideal world I would omit the sugar entirely and use some alternative sweetener, but for now this version will have to do. I am still unsure about substituting a solid (evaporated can juice) for a liquid (such as maple syrup). If any of you experienced bakers know the answer to this, please let me know!
I have yet to try different flavour combinations in these Morning Glories, so I think my next batch will feature coconut flakes and bananas, or maybe cinnamon, cranberries and orange zest! This batter is the perfect blank canvas to experiment with different tastes, so get creative and get baking! No matter what personal flourishes you decide to employ, you can rest and wake assured that a healthy, whole food breakfast is waiting for you – because you’re one smart cookie yourself and every morning should be glorious.

info source: http://www.whfoods.com/genpage.php?tname=foodspice&dbid=54
recipe inspiration: 101cookbooks.com

Senin, 05 Oktober 2009

Spicy Pumpkin Soup with Coconut Milk

Here's a recipe for a quick and easy pantry soup
that just so happens to be gluten-free.

Cleaning out the pantry always makes hungry. Come to think of it, so does packing. And lugging laundry. But the truth is, this time of year- anything can make me hungry. I could blame it on shorter daylight. Or the jarring touch of the cold tile floor when I tumble out of bed barefoot and sleepy and weave through boxes of books and movies to locate my tea mug, gone missing since three PM yesterday when I set it down- goddess knows where- to help my husband wrap one of my forty-inch square abstracts.

All of it makes me hungry. But here's my top ten.

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Minggu, 04 Oktober 2009

Celebrating Two Years



Happy Anniversary! My New Roots is two years old now, thanks to all of you! I have infinite gratitude for your enduring support, curiosity, and enthusiasm for all things healthy.

This year will be filled with exciting new things, such as the launch of My New Roots TV (WOW!), "reader request" articles, and of course more enlightening advice to help you along your path to total well being.
Remember, if you want to stay on top of all the articles published, you can subscribe to My New Roots. Just click on the orange link on the right sidebar and never miss a thing! And if you have questions, comments, or the desire to contact me for any reason, send an email to: sarahlbritton@gmail.com

It has been quite a year for me, lots of changes, up and downs, but my passion for expanding this nutritious network is unwavering. I look forward to many more healthful adventures and discovering how we can be even better, inside and out, every single day.

In love, gratitude, and health,
Sarah B.

(and yes, I do get that excited about raspberries.)

Jumat, 02 Oktober 2009

Gluten-Free Pumpkin Cake with Maple Icing

Gluten free pumpkin cake with maple frosting
Tender and moist pumpkin cake with maple icing. 
For nut-free, skip the chopped nut topping.


Today I'm digging into the recipe archives to share an old favorite. My pumpkin cake recipe. We're so busy sorting, bagging clothes and boxing up books for donation, getting ready for the big move to Los Angeles (next Thursday!) that yours truly has not had time to bake.

But if I did? I'd whip up this moist and tender beauty of a cake.

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