Your Market Produce
Buying Club
November 2010 Newsletter
Avocado Tree
Greetings and Peace,

I pray this newsletter finds everyone in the very best health.

Avocados are a good wholesome food. Yes, they contain a good amount of fat, but it is a good fat. It is actually said that eating avocados can aid in weight loss. Avocados are much healthier than the other types of fats we generally chose to eat. Don't let a fear of "fat" be the reason to miss out on the delicious taste and all the health benefits that come from consuming them.

Please check out the links below. My favorite this month was Wholesome Baby Food. It gives a lot of information and a variety of recipes.

 
In addition, Thank You Khristy, a buying club member. She was kind enough to share a picture and recipes of her many uses of the pomegranate.

 
May God Continue To Bless Us All,
Erika Muhammad

Benefits of Eating Avocado

by joyfulchoices.com

There are so many benefits of avocado eating that my family and I eat this wonderful fruit nearly every day, alone or in combination with other foods.

Introduction to Avocado

Avocado HalvesThe Botanical Name of Avocado is Persea Americana, P. gratissima, specifically classified from the flowering plant, Lauraceae (Laurel) family. Avocado grows in a variety of locations, but it is native to the Mesoamerican Region. It is an evergreen plant, which can live in diverse environmental conditions, making it easy to cultivate and grow in various places.

A Mayan princess was once believed to have eaten the first avocado, which was also believed to hold magical and mystical powers. Even in those early times, the benefits of avocado eating had already been linked to wellness, nutrition, and mysticism.

Alligator pear, midshipman's butter, vegetable butter, and butter pear are some of the various names associated with avocados. In web searches, Avocado is often misspelled as "avocadoe" or "avocadoes," which more often than not, re-directs the query to the correctly spelled variant of the word.

There are more than 80 varieties of avocado. A single mature avocado tree can yield up to 120-400 fruit annually. The avocado fruit comes in a variety of colors: green, dark green, purple, and black. As the avocado ripens, it changes color, though the extent of the color change depends on the variety. Some avocado varieties retain their color regardless of maturity.

The health benefits of avocado eating had been so widely spread that it is cultivated in most parts of the world. It is California - my home state - that claims the title "Avocado Capital of the World."

Benefits of Avocado EatingAvacado labeled

Avocado is considered by many as a nutritionally dense fruit. It is considered to have a cooling energy. Avocados are a rich source of good fats, vitamin E, B-complex vitamins, potassium (two to three times that of bananas), fluorine, copper, and lecithin.

A single avocado fruit has about 300 hundred calories in it, 20 percent of which is monounsaturated fat. This type of fat is beneficial in maintaining levels of good cholesterol (HDL).

Avocado aids in blood function, lung and large intestines lubrication, neutralizes liver functioning, and in cases of urinary adverse health conditions, it soothes the bladder. It is also widely known to counteract erectile dysfunction, promote bowel movement, ease nervousness and promote better sleep.

While we usually think of eating as something we do with our mouths, in fact, we also "eat" and consume nutrients through our skin and hair. Mashed ripened avocado applied to the face or scalp promote better moisturizing and conditioning, and is especially recommended for dry skin and hair. Clearly, the health benefits of avocado eating are not limited to internal wellness of the body, but to external beauty as well.

Eating Avocado

Whenn purchasing, it is best to choose firm avocados if you plan to use them later in the week. Otherwise, select an avocado that yields to gentle pressure when pressed. In our family, we have a preference for watching them ripen under our own eyes. If they are ripened on the store shelf, we cannot always tell how how ripe they actually are.

Generally, we leave them in the open air to ripen naturally. In order to speed up the ripening process, we sometimes place the avocado in a paper bag, either alone or with an apple. We keep the paper bag at store at room temperature for one to five days, checking regularly until ready to eat.

Because of the high oil content, avocados can deteriorate rapidly after ripening. As soon as they are ripe, place your avocados in the refrigerator to retard or avoid rancidity. Do not eat rancid or overripe fruits.

The benefits of eating avocado are endless. It is no wonder most health conscious people had a liking to this made-in-nature superfood! Nutritionally dense, and with a high amount of good fat, even people who have difficulty digesting fats, will usually find avocado easy to assimilate.

In any fruit or vegetable salads, avocado is an excellent addition or garnish. Avocado can also be used as a sandwich filler or dip, especially guacamole. It can also be eaten alone, with no other foods combined.

Avocado Cultivation

Due to the avocado's subtropical nature, it needs a climate without frost or too much wind. In the event of frost, the immature fruit drops from the tree, thus, seriously reducing the yield.

