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healthy cooking tips

Eat To Live!™ with Chef Tim Johnson

IF YOU EAT IT YOU BECOME IT!

 Food Additives To Avoid



1. Sodium Nitrate (also called Sodium Nitrite)
This is a preservative, coloring, and flavoring commonly added to bacon, ham, hot dogs, luncheon meats, smoked fish, and corned beef. Studies have linked eating it to various types of cancer.

2. BHA and BHT

Butylated hydroxyanisole and butylated hydrozyttoluene are used to preserve common household foods. They are found in cereals, chewing gum, potato chips, and vegetable oils. They are oxidants, which form potentially cancer-causing reactive compounds in your body.

3. Propyl Gallate

Another preservative, often used in conjunction with BHA and BHT. It is sometimes found in meat products, chicken soup base, and chewing gum. Animals studies have suggested that it could be linked to cancer.

4. Monosodium Glutamate (MSG)

MSG is an amino acid used as a flavor enhancer in soups, salad dressings, chips, frozen entrees, and restaurant food. It can cause headaches and nausea, and animal studies link it to damaged nerve cells in the brains of infant mice.

5. Trans Fats

Trans fats are proven to cause heart disease. Restaurant food, especially fast food chains, often serve foods laden with trans fats.

6. Aspartame

Aspartame, also known by the brand names Nutrasweet and Equal, is a sweetener found in so-called diet foods such as low-calorie desserts, gelatins, drink mixes, and soft drinks. It may cause cancer or neurological problems, such as dizziness or hallucinations.

7. Acesulfame-K

This is a relatively new artificial sweetener found in baked goods, chewing gum, and gelatin desserts. There is a general concern that testing on this product has been scant, and some studies show the additive may cause cancer in rats.

8. Food Colorings: Blue 1, 2; Red 3; Green 3; Yellow 6

Five food colorings still on the market are linked with cancer in animal testing. Blue 1 and 2, found in beverages, candy, baked goods and pet food, have been linked to cancer in mice. Red 3, used to dye cherries, fruit cocktail, candy, and baked goods, has been shown to cause thyroid tumors in rats. Green 3, added to candy and beverages, has been linked to bladder cancer. The widely used yellow 6, added to beverages, sausage, gelatin, baked goods, and candy, has been linked to tumors of the adrenal gland and kidney.

9. Olestra

Olestra, a synthetic fat found in some potato chip brands, can cause severe diarrhea, abdominal cramps, and gas. Olestra also inhibits healthy vitamin absorption from fat-soluble carotenoids that are found in fruits and vegetables.

10. Potassium Bromate

Potassium bromate is used as an additive to increase volume in some white flour, breads, and rolls. It is known to cause cancer in animals, and even small amounts in bread can create a risk for humans.

11. White Sugar

Watch out for foods with added sugars, such as baked goods, cereals, crackers, sauces and many other processed foods. It is unsafe for your health, and promotes bad nutrition.

12. Sodium Chloride

A dash of sodium chloride, more commonly known as salt, can bring flavor to your meal. But too much salt can be dangerous for your health, leading to high blood pressure, heart attack, stroke, and kidney failure.

Courtesy of Healthy Cooking Tips

Chef Tim Johnson

Remember...Grace is upon you so eat to live!

MY WHAT?

Your Brain


Your brain is a three pound control center of your mind and body requiring about 20% of the blood pumping out of your heart with each and every beat.  For optimal and long-term power, your brain requires a continuous stream of nutrition and oxygen.  Research on how the brain endures the damaging effects of everyday life shows that attention to nutrition can increase your chances against deterioration of your brain at any age.

Brain cells communicate with your other cells and keep mental activities in never-ending motion.  These very busy cells consume up to five times more energy and need at least five times more blood sugar than any other part of your body.  Keeping blood vessels clear of impediments improves brain function.  The same kinds of nutrients that can boost cardiovascular health and keep blood flowing properly also aid your brain's nourishment.

Among the nutrients your brain craves are mixes of fatty acids that are incorporated into your brain cells' membranes.  These delicate membranes are crucial for communication among neurons, nerve cells in your brain.  By the time you mature, your brain contains a complicated web consisting of about 100 billion neurons linked by trillions of connections.

Within this complex system, about one-fourth of your brain's weight is fat, called lipids.  Lipids serve many important roles, which include insulating nerve fibers and acting as building blocks of cell membranes surrounding neurons.

