Healthy with Jodi

Why Should I Eat Organic? Reasons Why You Should Eat Organic…

    Importance of Organic Foods

    Organic Foods – Nutrient Density

    Simply stated, nutrient density means how many nutrients you get from a food, given the number of calories it contains. Nutrient density is a simple way to connect nutrients with calories.

    – World’s Healthiest Foods

    What’s In Organic Foods?

    Higher Nutrient Content

    More Vitamins & Minerals per Calorie

    More Essential Fatty Acids & Amino Acids per Calorie

    More Antioxidants per Calorie

    What’s Not in Organic Foods?

    *Acetylcholine Esterase Inhibitors

    Acetylcholine

    Acetylcholine is the body’s most predominant neurotransmitter.

    Essential for Memory Recall & Quick Thinking

    Nutrient Density: Organic Legumes, Vegetables, Fruits

    Acetylcholine Esterase

    Acetylcholine Esterase is the enzyme that clears the neurosynaptic junction allowing for the next impulse to come.

    This is an especially important cycle for inhaling/exhaling during respiration and the contractions and relaxations of the heart muscle.

    ◦Thus Pesticides have an adverse effect upon the Lungs & Heart.

    List of Banned Chemicals

    http://scorecard.goodguide.com/chemical-groups/one-list.tcl?short_list_name=brpest

    Consequently, “The nutritive value of crops and their ability to handle pests and diseases is diminished.” The bottom line, Kittredge says, is, “across the board, our foodstuffs are less nutritious than they were. It’s well documented. Between 1940 and 2009, in a basic salad, USDA records show a 55-70 percent decrease in mineral levels.” – Remineralize the Earth

    We identified 191 matched pairs with valid comparisons of antioxidant, vitamin and mineral levels. Of these, 119 organic samples within the matched pairs had higher nutrient levels, or 62% of the total matched pairs.

    ◦State of Science Review: Nutritional Superiority of Organic Foods – Charles Benbrook, Xin Zhao, Jaime Yáñez, Neal Davies and Preston Andrews- www.orgain-center.org 53 pages

    Quinoa Brittle

      Quinoa Brittle

      Vegan, Gluten free, Refined Sugar Free
      Happily Serves 10

      ALL ORGANIC INGREDIENTS 

      3/4 Cup Tricolor uncooked quinoa

      3/4 cup Pecans

      2 TBSP Coconut sugar

      1/2 tsp Pumpkin pie or allspice

      2 TBSP Coconut oil

      1/4 cup Blackstrap Molasses

      1/4 cinnamon

      Pinch of Himalayan sea salt

      Stevia, if you desire it sweeter

       

      Preheat oven to 325.

      Line a baking sheet with parchment paper. (Cover all edges)

      Combine quinoa, pecans, coconut sugar, salt, and cinnamon/spices in a bowl and set aside.

      Over low to medium heat, add the coconut oil and black strap molasses (and optional Stevia). Stir until there is no visible separation.  Pour over the dry ingredients, combine and coat evenly,  spread on a parchment lined baking sheet with a metal spoon.

      Try to get it as even as possible or the edges will burn in the center won’t crisp up.

      Bake for 15 minutes and turn the pan around to ensure even baking and Browning. Back 5 to 10 minutes more and watch carefully so it does not burn. The edges will get crisp and caramelized, and the color will be uniformly deep golden brown in color.

      Let it cool completely before breaking it into serving pieces.   You can store leftovers in a sealed container at room temperature for a week, or in the freezer for up to one month.

      Dijon Lemon Dressing Recipe

        Dijon Lemon Dressing

        Happily serves 4

        ALL ORGANIC INGREDIENTS

        1/3 Cup lemon juice

        1 TBSP Dijon mustard

        2 Crushed garlic cloves

        1/4 Cup flaxseed oil or Macadamia Nut oil

        1/4 Cup extra virgin olive oil or avocado oil

        Sea salt/pepper to taste

        Grind Flaxseeds in a coffee grinder on medium speed until well ground, set aside.  (Keep extras in Freezer.). In a blender combine lemon juice, mustard, garlic, salt, and pepper and any of the additions you choose. Blend for 1 minute, then begin pouring oils very slowly through the feed hole in the lid of the blender. Blend until smooth.

