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Vegetarianism needs some R-E-S-P-E-C-T

4 Apr

I was watching Desperate Housewives last Sunday… I rarely follow what the girls at Wisteria Lane are doing these days anymore, but I had the TV on as “background noise” and the show came up.  I actually just learned this episode aired originally on October 22… see, I do not watch this…  But you can read a recap of the episode here. 

02

Apparently, Bree’s daughter, Danielle, came to visit Bree and her husband for a weekend after she has been away for a few years.  Danielle visited with her new husband and her son, who is now 6 years old.  When Bree offers to make a nice side dish to go with her beef roast, Danielle pops the news that the whole family is now VEGETARIAN.

Bree, being the controlling and over-criticizing mom she is, starts arguing about the decision based on nutritional aspects she thinks of the vegetarian diet.  She’s concerned her grandson will not grow “big and strong” as other kids do.  Then, when Danielle is not around, Bree starts to manipulate information to tell her 6-year old grandson how his mom used to eat hot dogs everyday and that hot dogs make little kids grow big and strong.  Then she proceeds to give the kid a traditional meat hot dog to the kid unknowingly to his mom.

You know I do not like to preach and I am not criticizing Desperate Housewives… the show is just bringing to light the nightmare many vegetarian moms go through when they grew up with a omnivore/meat-eating family and now try to raise a vegetarian family.  I have friends who are now vegetarian and are raising vegetarian kids and are afraid when they visit their grandparents who do not understand why they “became” vegetarians… as if becoming vegetarians means that you’re no longer yourself or that you’re now part of different species altogether.

However, the show is perpetuating the belief many people have that a vegetarian diet is LESS than a regular meat-based diet.  And in many ways it is.  It’s a diet with less saturated fats, less processed foods, less preservatives, less chemicals, less artificial ingredients, less sickness…  In turn it’s a lifestyle with more health, more energy, more variety, more youth, more years added to your life.

I would like to recap here some of the advantages of Going Veggie…  most of the information here I have gathered from articles distributed at our Yoga Center and some has been from several great articles I found  from Vegetarian Times – one from back in 1999 and another from their website.  But most of all, these are things I have experienced for myself… which in my “book”, it’s the best way to learn – by EXPERIENCING.

go-veggieWHY GO VEGGIE??

1-       You’ll live a lot longer. Vegetarians live about seven years longer, and vegans (who eat no animal products) about 15 years longer than meat eaters, according to a study from Loma Linda University. And a British study that tracked 6,000 vegetarians and 5,000 meat eaters for 12 years found that vegetarians were 40% less likely to die from cancer and 20% less likely to die from other diseases, during that time.

2-      You’ll ward off heart diseases and cancer. Cardiovascular diseases are strongly related to diets rich in saturated fats and cholesterol from meat and dairy. And a study in The International Journal of Cancer concluded that red meat is strongly associated with breast cancer.

By keeping a vegetable-based diet, full of antioxidant nutrients, you protect your heart and arteries because produce contains no saturated fat or cholesterol. Other studies suggest that a plant-based diet helps protect against prostate, colon and skin cancers because vegetarians’ immune systems are stronger and more effective in killing off tumor cells than meat eaters’.

3-      You will save money. In these tough economic times, replacing meat, chicken and fish with vegetables and fruits is estimated to cut food bills by an average of $4,000 a year.

4-      You’ll add color to your plate. Meat, chicken and fish tend to come in boring shades of brown and beige, but fruits and vegetables come in all colors of the rainbow. Disease-fighting phytochemicals are responsible for giving produce their rich, varied hues. So cooking by color is a good way to ensure you are eating a variety of naturally occurring substances that will boost immunity and prevent a range of illnesses.

5-      You’ll very likely be slimmer. On average, vegetarians are more slender than meat eaters, and when we diet, we tend to keep the weight off up to seven years longer. That’s because diets that are higher in vegetable proteins are much lower in fat and calories. Vegetarians are also less likely to fall victim to weight-related disorders like heart disease, stroke and diabetes.

6-      You’ll give your body a spring cleaning. Giving up meat and meat-products helps purge the body of toxins (pesticides, environmental pollutants, preservatives) that overload our systems and cause illness. When people begin formal detoxification programs, their first step is to replace meats and dairy products with fruits and vegetables and juices.

7-      Your bones will be stronger and last longer. There’s this misconception that vegetarians are weak and undernourished.  Questions I constantly get are “Where do you get your calcium?”, “Where do you get your protein?” Well, let me tell you something… the average person abuses the consumption of protein.  These new fad diets have placed too much importance on protein instead of focusing on carbohydrates, which should account for 50% of your daily food intake.

