Showing posts with label vegetarian. Show all posts
Showing posts with label vegetarian. Show all posts

Friday, April 27, 2012

RAW FOOD EXTRAVAGANZA AT THE HERB SHOP








We had a great time, great music and great food. Thank you to everyone that came and everyone that helped. A special thank you to my oldest daughter who has a gift for raw desserts and was my right hand! Below are some pictures. We will be offering Raw Food Preparation classes in June at The Herb Shop (20 Highland Drive, Newnan, GA http://www.georgiaherbshop.com/ ). If you are interested stop by and sign up or email me at aviva.novoa@gmail.com !





Strawberry Cheezecake

Chinese Broccoli

Tamari Almonds

Donut Holes

Raw Lasagna


Spanish Rice

Cheezy Popcorn

Cacao Nib Cookies


Tuesday, March 27, 2012

Raw Lasagna

I hear a lot of folks voice concern over the "labor intensive" nature of raw meals. Some of them can be laborious to prepare and some of them are not. None the less that idea, that preparing raw foods is laborious, can make it hard to get motivated. So I want to address that a bit before we get started. (This recipe I am going to share does have a lot of steps involved but uses no dehydrator. All fresh ingredients!)  When you are beginning a raw diet it is not required to do anything complex. Your meals could be simple salads or some sort of nut and sliced vegetables. Nuts and fruit are great for breakfast. Soaked and or sprouted grains and fruit or vegetables are a simple and nutritious meal. Frequently my lunches are humus with veges or veges and some sort of soaked nut and that is all! You can keep it very simple if you like. The point is getting more "living" food in your body so you can have energy, good health, wonderful digestion and be in amazing spirits. The reason I prepare some of these more complex recipes is to "train" our palate to eat raw foods and demonstrate that there can be creativity and fun in raw food preparation. Our palates, particularly here in America and in the Western world are very spoiled. We are accustomed to constant gastronomic stimulation. I am a person that loves preparing food. I consider it an art, but I can easily get carried away using food more for entertainment rather than it's real purpose. With children, in particular, years of this kind of eating can make a raw diet very difficult to transition to. We have to learn and teach our children that we eat to live, not live to eat. My hope and prayer is that educating the public about the benefits of raw foods will help people see how important it is to learn what real nourishment is all about. We need to get back to the simplicity of how our Creator intended food to taste and what it's purpose really is in our lives. Too many people are sick and getting sicker because of the abuse of these principles. Our society is complicit in this travesty. Time to change the tide folks! These recipes can "wean" one off of eating mostly cooked food but simplicity, eventually, is the goal.
I am done preaching. On to the recipe!


                                                                 Raw Lasagna

                                        (we doubled this recipe because of the size of our family)

"Noodles"
3 Zucchini (peeled and sliced into circles, a food processor with a slicer or a mandoline slicer works great for this, but you can use a knife just as well)



Filling

1.) Sun dried tomato marinara sauce
     Process 2 tomatoes, 1 clove of garlic, 1/2 cup fresh basil leaves, 1/4 extra virgin olive oil, juice of 1/2   lemon, 2 pitted dates, 1/4 cup fresh oregano, 1/2 fresh or dried rosemary, 1 teaspoon of sea salt, 3 tablespoons of sun dried tomatoes.




2.) 1 tomato, sliced

3.) 1/4 cup yellow onion, sliced

4.) Italian Cheeze
     Process 2 cups of cashews, the juice of a lemon, 1 clove of garlic, 1/2 cup of basil leaves, 1 teaspoon of sea salt, 2/3 cup of purified water



Directions: Layer in this order: Zucchini, cheeze, tomato, onion, marinara and then again until you use all of the ingredients.

***You can top with Cashew Garlic Parmesan Cheeze (Adapted from Ani Phyo's recipe in Ani's Raw Food Kitchen)


In your clean coffee grinder, grind cashews until powdery. Process cashews with 1/4 teaspoon sea salt and 1 clove of garlic. Sprinkle mixer over your lasagna. You can also top with sliced black olives if you like. Enjoy!


Rawmometer Rating: 4.8

Husband, "There is something about this sauce I can't get enough of."
Oldest Daughter, "Way better than I expected!"
Youngest Son, "I loved the cheeze and the sauce."
Youngest Daughter, "It's good!"
(Oldest Son at work, not an Italian fan anyway)





Wednesday, March 21, 2012

"Risotto" with Cherry Tomatoes, Black Olives and Jalapeno Cheeze

Spring is here! The flowers and trees are blooming and the air in Georgia looks like a yellow fog right now. OK, maybe that's an a bit of an exaggeration. It certainly feels like that! The pollen count is reaching record highs. Our temperatures, unusually high for this time of year, have been in the 80's. Here at our house some of us are doing a little sneezing. Honestly I am shocked that our allergies are not more severe. I think all the raw food is equipping our immune systems to handle all the allergens better than usual. I work at an Herb Shop as a herbal educator http://www.georgiaherbshop.com/ and we are seeing lots of folks come in to find natural remedies for their allergies. There are many, many things you can do herbally, but your first line of defense is a healthy diet. The Herb Shop will be having a class explaining how to combat and prevent allergies naturally this coming Sunday March 25th at 5:30 p.m. http://georgiaherbshop.com/georgia-herb-shop-events/abundant-health-classes/. The class is FREE! So if you are here in Georgia, near Atlanta, plan to attend. You will learn a lot!