        Variations/Additions

        1 tsp of curry powder

        1 TBSP minced basil or rosemary

        1 TBSP honey or Stevia

        Dash cayenne

        Five Chinese Spice

        Allspice

        Ginger, fresh or powder

        Salted Sunflower Nut Butter Cups

          Salted Nutbutter Cups

          Paleo, Vegan, Gluten Free

          Happily Serves 24 mini cups

          ALL ORGANIC INGREDIENTS

          CHOCOLATE SHELL

          3 cups Lily’s chocolate chips

          1 TBSP Coconut oil

          1 tsp Vanilla

          FILLING

          3 TBSP Sunflower butter

          1 tsp  Himalayan sea salt

          1 tsp Coconut oil

          1/4 Cup Dates

          TOPPING

          Pink Himalayan salt, to taste

           

          Soak Dates 1-4 hours.  Remove seeds.

          In a double boiler, add in dark chocolate chips, coconut oil and vanilla.

          Melt over a pot of simmering (not boiling) hot water until well incorporated.

          Fill the bottom of each muffin liner with 1-2 tsp of the chocolate mixture.

          Set aside leftover chocolate to put on top of the cups.

          Set the muffin pans in the freezer.

          In a food processor add in Sunflower butter, sea salt, coconut oil and dates.

          Blend until smooth and creamy.

          Spoon 1 tsp of the sunflower butter mixture on top of each chocolate filled muffin liner.

          Then spoon out 1-2 tsp chocolate mixture to cover each cup.

          Sprinkle Himalayan salt on top.

          Place the cups in the freezer for 30 minutes or until set.  Serve frozen.

           

          Asian Chick Pea Kale Salad Recipe

            Asian Chick Pea Kale Salad

            Vegan, Gluten Free

            Happily Serves 4

            VEGETABLES

            1 large bundle finely chopped kale  (steamed and drained)

            1 cup finely grated carrots (steamed)

            2 cups finely shredded red cabbage (Steamed)

            DRESSING

            1/4 cup cashew butter (or sub sunflower butter)

            1/4 cup + 1 Tbsp Korean BBQ sauce (Skyvalley brand)

            1/4 cup sesame oil

            3 Tbsp maple syrup

            Sea salt or 1 Tbsp tamari or coco amigos

            CHICKPEAS

            1 Cup soaked and dried chickpeas (or sub Mung beans)

            2 Tbsp sesame oil or avocado oil

            2 tsp maple syrup

            1 garlic clove

            optional: red pepper flakes or chili powder

            Preheat oven to 425

            When preparing chickpeas, make sure they are dry – this will help them crisp up.

            In a medium mixing bowl add sesame oil, maple syrup and Korean BBQ sauce and whisk.  Add chickpeas and toss to coat. Arrange on a baking stone/sheet and bake for 20-25 minutes, tossing halfway to ensure even baking. They’re done when crisp and deep golden brown.

            To prepare dressing, add all ingredients and whisk to combine. Taste and adjust flavors as needed, adding more maple syrup for sweetness, Korean BBQ sauce for heat, cashew butter for creaminess, or salt or tamari for saltiness.

            Add kale (steamed), carrots and cabbage to a large mixing/serving bowl and toss to combine. Then add dressing, toss to coat.

            To serve, divide salad between serving plates and top with crunchy chickpeas.  Keep leftover chickpeas separate from salad in a well-sealed container at room temperature for 2 days

            Broccoli Sweet Potato Poppy Seed Salad

              Broccoli Sweet Potato Poppy Seed Salad

              Gluten Free

              Happily Serves 8

              ALL ORGANIC INGREDIENTS

              4 cups fresh quick steamed broccoli, chopped into bite-size pieces

              1 cup sweet potato or yam

              ¼ cup finely chopped red onion

              ¼ cup sunflower seeds or pumpkin seeds

              1 tablespoon lemon juice

              Dressing

              1 cup Coconut kefir or small avocado, smashed

              ¼ cup raw organic honey

              1 tablespoon lemon juice

              2 teaspoons coconut vinegar

              1 tablespoon water

              1 tablespoon poppy seeds

              Combine broccoli, sweet potato, red onion, and sunflower/pumpkin seeds.

              In a small bowl, whisk together all dressing ingredients.

              Pour dressing over the salad and gently combine.

              Salad may be served immediately or refrigerated until serving.

              Cacao Avocado Mousse

                Cacao Avocado Mousse

                Gluten Free, Vegan

                Happily serves 4

                ALL ORGANIC INGREDIENTS

                3 Avocados

                1/3 Cup Coconut nectar

                1/2 Cup Raw cacao
                1 tsp ground cinnamon

                dash of allspice (optional)
                2 vanilla beans, split and seeded
                1/4 tsp Himalayan sea salt

                Stevia drops if desired sweeter

                Mash all ingredients together and enjoy!

                Optional to add nut milk to thin out consistency.

                Fresh mint leaf for garnish or chopped for added flavor
                The Cacao is antioxidant rich, high in flavonoids, which are essential to a healthy cardiovascular system.  Cacao provides a natural form of iron for a natural energy boost.