Now, back to our bones… the average bone loss for a vegetarian woman at age 65 is 18%; for non-vegetarian women, it’s double that. Researchers attribute this to the consumption of excess protein, which interferes with the absorption and retention of calcium and actually prompts the body to excrete calcium, laying the ground for osteoporosis. Consuming excessive proteins, in both animal and dairy products, make the blood acidic, and to balance that condition, the body pulls calcium from bones. So rather if you want to have healthier bones, turn to dark green leafy vegetables, such as broccoli and legumes, which, calorie for calorie, are superior sources of calcium without the damaging effects of too much protein.

8-      You’ll be more “regular.” I know people do not like to talk about this, but if you eat and enjoy eating, you must also be open to talk about your regularity.  Eating a lot of fresh fruits and vegetables means consuming insoluble fiber, which pushes waste out of the body. Meat contains no fiber and takes about 3 days to fully digest.  People who eat a vegetable-based diet tend to have fewer incidences of constipation, hemorrhoids and spastic colon.

9-      You could help reduce famine in the world. Would you believe that right now, 80% of all the available farmland is used to raise cattle and animals for slaughter and that 70% of all grain produced in the world is used to feed animals raised for slaughter? It takes 15 pounds of feed to get one pound of meat. But if this grain were given directly to people, there’d be enough food to feed the entire planet.

Also, using land for animal agriculture is inefficient in terms of maximizing food production. According to the journal Soil and Water, one acre of land could produce 50,000 pounds of tomatoes, 40,000 pounds of potatoes, 30,000 pounds of carrots or just 250 pounds of beef.  Unbelievable, huh?

end_hunger_fast

10-  You’ll be a great role model for your kids or kids around you. Kids learn mostly by example and everything you do and say will have an effect on your kids’ beliefs when they become adults.  If you start teaching your kids NOW how to live a healthier lifestyle, they’ll grow up to be healthier adults and in turn teach others their experience.  Also, we will be creating a higher demand for vegetarian products and we’ll ensure these will continue to be available for generations to come.

11-  Going vegetarian is very easy to do. Vegetarian cooking is simple and delicious – I hope I have demonstrated that here in this blog. Supermarkets now carry packaged foods like tofu hot dogs, veggie burgers and soy yogurt, milk and cheeses that help make the transition to a vegetarian lifestyle much easier.  There’s greater availability of vegetarian options in food courts and restaurants, some which have added “veg-friendly” dishes to their menus. Even traditional fast food chains offer salads, veggie burritos and vegetarian pizza.

So contrary to popular belief, you do not need to eat meat to be healthy and strong.  When done right and in a balanced way, a vegetarian diet full of fruit, vegetables, whole-grains, legumes and non-saturated fats is the most intelligent option to live in sync with Mother Nature and to add productive years to our life.

Help me spread the word and educate all those “Bree’s” out there that it’s their choice if they want to continue to eat meat… but allow others who have already chosen a healthier lifestyle to stay their course.  Time will continue to prove us right…

karmic-disaster

Eating Veggie in NYC… Again

31 Mar

I love NYC for many reasons, among them because you do not need to go to a vegetarian restaurant to find plenty of vegetarian, healthy alternatives to eat.  I mentioned this a bit in a previous post of my last visit to NYC.

I went to NYC to spend the weekend with my friend AnnieMariel.  We wanted to do something exciting so we hopped on a plane to visit “the city that never sleeps”.  AnnieMariel is an almost vegetarian and loves good food just like me… so here’s our recount of where we ate deliciously in NYC last weekend…

CO.

I have read about this place on the internet and then saw the chef, Jim Lahey, the guy behind the no-knead bread, make their Popeye Pizza on the Martha Stewart show recently.  I was staying in the Chelsea area so we had to go and try it.

