Holiday Dinner…

It is autumn in November. Sunny and warm on the California Central Coast in Morro Bay. It’s time for a special focus on a plant-based celebration. Here are the beginnings of my Thanksgiving Day dinner that I have assembled. A kabocha squash bought at the Baywood Farmers’ Market along with herbs and poultry seasonings was the centerpiece. More would be added as the assembly continued.

Color is always attracting my eye. The kabocha squash is brilliant orange, complemented by the still-life of red orange roses, Red Anjou pears, avocados and yellow Bearss limes.

Looking up a kabocha squash directed me to a recipe which I adjusted to make totally plant-based, no oil, no meat or dairy. After hollowing out the squash, I roasted it for an hour until it easily stuck done. The day before I had made seasoned farro, celery, carrots and onions. My latest assembly of mushrooms included my new favorite long steamed Beech mushrooms along with the familiar white button mushrooms. All I had to do was to assemble and season my stuffing. Roasted carrots were cooked with the squash during the last 20 minutes and arranged with the squash and surrounded with young spinach leaves.

I had made my cranberry sauce the day before. Look carefully for it in my dish at the lower left.

It was so delicious and fun to make! Everyone who saw it was ready to eat at my house!

Remember to eat well and healthfully through the winter weather and during the upsetting political times that stress us.

Until my next personal sketch, PEACE and HEALTH, Heather

A possible recipe for the White House…

Singapore Dal

Lately, our choices of food have been gravitating towards more plants, especially unprocessed plants. We call it a whole foods plant-based diet. The first book I read about this way of eating was “The China Study” written by T. Colin Campbell, PhD and his son, Thomas M. Campbell ll, MD. Eating this way is done to lessen the chances of succumbing to the chronic diseases we might experience as we grow through our baby, teen, young adult, middle age, senior and oldest years.

The most recent young medical doctors are now realizing that the study of nutrition is vital to good health. They are often interested in studying the combination of nutrition and lifestyle style. The combined effects are powerful.

In the previous post, I mentioned a recipe that I thought would be a good example of something Kamala might prepare from the “Prevent and Reverse Heart Disease Cookbook” by Ann Crile Esselstyn and Jane Esselstyn. Dal is as the New York Times said in their March 28, 2024 issue a South Asian comfort food. Dal is made of split pulses which are lentils, peas and beans. They may be cooked quickly and are good sources of potassium and magnesium which contribute to a healthy heart and normal blood pressure levels. The fiber in them contribute to healthy cholesterol levels.

I gathered together everything I’d need to make a Singapore Dal dinner. If you make it, please let me know how you enjoyed it.

All ingredients were chopped, measured, sautéed, stirred and carefully watched at the proper stove temperature. The pleasure of combining all ingredients to make a fragrant recipe was a way to create a delicious meal.

Many Indian recipes create the health we all desire with an ample amount of protein with nutritional sources of vitamins, minerals and combined phytonutrients that I cannot begin to name. Notice no animal had to die to create this fine dinner which I served with quinoa and garnished with cilantro (or parsley if you prefer).

Every time I see a new President in the White House, I wonder what might be the requested breakfasts, lunches and dinners. Years ago I recall the White House posted the meals served. Every Presidential family has their own favorite breakfasts, lunches and dinners. I did find a post that showed the White House Chefs cookbooks which give us an idea of what they had prepared. I’ll keep an eye open to what might be the next possible choices. Hopefully more plant-based wouldn’t you think?

Until my next personal sketch, PEACE and HEALTH, Heather

Kamala’s South Indian ancestry…

While I do not know what Kamala Harris is eating now, I guess her ancestry steers her appetite towards a plant-based way of eating. She grew up as a daughter of a South Indian mother from Chennai, who was a biomedical scientist at the Lawrence Berkeley National Laboratory, and a Jamaican father, a Jamaican-American economist and professor emeritus at Stanford University.

In the past, she shared her love of cooking with her friend, Mindy Kaling, who you may recall was at the Democratic National Convention endorsing Kamala Harris. Here is the video to meet them cooking four years ago when Kamala was a Senator.

From Kamala’s mother in Tamil Nadu, India there would be specialties. Indian food bursts with fragrance and spicy flavors. Many of the recipes from India are plant-based naturally. Below is a recipe from page 215 in one of my favorite sources, The Prevent and Reverse Heart Disease Cookbook by Ann Crile Esselstyn and Jane Esselstyn.

