Tag Archives: kim snyder

Multi-Grain vs. Whole Grain vs. Whole Wheat

It’s hard to ignore the gluten discussion that is all around us now. When you walk into the grocery store, and you’ll find whole sections of baked and assorted goods labeled as “gluten-free.” At your kids’ school, you may find that more and more of your kids’ classmates have to adopt a gluten-free diet. And perhaps you’ve heard friends or co-workers talking about cutting out gluten as part of a detox plan or to lose weight.

Gluten. GLUE-ten. Funny word, right? Was this a word that was part of our colloquial language even a decade ago? I think not. But it’s important that we discuss it, so you can be aware of what it is exactly and how it can affect you.

Many of the foods you may currently be eating contain gluten, which may be wreaking havoc on your body. Present in wheat, rye and barley, gluten is the grain protein that allows baked goods to bind and makes wheat-based dough sticky. Along with the aforementioned grains, gluten is present in many processed foods like soy sauce, malt, junk food, microwaved dinners and many others. Personal care products may also contain gluten, which can be absorbed into the body through the skin or inhaled through the lungs.

Should Humans Eat Gluten Grains?

Unfortunately, these proteins can cause a lot of detrimental issues for many people that consume them. Wheat, rye, and barley are all annual grasses that release seeds for a short time every year. These seeds contain chemicals within their glutens to protect them from rodent and insect consumption, helping the plants effectively reproduce during their short seeding season. This ensures the ongoing survival of the plant species. Unfortunately, these chemicals may be toxic to more than rodents and insects – they may also cause toxicity in human beings. A growing number of people exhibit signs of some form of gluten sensitivity. In fact, findings from a 2007 University of Valladolid Department of Pediatrics and Immunology study suggest gluten consumption causes a harmful effect in everyone who consumes it, regardless of whether they manifest signs of gluten intolerance.

Celiac Disease on the Rise

One of the most widely recognized forms of gluten sensitivity is celiac disease. Once believed to be a rare disorder, celiac disease is on the rise in the United States. Slightly less than 1 percent of the population has obtained an official diagnosis of celiac disease, although health authorities believe the percentage of people with the autoimmune disorder is higher due to a large, undiagnosed population. When someone with celiac disease ingests, absorbs, or inhales even trace amounts of gluten, they sustain damage to their small intestines.

With celiac disease, one’s body recognizes gluten as a foreign invader instead of as food. In response to the presence of gluten, the body attacks the villi of the small intestine, damaging the tiny finger-like projections that are essential in nutrient absorption. The result is malnutrition, stomach pain, bloating, flatulence, and a host of other symptoms. Untreated celiac disease can cause serious illness such as heart disease, certain cancers, thyroid disorders, and many others.

Internal Paste?

If you’ve ever done papier-mâché, then you already know just how sticky gluten really is. For those of you who may be a little less craft-oriented, papier-mâché is an art project where you cover balloons with strips of paper dipped in sticky paste. Once the paste dries and hardens, you have a solid sphere you can paint to look like all kinds of things. What you may not realize, however, is that most papier-mâché paste is made from a very simple combination of wheat flour and water. As the water evaporates, the “glue” hardens, thanks largely to the gluten contained in the wheat flour. Imagine that inside of your body, and it’s easy to see how easily gluten can “gunk” up your insides – even if you aren’t one of the millions of people diagnosed with celiac disease or gluten sensitivity.

Avoiding Gluten

Fortunately, gluten sensitivity and celiac disease are 100 percent reversible merely by avoiding gluten in all of its forms. While the solution sounds easy, however, if you eat processed foods or use beauty products with a long list of hard to pronounce ingredients, it may be very difficult to avoid. If you eat a more natural, fresh plant foods-based diet, however, then gluten is less likely to be a problem. It is important to note, however, that even trace amounts of gluten are not okay for those people with any form of gluten sensitivity. Because of this, people with celiac disease and other forms of gluten sensitivity have to become label sleuths, learning to recognize the various names for ingredients that contain glutens.

Assessing Grains

Still, whole grains are an important part of the diet, providing beneficial fiber and nutrients your body needs. You’ll find I recommend certain grains in The Beauty Detox Solution; however, when you eat grains it is important to know exactly what it is you are getting.

As I mentioned previously, if you’re concerned about gluten (and I believe everyone should be), then you absolutely must avoid rye, barley, all kinds of wheat (whole wheat, graham, cracked wheat, wheat flour, white or wheat pasta, couscous, kanut, eikhorn, and many others), and some oats. While oats do not naturally contain gluten, many oat products are contaminated in processing. The best way to avoid getting gluten with your oats is to find the most minimally processed form of them available – oat groats. That’s why I use oat groats in recipes, especially for the Blossoming Beauty Phase of the Beauty Detox.

Reading Labels

The best way to ensure you avoid gluten is understanding what labels mean. For example, you may find products labeled whole wheat, whole grain, or multi-grain. What, exactly, do each of these designations mean?

Whole Wheat

It is exactly as it sounds. The product contains all parts of the wheat, including the endosperm, germ, and brand. According to the FDA, in order to obtain a whole wheat listing, the product must contain all of these components in the same ratios that naturally occur in a grain of wheat. While whole wheat does contain beneficial fiber and nutrients, however, it also contains gluten and is best avoided. It can be replaced, such as by using brown rice or quinoa pasta instead of whole wheat pasta.

Whole Grain

Products may or may not contain wheat, so a careful reading of the label is required. FDA labeling laws for whole grain are the same as whole wheat: the product must contain all parts of the grain in the same proportions found in nature.

Multi-Grain

Sounds quite healthy, but when you see this on the label all you know for sure is that the food contains more than one type of grain. The grains may be in whole form, or they may be refined. Reading package labeling can help you define exactly what the multi-grain label means.

Grains to Eat

I recommend eating healthful, whole grains that do not contain gluten. Whole grains have minimal processing and provide better fiber and nutrition than their more refined counterparts. Along with oat groats, I love the following non-gluten grains:

  • Brown rice
  • Amaranth
  • Millet
  • Quinoa
  • Buckwheat (which is completely different than wheat and does not contain gluten)

I also recommend soaking grains overnight in order to remove phytic acid and make them more digestible.

Intestinal Healing

If you have been eating gluten grains your whole life, all is not lost. Once you begin avoiding them, you can further facilitate healing by rebuilding good intestinal flora. I recommend daily probiotics  and regular consumption of my Probiotic & Enzyme Salad. It may take as long as a year or two without any gluten in the diet for your intestines to fully heal from the damage, but following The Beauty Detox Solution diet will definitely help and put you on the right path.

toxic-chemicals

5 Everyday Items That Contain Toxic Chemicals

Let’s look at five major sources of unhealthy chemical exposure. These chemicals can cause a variety of illnesses and toxicity. How awful it would be if you are working to cleanse your body with natural, organic foods but then amass a great deal of toxicity unknowingly by the following 5 items.

They also can get into your body and suppress your natural beauty, leading to premature aging, dull or clogged skin, and even serious illness.

