Showing posts with label avocado. Show all posts
Showing posts with label avocado. Show all posts

1.01.2013

Let's Raw'k n' Roll!

You will never achieve optimum health unless a portion of your diet comes from real, unadulterated food!


Today is the day! Are you ready to raw'k n' roll?

I enjoyed some ice cream and a pizza casserole (gluten-free, mind you) last night as my "last supper". My stomach's churning as I type... it's like it knows I'm about to embark on something better than what just entered it. 

I am so happy you decided to join me on this challenge. Let me just remind you of what you are about to do to your body or not going to be doing to your body during these next ten days. It's going to love you for it! 
  • Cooking food causes chemical changes that create acidic toxins, including the carcinogens, mutagens and free-radicals associated with diseases like diabetes, arthritis, heart disease and cancer. Cooking also destroys the live enzymes that aid in digestion and health. 
  •  Enzymes are the power of life. They are living forces that conduct and direct every activity in your body. Enzymes digest or break down raw foods. Eating an enzyme-rich diet is thought to increase vitality and slow the aging process. Enzymes can even help repair our DNA.
  • One of the most important benefits of a raw food diet is that it is "alkaline forming." The standard American Diet (SAD) is an "acid-forming" diet, which leads to disease. Your body is actually sort of an alkaline battery, running on electrons. All life-giving chemical reactions only happen when electrons or energy flows between atoms. Raw foods contribute electrons/energy, and are called alkalizing.
  • Raw fruits and vegetables will increase the vitamins and micronutrients in your diet and you'll feel the difference immediately.
  • When you eat raw fruits and vegetables, you’re getting the benefits of their high water content, which helps to suppress appetite. People who switch to eating mostly raw foods often have an easier time controlling their weight.

Example shopping list for stocking a raw food kitchen: 

1. Seeds - Such as pumpkin, sunflower, or chia seeds (seeds are more affordable than nuts)
2. Basic nuts -  Such as almonds, walnuts or pecans (can usually substitute these for one another)
3. Creamy nuts - Such as cashews or macadamia nuts (creamy nuts are more expensive and should be used sparingly if you're on a budget)
4. Sea salt
5. Spices - Cinnamon, Italian spices, Cumin, Cayenne pepper, Curry powder (buy as needed)
6. Olive oil - Or another oil
7. Apple cider vinegar
8. Garlic
9. Flax seeds - Used as binding agents in many recipes to hold food together
10. A concentrated natural sweetener - Such as agave nectar or stevia
11. Nori rolls - Sheets of seaweed to make sushi-type rolls
12. Dates - Medjool are best, be sure to remove the pits (dates are used as natural sweeteners)
13. Bananas - Add creaminess and sweetness
14. Apples
15. Avocados
16. Lettuce
17. Tomatoes
18. Cucumbers
19. Onions
20. Your favourite fruits or vegetables - Such as fresh pineapple, kalamata olives, celery, kale, strawberries and/or grapes or whatever you like!

Ideas/recipes & videos:

Pineapple Strawberry Sorbet 

How to make a green smoothie with any blender

Blackberry Lime Sorbet

Carrot and Ginger Dressing

Raw Food Salad Dressings

5 Easy Raw Salad Dressing Recipes 

Fully Raw Kristina

What does it mean to be fully raw? FAQ

Enjoy this first day of the challenge. Don't let negative thoughts enter your mind. Don't let that little voice creep in and say, "You can't do this". You can do this even when your mind is saying you can't. It's a challenge because it's something that doesn't come natural. But I know you can do it, and down deep, you know you can do it too!

  "Every disciplined effort is met with multiple reward."

5.01.2012

Super Stuffed Veggie & Chicken Enchiladas

Mexican food is quite appealing to me. I love the flavors of cumin and cilantro. I love beans... any kind. What else? Tomatoes, corn, onion. You could just take all those just mentioned and throw them in a tortilla and I'd be in heaven.

This meal is quite easy... quite quick... quick tasty. OH, and most importantly, quite healthy. By omitting sour cream in and out of the enchilada and relying on the avocado to bring the creaminess and the sauces inside to give it a bit of "wetness" to the enchilada, the fat content is drastically reduced.

This recipe is a keeper. I hope you agree!


Super Stuffed Veggie & Chicken Enchiladas

Ingredients:
1 can pinto beans, drained and rinsed
1 can enchilada (red) sauce, divided
1/2 small can green chiles (add more for more heat, if you'd like!)
1/2 small can salsa verde
1 cup frozen corn
1 small zucchini, chopped
1 small onion, chopped (red or yellow)
1/3 cup fresh cilantro, chopped, plus more for topping
A few shakes of ground cumin 
A few more shakes of garlic powder :) 
1/2 tsp salt
2 tbsp olive oil
2 large chicken breasts, cooked and chopped or shredded
8 large whole wheat tortillas
iceberg lettuce, thinly chopped
1 cup 2% milk Mexican 4 cheese blend
1 ripe avocado

Directions:
1. Preheat oven to 420 degrees. Coat bottom and sides of a 9x13 pan with cooking spray. Spoon and spread about 2 tbsp of enchilada sauce on bottom of pan as well.

2. In a large bowl add beans, chiles, zucchini, onion, cilantro, salsa, sauce, spices and salt. Mix until the salsa and sauce are incorporated well.  

3. Saute chicken breasts with olive oil in skillet until no longer pink inside... approximately 10 minutes. Season with salt and pepper. Chop or shredded when cooled. Add chicken to bean and veggie mixture. 

4. Take about 3/4 cup of mixture and lay in middle of each tortilla and tightly wrap each tortilla. Lay tortillas seam down in prepared pan.  

5. Evenly spread the remainder of the enchilada sauce over the tortillas and sprinkle cheese on top. 

6. Cook in oven for 15 minutes or until cheese is bubbly on top. Let cool slightly. 

7. Before serving add lettuce, cilantro and a nice helping of sliced avocado on top.

Serves 8 enchiladas.