Sexy Susan

Health & Wellness Newsletter               

FEBRUARY  2012

In This Issue
5 Asian Superfoods
How to Sneak Your Kids their Veggies
Recipe of the Month: Marsala Chai Apple Crisp
New Group Programs
February Events
Greetings!

 

Happy Valentines Day

February is

Heart Healthy Month

and one of the best ways to nurture your heart is with love and a healthy lifestyle! Check out below some exciting news about

HLW new Group Program and kickstart your health with a

 Health & Weight Loss Adventure!

Happy Valentine's Day

 5 Asian Superfoods
 
 Medicine doesn't always come in a pill. In fact some of the most powerful medicines are delicious and can be found at your local supermarket or "farmacy." Healing foods have been used for centuries in Asia as part of the cuisine. In Asia food and medicine are often the same thing.

 

Here are five foods you may never have heard of but can be found at most Asian markets and even places like Whole Foods. Try them. You might be surprised by their unique and extraordinary good taste. And they may help you lose weight, reverse diabetes, lower cholesterol and prevent cancer.

 

KonjakKonjac: The Asian Super Fiber

 

Long used to make konnyaku, a jelly prepared in Japan for over 1500 years whose medicinal properties were appreciated as early as the 6th century, konjac fiber or glucomannan has multiple benefits. Konjac is much more viscous than usual fibers, retaining up to 17 times its weight in water.

Expanding in the stomach and the small and large intestine, it absorbs fat, accelerates elimination, reduces cholesterol, blunts sugar absorption and facilitates weight loss, in part by increasing feelings of satiety. You have it as jelly or noodles called shirataki.

 

ArameArame: A Wonder of the Sea

 

Arame is a marine brown algae, or sea vegetable, that can be added to soups, stir fries or even made into a sea vegetable salad. It is rich in minerals calcium, iron, zinc, manganese, folate, vitamins A & K, and iodine. It also boosts immunity and helps bind toxins in your body. Some even say it helps boost sex drive!

 

 

 

Shitake MushroomsShitake Mushrooms: Healing from the Earth

 

The earthy shitake or Chinese black mushrooms boost immunity through special polysaccharide molecules and can help prevent cancer. They are also full of minerals, especially iron, and they appear to decrease binding of immune cells to your arterial wall preventing atherosclerosis. Aside from exposure to the sun and eating herring, mushrooms are one of the few ways you can get vitamin D. Think of them as the sunshine food.

 

daikon radishDaikon: The Other White Meat

 

Daikon is a mildly flavored large East Asian white radish. It looks like a giant white carrot. It contains digestive enzymes that help you break down food, and they contain myrosinase that boosts detoxification of environmental chemicals. Daikon is high in vitamin C and folate. Like its relatives broccoli, cabbage and kale, daikon is a cruciferous vegetable that offers cancer-protecting potential. It can be grated and eaten raw in salads, in stir-frys or in soups.

 

 

Umeboshi PlumsUmeboshi Plums: A New Kind of Pickle

 

These red little Japanese plums add a perky taste to stir fries and soups. Besides their scintillating flavor, Japanese pickled plums have remarkable medicinal qualities. Their acidity has a paradoxical alkalinizing effect on the body, helping with fatigue, enhancing digestion, and boosting the elimination of toxins. This is the Far Eastern equivalent to both aspirin and apples; it is a great hangover remedy for mornings after; and an umeboshi a day is considered one of the best preventive medicines around!

 

Souce: Dr Mark Hyman 

 

How to Sneak Your Kids their Veggies
Girl with Brocolli 
 
Kids are notorious for looking at anything leafy and green as their dinner-table enemy. They'll sooner forgo dessert than willingly eat their recommended servings of vegetables.

 

Short of force-feeding, what is a concerned parent to do?

 

Researchers at Pennsylvania State University may have found a solution - and your kids may never be the wiser!

 

In a three week study, the research team substituted pureed zucchini, broccoli, tomatoes, cauliflower, and squash into childrens' meals, increasing their intake of vegetables up to 73 grams and reducing their caloric intake by up to 12 percent!

 

The best part? On of a scale from yucky to yummy, 70 percent of the children rated their vegetable infused meals as O.K. or yummy!

 

It may be a little deceptive, and kids still need to learn how delicious vegetables  can be in their original form, but sometimes taking the "stealthy vegetables" route can be a stress-saver for parents and kids alike.

Here are a few ideas to season your kids' favorite dishes with healthy veggies:

  • Hide pureed spinach in tomato sauce for pizza or spaghetti  girl eating spaghetti
  • Add pureed cauliflower in mashed potatoes or cheesy pasta sauce
  • Sneak pureed zucchini into chili
  • Fortify brownies with pureed black beans or pumpkin

You get the idea! Go nuts, you sneaky cook, you!