                The avocado provides heart healthy monounsaturated fats as well as a good amount of vitamin B5 and Vitamin K.  Avocados are known for promoting heart health, regulating blood sugar and are believed to potentially offer anti-cancer benefits, specifically when it comes to cancer of the mouth, skin and prostate gland. Avocados are very alkalizing to the body.

                Hot mess: The grossest health concerns of summer

                   

                  (CNN)You are not the only one who thrives in the summer and loves its warm, long days. Bacteria and other microbes that cause food poisoning, diarrhea and just general grossness also flourish, threatening to make it a season to be sick.

                  “Foodborne pathogens follow an annual cycle, and we tend to see peaks of them, especially bacteria, in the summer, at picnics, potlucks and all the outdoor events,” said Melinda Wilkins, director of the online science master’s program in food safety at Michigan State University.
                  Your gut is not the only part of your body at risk of assault by bacteria such as E. coli in summer months. Bugs lurk in air conditioning filters, especially when it is hot and humid, ready to cause trouble for those with breathing problems. And the skin that protects you from infections can become a portal for them after a bad, blistering sunburn.
                  Of course, even if some dangers await you at the picnic, pool or beach, it is worth it to get out and enjoy yourself. You can most likely handle what comes your way.

                  Don’t pee (or poop) in the pool

                  The burn you feel in your eyes after a dip in the swimming pool is not because of chlorine. It is because pee, poop and sweat from fellow swimmers (and maybe you) react with chlorine and form chloramine compounds,and this combination is what really stings your peepers. Aside from the gross factor, the formation of these compounds means there is less chlorine left in the water to kill bacteria, such as E. coli. Chloramines can also irritate the airways, and when they build up in the air, such as at indoor pools, they can trigger asthma attacks.
                  “We recommend that you not pee or poop in the water, and shower before you go in,” said Michele Hlavsa, chief of the Health Swimming Program at the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention. A 2010 CDC report found that one out of 10 public pools don’t have proper chlorine levels. To make sure you’re not about to take a dip in a bacteria-laden pool, “you can use pool test strips at a pool supply or big box store” to check the chlorine level, Hlavsa said. (The CDC recommends chlorine levels in pools between 1 and 3 parts per million and pH of 7.2 to 7.8.)
                  Even at the right levels, chlorine does not wipe out everything. A new CDC report found that a parasite called cryptosporidium, which can cause diarrhea and lives up to 10 days in a chlorinated pool, was associated with 37 (54%) of the 69 outbreaks of illness at pools and water parks. “To protect yourself, it’s about not swallowing the water you swim in, and to protect others don’t swim if you have diarrhea,” Hlavsa said.

                  Lurking in seawater

                  A day at the beach may leave you with more memories than you imagined if you go home with vibriosis. The infection is caused by vibrio bacteria, which live in some coastal waters and flourish in the warm months between May and October, when the majority of cases occur.
                  According to the CDC, there are about 80,000 cases each year, and about 100 of them are fatal.
                  An estimated 52,000 of those cases result from eating contaminated food, such as raw oysters, that have been infected in the water they once lived in. Symptoms usually begin within 24 hours of consumption. They include abdominal pain, diarrhea, nausea, vomiting, fever and chills. The illness lasts about three days.
                  The bacteria can also cause skin rashes that lead to infection when contaminated water gets into an open wound or even a scratch.
                  The best way to prevent this infection is to thoroughly cook shellfish and clean hands well after touching raw or undercooked shellfish. Cuts or scrapes should be cleaned well with soap after contact with infected water. When possible, cover the wound with a waterproof bandage before getting it wet.

                  Beware the picnic burgers

                  The thought of potato salad sweltering in the heat at the summer picnic may make the burgers on the grill sound pretty appetizing, but think again. “Actually, potato salad has kind of a bad rap, but it is not really a particularly high-risk food,” said Wilkins, of Michigan State University. “But people tend to bring frozen (burger) patties and throw them on the grill before they are fully thawed, (and) ground meat that is not thoroughly cooked is one of the riskiest items” because it can have E. coli, she said.
                  Ground beef and pork should be cooked to 160 degrees Fahrenheit, ground chicken and turkey to 165 degrees. And yes, that means using a meat thermometer to test the temperature in the middle of the burger, Wilkins said.
                  Of course, bacteria can still lurk in a big bowl of gooey potato or pasta salad, but not for the reasons you may think. Ingredients such as potatoes, pasta and eggs, not the mayonnaise, are prone to contamination. To play it safe, keep containers of anything you’re supposed to eat cold, such as potato salad, in big bowls or coolers full of ice, Wilkins said.