So on to tonight's recipe. This recipe has been adapted from Ani Phyo's recipe in Ani's Raw Food Essentials. Tonight we experienced a raw dish that is designed to look like Risotto. It absolutely looks like Risotto as you can see from the picture below!



Looks can be deceiving. One should never expect raw food meals to taste like cooked ones.
Sometimes they are much better than cooked food and sometimes not. This one was no Risotto! I am a little spoiled. I have had and have prepared very good risotto. So I might have had my expectations a little high considering this particular dish.

Don't get me wrong this dish in and of it's self was good. My husband said it would be an excellent raw sandwich spread or perhaps a dip. I would agree with that completely. It was tasty but we broke out the carrot sticks and pita chips because the taste was slightly overpowering by itself. It almost tasted and had texture like chicken salad. Very interesting.

So here is the recipe:

Risotto With Cherry Tomatoes, Black Olives, and Jalapeno Cheeze

First prepare "Raw Sushi Recipe"
1 1/2 cups peeled and diced turnips
1/2 cup pine nuts
1/2 teaspoon sea salt
2 teaspoons raw apple cider vinegar

In a food processor, combine the turnips, pine nuts and salt. Process into "rice-size" pieces. Add the vinegar and pulse gently to mix. I did end up adding a little purified water to help it combine better. I few teaspoons.

Next prepare one recipe of Jalapeno Cheeze by processing:

1 clove of garlic
1/2 teaspoon of sea salt
2 cups of soaked sunflower seeds
the juice of one lemon
1/2 cup water,  or as needed to process
1 Jalapeno pepper, seeded and chopped

Next, slice 1 cup of cherry tomatoes in halves. Now mix the "rice", the "cheeze" the and tomatoes well. Top with black olives and enjoy.





Rawmometer Rating "3"
Husband, "Wasn't quite what I expected. Good for a dip or sandwich spread."
Oldest Son, "Better on bread mom, not by itself."
Oldest Daughter, "Not my favorite, but not bad."
Youngest Son, "Alright."
Youngest Daughter, "This is great!" (go figure, LOL)



Tuesday, March 13, 2012

Raw Corn Chowder

Our family has begun a journey of adding more raw food (fruits, vegetables, nuts and seeds) into our vegetarian diet. We are approximately 80% raw at this point. The enzymes, vitamins and minerals gained by eating this way far surpass any other style of eating. Meat, organic and free range, where we are living, is expensive and hard to find not to mention animals are rarely slaughtered in a humane way. So we have opted for this style of eating to keep our bodies as healthy as possible and to feel our best. It is not a judgement on anyone elses way of eating but even carnivores could benefit from eating more raw produce, nuts and seeds. We will try to frequently post our reviews and recipes here for you. You are welcome to take this journey with us if you'd like and we are happy to share what we are learning!

Tonight's meal was raw corn chowder. I adapted it from Ani Phyo's recipe to fit the needs of the size and individual tastes of my family. There are six of us. The corn chowder also had a mound of Jalapeno Lime Kream in the center and is garnished with "Bacon" made from eggplant and a little cilantro for the finishing touch on our Southwestern meal. You will find when you eat raw you do not need to eat as much of a "volume" as you did before eating cooked food. Be aware this is a "cold" soup. It can take a while to get used to eating cold soups, but they are very good when you do. Not only that, they are full of LIFE!!

OK, so here is the recipe. I have homework to get to with kids so I better make this quick!

Corn Chowder
1 clove of garlic
1 teaspoon dried thyme
1 teaspoon of Himalayan salt
6 cups of organic non GMO raw corn kernels
1/4 cup of extra virgin olive oil
2 cups of purified water
1 recipe of Eggplant Bacon (recipe below), diced
1 recipe of Jalapeno-Lime Kream (recipe below)

Place garlic, corn, thyme, salt, olive oil and water in a blender. Blend till slightly smooth and slightly chunky. Top with a mound of Kream and sprinkle "Bacon" and a sprig of cilantro on top.

Jalapeno-Lime Kream
1 cup of soaked and drained cashews (at least 4 hours)
1 whole jalapeno pepper seeded and roughly chopped
1 teaspoon of lime zest
The juice of one lime
1/2 teaspoon of Himalayan salt
1 tablespoon of extra virgin olive oil
1/4 cup of purified water, as needed to blend

Blend all ingredients in a blender until creamy.

Eggplant Bacon
(you will need to prepare this a few days ahead of time)
In a bowl, marinate
1 large eggplant, thinly sliced length wise
3/4 cup extra virgin olive oil
1 teaspoon black pepper
2 tablespoons of raw honey (do not feed to children under 1 year)
4 tablespoons of Ume Plum Vinegar (if you can not find raw Apple Cider Vinegar works great)
Marinate for 2 hours, wipe off some of the oil or it will not dehydrate to "crisp", place on teflex sheets in dehydrator (Excalibur works best) and dehydrate for 12 hours. Turn "Bacon" over and dehydrate for another 12 hours without teflex sheets. It should be crispy.

My youngest child, who is the picky one, consumed the entire bowl. A tiny bit of protest about the cilantro but she ate her meal. Everyone else had no problem with it. My oldest son was not present. So we will give Raw Corn Chowder a 4 out of 5 on the Rawmometer.

Many blessings to you from The Raw Mommy