 

1. Household cleaning products

Everyone wants a clean house, but if you’re using conventional household cleaning products, you could be ingesting dangerous chemicals through your skin, mucous membranes, and respiratory system. While many commercial cleaners contain dangerous ingredients, some of the most toxic include:

  • Bleach, which can damage your respiratory system.
  • Air fresheners, which may contain formaldehyde, petroleum distillates, aerosol propellants, and dicholorobenzene.
  • Ammonia, which can cause skin burns and respiratory irritation. It can even create a poison gas when combined with bleach.
  • Drain cleaners are caustic and can burn skin and harm mucous membranes. They also have a harsh chemical scent that can damage the respiratory tract.
  • Laundry detergents contain dyes and other chemical agents that you can inhale or absorb through your skin.
  • Dishwashing soap contains chemicals and fragrances. Dishwashter detergents may contain bleach and other chemicals that can end up in trace amounts on your utensils and cookingware, and therefore then get into your food.

These are a few of the many hazards associated with conventional household cleaning products. Instead, choose natural solutions for cleaning. There are many available today at even regular drug stores that have green labels or are plant-based. You can use lemon rinds to clean stove tops and white vinegar to clean floors. If you have children or babies, using natural cleaning products is particularly critical, as their bodies and DNA are even more susceptible to damage from these chemicals.

 

2. Beauty products

Because you put beauty products directly on your skin, your body can absorb toxic chemicals from them. The ingredients in many beauty projects can accelerate free radicals, cause respiratory damage, and have other aging and health affects, as well. Some to watch for include:

  • Toxic shampoos that contain petroleum distillates and other chemicals. Many shampoos also contain sodium lauryl sulfate (SLS) and sodium laureth sulfate (SLES), which can damage mucous membranes, the respiratory tract, and the immune system. They may also contain fragrance. When a label list fragrance, it may indicate as many as 4,000 different compounds. Many of these can lead to health problems, respiratory distress, and may even be carcinogenic and impose fertility issues or complications.
  • Body washes, cleansers and bubble baths may contain SLS and SLES, which we discussed above. They may also contain DEA (diethanolamine), MEA (monoethanolamine) or TEA (triethanolamine). These chemicals are carcinogens and hormone disrupters, which can prematurely age you.
  • Antiperspirants contain imidazolindinyl urea and DMDM hydantoin, two preservatives that are components of formaldehyde. This can cause joint pain, asthma, cancer, and other conditions. They also often contain aluminum, which is associated with brain conditions like Alzheimer’s disease. Nail polish also contains these ingredients, as do many other beauty products.

Other skincare products such as cleansers, lotions, and many others contain petroleum distillates, preservatives, artificial colors, mineral oil and fragrances, more. These chemicals can accelerate aging, discolor your skin, and block beauty from the inside. Read your labels carefully, and select all-natural, organic lines of products.

 

3. Sunscreen

It seems ironic. Many experts tell us to apply sunscreen to protect our skin and prevent cancer and aging, yet sunscreen can accelerate aging and increase cancer risk. Fear of skin cancer has led to daily application of dangerous sunscreen products, and many lotions and other beauty products contain sunscreens.

Sunscreen not only blocks your skin’s ability to absorb vitamin D from sunlight, which is essential for good health, but it also contains numerous toxic ingredients that serve as hormone disrupters and carcinogens while accelerating formation of free radicals. In fact, some studies show that areas where more sunscreen is applied there is a higher incidence of skin cancer. And all of this can lead to premature skin aging. Dangerous ingredients include:

  • PABA
  • Oxybenzone
  • Dioxybenzone

Instead, wear sun-resistant clothing and hats to minimize your sun exposure. Remember the quality of your sunscreen is very, very important. Look for chemical-free (or free-er I should say) sunscreens where titanium dioxide is the active ingredient.

 

4. Water bottles

Plastic water bottles, no matter how recyclable, are just not good for you. Made from petroleum distillates, plastics contain chemicals that leech into the water in the bottles, and can cause neurological disorders, hormone disruption, and cancer among other illnesses. Hormone disruption is of particular concern in premature aging.

Instead, choose a glass or stainless steel water bottle, and get yourself a good water filter that you can use to fill and refill your bottles.

 

5. Perfume

Perfumes and colognes contain fragrance with chemicals that can cause everything from respiratory distress to hyperpigmentation. No wonder so many people get a headache from strong perfumes (including me). They look so pretty in fancy bottles, but perfume is so toxic! It gets sprayed right on the skin and pulse points and is absorbed right into the blood stream, distributing the chemicals throughout the body. Scary.

Instead, try an essential oil as a fragrance. Sally B’s carries a few great solid fragrances (I like Just B). They don’t last as long as regular perfumes, but I keep it in my purse and re-apply more often. At least they are all natural and non-toxic, while smelling great!

5 Foods That Increase Your Risk of Breast Cancer (and 5 that Reduce it)

Ask any woman, and she probably knows someone who has had breast cancer, or she has had it herself. It is downright scary. While breast cancer rates have decreased marginally over the past decade (possibly due to the decrease in prescribed hormone replacement therapy), they remain high. In fact, one in eight  women in the United States (about 12 percent) will develop breast cancer in her lifetime. Men are not immune either. While lifetime risk of developing breast cancer is significantly lower in men, about 2,140 cases are diagnosed annually, leading to approximately 450 deaths. Death rates in women have also dropped since 1990.

Still, even with dropping diagnosis and death rates, breast cancer remains a significant issue, particularly for women. It is the second most commonly diagnosed cancer in American women with the second highest death rate for females behind lung cancer.

Causes

While the causes of breast cancer remain unknown, many factors may increase a woman’s risk of developing it. These factors include:

  • Genetics
  • Family history
  • Race
  • Certain medications
  • Age
  • Birth control pill use
  • Hormone replacement therapy
  • Obesity
  • Lack of exercise
  • Diet in general as well as certain foods

Controlling Your Risk

While you can’t control many of your risk factors for developing breast cancer, you can change the behaviors that increase your risk.

  • Exercise regularly.
  • Maintain a healthy weight.
  • Eat a plant-based diet which contains a wide range of cancer-protecting phytonutrients
  • Make informed decisions before taking medications or undergoing hormone replacement therapy.

Foods that Increase Your Risk of Breast Cancer

So what foods should you avoid that cause an increased risk of breast cancer? Here are 5 top foods:

1. Sugar

A 2007 Italian study published in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition showed a correlation between increased intake in foods with a high glycemic index and breast cancer. Sugar is just one of many high glycemic index food, including baked goods, candy, pasta, white rice, and other refined carbohydrates.

Foods with a high glycemic index are those that have a significant impact on blood sugar. As blood glucose rises, the body releases the hormone insulin. When insulin is high in the blood, it also increases the levels of circulating free estrogen. Moreover, breast tissue (both cancerous and normal) contains insulin receptors. When the insulin and/or estrogen attach to these receptors, it causes cell division, which spells disaster for breast cancer. Note: some natural plant foods are considered to have a high glycemic index, but also contain many important nutrients, and can be eaten in moderation and along with other low glycemic plant foods. The main guideline is to avoid processed and refined carbs and sugars.

The bottom line: Minimize your intake of refined carbohydrates and sugars.

2. Grilled meats

While grilling is frequently touted as the healthiest way to cook meat, this may not be so. Grilling certain animal proteins to high temperatures can increase development of heterocyclic amines (HCAs), which are mutagenic cancer causing compounds. According to the Cancer Project, the worst offenders included well-done chicken breast, well-done steak, pork, salmon, and well-done hamburger. Unfortunately, alternative cooking methods aren’t much better. Frying and broiling to high temperatures also increases the levels of HCAs in meats.

The American Institute for Cancer Research reports increased risk of both colorectal and breast cancer from all red meat consumption, as well. Smoking and curing meat also adds carcinogens. Yikes! Is a piece of meat really worth sacrificing your health and your life?

