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My New Favorite Juice – Pomegranate Juice

9 Oct

I recently discovered pomegranate juice.  I hadn’t tried it before because the POM bottles were so outrageously expensive in my local supermarket store – almost $9 for a small bottle.  Thanks to my trusted COSTCO, now I can get delicious pomegranate juice at a more reasonable price.

I like pomegranate juice for several reasons…

  • It’s deliciously sweet and tart at the same time. It reminds me a bit of cranberry juice.
  • It’s has antioxidant properties.
  • It’s great to drink by itself or to mix into fruit smoothies.
  • It’s super refreshing in the summer heat.

But, just like yoga… this is something you need to experience.  If you have not had pomegranate juice, I urge you to try it.

My next step… doing something with the actual fruit.  They look so pretty and jewel-like…

How to become Vegetarian

20 Sep

Many people ask me how I decided to become a vegetarian.  Most people think it is a decision you just make one day and BOOM – you immediately stop craving any meat products.  While many people might have done it that way, such was not my case.    From the moment I started to get close to a vegetarian lifestyle to the moment I decided to seriously try to be a vegetarian took me nearly 4 years.

First, when my mom decided to go veggie, I decided not to eat meat products at home.  I didn’t want my mom to feel inhibited in her own kitchen.  I thought I ate out often enough to be able to “hack” eating only vegetarian food at home.  After doing that, I noticed that I started craving meat less and less when I was ordering out in restaurants.

When I moved out of my mom’s house, I decided that my kitchen would remain vegetarian so she would not feel uncomfortable when visiting me.   I also decided at some point in between to stop buying canned goods, to stop drinking regular carbonated drinks, to stop buying foods with artificial coloring or chemical ingredients I can’t pronounce.  I started buying foods made with whole grains, as well as fresher and more authentic choices.  I decided to take some cooking classes to help me shift the way I looked at foods and to get to know new ingredients options.

So, to help the ones that might be considering becoming vegetarian but do not know where to start or consider it too daunting of a project… I say to all of you – START SMALL.  Break it down into smaller steps and you’ll be more likely to be successful. Here are some ideas you can implement yourself:

Decide to stop eating your least favorite meat product first.  For most people it’s red meat, for others it’s seafood.  Whatever it is for you, it’ll be easier to leave what you like the least.  Little by little, you might decide then to stop eating some other meat product, and another, and another, and another…

Consciously decide not to eat meat several days a week.  Start with 2 days.  Hey, you’ll still have 5 other days to eat “whatever”.  You’ll start seeing the difference in how you feel those days.  Maybe you’ll like the recipes and choices you have those days so much, that you’ll unconsciously increase those days little by little.

Decide to eliminate from your pantry canned goods, foods with chemical preservatives, artificial ingredients or animal additives.  I started buying evaporated milk in cartons, tomato sauces, roasted red peppers and olives in glass jars.  Frozen vegetables and fruits substituted the canned variety.  I started buying whole grain rice, 100% whole wheat bread or 100% whole grain cereals.  Sodas were out of my diet.  Whenever I wanted something carbonated, I would have a Perrier or San Pellegrino with lime.   I stopped buying foods whose list of ingredients were larger than the actual product and if I just could not pronounce something in the list I would just put it back.  Off-limits ingredients now are gelatin, carmine coloring, eggs, rennet, which are all animal-based ingredients.  Always go with the simpler ingredient lists… even going down to buying products with no ingredient list at all. Which takes us to our next point…

Start planning your meals with a larger quantity of fresh products – more fruits and vegetables.  Make that lasagna filled with mixed vegetables or spinach instead of ground meat.   Include more fruits in your breakfast – like fruit salads or fruit smoothies.  Always include a salad with at least 3-4 ingredients as a side dish.  Eat fresh fruits as snacks during the day.

Redefine your dinner plate – look at the rice, the pasta or a casserole as the main part of your dish.   Think of that vegetable rice or spinach and mushroom risotto as the main dish.  To me, a macaroni and cheese or vegetable lasagna with a side salad and plantains is a round meal.  Pastelones or casseroles containing potatoes, sweet potatoes, rice, and a variety of vegetables and vegetable proteins eaten with a nice salad is a complete meal.

Experiment cooking with ingredients that are new to you.  To me it was getting to know sun-dried tomatoes, the different varieties of mushrooms (button, Portobello, cremini, shitake, porcini, enoki, trumpets, etc.), the different varieties of lettuces (Romaine, Boston bib, arugula, frisee, mesclun greens, endive, radicchio, etc.), sugar snap peas, leeks, artichokes, polenta, tofu, textured soy protein, quinoa, kelp, umemboshi paste, agar agar, brown rice syrup, agave nectar,  rice pastas, panko breadcrumbs, among others.

Take some vegetarian cooking classes and visit vegetarian websites or blogs (wink, wink) for recipe ideas.  It’s a good thing you’re already reading this.  That means you’ve already found my vegetarian blog.  Learn how to make new recipes… but also see that making onion soup with vegetable stock will taste just as good as your traditional recipe, if not better.  Mofongos can be made just as good without the pork rinds.  Even a bacalaito can be made without the salted cod fish (bacalao) and taste great, because most of the flavor comes from another place and not from the animal products.

