Wednesday, October 8, 2014

Healthy Pho


Ingredients:
  • 12 cups low sodium organic free range chicken broth
  • 1/4 cup srirancha hot sauce
  • 1/4 cup low-sodium tamari sauce
  • Juice from 3 limes
  • 1 teaspoon extra virgin olive oil (light)
  • 2 teaspoons garlic powder
  • 2 teaspoons of onion powder
  • 1/2 teaspoon of sea salt
  • 1 medium onion (cut in rings)
  • 6 green onions (thinly sliced)
  • 1/2 cup chopped cilantro
  • 1 1/2 cups bean sprouts
  • 1 bunch basil
  • *8 oz brown rice noodles (thin)
  • 1 1/2 lbs grassfeed beef top sirloin (thinly sliced ) or chicken

Directions: 

1. In a large skillet, sautéed the thinly sliced beef (chicken) until cooked to liking. 

2. Place chicken broth, garlic, lime juice, onion powder, salt, olive oil, srirancha sauce, tamari sauce and onions in a large pot. Bring to a boil and reduce heat to low.

3. Follow directions, on package, for the brown rice noodles.

4. (Makes 4-6 servings) Divide noodles into bowls; top with sirloin, cilantro, and grinds, pour hot broth over the top. Serve with bean sprouts, cilantro, basil, and low sodium soy sauce (optional)

*Noodle type may be substituted (Besides the brown rice noodles, I also sautéed zucchini noodles. (vegetti- spiral cutter)


Wednesday, July 16, 2014

Detox

I received multiple emails about this particular topic; therefore, I thought I would share my views along with research.  The goal is to educate and help consumer keep money in their wallet.

Summer vacation rolls around, you tried to keep it fairly healthy, but you enjoyed a few to many treats. Now that vacation is over, it’s time to get back on track. You’re finally going to get serious about your health. It’s time to make changes. Conveniently, there is no shortage of solutions being advertised to absolve you of your sins while overhauling your body and soul for the back to school special: What you need to do is “detox”. You’ll see the detox kits at your local Whole Foods (or even your local pharmacy). Books, boxes or bottles, with some combination of “detox”, “cleanse” or “flush” in the product name. Supplements, tea, homeopathy, coffee enemas, ear candles, and footbaths all promise detoxification. The advertising suggests you’ll gain a renewed body and better health – it’s only seven days and $49.95 away. Or try to cleanse yourself with food alone: Or what about that old standby, the “Master Cleanse”? It’s the New You – wouldn’t a purification from your sins of summer be a good idea to start the fall year? After all, the local naturopath offers complete detoxification protocols, including vitamin drips and chelation. There must be something to it, right?

Wrong. “Detox” is a case of a legitimate medical term being turned into a marketing strategy – all designed to treat a nonexistent condition. In the setting of real medicine, detoxification means treatments for dangerous levels of drugs, alcohol, or poisons, like heavy metals. Detoxification treatments are medical procedures that are not casually selected from a menu of alternative health treatments, or pulled off the shelf in the pharmacy. Real detoxification is provided in hospitals when there are life-threatening circumstances. But then there are the “toxins” that alternative health providers claim to eliminate. This form of detoxification is simply the co-opting of a real term to give legitimacy to useless products and services, while confusing consumers into thinking they’re science-based. Evaluating any detox is simple: We need to understand the science of toxins, the nature of toxicity, and how detox rituals, kits, and programs claim to remove toxins. With this framework, it’s a simple matter to spot the pseudoscience and be a smarter consumer. Bam! Let’s get to work!

Premise one: Our bodies are accumulating toxins
There’s a reason we fall for the marketing of detoxification – we seem hardwired to believe we need it. Today’s version of autointoxication argues that some combination of food additives, gluten, salt, meat, fluoride, prescription drugs, smog, vaccine ingredients, GMOs, and perhaps last night’s bottle of wine are causing a buildup of “toxins” in the body. But what is the actual “toxin” causing harm? It’s nothing more than a meaningless term that sounds scientific enough to be plausible. A uniform feature of detox treatments is the failure to name the specific toxins that these rituals and kits will remove. For example Renew Life promises you:

“CleanseSMART is a 2 part, 30 day, advanced herbal cleansing program. It is formulated to stimulate the detoxification process of the body’s 7 channels of elimination: the liver, lungs, colon, kidneys, blood, skin, and lymphatic system. In today’s toxic world, cleansing and detoxification is a necessity. Toxins enter our body daily through the air we breathe, the food we eat, and the water we drink. Over time, these toxins build up and slowly start to affect our health in a negative way.
Through cleansing and detoxification, you enable your body to better process this toxic load. Reducing the toxic load in your body decreases the risk of developing chronic health problems, improves overall health and immune response, and can increase energy levels. CleanseSMART works to cleanse and detoxify the entire body, but with focus on the body’s two main detoxification pathways – the liver and the colon. CleanseSMART is essential for helping eliminate constipation and improving bowel health.

Note the vague language. Toxins are alluded to – but not named. It sounds somewhat plausible, but is non-specific. Note that even if you’re well (and presumably toxin free?) a detox is still recommended. The colon remains ground zero for detox advocates. They argue that some sort of toxic sludge (sometimes called a mucoid plaque) is accumulating in the colon, making it a breeding ground for parasites, Candida (yeast) and other nastiness. Fortunately, science tells us otherwise: mucoid plaques and toxic sludge simply do not exist. It’s a made-up idea to sell detoxification treatments. Ask any gastroenterologist (who look inside colons for a living) if they’ve ever seen one. There isn’t a single case that’s been documented in the medical literature. Not one.

Premise two: Illness is the result of toxins
Marketing materials for detox treatments typically describe an array of symptoms and diseases linked to toxin buildup: A few that are general enough to apply to anyone (e.g., headache, fatigue, insomnia, hunger) with a few specifics to frighten you (cancer, etc.) Which toxins cause which disease is missing, and how the toxins cause the symptoms is never actually explained. Here again we see the contrast with real science. To establish that even a single chemical can cause disease requires a significant amount of research (i.e., the entire field of epidemiology). Despite the variety of toxins that are claimed to be causing your illness, marketing claims for detox treatments will uniformly fail to link specific toxins to specific symptoms or illnesses.

The reality is that our bodies are constantly being exposed to a huge variety of natural and synthetic chemicals. The presence of any chemical in the body, (natural or synthetic) does not mean that it is doing harm. Many naturally-derived substances can be exceptionally toxic, and consequently the human body has evolved a remarkable system of defenses and mechanisms to defend against, and remove unwanted substances. The skin, kidneys, lymphatic system, our gastrointestinal system, and most importantly, the liver make up our astoundingly complex and sophisticated intrinsic detoxification system. Importantly, the dose makes the poison – even water can be toxic (dilutional hyponatremia) when consumed in excessive amounts.
Advocates for detox typically describe the liver and kidney as acting like filters, where toxins are physically captured and retained. It’s argued that these organs to be cleaned out periodically, like you’d rinse out a sponge, or change the air filter in your car. But the reality is the kidney and liver don’t work this way. The liver performs a series of chemical reactions to convert toxic substances into ones that can be eliminated in bile, or the kidneys. The liver is self-cleansing – toxins don’t accumulate in it, and unless you have documented liver disease, it generally functions without any problem. The kidney excretes waste products into the urine – otherwise the substance stays in the blood. To argue that either organ need a “cleanse” is to demonstrate a profound ignorance of human physiology, metabolism, and toxicology.

Premise three: Detox treatments remove toxins
A search of the medical literature for clinical studies of detox kits provides the following result:

There is no credible evidence to demonstrate that detox kits do anything at all. They have not been shown to remove remove “toxins” or offer any health benefits. The same can be said for quackery like coffee enemas – there is no credible evidence to support claims that coffee enemas help the body to “detoxify” compounds, or help the liver function more effectively. Vitamin injections are another treatment that fail to offer meaningful benefits to consumers, and have no beneficial effect on the ability of your liver or kidneys to work effectively. Chelation injections are touted as a cure-all for all kinds of illnesses, but unlike real chelation that’s administered in hospitals for real cases of poisoning, naturopath chelation is not science-based and doesn’t seem to do much of anything