The bottom line: If you eat meat, make it an occasional treat and cook just to the safe temperature to eliminate bacteria. Better yet, avoid meat altogether.

3. High Fat Animal Products

A high fat diet raises estrogen and prolactin levels, which can in turn give rise to hormone-dependent cancers, such as breast and endometrial cancer. Many commonly consumed animal products are not only rich in fat in general, but in cholesterol-containing saturated fat, which is the type that is extremely problematic for health.

The bottom line: While you need some fat in your diet, get it from avocados, seeds and nuts and other plant foods. Keep animal products in general to a strict minimum (as per #2), and if you do eat some animal protein be sure to trim off all fat and stick to lean cuts. Avoid super fatty animal products altogether such as bacon and cream.

4. Dairy

In order to maintain production, dairy farmers ply their milk-producing animals with all kinds of hormones and chemicals. One of these chemicals is rGBH, which is commonly used in American dairy cattle. Cows’ milk treated with rGBH has higher levels of another hormone, insulin-like growth factor-1 (IGF-1). This hormone is naturally present in humans and it regulates cell differentiation and division. Studies link elevated levels of IGF-1 to increased risk of breast cancer.

The bottom line: Skip the dairy. Instead, opt for almond milk.

5. Artificial sweeteners

Artificial sweeteners like aspartame (NutraSweet) and sucralose (Splenda) may increase the risk of breast cancer. Though approved by the FDA, little is known about the long-term effects of these artificial chemicals. Studies have shown, however, that artificial sweeteners can and often do trigger insulin release when ingested (known as the cephalic phase response). Because many consider artificial sweeteners “free” foods since they are non-caloric, this often leads to increased consumption and therefore, elevated insulin levels. For the reasons discussed above, excess elevated insulin may increase the risk of breast cancer.

The bottom line: eat fruit, drink water, and avoid artificial sweeteners.

Foods that May Decrease Your Risk of Breast Cancer

Try these foods, that may decrease your risk of breast and other cancers.

1. Broccoli

This cruciferous vegetable contains high levels of indole-3 carbinol (I3C), which as strong anti-cancer properties. IC3 also shifts estrogen balance, which may reduce risk of developing breast cancer.

2. Red Cabbage

This colorful veggie contains IC3, as well as vitamin A and the flavonoid anthocyanadin (which gives the cabbage its color). All reduce cancer risks. Try whipping up some red Probiotic & Enzyme Salad.

3. Chia Seeds

These seeds are high in Omega-3 acids and antioxidants. Studies at Seattle’s Fred Hutchinson Cancer Center showed that Omega-3 fatty acid intake may decrease the risk of developing breast cancer.

4. Shiitake mushrooms

These delicious mushrooms contain lentinan, which boosts immune health and reduces risk of developing certain cancers including breast cancer.

5. Turmeric

This golden spice contains curcumin, an antioxidant that has demonstrated anticancer effects in studies. Try my Veggie-Turmeric-Quinoa recipe in The Beauty Detox Solution.

How To Beat That Sick Feeling This Winter

As you go about your daily life, you come in contact with all sorts of things that could make you sick. Germs are everywhere, as are carcinogens and other toxins that could be detrimental to your health. Fortunately, your immune system quietly goes about its business, responding to the pathogens you encounter and keeping you healthy. In fact, most people only think about their immune system when it fails, and they get sick.

Innate Immunity

Have you ever wondered why two people can encounter the same germs and only one gets sick? Have you ever eaten the same meal as someone else at a restaurant, and only one of you winds up with food poisoning? The answer to these puzzling situations is immune function. In healthy immune system, your body responds to events that could cause illness or injury, seeking to restore you to healthy function as quickly as possible.

How Immunity Works

Your immune system works on multiple levels.

  1. Initially, it strives to protect you from toxins or pathogens entering your body by forming a physical barrier. In fact, all of the surfaces of your body are bacteria and virus resistant, and mucous membranes contain enzymes that further break down the cell walls of substances that shouldn’t be in your body. This occurs on the parts of your body you can see, such as your eyes and skin, as well as internally, such as in the mucous membranes of your intestines.
  2. Next, your immune system seeks to detect and eliminate those pathogens that make it through your body’s barrier system before they have a chance to proliferate. It does this with a variety of substances designed to fight disease, including antibodies, interferon, and lymphocytes (white blood cells). T-cells, which are a type of white blood cell, come in two forms to fight immunity. On this level of immunity, “helper” T-cells detect invaders and send out an alarm to the rest of your body to come in and fight.
  3. If pathogens have managed to proliferate, then your body next attempts to eliminate the illness by getting rid of them on a massive scale. In this stage, you will most likely notice common reactions that manifest as “illness,” which is your body’s attempt to eliminate the invaders. Here “killer” T-cells fight the pathogens in a massive attempt to eliminate them from your body.
  4. The final level on which your immune system operates is slightly different than germ-based illnesses. Instead, this stage is your body’s attempt to find cancerous cells and eliminate them before they proliferate. Your body’s tumor necrosis factor (TNF) fights off tumor formation by stopping cell proliferation. Unfortunately, TNF can get out of balance in your body, leading to increased inflammation, which can cause heart disease and other autoimmune disorders.

Immune System Reactions

If your immune system is unable to fight off whatever pathogen or toxin you come across and you do get sick, your body does whatever it can to rid you of the germs in your system. Below are examples of immune system reactions.

  1. Inflammation: In the presence of foreign invaders, your body produces large numbers of white blood cells in your bone marrow. This is known as inflammation, and it is important in fighting off disease. However, the body’s inflammatory response can get out of control and lead to inflammatory autoimmune disorders including arthritis, lupus, and fibromyalgia. Chronic inflammation may also negatively impact all of the body’s organs, including the heart.
  2. Fevers: When you spike a fever, it is your body’s attempt to become inhospitable to the germs that are making you sick. In fact, spiking a high temperature is actually a sign of a healthy immune system. Your body is doing what it needs to in order to return to health. If you suppress the fever, then you are creating a body temperature that is more hospitable to the germs that are making you sick, and you are teaching your body its natural responses are incorrect. When a fever arises, I recommend resting in bed, relaxing, and eating only when you truly feel hungry. Lack of appetite during fever means your body is using its energy to fight the infection, and you don’t need to be spending it on digestion. As always, let’s learn from nature: when animals are sick they naturally fast for some time to help healing.
  3. Vomiting and diarrhea: When you ingest something that is not healthy for your body, your digestive system works to expel it in the most expedient and efficient way possible. The result – your body rapidly evacuates everything you put in it in order to expel whatever it finds to be toxic.

Intestines and Immunity

Many pathogens may enter your body through your intestines, which break down the foods you eat into usable parts and waste. They then absorb nutrients and, in some cases, pathogens. To protect you from this, your bowel contains plicae circulares, large flaps of mucous membranes that serve as an internal physical barrier to fight off pathogens. This barrier is especially important in the intestines, which contains millions of naturally occurring microbes. Your gut also contains healthy flora, which keeps potentially harmful microbes in balance and at bay, further protecting you from illness. In fact, about 70 to 80 percent of the battle for your body’s health via the immune system occurs in the gut resultant of this beneficial flora. When it gets out of balance, illness often results. As I say over and over again, your overall health and beauty largely depend on the health of your intestines!

Studies also show that gut flora is instrumental in the development of immune system components. Intestinal dysbiosis occurs when good and bad bacteria get out of balance in the gut, which can lead to many immune damaging conditions such as leaky gut syndrome and other autoimmune disorders.