As an appetizer, we had the Winter Salad with butter lettuce, roasted butternut squash and roasted pumpkin seeds.   I always like to have a salad when eating pizzas so I feel I am not being that bad.

co-salad

As main course, we shared the Margherita and the Popeye… both awesome!!  They both have enough sauce and enough cheese to match the thin crust.   The crust is whole-grain, thin but with some chewiness.  It comes with a few sections burned, but it tastes very authentic.

                    co-pizza-magherita       co-pizza-popeye

The restaurant is super cool… with these communal tables where people seat next to you – great when traveling and in the mood to meet new people.  We met the sommelier at Per Se restaurant and saw Andrew Knowlton from Bon Appétit magazine – super cute in person, by the way.  Our server, who happened to be Puerto Rican, told us Martha Stewart always seats in the seat next to me every time she has visited Co.

foodist_highlight2

 BAR JAMON

I mentioned we met the sommelier at Per Se, so he invited us to Bar Jamón after a night of music at the Fleetwood Mac concert.  (Thanks Chris for the wonderful tickets…)  Bar Jamón is the Spanish tapas place by Mario Batali.  It’s a super small place, but great for a late night snack with friends.  It’s very dark so that’s why I do not have any pictures of what we had…

We had Pan con Tomate and a selection of cheeses with their condiments – Garrotxa with Tomato Jam, Valdeon with Figs, and La Serena with Oranges.  That was enough for a late night snack, but I wanted to try out a few other options – like their Coach Farm cheese-filled Piquillo peppers, Beets with Valdeon cheese and their Cauliflower with Salsa Verde.

 LE PAIN QUOTIDIEN

AnnieMariel recommended this place for breakfast.  We did not know this is actually a chain, because it sure does not feel like one.  We had the Cut-Steel Oatmeal made with organic milk, fresh fruit salad and the Five-Grain Tartines with organic butter, their Red Fruit Jam and Brunette Spread.  This Brunette Spread is a nut butter made of pralines – loved it!!!

We wanted to buy the oatmeal, but out of everything we had for breakfast, that’s the only thing they do not sell separately to make at home.  What a shame… but I will definitely come back and look for every time I travel.

 ALLEGRETTI

We went to Allegretti by invitation of a very good friend and our host for the weekend, Chris. He’s relatively new to the city, moving there from Philly.  So far, this is one of his favorite restaurants and knowing the passion AnnieMariel and I have for anything French, he invited us here.  Allegretti is a Provencal restaurant, just like its chef/owner Alain Allegretti.

The menu is not very inviting to vegetarians at first look, but after mentioning I was vegetarian, they immediately offered suggestions.  I had the Casolette of Provencal Vegetables with black truffles, extra virgin olive oil and maldon sea salt.  I had it with a side of the Olive-oil crushed potatoes.  The combination was awesome, super delicious.

And just like in the clip in this link, Alain, the chef/owner came over to talk to us and many of his other guests that night.  We had a chance to speak to him in French and some Italian too.  He was very gracious when we congratulated him on the meal.  And he’s very easy on the eyes too…  I must say.

 

LE BERNADIN

Le Bernadin is one of the premier fine-dining restaurants in NYC.  It’s famous for its seafood menu and celebrity chef, Eric Ripert.  We wanted to dine at Per Se because we were told by our new friend James the sommelier that it has a true vegetarian tasting menu, but unfortunately, we were not able to get a table, even with our newfound connections… 

Le Bernadin, just like a lot of these expensive, fancy restaurants has either a Tasting Menu or a Prix Fixe Menu, the latter being that you pay a fixed price to choose from a selection of dishes in four different courses.  I loved the fact they have a vegetarian option in each of the courses.  We requested a French-speaking server, and we got to order in French, but we would have rather had a French-native as a server.

Again, I do not have pictures because the restaurant lighting was dim.  The place is so fancy, I did not felt comfortable shooting pictures with flash, plus they never come out pretty. 

From the Almost Raw section I had the Mesclun Salad with Shallot Vinaigrette.  From the Almost Cooked section I had the Cauliflower “Couscous” with a Warm Salad of Seasonal Vegetables and Argon Oil Vinaigrette.  And from the Upon Request section I had the Buffalo Mozzarella Pasta with Wild Mushroom consommé and Parmesan Emulsion.  They were like little purses of cheese with a great mushroom broth.  I really wanted some more…  For dessert, I had the blood orange sorbet and a mint tea leaves au naturel infusion.  They brought it in a French press so you can see it’s really only mint leaves in hot water.  Their raw sugar was awesome.

 eric_ripert1

Even though I prefer to eat in vegetarian places, it’s also nice to know that chefs and restaurants in a city like NYC are open enough to recognize that vegetarians are legitimate customers and they should be accommodated as much as our meat-eating counterparts. 

This was certainly a very exciting and delicious weekend…  we’ll see where we end up flying and eating next.