Can Detoxing be harmful?
If they provide no benefit, is there the potential for detox treatments to harm?
When it comes to simple dietary changes, there’s little evidence of harm. Eating more quinoa and kale, and less processed and refined foods is reasonable dietary advice for everyone. Homeopathic “detox” is also likely safe – with no active ingredients, homeopathy is an elaborate placebo system. As you get into more unorthodox detox treatments that actually contain active ingredients, it’s clear that some approaches are demonstrably risky. Coffee enemas are considered unsafe and should be avoided. Harms such as septicemia (bacteria in the bloodstream), rectal perforation, and electrolyte abnormalities have been reported. Even deaths. Vitamin injections don’t seem as risky, as long as you trust the sterile technique of your alternative provider. However, given some naturopaths seem to be willing to inject products intended for oral use, you might want to think carefully about taking a vitamin injection or chelation treatment, especially when there’s no reasonable expectation of any benefit.
What about the detox kits? Contents vary, but typically contain two categories of ingredients:
1. A liver “booster” – typically milk thistle (Silibum marianum). If the liver can’t be wrung out and rejuvenated, can it be boosted to do a better job? Milk thistle is the most popular product purported to “boost” the liver’s effectiveness. There are no published studies that demonstrate milk thistle has a detoxifying effect on the liver. Milk thistle has been studied in patients with alcoholic liver disease, and in patients with hepatitis B or C, and it has not been found to exhibit any meaningful effects. There is no evidence to suggest that consuming milk thistle will cleanse you of unnamed “toxins”.
2. A laxative – Typically magnesium hydroxide, senna, rhubarb, cascara, etc. Laxatives are the ingredients in detox kits that give you the effect you can see (and feel). However, these ingredients can cause dehydration and electrolyte imbalances if not used carefully. Regular use of stimulant laxatives, like senna and cascara, are ill-advised for most healthy adults due to the risk of dependence and electrolyte depletion. They’re among the most potent laxatives, usually used for short periods to alleviate significant constipation or to clear out your bowels before a medical procedure. With regular use, your bowel can grow accustomed to the effects of laxatives which may result in constipation once you stop using them. It’s a perfect case of the treatment causing the illness: After the detox, you get could conceivably become constipated: Time for another detox!
3. Side effects can continue once a detox ends. Some people experience post-detox effects like nausea and diarrhea. Advocate call these “cleansing reactions” and will assure you it’s “toxins leaving the body”. A more plausible, science-based explanation is that this is a consequence of restarting the digestion process after a period of catharsis, where, depending on the extent and duration of fasting, little to no digestion occurred, and the normal gastrointestinal flora may have been severely disrupted. It’s the same effect seen in hospitalized patients who have difficulty initially digesting food after being fed intravenously. The detox ingredients, and resulting catharsis, may irritate the colon to such an extent that it may take time to return to normal.
4. Immediate weight loss is not uncommon after a detox, especially one that involves a laxative. Unfortunately this is usually due to losses in water and possibly muscle tissue, depending on the how disruptive the detox was to normal body function Regardless of the weight loss, the body will move back to its pre-detox weight over time if diet and activity levels remain the same.


Conclusion
Any product or service with the words “detox” or “cleanse” in the name is only truly effective at cleansing your wallet of cash. Alternative medicine’s ideas of detoxification and cleansing have no basis in reality. There’s no published evidence to suggest that detox treatments, kits or rituals have any effect on our body’s ability to eliminate waste products effectively. They do have the ability to harm however – not only direct effects, like coffee enemas and purgatives, but the broader distraction away from the reality of how the body actually works and what we need to do to keep it healthy. “Detox” focuses attention on irrelevant issues, and gives consumers the impression that they can undo lifestyle decisions with quick fixes. Improved health isn’t found in a box of herbs, a bottle of homeopathy, or a bag of coffee pushed into your rectum. The lifestyle implications of a poor diet, lack of exercise, smoking, lack of sleep, and alcohol or drug use cannot simply be flushed or purged away. Our kidneys and liver don’t need a detox treatment. If anyone suggests a detox or cleanse to you, you’d do well to ignore the suggestion, and question any other health advice they may offer.