SINGAPORE DAL SERVES 2 TO 4
We first had this dal in Singapore. I stood right beside the chef so I wouldn’t miss any of her secrets. The colors and the spices and the smells are embedded in my head. Putting the chiles in whole gives just the right amount of heat. This is delicious and thick over brown rice or potatoes. Serve it with a huge green salad or add Corn Tortilla Taco Shells and Tostados (page 32) instead of rice – or along with the rice! Fresh mango adds that last just-right touch.
INGREDIENTS:
1 onion, chopped
3 cloves garlic, chopped
2 tablespoons chopped, peeled fresh ginger
1 teaspoon ground cumin, 1 teaspoon ground coriander
1 teaspoon garam masala
3 medium tomatoes, cored and chopped
1 (15-ounce) can no-salt-added black-eyed peas, drained and rinsed
1 (15-ounce) can no-salt-added chickpeas or any white bean, drained and rinsed
2 cups vegetable stock or water
3 small skinny green chiles (also called finger chiles; serrano chiles will work, too)
Chopped fresh cilantro, and 1 tablespoon fresh lemon juice for serving
1 mango, chopped, for serving
INSTRUCTIONS:
In a saucepan, cook the onions over medium heat until they begin to soften; then add the
garlic and ginger and continue to cook, stirring, for a few more minutes. Add drops of water as necessary if the pan gets dry. Add the coriander, cumin, and garam masala, and cook for 2 minutes more for flavors to mingle. Again, add a few drops of water if the pan gets dry. Add the tomatoes, black-eyed peas, chickpeas, vegetable stock, and whole green chiles! Bring the mixture to a boil, reduce the heat to maintain a simmer, and cook until the dal has thickened to a gravy-like consistency, about 30 minutes. Add the lemon juice and lots of cilantro. Before serving, remove the chiles, or if you want more heat, break up the chiles and add them to the dish to suit your taste. Serve with chopped fresh mango in every bite. Perfection!

Next week I plan to make this recipe, thinking of Kamala during the preparation. She already has my VOTE ! Is there anyone you would like to share this with? DO IT !

Until my next personal sketch, PEACE and HEALTH, Heather

Sunday with Dr. John McDougall…

Every Sunday in California, I listen to a presentation given along with a brief talk on a health topic at 5PM Pacific Daylight Time. So if you are in another time zone like the East Coast, convert to your time. It would be 8PM EDT for you. It feels like he is chatting with me in my neighborhood when I listen to Dr. McDougall. If you miss the chat with his daughter, Heather, moderating and wife, Mary, you may catch it later on YouTube. Just search a little bit for lots of excellent information from Dr. McDougall that fits your needs. I’m sure you’ll find something intriguing!

Because I do not eat meat or dairy, growing a garden full of veggies is so much fun when not visiting the Farmers’ Markets or my local Natural Foods Store, Sunshine Health Foods. I don’t have room for a pet cow, pet chickens or a pet pig! And who would want to eat my pets? The beginnings of my cherry tomatoes are growing in my garden. We have planted three cherry tomatoes, arugula , lettuce, Kentucky Wonder Pole Green beans and may find room for a cucumber. Of course, there are always flowers which are food for my soul.

Arugula
Amaryllis
Kentucky Wonder Pole Beans and Morning Glory

This morning I had a delicious Tofu Scramble! Just had to see how to improve my own Tofu Scramble. Add a few chopped potatoes is a great idea!

Until my next personal sketch, PEACE and HEALTH, Heather

Go plant-based…

Plant Stock 2020

There is an excellent program on your computer right now that I started watching last night. Avoid so many health problems! It runs through the weekend. If you’re willing to spend $97 then you’ll have all the information you can possibly use. Re-watch all the presentations, the ones you want to see again or missed.

If you eat well, you feel well! You are happy, have energy and sleep well.

There is more education here for the rest of your life. Especially for men! I say this because many men depend on the women or partner in their life for what they eat or are too lazy to cook for themselves. Men are just as smart and capable in feeding themselves healthfully. Think about your sex life, your heart, your weight. It’s all about your total health. All information is suitable for men, women and children.

This program is run by the Esselstyn Family Foundation especially Caldwell Esselstyn Jr. M.D. who wrote the book How to Prevent and Reverse Heart Disease. Others include the well respected physicians in Lifestyle Medicine. Drs. Klaper, McDougall, Barnard, Greger and many more.

Vegan pizza

So eat it fresh and raw or cook it up. Enjoy your good health. Remember that it has taken you years to create habits that have made you sick, fat and miserable. Jump in 100% or start gradually by including plants in place of the animal products you used to eat day by day. So sign in to Plant Stock 2020 Consider it an education and a prescription for HEALTH !

Let me know if you have registered and watched this Plant Stock 2020. I’d love to hear what you thought about the program and all the reruns. Tell me what you’re eating and cooking too! We need to create a plant-based support group.