It takes 4-6 years for an avocado tree propagated by seed to bear fruit. Because of this long growth, commercial avocado orchards often use grafted trees and rootstocks.

The avocado fruit does not ripen on the tree. Instead, it will fall off or be picked, once it has reached a mature size. Avocado tastes vary, depending on the oil content and variety.

Of all avocado varieties cultivated in California, 80% are the "Hass" (often misspelled or marketed as "haas") variety. This variety has dark rippled skin and rich, creamy flesh. The cultivar "Florida" on the other hand, is larger and rounder with a smooth medium-green skin. With firmer, fibrous flesh, and less-fatty, oftentimes marketed as the low-calorie avocado.

How to Pick Ripe Avocados

The pile of avocados at the store can be enticing. If you want a ripe avocado to use that day, however, you cannot rely on the way an avocado looks. Read on to learn how to pick a ripe one from the bunch.

Difficulty: Moderately Easy

Instructions

    How to Pick Ripe Avocados 

    1. Choose an avocado without bruises or scars.

    2. Pick that avocado up and examine the stem end. If the avocado is ripe, you will be able to pull the stem out very easily. If the stem is already missing, or your not sure how easy it was for you to pull out the stem, read on.

    3. Hold the avocado in your hand and gently squeeze it. An unripe avocado will feel like a stone. An over-ripe avocado will feel loose under the skin. A ripe avocado will feel the same as if you were to squeeze the palms of your hands.

    4. Know when the varieties of avocados are in season. Haas avocados are available year-round but at their peak from April to November. Fuerte are available from November to July. Reed are available from March to September. Booth, Lula and Taylor are available from the end of June through February. Zutano are available from October to May. Bacon are available from November through July.

Tips & Warnings

  • If you can buy the avocado you need a day or so before you need it, you can ripen it yourself. Put it in a paper bag with an apple. The ethylene gas that the apple will release will speed up the ripening process.
  • Avocados picked later in the season will take less time to ripen since they were left longer on the tree.
  • Never put avocados in the refrigerator. They will only turn brown. They will not ripen.
Khristy's Pomegranate Dishes
Khristy's pomegranate dishes
  1. Pomegranate rice: toast the 2 cups of rice, wash it then add salt, cayenne pepper, onion, garlic, sweet basil, and half a pomegranate seeds, sprinkle some seeds on your rice for garnish once plated
     
  2. Pomegranate spinach: 2 bags of bag spinach washed, butter your pan on medium low, add garlic, and onion cook until translucent, add spinach 1 handful at a time until all spinach is cooked down enough to fit in you pan, add pinch nutmeg, some salt, cayenne, toss until the spinach is coated with the butter, once cooked down add some pomegranate lemonade as a deglazer & toss, cover & let simmer until flavors are all incorporated. Sprinkle red pepper flake for garnish once plated.
  3. Pomegranate Chicken: make a marinade using pomegranate lemonade, salt, cayenne, onion powder, garlic powder & sweet basil. Season chicken w/ a little salt & cayenne. Place chicken in ziploc bag, pore on the marinade close bag w/ air still in bag, toss chicken in bag & massage until chicken is well coated. Place in refrigerator for at least 15mins no longer than over night. Heat oven to 400 degrees. Spray Olive oil on pan and bake for 45mins uncovered or until cooked through. Plate and enjoy!
     
  4. Pomegranate BBQ Sauce: take your favorite BBQ sauce, in a sauce pan add ketchup, mustard, brown sugar, butter, salt, cayenne, sweet basil, onion & garlic (powder or fresh; if fresh saute before adding to sauce), the juice of 1 pomegranate, and let simmer until the flavors are well blended. Use as dipping sauce or poor over meat, rice, or even veges.
     
In This Issue
Health Benefits: Avocado
Pomegranate Recipes from Member
Membership Incentives
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What is Your Produce Market Buying Club?

We are a group of people who see the need for and are committed to establishing economic and agricultural unity in the black community.

Our inspiration is the teachings of the Honorable Elijah Muhammad, which teach us to "pool our resources and do for self."

Our Mission, "Empowering people to feed themselves."

Our primary goal is to establish a member-owned cooperative corporation supermarket in our community.
 
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Membership Administration: Majeedah Muhammad  buyingclubmembers@gmail.com 510-712-0094

Informational Presentations: Carlton Muhammad  carltonm@sonic.net  510.827.5203

"Simple Foods are best."
 How To Eat To Live
 Book Two