                  Bacteria scream for ice cream (machines)

                  An issue that can plague many an inadequately cleaned soft-serve ice cream dispenser is bacteria. “Listeria (bacteria) is a really sneaky pathogen in that it likes to live in cooler temperatures and populate machinery,” Wilkins said. Listeria infections can cause fever and muscle aches, and they are especially dangerous for pregnant women, who may miscarry as a result.
                  On the bright side, the Blue Bell ice cream scare has made people more aware of listeria’s potential to lurk in frozen desserts, Wilkins said. It is a good idea to ask the person working at the yogurt shop or ice cream truck when the machines were last cleaned. “It brings the issue to the awareness of the workers and management to double check their procedures,” Wilkins said.

                  Burn, baby, burn

                  Sunburns may seem like a sweet souvenir from a day at the beach, but they should really be thought of as potentially harmful wounds. In the most severe cases, people can develop blisters and need to be treated like burn victims, said Dr. Cameron K. Rokhsar, assistant clinical professor of dermatology at the Icahn School of Medicine at Mount Sinai. “The skin sloughs off, (and) if there’s any kind of raw wound, it can predispose you to an infection” and should be treated with a prescription antibiotic ointment, he said.
                  Worse yet, even just a few serious sunburns may greatly increase your risk of developing skin cancer. A 2014 study found that white women who had five or more blistering sunburns when they were teens were 68% more likely to develop melanoma, the deadliest form of skin cancer.

                  Brush with jellyfish

                  Despite that old episode of “Friends” where Joey peed on Monica’s jellyfish sting, urine is not the antidote to the venom of this goopy animal, which is common off beaches across the United States and thrives in warm water. Rinsing the wound with saltwater is one of the most recommended ways to relieve the stinging, redness and swelling that follow a brush with a jellyfish tentacle.
                  A more surprising but also effective treatment is vinegar, said Rokhsar, who knows firsthand that it can make the pain go away almost instantaneously. “It happened to me. It hurts a lot, and I actually went to the lifeguard station, and they had vinegar spray,” he said.
                  Also beware of the not-so-cute baby jellyfish called sea lice. Unlike the adults’ sting, theirs doesn’t hurt, so you don’t have to worry about rinsing the wound with saltwater or vinegar. Save the vinegar for rinsing your swimsuit before you wash it. Some believe the larvae can become trapped in the fabric.
                  You will usually experience an itchy, red rash and small blisters within 24 hours. The rash is sometimes accompanied with fever, chills, headaches and nausea. The symptoms can last as long as two weeks and are not contagious.
                  The sea lice, which are actually microscopic larvae of marine life such as jellyfish or sea anemones, are most often found in summer waters in Florida and the Caribbean.

                  Grossness flourishes in air conditioning filters

                  When air conditioners are working around the clock in hot summer months, dust, mold and pollution from outdoor air (in the case of central AC) or indoor air (in the case of a window unit) tend to build up on the filter of AC units. Not only does this slash the air conditioner’s efficiency, it can also carry health risks, said Abby Brokaw, director of the American Lung Association of the Upper Midwest Health House program.
                  “People who are already having problems with breathing or lung health — so people with allergies or respiratory disease — are going to be affected” if the filter is not properly cleaned, removing dust, mold, dander and other detritus, Brokaw said.
                  To keep your filter in tiptop shape, clean or replace it every three months, Brokaw advised. But take precaution when you do. Mold and bacteria love to grow on filters, especially in the summer humidity.
                  “You don’t want to breathe in mold spores and bacteria. We would recommend that you wear gloves and a mask,” Brokaw said, referring to surgical masks sold in drugstores.

                  Read more: http://www.cnn.com/2015/06/26/health/gross-summer-health/index.html

                  Quinoa Quiche

                    Quinoa Quiche

                    GF, Paleo

                    Happily serves 2

                    ALL ORGANIC INGREDIENTS

                    3/4 Cup sprouted tricolor quinoa, rinsedquinoa

                    1 1/2 Cup bone broth (for cooking quinoa)

                    2 free range eggs, lightly beaten

                    2 Cups broccoli, finely diced

                    1 Cup yellow onion, finely chopped

                    1 garlic clove, minced

                    1 1/2 Cup Vegan cheese

                    1/2 tsp paprika

                    Crushed red pepper to taste (optional)

                    Preheat oven to 350, spray muffin tins with coconut oil.

                    Cook quinoa according to directions, do not over cook, let cool

                    Combine all ingredients.  Fill muffin tin and bake for 15-20 mins or until golden brown.  Let cool 5 mins and gentle remove from pan.