Greek Food – Great Vegetarian Alternative

11 Mar

I recently went to Houston for a business trip.  I asked my sister and brother-in-law for a few restaurant recommendations in Houston, because they lived nearby for about 5 years.  One of their recos was for a Greek restaurant called Niko Nikos…

Niko Nikos is a very casual restaurant in the Montrose area of Houston.  Nice, quaint area filled with lots of restaurants.  It’s definitely not the place to take any business associates, but if you’re looking for good food without the fuss, this is your place.  You order and pay in advance at a counter, they give you one of those buzzer things that buzz when your order is ready.  You get up from your table, go pick it up at another counter and then you eat it… you take your beverage from the soda machine or a cooler they have to the side…  plastic cutlery and disposable plates.  Nothing fancy here.

I ordered a falafel sandwich on pita bread and an eggplant dip called melizano salata.  Both choices were pretty good.  I liked the melizano salata better than the falafel… they were too “green” for my taste.  So I took the pita, lettuce and tomatoes and placed my eggplant dip inside the pita bread and had a melizano pita sandwich instead. 

niko-nikos

But this brought to mind how appropriate the Greek menu is for a vegetarian diner… they have a lot of great choices and at Niko Nikos they even highlight them on the menu:

  •  
    • Greek Salad – lettuce, tomatoes, onions, olives, feta cheese, vinaigrette
    • Tzatziki – Yogurt, sour cream, garlic & cucumber dip
    • Melizano Salata – Eggplant dip with tomato and onion
    • Hummus w/ Pita – Chickpea, garlic, fresh parsley dip
    • Falafel – Fried chickpea patties served in pita with lettuce, tomato, onion.  Tahini & tzatziki  on the side.
    • Veggie Kebob – Zucchini, squash, onion, bell pepper, tomatoes & tzatziki sauce.  Served with pita.
    • Spinach & Feta Pita – Sautéed spinach with dill, tomato, onion & feta on pita.
    • Spanakopita – Spinach pie in phyllo.
    • Cabbage Rolls – filled with rice
    • Dolmades– Grape leaves filled with rice.
    • Baklava – Flaky fillo filled with ground walnuts & cinnamon, topped with homemade honey sauce.

  

     greek-salad        sponokopita        baklava_main

I hope you have a Greek restaurant nearby and try and tell me all about your favorite Greek favorites.  We have a really nice Greek restaurant in San Juan called Fleria.  I usually order the stuffed vegetables or some stewed potatoes dish that is just heavenly.

I hope to be able to visit Greece soon and be able to taste all these delicacies first hand…  how about that!!! Opa!!!

Sad News…

3 Feb

I just learned that Joe Ades… a very quirky, but very charismatic vegetable peeler sales man died in NYC at the age of 75.

During my last visit to NYC, I went to Union Square Farmer’s Market and bought 2 of his vegetable peelers.  This was exactly the same day as he was featured in the TODAY SHOW. 

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His sales pitch was superb.  My mom and I were enthraled for the better part of 5 minutes.  I remember trying to ask him questions and he just would not stop his sales speech for me… he just kept going and going like the Energizer bunny.  At the end and only at the end he answered my questions and I surely bought one peeler for myself and one for my mom.

Believe it or not, I used mine for the first time last week…   I tend to save things “for a special ocassion”, something I am erradicating this year as part of my new year’s resolutions.  Now thinking about it, I should have bought the 5 for $20. 

This is very sad news.  Hope his soul rest in peace. 

Hope someone will continue to sell these and continue the tradition… even thou it will never be the same again.

The Importance of Washing your Produce

29 Jan

I once mentioned to you I use a product wash to clean my produce.  But even if you don’t feel you don’t want to buy a product to clean your fresh fruits and veggies, I wanted to show you how much dirt and grime is released from the produce you purchase.

It’s important to clean all produce because of the dirt, the insects and all the man-handling your produce goes through before reaching your home.  But if you buy organic produce, this is as important, because when no pesticides are used, many insects and bugs can lodge in your produce. 

 wash-ur-produce-1 

 

For fruits and vegetables I clean them under the faucet.  But for lettuces and leafy greens, fill your clean sink or a large bowl with fresh water and let the leaves soak for a few minutes.  Swish them gently with your hands as a delicate washer.  After a few minutes, you’ll see how much dirt and grime falls to the bottom.  You need to make sure you have enough water so the leaves will float and have space to release the dirt.

 

dirt-in-produce

Imagine… if you didn’t wash them, you would be eating all that!!!!

I clean my lettuces in the bowl of my salad spinner.  I fill it with water, swish it, drain it, move it into the colander thing that spins in the spinner, place the colander thing inside the bowl and spin it away.  You’ll have clean and dry lettuce in no time.