Until the next sketch… Peace and health, Heather

P.S. Maybe you thought I forgot some hearty food like grains, legumes and nuts. Wait for my next post, friends.

I wish I had…

Lately, I have thought of all the things I wish I had done. I have the time now. California is in “shelter at home” situation to slow the rate of infection of the Covid-19 viral infection. It’s better to be prepared for the worst and be happy if it eases up sooner. You’d call me a pessimist. That’s OK with me.

To make it through this challenging time, I have to learn to think a bit differently. I am especially interested in immunity for good reason.

Below is what I made from the “Forks Over Knives” App after I searched for my main ingredient, bok choy. It had the high immunity ingredients of garlic, fresh fresh ginger, Shitaki mushrooms, leeks, onions, celery, bok choy, broccoli, edamame, jalapeño peppers and Chinese Five Spice powder and was delicious.

I wish I had changed my lifestyle and eaten plants consistently years ago. I could have skipped the knee and hip replacement, high blood pressure and depression.  I eat plants now. I avoid all animal products. I have since learned that my body functions much better when avoiding all animal products and alcohol ( a Class 1 carcinogen). I am much healthier now! And so will the planet Earth be too! 

Wild Mushroom Pho

As you can tell, I dive into all the information that I can find from the websites that I follow. I feel like a sieve filtering out all the junk and saving the valuable information for you and me.

After watching the movie which is available on Netflix, “Forks Over Knives,” I started following the people that I’ve mentioned in previous posts and on other areas of this blog. Here are a few people to check in on and even sign up for their newsletters to stay healthy. Please do! Especially important at this time. 

Dr. John McDougall is a favorite. Check out his YouTube videos for dealing with the Coronavirus. Very interesting! I’ve gone to his “Advanced Nutrition Weekends” and even a week of nutrition study and travel to Kauai. From there I met others such as Drs. Esselstyn, Greger, Fuhrman, Ornish, Goldhamer,  and many more reputable physicians. I am totally convinced that this will serve me well through this difficult time of Covid-19.

The reason that I’m so convinced and am working so hard is that I’m in the high risk age category, 77, but since I have no chronic diseases of aging (obesity, diabetes, heart condition, cancer, etc.) I plan to be  around for a long time. No reason not to put in my best effort! I expect you will too!

Until the next sketch, Heather

Gypped…. but

I woke up early at 5:35AM, made coffee for my guy, started his Wheatena with ground flax, set up a bowl with frozen Bing cherries to defrost, sprinkled them with walnuts and went back to bed to listen to a podcast. It was Rich Roll on his podcast! He interviewed two women who made “an attempt to complete 5 Ironman-distance triathlons on 5 Hawaiian Islands in under 5 days.” It’s called the EPIC5 Challenge . It was so interesting and then I faded off and fell asleep and then woke up at 6:50AM. He was talking to the two women who are Ultra Athletes,  “thriving on the cutting edge of ultra-endurance.”

I woke up excited about what these women were doing, thinking about the effort they put in and how it paid off. I wanted that too. I went back into the kitchen and made my steel cut oats and thought what else would I like in it. Went to the fridge and grabbed my jar of saved leftover kale cooked the day before, dumped it in, went to the freezer and grabbed two shiitake mushrooms, chopped them up, grabbed a can of fire roasted tomatoes from my pantry and dumped about a quarter of a can in along with one tablespoon of my Dr. Greger’s seasoning mix . Oh yes, a tiny bit of liquid smoke (optional). This is my favorite way to make my oatmeal after spending years of wondering why anyone would eat and like savory oats. Must have been me watching Jane and Anne Esselstyn’s video.

As I see it, since our American doctors were never really trained in NUTRITION, they never gave us the information that we needed to avoid so many illnesses and the chronic diseases of aging. So sad. I know they tried their best, but all they could do was give us pills. I speak from experience having been a little girl who missed lots of days at school due to sickness. I took endless naps due to tiredness and lack of energy. I was eating the SAD, standard American diet, which my mother and father carefully prepared to make sure I was as healthy as possible. Little did they know that their choices were guided by the meat lobbies, dairy lobbies, egg lobbies, sugar lobbies, pharmaceutical lobbies, and medical lobbies. I had numerous doses of antibiotics.

Yes, I was gypped for many years by being deprived of information, but the truth is that now I consider all this experience in the past is now an opportunity! I have chosen to educate myself over the past 8 years in what I have found to be a much more healthful way of living. It was that I was offered a copy of “Forks Over Knives” to watch by a friend. I am very grateful to her. She happened to be a Seventh Day Adventist with the knowledge from one of the Blue Zones  in America, Loma Linda, California. No matter what religion or Humanist  approach you take, the lifestyle that promotes healthful longevity seems desirable to me. So now is the time for those of us, no matter what our age is, to choose a healthy lifestyle by eating a whole foods plant based diet and avoiding all the meat, dairy, eggs, and strongly limit the salt, oil and sugar to which we’d been accustomed. Add onto this way of eating a lifestyle which includes daily exercise and relationships with like-minded people who support our efforts.