Keeping a Healthy Gut

Since your intestines play such a key role in maintaining your body’s overall immunity, maintaining gut health is essential. Toxins can build up on intestinal walls, overflowing into the rest of your body and keeping you from enjoying vibrant health. Fortunately, your lifestyle habits can help you maintain gut health. I outline my full plan for gut health in The Beauty Detox Solution. Here, I will briefly outline steps you can take to protect your immunity via gut health.

  1. Keep food moving through your intestines. Always eat heavier foods later in the day in order to prevent the backup and putrefaction of foods.
  2. Cut down your meat intake to at most once a day, and work to cut down from there to a few times a week maximum (one to three ounces a serving, depending on your size). Animal protein is very slow moving, and cause putrefaction and the proliferation of the bad bacteria that love to feast on the rotting matter.
  3. Avoid gluten grains (wheat, rye, spelt, and barley), which can harm intestinal villi. Avoid dairy products, as well, which contain casein which is very hard for the body to digest.
  4. Eat mostly organic plant foods including plenty of fresh fruits and vegetables. Fresh produce contains enzymes that help break down foods and digest them easily.
  5. Ensure you have plenty of beneficial gut flora by taking a probiotic supplement twice a day.
  6. Eat my Probiotic and Enzyme salad several times a day to maintain healthy gut flora.
  7. Avoid taking antibiotics unless absolutely necessary, because they kill off all types of bacteria, not just the “bad” stuff. If you have a healthy immune system, chances are you will not need antibiotics to fight off illness anyway, since your body will do it for you.

Kimberly’s Holiday Buying Guide: 10 Gifts for Health, Peace, and Joy

Happy holidays everyone!! With only a few weeks left until Christmas, are you scrambling to buy gifts for your friends and family? If you are, then I have some great suggestions for you.

Conscious Gift Giving

I’m not a fan of the big, national box stores. Many of these places rely on cheap labor from foreign countries. Others sell products with toxic ingredients that don’t support health or wellness. That’s why I encourage you to make conscious choices during your holiday shopping. Some suggestions for shopping during the holidays:

  • If you can, buy local. Purchasing items from local businesses supports your local economy.
  • Purchase fair trade items. These products may be produced overseas, by they are created in a conscious way by workers that have been paid a fair, non-exploitative salary.
  • Whenever possible, choose natural. Select natural fibers and materials. If you are purchasing cosmetics or food for others, make sure the ingredients aren’t derived from petrochemicals or other unnatural products. On the other hand, don’t buy makeup brushes made from animal hair or bristles.
  • Give gifts that support health. A well-chosen and thoughtful gift can help your loved ones find ways to relax, tune in, and make healthier choices.
  • Go organic. Choose beauty products, food items, and fabrics that are made from plants grown without pesticides.

10 Top Picks for Holiday Gifts

Here are my top picks for the holidays.

  1. Vitamix blender: Think a kitchen gift isn’t a romantic gift? Think again! Give the gift of health this year. These blenders are custom made to order at the Vitamix factory, and I’ve never seen any other blender that can do what a Vitamix (price varies) does. It just takes seconds to blend a GGS or any other type of smoothie, and the mixture is completely pureed without any chunks. The Vitamix also is great for making sauces and blended soups. If you know someone who is trying to improve their health by incorporating more raw fruits and vegetables, the Vitamix is the perfect gift.
  2. Sally B’s Skin Yummies (5% off code: beauty): I came across this line of cosmetic products when I received some lip gloss in a gift bag, and I quickly became a huge fan. All of Sally B’s products are made from organic, natural, wild-crafted ingredients. The lip gloss ($18) makes a great stocking stuffer, or you can give multiple colors as a set. Give the gift of pretty lip and chemical-free gift care. I also love Sally B’s newest product, Skin Booster ($30). You can add a little bit of this antioxidant vitamin C/resveratrol powder to your favorite moisturizer to give your skincare regime a potent boost! I also love the Lavender Sugar Body Scrub ($32), which polishes and exfoliates with a yummy lavender aroma. This scrub also comes in lemongrass and peppermint. 
  3. Other products from Sally B’s include:B Fizzed Bath Bombs ($8) in green tea-lemongrass or lavender grapefruit, as well as the Organic Peppermint Feet Treats ($16) that soothe tired feed and relieve dryness and cracking, especially in the winter. They come in an adorable “foot” shape.
  4. Adesso Jewelry (5% off code: Yoga): Adesso is an Italian word meaning “in the moment,” and this gorgeous jewelry designed by Santa Barbara artist, Samantha Goldstone, provides a powerful reminder to remain present. Using ethnic beads, semi-precious stones, and metals like gold, pewter, and silver, Samantha builds gorgeous creations. Two of my favorites are the Zodiac bracelet ($32) made from brown, white, or black wood beads and an antique brass zodiac symbol; and the Fortunata tre ($85), a tiger ebony wooden bead bracelet with 24 karat gold rings.
  5. See Your Impact: I love this concept for a holiday gift. Give a gift in someone’s honor to make the world a better place. Give a Gardens of Health donation for $25 to provide sproutings, tools, fertilizer, advocacy, and training to provide a sustainable garden for a family. Best, you can see your donation at work, because See Your Impact will send you a photo and story about the family you help. For people who want to change the world but don’t know where to start, See Your Impact allows you to make a difference – one person at a time.
  6. Bert Bee’s Natural Skincare for Men: These 100 percent natural products protect his health and the environment. Packaging is environmentally friendly, and ingredients are natural and organic. Try the Natural Skin Care for men line, which includes bar soap ($4), body wash ($8), after shave ($8), and shave cream ($8).
  7. Empire of the Summer Moon by S.C. Gwynn: This is one of the best books I’ve read in a while. I kept it in my purse and read most of it on the subway! It explains how the United States came into being, and describes tumultuous times between indigenous Native populations and white settlers. This eloquently written and fascinating insight into our country’s history makes a great gift for the readers in your life.
  8. Yoga Pass: Visit your local studio and pick up a yoga pass for your loved ones. Most studios offer gift certificates. What better way to let people know you care than by providing the gift of health, stress reduction, and inner peace?
  9. The Beauty Detox Solution: Do you know someone that is seeking a healthier more vital 2012? Pick up a copy of The Beauty Detox Solution at your local bookstore.
  10. Community Supported Agriculture: Give the gift of fresh, seasonal, organic vegetables by providing a CSA membership. Prices vary according to the community. You can find a CSA membership in your area by visiting LocalHarvest.org.

Those are my top ten holiday gift ideas to bring health and light to your loved ones. I wish you all a truly wonderful and blessed holiday season. Love to all.

My Adventure in Morocco [Pictures]

I just returned from a glorious 2 week trip to Morocco. Why Morocco? I felt I needed to have an adventure, for inspiration and to feed my soul. I got that in spades, plus much more than I could have asked for. Sometimes when you go away to a place so different than what you know, it forces you to re-examine your life, and things you may take for granted.

 Here’s some of the typical food I ate there. Mixed salads, with cucumber, tomatoes, olives, green beans, zucchini, etc. and couscous with vegetables. Though I don’t usually ever eat couscous (I eat millet or quinoa instead), when you’re traveling you have to be flexible and adapt!

 In the souks (covered marketplace), looking for the perfect tea pot!

 Life in the medina, which is the old part of the city. It is all windy alleyways, without cars. It is where I stayed the whole 5 days I was in Marrakesh.