 

I hope these ideas will help you see that living a vegetarian lifestyle is not as daunting as you may have thought.    Even if going vegetarian is not the thing for you, integrating some of these ideas into your lifestyle will definitely have you eating better and more healthful.  Try it… you’ll not regret it.

I want a Whole Foods in Puerto Rico!!!!

18 Sep

I recently came back from visiting my family in South Florida.  Because I go so frequently there, I rarely do sightseeing.  My trips to Miami are full of visits to family, running errands with family and going shopping to all the stores that we do not have available here in Puerto Rico.

Before in my list there was Victoria’s Secret, Pottery Barn, Ann Taylor, Ann Taylor LOFT, Borders, L’Occitane, Bed Bath and Beyond… but nowadays most those stores are available here.  But there are 2 stores I still have in my TO SHOP list whenever I travel to the US – Target and Whole Foods.  We have health foods here in PR, but the largest health food here, called Freshmart, pales in comparison to the size and variety of goods in a Whole Foods.

 

To all of you, readers that live in the US – you’re SOOOOOOOO lucky.  Hey, there are even other nice supermarket chains that follow the Whole Foods trend.  I visited one in Vermont called City Market, there is also Wild Oats in Miami.  But I particularly like the breadth of products Whole Foods has.  I also make it a point to visit when I am in NYC.

Here are some of my new Whole Foods discoveries…

 

Sparkling Pink Grapefruit Soda

I bought this on a whim and I drank the whole bottle by myself – Perfect drink to accompany pizzas, veggie burgers or veggie hot dogs. 

Blood Orange Sherbet

Something about the blood orange flavor captured me.  Apparently I was in a very citrusy mood that day.  It’s sweet and tart at the same time… but not too sweet.  Great as a palate cleanser after a meal.

Kate’s Homemade Butter

This butter is sooooo good.  It’s creamy, salty and delicious on a toast in the morning.  It’s perfect to mash some potatoes too.  I had never bought it before my Whole Foods trip, but it is available in my neighborhood Freshmart too.

Olive Bar

Look at this… I wish I had something like this here in PR whenever I am hosting a party.  Where I could buy nice looking olives, the amount that I need and the variety I would like.  Oil cured or brined… the possibilities are endless.  Yumm!!!

 

I am traveling soon to NYC and I am indeed stopping in Whole Foods – what will I discover next????

 

Here, a message to Whole Foods management…

Please, seriously consider opening a store in the Puerto Rico market – the consumerism capital of the Latin World.  I am sure many vegetarian and health-conscious people like me feel the exact same way.  Plus, with the added price to check a luggage, the grocery trip is becoming more expensive each time.  Thanks in advance.

Spinach and Tomato Roll Call

16 Aug

I love spinach and I love tomatoes.  How many ways can I incorporate these two into a delicious meal?? Let me show you the ways:

 

No Boil-Ahead Pasta – Spinach and Tomato Version

 

Florentine Mac & Cheese with Tomato Salad

Baby Spinach and Potato Pastelón

 

Spinach and Asparagus Casserole

 

Spinach, Tomato and 5 cheese Risotto

Vegetable Noodle Soup

 

Bucatini with Spinach, Tomatoes and Goat Cheese

 

Eggless Frittatas

 

Artichoke and Spinach Casserole

 

Spinach Fettuccini with Marinated Tomatoes

 

This is it… for now.  Hope you enjoy them time and time again.

Les Francophones Get-Together

28 Jul

This has been an amazing summer so far…  Back in June, I started taking this conversational French course at L’Alliance Française.  I have mentioned to you already I take regular classes at L’Alliance, but usually we have to take a summer break and go without speaking or learning French because the courses are mostly grammar reviews for the entry level students, etc.

Well, this year they organized a conversational course where you can attend from Monday thru Thursday and take a 2hr conversational class.  No assignments, just talking and speaking in French for 2 hours straight.  The funny thing is that the class was FULL – we had almost 20 students in class every day, something only seen at the introductory French classes.

All these people are super excited about the French language.  So enthusiastic in fact, that we created a club – Les Francophones.  The first meeting of Les Francophones was held chez moi last Saturday night…  of course I had to make a French-inspired menu.  I got a little inspiration from the book that also inspired me to take up French classes again – Barefoot in Paris from Ina Garten.

 

 

Here was the menu…

Cheese Platter with Roquefort, Gruyere, Camembert and Cheddar with a selection of Strawberries, Grapes, Apples and crostinis

Rosemary Almonds

Sun-dried Tomato and Roasted Garlic Breadsticks

Brie Chaud avec Walnuts Praline et Honey

Mushroom-Stuffed Mushrooms

French Onion Soup with Gruyere croutons

Citrus Punch

And a Tarte aux Pommes that Laura brought in…

 

We had a wonderful night… we spoke mostly French all night and saw a French movie called Le Grand Chemin.  To my surprise, everyone wanted to take some of the leftovers home… everybody raved at how good the food was.

I hope this is just the first of many, many Francophones dinners/get-togethers.  But most of all I want to thank my sous-chef Annie-Mariel, Laura, Katherine, Michelle, Noreniel, Zorymar, Kristina, Nicole, Antoinette, Ana, the crew of the French frégate Cassard and L’Alliance Française for making this Summer of 2008 an unforgettable one.  I have found true friends that I hope will last for a lifetime… 

 Merci mes amis… a bientôt.