Monday, June 30, 2014

Chewy Pro Brownies


Ingredients:

  • 1 can pumpkin
  • 1/2 cup egg whites
  • 1/2 cup egg protein powder
  • 1/2 cup unsweetened almond milk
  • 3/4 cup cocoa powder
  • 8 pitted dates 
Topping Optional:
  • 4 squares dark chocolate bar or chips (at least 60% or greater)
  • Handful of walnuts (48 grams)

Directions:
Preheat the oven at 350 degrees. 

In a food processor or blender, add the can of pumpkin, egg whites, protein powder, cocoa, and dates. Blend all ingredients. Using non-stick spray, lightly cover the pan. Now add the mixture along with the walnuts into the pan.

Bake at 350 for 25-30 minutes 
Finally, while it is still hot, melt the chocolate bar over the top of the brownies. Cool and store in fridge or freezer. That is....if it last that long :)


Quantity: 16 bars

(Macros include half dark chocolate bar and handful walnuts)

Calories 109
Fat: 4 g
Protein: 5 g
Carbs: 13 g
Fiber: 2 g
Sugars 10 g

Friday, June 13, 2014

Progress vs. Perfection

It’s easy to get caught up in the world’s perception of what it means to be ideal.

Please take a moment and define what an ideal person is to you?

 The world has a skewed belief that ideal is someone who embodies power, beauty, and strength. We see it on social media, gracing the pages of magazines, slogans on workout t-shirts, and finally words from our peers. We can’t deny the part of us that enjoys picking up a magazine longing to be that flawless model. How many times have you tried a Facebook or Pinterest latest social media craze: “Super Skinny Me” or “Boost Your Booty.” Perhaps, you worked out for seven day straight only to jump on the scale to find no weight loss obtained. You then race back to the gym for another two-hour workout. The vicious condemnation cycle continues. And you then think to yourself, anything other than perfection is nothing short of complete utter failure…

 The fact is we our constantly being fed lies- to strive for what I consider to be unrealistic and unattainable standards. Strive for progress not perfection. Each day, wake up, look in mirror, and see the masterpiece being reflected. You are a masterpiece. You are of value. Stop negative shaming self-talk and speak truth. Let your inner beauty shine bright.

“For we are God’s handiwork, created in Christ Jesus to do good works, which God prepared in advance for us to do.” Ephesians 2:10

Saturday, April 19, 2014

Lemon Bread with Lemon Glaze



Lemon Bread with Lemon Glaze

Ingredients:
  • 2 cups of oats
  • 12 egg whites
  • 1 cup stevia or ideal sugar
  • 3 teaspoon lemon extracts
  • juice from 1 lemon
  • zest from 2 lemons
  • 1 teaspoon of baking powder
  • 1/4 teaspoon sea salt

Glaze: optional
  • 2 tablespoon of organic coconut oil
  • 1 or 2 tablespoon organic powder sugar
  • 1 -2 tablespoon almond milk
  • 1 teaspoon lemon extracts

Blend in a blender or food processor and poor into a spayed muffin tray or bread pan. Bake 350 for 30 mins. Let cool completely and then glaze.
I mix the glaze in the blender; it made an icing texture.

Sunday, January 26, 2014

Sweet Potato Protein Muffins

Ingredients:

  • 3 cups of mashed sweet potatoes 
  • 12 egg whites
  • 1/2 cup sweetener of choice
  • 1 tablespoon vanilla
  • 1 1/2 tablespoon cinnamons
Directions:
Preheat the oven to 350. Mixed the mashed sweet potato with the egg whites, cinnamon, vanilla, and sweetner of choice. Pour into a greased muffin and bake for 20 minutes. 

Wednesday, January 8, 2014

Turkey Chili

                                                                                               Ingredients: 

  • 2 lbs extra lean turkey
  • 2 cans no salt added diced tomatoes
  • 2 can tomato sauce
  • 2 cups of shredded carrots
  • 1/4 chopped purple onion 
  • 4 tablespoon of organic chili powder
  • 1 teaspoon salt

     Directions:
Brown the meat and add the tomatoes, sauce, and veggies. Next, add the salt and chili powder and bring to a boil. Cover and reduce heat. Let the chili simmer for 10 minutes and  then serve.

Makes 8 servings