 

I am very grateful for taking French in school, and also for having a French ex boyfriend whose family didn’t speak English…my decent conversational level of  French allowed me to interact with the locals in Morocco, including this little boy whose family owned a spice stall at the market. I got a lot of traditional spices, including the traditional tangine blend with over 35 spices!

Everywhere you look in Morocco, it is pure magic. The colors, the alleyways, the doors, the doorways…

Jaama El Fna square is the place to be at night. Thousands of locals gather to see live street theater, eat from one of the 100 makeshift restaurants which gets assembled every evening, sell their wares and more. Amazing! It was named in 2001 as a World Heritage Site for “oral history.”

Life = joy.

Snake-charmers at Jaama El Fna!

In the square, there were tons of almonds, walnuts, figs and dates to buy, which grown locally. I stocked up, which was fantastic for snacking on during the whole journey and into the desert.

 This is the local market, at the other end of the medina. Chaos!

This is the famous Baba El Khemis doorway, less than a 3 minute walk from my riad (guesthouse) I stayed at. Life around the door, with donkeys hauling wares and people walking to and from the local market, hasn’t changed much in 500 years.

Lots of fresh vegetables in Morocco. No GMO produce either!

As a tourist, you don’t interact so much with the women as the men. They remain mysterious.

 The souks were covered in wooden thatched roofs, and sometimes, at just the right time of day, the light would come in through the cracks in the wood, and create this absolutely beautiful, magical light.

My favorite custom in Morocco is that after you shake someone’s hand, you touch your hand to your heart, to show that you take the meeting to heart. I want to keep practicing it.

This is the entranceway to get into our riad. Everything is confusing alleyways, which become even more dizzying at night, when the stalls close and your visual points of reference vanish…At first I was a bit nervous about walking the 20 minutes from the main square to the riad in the dark, through the unlighted alleys, but I realized that it was okay, and safe.

 

 Ah! Life outside the city. Rented a car and started driving south…

The land changed dramatically from desert landscape, to snowcapped mountains that we had to drive through. The roads were windy and not for the faint of nerves.

Had to get out and play in the snow!

Stopped and stayed at a small village called Ait Bennadou, which has a fairytale-like look to the kasbah (old fortress). The whole village is about the length of 2 NYC blocks. I loved it and we stayed a night down and another night on the way up. Lots of amazing locals, fires in a cozy riad and great food. We were the only tourists in the whole village!

We ate in Berber (the indigenous Moroccan people) tents.

And climbed all through the kasbah.

Next, we drove South through Zagora and M’Hamib, and camped for a few days in the Sahara Desert. This was probably my favorite part of the trip of all. The Tuareg people are the traditional nomads that travel through the desert as their animals (camels, sheep, goats) need more food. I have never met people who love the desert so deeply and love their life there. They play music, wonder at the stars, and are meditative, wonderful people.

 

At sunset, we would take the camels to go over the sand dunes. Sweet, powerful animals they are.

I won’t lie… at night it was freezing! Slept in simple Berber tents, with a carpet put down right on the sand and some thick blankets to sleep under. No electricity, so just had candles.

This is our Tuareg driver, who drove us to El Chicaga, the biggest sand dunes in Morocco a few hours outside the M’Hamib. This is where the road literally ends, and you are on a 4 x 4 through the sand for hours to the dunes!

Our Tuareg driver was a nomad in the desert for most of his life. He knew where there were interesting rock fossil sites, oases, and lookout points. He knew every twist and turn in the road-less desert.

The energy in the Sahara is palpable and so powerful. I’ve been to deserts in Mongolia, Southern Africa, India, Namibia, Bolivia, Australia and all around the world, but the Sahara may be one of my favorites.

Medersa carvings.

Yoga overlooking the kasbah.

 The ubiquitous mint tea. I always asked for mine “sans sucre” (no sugar)… you can see why!

The nut market part of the souks.

 As with every adventure, the journey changed me and helped me grow. I feel newly refreshed in creativity and inspiration. This time I did go in the middle of a film and in a very busy time, but I am back working for my clients on the film now. There really isn’t ever a perfect time to get up and leave for an adventure, so you just have to go. It is the best thing ever. You’ll never regret it.

milk-does-a-body-good

Common Diet Advice That’s Actually Bad for You

Every culture has its own mythology. In Western culture, much of ours surrounds food and drink. While many of these ideas are considered “conventional” wisdom, the truth is they are making us fat and sick. It’s not that “diet experts” are trying to intentionally harm you when they suggest common dietary advice. It’s just that they, like the rest of the American public, have been very misinformed about what constitutes a healthy diet. We have moved away from our natural intuition as to what to feed our bodies, and are sucked into an ever-complicating “diet” world.

The unambiguous proof lies in the statistics. The prevalence of obesity in the United States over a single generation has grown substantially. According to the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, the prevalence of obesity in America went from less than 14 percent in every single state in 1985 to higher than 20 percent in nine states, greater than 25 percent in 25 states, and higher than 30 percent in the remaining states. At the same time, the incidence2 of type 2 diabetes (an illness typically found in people over 40) is rising in children and adults! Autoimmune disorders are on the rise, as well.

Clearly, something is wrong here. Many experts are pointing their finger straight at the contemporary Western diet, and I concur that the very poor diet that most people have is indeed at the root of an overwhelming amount of health problems.

I always find it strange that many health experts blame these problems on a lack of willpower. After all, the diet industry in this country is booming. Americans spend billions on an array of products that promise to facilitate weight loss, including low-fat foods, diet books, diet programs, and more. Yet, America as a country continues to grow fatter in spite her citizens’ best efforts to count calories, cut out fats, eat “diet” microwave or packaged foods and lead healthier lives. I’ve always believed that the biggest issue isn’t about willpower. Instead, I think America’s health problems lie in all of the myths that have become conventional wisdom.

Let’s take a look at just a few of these myths so we can see how they just might be affecting the unbalanced weight of the Western world.

Myth 1: Counting Calories is The Best Way to Lose Weight.

How many diets have you personally been on that recommend counting calories? According to the calorie hypothesis:

  • If you eat more calories than you burn, you will gain weight.
  • If you eat fewer calories than you burn, you will lose weight.

If this were the case, a lot more people would be thinner than actually are. The calorie hypothesis assumes that the human body behaves like a simple thermodynamic machine and employs a straightforward method of burning food for energy.

What is a calorie, anyway? By definition, it is the energy needed to raise the temperature of one gram of water by one degree Celsius. While this definition actually defines a kilocalorie, it’s been shortened to calorie. This works in a simple machine, like a car engine, but does it work in human beings?

The answer to this question is very likely no. The human body is an extremely complex biological mechanism that does not operate according to the rules of simple thermodynamics. I personally know people who have counted calories religiously yet remained overweight in spite of their best efforts.

How often do you see overweight wild animals? From personal experience going on over 11 safaris in Africa, I can vouch for the fact that wild animals maintain normal weight. Yet these animals haven’t a clue how to count calories. Instead, they eat the foods their bodies need and move as needed. This helps them maintain a healthy weight. Since humans are animals, it makes sense that our biological responses are very similar.

Counting calories may work for a few people, but have you ever noticed how difficult it is for them to sustain weight loss? For most, it is a lifelong, ongoing struggle to keep weight off by religiously counting and continuously cutting calories. It is indeed a miserable way to live.

It’s not how much food you eat, it’s what you eat that matters.