 

Recipe of the Month: Marsala Chai Apple Crisp
Marsala Chai Apple Crisp 
 

Chai spices are the perfect accompaniment to this

quintessential American dessert.

 

Ingredients

Makes 6 servings

 

 

 

1/2 teaspoon ground cardamom (preferably from green cardamom pods)
1/2 teaspoon ground cloves
1/2 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
1/2 teaspoon grated nutmeg
1 teaspoon ground cinnamon
2 tablespoons turbinado sugar
4 apples, cored and sliced thinly (2 Pink Ladies and 2 Granny Smiths, preferably)
1 tablespoon apple cider vinegar     apple Crisp
1 cup apple jelly
1 tablespoon fresh ginger, grated
1 1/2 cups dried oats

 

Directions

Combine all the spices and the sugar together. Place the apple slices in a mixing bowl and toss them with the spices and sugar. Allow this to sit for about 30 minutes. At this point, the apples will have released some liquid.

Drain the juice from the bottom of the mixing bowl into a small saucepan. Over medium heat, reduce the juice until it is about half the original volume. Mix this with the apple cider vinegar, apple jelly, and grated ginger.

Place the apples in a baking dish and spread the apple jelly mixture over them. Top with the dried oats. Bake this at 350 F for 20 minutes.

 

The Gourmet Touch: Toast each spice individually, whole, for about 1 minute over medium-low heat, then grind each spice into a powder.

 

Core Concepts: Dried ingredients like sugar and salt pull out liquid from fruits and veggies through a process called maceration. When making a pie or crisp, this is important because it reduces the amount of liquid released by the fruit during baking, keeping the texture of the dessert tight instead of watery.

 

Nutrition Information | Per serving (1/6 recipe):

calories: 278; fat: 0.8 g; calories from fat: 3%; cholesterol: 0 mg; protein: 4 g; carbohydrates: 70 g; sugar: 49 g; fiber: 5 g; sodium: 1 mg

Recipe from Jason Wyrick found in 21-Day Weight Loss Kickstart: Boost Metabolism, Lower Cholesterol, and Dramatically Improve Your Health by Neal Barnard, M.D.

 

New Group Programs
HLW Logo 
 
 

COME AND LEARN with

 Higher Level Wellness

& C.H.E.W.

 

 NEW GROUP HEALTH and

WEIGHT LOSS ADVENTURE

For Friends Family Couples  Corporations/ Businesses

 

LEARN HOW TO:

  •   Eat MORE and Weigh LESS!
  • It's Not Your Fault: Learn how to deconstruct your addiction to unhealthy foods
  • Tips on Cleaning Out and Stocking a Healthy Pantry
  • Introduction to NEW: Greens Grains Proteins Sugars & Superfoods!
  • Recipes: Shopping and Cooking Ideas
  • Food Demo's 
  • How and Why to do: Cleanse/Detox
  • Self Care: Learn how to love and nurture yourself with non-foods and more....
  • Tips on eating out, in the work place and on the go
  • Get a Group of friends, family or co-workers and do this together!
  • Super Discounted Group Rate!

 

 READY TO TAKE CONTROL OF

YOUR HEALTH & HAPPINESS?

Get your group together and call to book your

 Free Introductory Class NOW!

847-361-6185

 

February Events
Healthy Dining Adventures 
 
Join us Friday February 10th @ 6.30PM as we continue our Healthy Dining Adventures to a new restaurant in Wicker Park
PRASINO 
1846 W Division Street Chicago IL 60622
312-878-1212
Prasino means Green in Greek and General Manager Peggy Maglaris-Kopley and staff have done an oustanding job!
 
The restaurant is: Eco-friendly, organic, sustainable, with hormone free meats, line caught fish,  vegan, vegetarian & gluten-free selections.
Call ASAP to reserve a seat at the table!
847-361-6185
 
 
 
Book Club
 
 
Our next Mind Munching Book Club meeting will be Monday February 27th @ 7:PM Call for location and directions. Our Selection this month is:
 
NO MORE BULL!
by Howard F. Lyman the
 
No More Bull by Howard F. Lyman
Howard a fourth-generation Montana rancher was one of my teachers at school a very entertaining speaker with a very important message!
 
 In 1996 on the Oprah Winfrey Show he warned America on the feeding practises of cattle ranchers and because of that show he and Oprah were sued by the Cattle Ranchers Association. After three years in court both Howard and Oprah were vindicated.
 
Join us as we discuss Howard's message for meat eaters, vegetarians, and vegans in "No More Bull" which is that we can do better for ourselves and the planet!

Happy Healthy February

See you all soon!

Sincerely,

Susan

Susan Frangos C.H.C. AADP

Certified Health Coach

Higher Level Wellness

847-361-6185

 


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