This way of living is expanding rapidly while our waistlines are shrinking. Thousands of people are carefully considering how to do this and are finding a better and pleasant improvement in health and happiness. It’s all about educating ourselves. 

Now that you’ve read all this, here’s a little bit of dessert, an Anjou pear from my Farmers’ Market.

Until the next sketch… peace, Heather

*Quotes are from the Rich Roll website mentioned here.

Orange…

During a cold and frosty winter, a brilliant color that evokes the warmth and freshness of summer or a trip to Florida or California. Peeling an orange makes my fingers juicy and sticky just to separate the sections to pop into my mouth. A big squirt of orange juice is a delightful way to add in some Vitamin C which can lessen the chance of getting sick. It is one of the most delicious fruits. Just don’t try to eat one while you’re on a computer, iPad or iPhone!

Dr. Michael Greger discusses the value of apples and oranges in this short video.

So going to the market, I’ll choose a variety fruits and vegetables. It’s funny that I write about something that we have known about for years, eat fresh fruits and vegetables. Skip the processed and fast food that has snuck in to our pantries and way of thinking. Factories have created processed food that appeals to our senses of salty, sweet, buttery. Or should I say SOS (sugar, oil, salt) which I now consider dangerous to my health. Now, I’m leaning towards more fresh fruits and vegetables since there is less work. Then it’s not hard to cook a few grains (rice, potatoes, quinoa, millet or kasha) to put my vegetables on! A pot of beans soaked overnight then cooked in my Instant Pot makes a super addition to my meal. The excess I freeze in pint jars to save for later. Canned beans or chickpeas are fine too, if you rinse off the excess of  salt.

Come join me, Heather

P.S. Join Howard Jacobson in Plantyourself.com for his latest podcast or one of many others that he has produced on all sorts of useful topics. This week he chose the topic of “Vanquishing Procrastination.”

Savoy cabbage…

Here is one of my prettiest wrinkled and curly cabbages in pastel. Since it’s sketch you cannot enjoy the full pleasure unless you see one in actuality. It almost leapt off the organic farmer’s stand!

Since I’ve chosen to eat plants and draw them, here is a thought that it would be good as coleslaw! My coleslaw is ready for a bit of plant yogurt and grated carrots, and I found some grapes on my counter that would compliment the slaw. Now, I’m off to get the soy or cashew yogurt to mix in with the rice vinegar, dijon  mustard and celery seeds. I consider myself a creative cook who frequently alters recipes on a whim.

For those of you who started following me for my art, I hope you’ll enjoy the beauty of art and good health. When it looks this attractive, it will feel good too.  I guess I just love to eat beautiful vegetables. What could be next?

Come join me, Heather

Farmers’ Market…

Because I have spent many years learning about health and nutrition, I have learned to  keep an open mind. There is so much new well-researched information showing up, it is hard to know where to take you first. When a person says, “I eat a good diet.” I really don’t know what they eat unless I am joining then for a meal. Many people think they have a good diet, but it is often based on old information from years ago and biased by the meat, dairy and egg lobbies.  There is a lack of fiber and lack of nutrients which we find in fruits and vegetables. We can talk about meat, dairy and eggs later.  If you are curious now, make sure you check to see who wrote a report backing up a statement.

My mother always thought that she was serving a good meal, but she didn’t have the information that we have now. She had the “good” information that was available when I was a little girl in the 1940s and 50s! Things have changed! I saw the way my mother and father suffered at the end of their lives due to consuming what was then considered a “healthy diet.” She always tried to do her best, but the food lobbies were altering information that she received.

I decided to change my lifestyle and what I ate when I became older after attending a three day Advanced Nutrition Weekend with Dr. John McDougall  several years ago. Actually, I have attended a few of them. It is never too late!

I must remind you that I daily listen to a new podcast, read a new article or try another recipe.

Monday I went to the Farmers’ Market in Baywood to replenish my store of veggies.

Baywood Farmers’ Market

Here is what I found… a tomato, broccoli, a Delicata squash, grapes, white sapote, Winter Nellis pears, mixed greens, apples. With all these on my counter, they make easy snacks or a simple dinner.

I cut the Delicata squash in half, scooped out the seeds, put it upside down on a dinner plate and microwaved it for 5 minutes. Easy and delicious just plain… for my lunch with some broccoli. It is easier than an acorn squash and sweeter.

Come join me, Heather