Does this mean you can eat as much as you want all the time? No. Not counting calories is not a license to stuff yourself;  however, if you eat the foods your body was intended to eat, based on whole and natural foods, your weight problems will be alleviated. You will get more nutrition from such foods, and will not need to eat such huge quantities naturally. These foods also possess fiber, which is a filling and natural means to help with calorie restriction. Furthermore, natural foods do not clog up your digestive tract with sludge, which keeps you from feeling full and getting the maximum amount of nutrition from the foods you are eating. If you eat heavier, more difficult to digest foods that don’t digest as cleanly, you will eat more and rely on external sources of energy such as sugar and caffeine.

What should you eat? Eat mostly organic, whole plant foods for good health. Eat foods that were grown in the earth, and not manufactured in a lab or that have a long list of ingredients. Avoid “diet” foods such as artificial sweeteners, “energy” bars and microwaved frozen dinners.

Myth 2: Milk – It Does a Body Good.

The dairy industry has spent a lot of money convincing you that milk is essential for good health. Over the years I’ve seen multiple claims about the healthfulness of milk including:

  • Eating two servings of low-fat dairy every day can help you lose weight.
  • Dairy products help prevent osteoporosis.
  • Dairy products help build strong bones and teeth.
  • Milk and other dairy is the best source of calcium and vitamin D available.
  • Yogurt can help build healthy intestinal flora and is good for dieting.

In fact, we’ve bought so deeply into the dairy mythology that our food pyramid even has a special section just for low-fat dairy products.

Nature creates a way for mammal mothers to nurture their young. After giving birth, mothers produce milk in order to nurse their young through the first few months or years of their life. Human babies are intended to drink breast milk for the first few years of life, not cow’s milk. That is intended for baby cows. In nature, cows stop producing milk after the calves are weaned. Dairy farmers continually breed the cattle in order to maintain ongoing lactation.

Milk contains two ingredients that are very difficult for humans to process: lactose and casein. Additionally, the milk contains hormones that may lead to sensitivity in humans, and many dairy cattle are injected with rbGH (recombinant bovine growth hormone), a hormone genetically engineered by the Monsanto Corporation to artificially increase milk production.

Human health problems associated with dairy consumption include:

Lactose leads to gas, bloating and discomfort
rbGH in dairy increases the incidence in IGF-1 (Insulin-Like Growth Factor 1) in humans. This can decrease insulin sensitivity and may be a precursor to type 2 diabetes. IGF-1 may also increase risk of developing heart disease or cancer.
Casein is the protein in dairy products. In the China Study, Dr. T. Colin Campbell concluded that casein ingestion promotes cancer in all stages of development.

Dairy is extremely acid-forming.

Dairy is extremely mucus-forming, which means it is slow to digest in the digestive tract, which may lead to more toxicity being compounded in the digestive tract and throughout the body.

Avoid dairy products including milk, cheese, yogurt and kefir. Instead, eat a plant-based diet, and get your probiotics from Probiotic & Enzyme Salad and probiotic supplements. if you need milk, then try unsweetened almond, hemp, coconut or hazelnut milk. Goat’s cheese is a good transition cheese that digests better than cow’s milk cheese.

Myth 3: Breakfast Is the Most Important Meal of the Day

There’s probably not a mom alive that hasn’t repeated this myth at some point. Breakfast is entrenched in our belief system, and many people feel this means they should eat a heavy, protein-laden breakfast in order to get the day started right.

In fact, a heavy breakfast will start your day off just wrong! Every morning is a new opportunity to cleanse your body, since it has fasted all night and your food has digested. Eating a heavy meal in the morning can plug up the plumbing and decrease your energy stores as your body focuses on digesting all of that food you just ate. If you eat a huge breakfast, you will need more snacks and caffeine by mid-morning.

What should you do instead? Don’t force yourself to eat until your natural hunger kicks in, and then start yourself off with a Glowing Green Smoothie. Eat heavier meals later in the day when your body will have a long time available to digest them. Try it for yourself for 2 weeks, and notice how much better you feel than from having huge daily breakfasts! You will feel lighter, more energetic, and will be able to perform all functions more efficiently.

Myth 4: Grazing Every Few Hours Is the Best Way to Maintain Weight

Grazing doesn’t give your body time to fully digest the foods you eat. Instead, it causes foods to back up in your intestinal tract, forming a rotting, partially digested sludge in your gut. It also means your digestive tract is constantly working. This burns an incredibly amount of energy and can actually accelerate the aging process.  Instead, eat breakfast, lunch, and dinner and minimize snacking. I sometimes eat a snack between lunch and dinner, but keep it to only that one snack.

Myth 5: There’s No Difference Between Organic and Conventional Plant Foods

Conventional produce is grown using toxic pesticides. At the same time, many conventional foods are also grown from engineered seeds that have been genetically altered in order to better accept pesticides and fertilizers. Every time you eat these foods, you are filling your body with toxins no matter how well you wash the plants. Additionally, most conventional plant foods are grown on “factory farms” that favor monocultures where they grow only one type of crop in a field. This can strip the soil of nutrients and leave the plants open to disease.

Choosing organic foods grown on local family farms on the other hand, allows you to eat chemical free produce that is far more nutritionally dense than conventionally grown produce. The soil of organic farms is more rich, and will therefore impart more minerals to the produce that is grown in it. Eating this way and purchasing your foods from local farmers markets or CSAs also allows you to support the dwindling number of small family farmers in this country.

There are many other dieting myths, especially those regarding the excessive consumption of animal protein, which is also acid-forming and slow to digest (and therefore aging). For further info on this topic and other myths, please check out The Beauty Detox Solution, it won’t all fit here. Wishing great health to all!

8 Dangers of Diet Soda

You’ve probably noticed I mention diet soda quite often as something you need to eliminate from your diet as quickly as you can. It is a huge peeve of mine (along with a few others, like agave). I know many people enjoy diet soda and feel it is a “freebie” because it contains zero calories. What many people fail to realize is diet soda can be very detrimental to their health. It is also not beautifying at all- in fact it will diminish your beauty.

Why is diet soda unhealthy? Let me count the ways!

1. Neurotoxic

While artificial sweeteners may be a zero calorie alternative to sugar, they are in no way healthier. Diet sodas may use a variety of artificial sweeteners in place of sugar, including aspartame, which acts as a neurotoxin.

Also known as NutraSweet, aspartame originally received FDA approval for use in carbonated beverages in1983, and it still remains the most commonly used sweetener in diet soda. Annually, reactions to aspartame result for a majority of the adverse reaction reports made to the food and drug administration.

Made from L-aspartyl-L-phenylalanyl-methyl-ester, aspartame is 200 times as sweet as sugar and contains negligible calories. Once in the human body, aspartame breaks down into phenylalanine, aspartic acid, and methanol. Methanol is a wood alcohol poison that, when heated above 86 degrees Fahrenheit (the human body temperature is 98.6 degrees), converts to formaldehyde. Aspartame is also an excitotoxin that builds up in the brain, and can excite brain neurons to the point of cell death.

2: Causes Headaches and Other Symptoms

Another artificial sweetener commonly used in diet sodas, sucralose, may cause a host of health problems including headaches.

Made from a modified sugar molecule, sucralose is supposed to pass through the body unabsorbed. Because sucralose is relatively new in the market still, its long-term effects have not been measured. Some evidence1 suggests sucralose may cause migraines, gastrointestinal issues, and thymus gland damage. Sucralose may also intensify sugar cravings, increase appetite, and trigger insulin release.

3: Acidifying

Soda is made up of a number of acidic chemicals. It is one of the most acidic substances humans ingest. The acids in diet soda demineralize the bones and teeth, and can lead to fractures and osteoporosis. Acid in the body also can lead to a number of health conditions such as inflammation and corrosion of body tissue. When your body is overly acidic your skin will not be as beautiful or youthful. It will contribute to looking older.

4: Caffeinated

Many diet sodas contain caffeine, which is an artificial stimulant and an addictive substance. Caffeine also excessively taxes the liver and can hamper its ability to cleanse and filter toxins from the body. Additionally, caffeine can trigger stress hormones, which can result in chronic stress and weight gain. Caffeine is also a diuretic, which dehydrates the body. It’s best to avoid caffeine in all its forms, particularly diet soda.

5: Increases Risk of Obesity

Studies show that although diet soda has no caloric value, it may have an impact on insulin similar to sugar ingestion. This is most likely due to the cephalic phase insulin response in the brain. When you taste the sweet in diet soda, your body perceives it as sugar and causes the pancreas to release insulin just as it would if you were consuming actual sugar.

Some studies show that drinking diet soda may increase the incidence of obesity and/or prevent you from losing weight. In fact, researchers at the University of Texas Health Center made some startling findings when testing the link between obesity and diet soda.

Obesity risk increased as followed:

26.5 percent for people drinking up to ½ can of diet soda per day, and 24 percent for regular soda drinkers consuming up to one can per day
54.5 percent for one to two cans of diet soda per day as opposed to 32.8 percent for those drinking the same amount of regular soda
57.1 percent for people drinking more than two cans of diet soda per day as opposed to 47.2 percent for people drinking the same amount of regular soda

In other words, diet soda consumption had a higher correlation with obesity rates than consumption of caloric soda containing sugar or high-fructose corn syrup.

6: Increases Toxic Load

There’s not a lot that’s natural in diet soda. Here are just a few of the ingredients you may find:

Carbonated water
Artificial coloring
Phosphoric acid
Potassium benzoate
Citric acid

Doesn’t sound so delicious and healthy, does it! It sounds nasty, and that is because it is indeed a nasty product. Diet soda places a significant toxic load on your liver and can contribute to toxic sludge in your intestines. You are much better off drinking pure, filtered, non-tap water.

7: Increases Risk of Heart Disease

A study at University of Miami Miller School of Medicine4 showed that people who drank diet soda daily had a 61 percent increased risk of a cardiovascular event. The study followed more than 2,500 participants for about nine years, during which 559 vascular events occurred. Even accounting for age and other risk factors, the risk with diet soda consumption appeared to be at least 48 percent higher. With that kind of risk, why take a chance on diet soda?

8: May Contribute to Metabolic Syndrome

A study at University of Minnesota’s School of Public Health in 2008 linked diet soda to metabolic syndrome, a cluster of metabolic disorders including obesity, high blood pressure, elevated triglycerides and hormone resistance. According to the study, consuming diet soda increased the risk of developing metabolic syndrome by 34 percent, which was higher than the elevated risk from consuming two other unhealthy types of foods – meat (26 percent increased risk), and fried foods (25 percent increased risk).

With all of these health risks, you have to ask yourself, is diet soda worth it? Avoiding soda may be one of the best things you can do for your health and beauty.

Beautiful & Affordable Jewelry

Many readers have been asking me about some of the jewelry I wear, that they’ve seen me wear in pictures, on TV and in magazines. I think jewelry is an awesome way to express your spirit. I don’t wear diamonds or super fancy jewelry. I love pieces that are unique, have symbolic meaning and use elements from the earth like cool rocks, crystals and types of wood.

When I spent a lot of time in Los Angeles last year I met Samantha, who is a mother of a sweet 4-year old and an entrepreneur. She started the Adesso jewelry line (5% off code: “yoga”) in Santa Barbara, which is north of Los Angeles. I connect to her jewelry because it is inspired by her travels around the world – and I can feel the influences from cultures where I too have traveled and love (travel is part of my soul- I’m in Morocco at the moment!). Her pieces are not just mass-produced from some huge company; she is a niche brand with really high quality pieces. I love supporting her because besides being a mother, she is a sister to all of us in the Beauty Detox community, following her dream and making beautiful things to put out into the world.

My absolute favorite piece of Adesso jewelry, which I get compliments on constantly, is the Fortuna Tre bracelet, $85, (5% off code: “yoga”). In the bustle of busy life, it serves as a reminder that my spiritual and yoga meditation practices are at the center of all I do. It has a yoga/Eastern influence in the ebony wood beads, but it is dressed up with the 3 (a lucky Feng Shui number) hammered 24-carat gold rings. This is key because my everyday jewelry has to be able to hold up to grocery shopping, having meetings in the middle of the day at a fancy restaurant, running to the farmer’s market, possibly going to a yoga class and meeting a friend or a client out later in the evening.

The Fortuna Tre would make an amazing gift for Christmas! Even to yourself. You will love it like I do and wear it all the time. It goes with everything, for every occasion. Samantha has been generous to give the Beauty Detox community a special code “yoga”, which you can enter at checkout for 5% off.

The zodiac bracelets (5% off code: “yoga”) are pretty awesome also, and I have one for my sign (Aquarius), which I stack over the Fortuna Tre bracelet. It will be a great reminder to you to draw on the strengths of whatever sign you may be, which is your birthright. You can personalize them as gifts for everyone’s birthday. They have the same combo of the wood with a gold accent to upgrade the whole piece, so it looks classy. They come in white, black and brown, but I personally like the brown ones the best, so it looks good for stacking with the Fortuna Tre.

Finally, a great statement necklace should be part of every girl’s collection. I love the Russell necklace (5% off code: “yoga”). I throw mine on especially to dress up a plain top (like in this picture). The look great with tank tops in the summer, cute dresses and sweaters in cold weather. They give more personality and edge to any outfit. The center of the Russell necklace is a lodolite quartz crystal- which is said to have a really high healing vibration. Quartz is also known as the “Stone of Power” to help amplify any energy or intention.  I do love rocks and crystals, and you’ll find them all around my apt. No matter where I am, wearing jewelry that contains natural elements helps me feel connected to the earth and nature. When we are connected, we are our most powerful.

I hope this gives you some great gift ideas.

Shanti and love to all.

Roasted Sweet Potatoes

How to Enjoy a Thanksgiving Dinner without Gaining Weight

Happy Thanksgiving, everyone! On Thursday, people across the country will gather with loved ones and give thanks for all that they have. If you are like most people in this country, Thanksgiving is also a holiday that’s tied in with eating a big, heavy meal.

For many Americans, Thanksgiving is the start of a holiday season filled with tempting treats. Unfortunately, this provides a formula for weight gain. In fact, Americans may gain between one and ten pounds between Thanksgiving and the beginning of the New Year if they are not careful.

Of course, weight gain isn’t the only issue. Regularly consuming the tempting treats associated with Thanksgiving and the December holidays can also lead to imbalances in your system that result in poor digestion, sugar cravings, loss of energy, skin eruptions, and many other symptoms.

It all starts with Thanksgiving. So what should you to do to get your holiday season off to a healthy start? Here are my tips for a healthy day.

1. Start out the day as you normally would.

Many people decide that as long as they are going to be eating a huge feast later in the day, they might as well just give up on their health habits for the entire day. If you use Thanksgiving as an excuse to get out of bed and eat a donut, however, then you may notice sluggish energy and poor digestion as the day progresses. You may also put your body in a state where you eat even more than you would have had you started out your day normally.

Instead of calling the entire day a wash, I strongly suggest keeping your morning routine intact. Start out the morning with a cup of hot water with lemon. Enjoy your Glowing Green Smoothie for breakfast. This will start you in a great nutritional position, keeping you hydrated and prepared to veer off track only a little when you sit down at a food-laden dinner table.

2. Skip the appetizers.

In many families, it is customary to nosh on all sorts of appetizers while visiting and awaiting the big meal. Instead of munching, focus on taking with your family and friends and enjoying your time with them.

3. Approach food with awareness and thankfulness.

Your mental state when you eat is important. Don’t munch away without paying attention to the foods you eat. Instead, be present as you eat your meal with an attitude of thankfulness. This will help with digestion, and you will be more likely to be aware of the foods you are using to nourish your body.

4. Take digestive enzymes.

While eating with awareness will aid digestion, chances are you are going to eat some foods you haven’t had in a while. This can make it difficult for your body to digest these foods, so taking two digestive enzymes before your Thanksgiving dinner will help ease the process.

5. Talk turkey.

If your family eats turkey on Thanksgiving, encourage them to buy an organic, free-range turkey. Many specialty shops are happy to order the birds for you; or, visit a farm yourself that specializes in raising organic turkeys and choose one for your meal. If your family is particularly open-minded, you may even be able to convince them to skip the turkey altogether and instead enjoy a bounty of fresh, seasonal, organic plant-based foods. Family traditions after all, are what we make them.

Do you love turkey? It’s okay to have a little bit, but enjoy it with delicious vegetable options. (See the recipes below).

6. Practice moderation.

Let’s face it. Thanksgiving food is really good, and there’s a solid chance that seconds are going to happen. With so many delicious foods in front of you, it’s okay to be a little bit indulgent. A small portion of seconds is allowable, but avoid going in for a (glutinous) third helping. :)

7. Have a cup of tea.

Mint helps with digestion. A few hours after your meal, sit down and enjoy a nice cup of fresh mint tea.

8. Skip the leftovers.

Enjoy Thanksgiving in one meal, and leave the heavy leftovers to others. Instead, get right back on track with The Beauty Detox Solution so you can sail through the holidays in glowing good health.

Thanksgiving Recipes

Enjoy veggies this Thanksgiving! You’ll feel like you’re having a treat, but you’ll still be eating healthful, nutritious foods, as well.

Thanksgiving Baked Vegetables:

(Serves about 4)

Sometimes baked veggies are so yummy! As long as we are having plenty of raw greens and veggies every day, it is okay to have some baked vegetables in the mix. This is especially delicious in wintertime, when we naturally crave warmer foods.

  • 3-4 carrots, peels and cut into chunks
  • 2 large sweet potatoes, cut into chunks
  • 1 small cauliflower, cut into ½ inch florets
  • 2 large zucchinis, cut into 1 inch cubes
  • 5 cups bok choy greens, chopped into into 1 inch pieces
  • 3 Tbs. fresh parsley
  • 1 Tbs. fresh, minced rosemary
  • 1 Tbs. fresh, minced thyme
  • 1 tsp. fresh sage
  • ¼ cup low sodium tamari
  • ¼ cup raw coconut oil
  1. Preheat oven to 350 degrees.
  2. Smear the coconut oil over a glass oven-proof casserole dish with lid, and place all vegetables, parsley and rosemary, mixed up, inside.
  3. Mix the coconut oil and the tamari through the vegetables.
  4. Cover and place in oven for about 55 minutes, or until the vegetables are tender.
  5. Add a bit more tamari to taste, if desired, and serve with a salad.

Give Thanks Sweet Potatoes:

(Makes about 3-4 servings, multiply recipe for as many people as you have!)

  • 2 pounds organic sweet potatoes, washed and cut into medium sized chunks about 2” long. (For the average sweet potato, there should be about 8 pieces).
  • 2 Tbs. coconut oil
  • 1 Tbs. fresh minced rosemary
  • 1 Tbs. fresh minced thyme
  • 1/2 tsp. fresh minced marjoram
  • ½ tsp. fresh minced sage
  • High quality sea salt, to taste
  • Black pepper, to taste

 

  1. Preheat oven to 375 degrees.
  2. Toss the cubed sweet potatoes with the coconut oil, herbs, and salt and pepper. Adjust seasonings to your taste.
  3. Bake in oven for 1 ½ – 2 hours.

 

Colored Grateful Stuffed Peppers:

(Makes 6 servings)

  • 6 red, yellow, orange or green peppers, or a combination, seeded and hollowed out
  • 3 Tbs. of raw coconut oil
  • 3 cloves of garlic
  • 2 cups of broccoli florets, cut into small pieces
  • 4 cups of kale, chopped finely
  • 2 medium carrots, diced
  • 1 cup basil, chopped finely
  • High quality sea salt, to taste
  • Black pepper, to taste
  • 1 tsp. oregano
  • 3/4 cup dried quinoa
  • Fresh thyme, for garnishing

Pre-prep: Be sure to soak the quinoa overnight in water and rinse well before using.

Instructions for Preparing seeded and hollowed peppers:

  • Make an incision at the rounded top of each pepper, about 1 – 1 ½ inches from the stem.
  • Cut all around the stem in an even circle, then pull out the stem and the seeds.
  • Discard stem, and save the rest of the pepper top to chop and add to the filling
  • If necessary, clean out any remaining seeds from inside the pepper and discard.
  1. In a saucepan place 2 cups of water and bring to a boil. Reduce heat and add the quinoa to the hot water, and simmer until the water is absorbed and the grains become translucent soft (about 10-15 minutes). Pour through a strainer and set to the side in a bowl.
  2. Saute garlic in coconut oil until gently cooked, then add onions, and stir until the onions become translucent. Add the broccoli, carrot, chopped pepper tops (from preparing the peppers) and basil and cook gently for a few minutes. Add the sea salt and other seasonings to the veggie mixture and stir it up.
  3. Add the cooked quinoa and mix everything together well.
  4. Adjust seasonings to your taste. The mixture should taste slightly saltier than your taste, as the seasoning will be less concentrated when you stuff the plain bell peppers.
  5. Once you are satisfied with your filling, spoon into each pepper, right up to the top.
  6. Place peppers tightly next to each other in a glass dish so they remain upright.
  7. Bake at 350 degrees for 45 minutes.
  8. Garnish with fresh thyme just before serving

 

Raw Pecan Love Pie

Crust:

  • 2 cups walnuts
  • 3 cups of pitted dates
  • 1 cup coconut flakes, finely ground

 

  1. Pit the dates yourself, extracting each pit and discarding.
  2. Add the dates, coconut flakes and walnuts to the food processor and mix on high until thoroughly mixed.
  3. Press the mixture into the bottom and sides of a pie tray. Set to the side.

 

Filling:

  • 2/3 cup filtered water
  • 1 cup raw pecans, soaked about 15 minutes
  • 1 cup organic Thompson raisins
  • 1 Tbs. vanilla extract
  • 1 tsp. nutmeg
  • 1/3 cup coconut nectar
  • 1 tsp. Celtic sea salt

 

  1. Blend all the filling ingredients together in the blender until smooth.
  2. Pour onto the crust of the tray, and garnish with fresh, raw pecans.
  3. Set in freezer overnight, or for at least 5 hours before serving. Slice up and enjoy!

 Happy Thanksgiving!!! Love and peace to all.