The most important fats you need to consume to increase cognitive processes are
omega-3 fatty acids.
  These are best obtained by eating fish, nuts, seeds, and flax and hemp oils.

Fats that should be avoided are trans fatty acids, found in many refined, processed and fried foods.  These actually have detrimental effects on your brain.  Hydrogenated oils added to many cakes, cookies, boxed cereals, breads, peanut butter, margarine, microwavable meals, all chips, and about half of all refined foods sold in containers are slow poisons.  These possess physical characteristics that, when incorporated in cell membranes, radically alter their performance.

One hour after eating a fatty meal, blood cells begin to stick together.  Within six hours the "clumping" is so severe that blood flow actually stops in small blood vessels.  In addition, eating fatty foods decreases the bloods oxygen supply by 20%.  The electrical communications between cells can be hindered.  The flow of the bioelectrical current crucial to proper neuron function can be altered.  Membranes can stiffen making them less flexible and potentially slowing your mental abilities as the harmful fats interfere with the normal flow of molecules in and out of brain cells.

Kids that eat too many of the fatty treats sold in supermarkets like candy bars, pastries, etc, may consequently suffer learning difficulties.

Your brain does require a steady, large supply of blood sugar.  These are easily supplied by eating whole grain foods like brown rice, whole wheat and oats.  B vitamins are also a good bet.  In fact, they are called the mental health vitamin.  But, metabolizing excess sugar depletes B vitamins in your body and at times there's not enough left over to produce great mental and emotional chemistry.  B vitamins are found in lean meats, whole grain foods, dried beans and peas, sunflower seeds and nuts, green leafy vegetables, cheese, yogurt and tofu.

Your brain's large concentration of fat makes it vulnerable to destructive free radicals.  To protect brain cells, the body produces an amino acid called glutathione, which helps defuse the destructive force and help salvage oxidized vitamin C so it can continue to act as an antioxidant.

Natural chemicals called polyphenols can aid in the protection of lipids in brain cell membranes.  Rich sources of polyphenols include red wine, green tea, and soy.
 
Courtesy of Healthy Cooking Tips
 
 Chef Tim Johnson
Remember...Grace is upon you so eat to live!™

YOUR BRAIN ON LIFE

Mind and Spirit


We are citizens of the "information age" and, in so being, have a tendency toward mental hyperactivity.  Excessive thought, worry and ultimately stress become commonplace.  This, too, affects our health. 

Calming the mind and spirit are important parts of restoring health.  And, conversely, restoring health calms the mind and spirit.  Avoiding foods and habits that scatter the mind (rich foods, refined sugar, alcohol, coffee, eating too late and too large of meals) and a simple diet with perhaps occasional light fasting goes a long way toward building inner peace.

Denatured, devitalized, deficient foods may very well create denatured, devitalized, deficient lives.  Depression, isolation, insecurities, fears, intense anxiety… Life depleting food intake becomes brain chemistry influencing thinking and emotion.  Foods can drive emotions and passionate desire, emotional heat, and even social disarray.

Nutritional science now understands that the amino acid tyrosine, which is abundantly supplied in protein-rich diets, produces in the brain the chemical dopamine.  Dopamine causes enhanced activity and aggression.  Excesses of spices, refined sugar treats, meats, and poor quality fats ultimately lead to nervousness, agitation, and depletion.

Complex carbohydrates and dairy products promote brain chemistry rich in tryptophan, seratonin and melatonin.  When these substances are abundant in the body they promote calmness, deep sleep, strong immunity and a relaxed, focused mind.  Emotions, body and intellect are harmonized.

A great many people in the so-called "advanced" civilizations of the world suffer from stagnation and degeneration of the mind and body.  These problems can manifest themselves in dark obsessions and dull, warped personality traits. 

Our emotions can take the shape of desires and cravings.  Nervous systems, hearts and minds degenerate as well as the body. 

Today exists epidemics of cancer, tumors, heart disease, emotional and mental diseases, sexually transmitted diseases, and moral and spiritual degenerations. 

Many of us are blindly addicted to pre-packaged, processed and very rich tasting foods, excessive and poor quality meats, intoxicants of one kind or another, overly sweet, spicy, salty and fatty foods, and actually have no sense of diet other than mindless desires.  And, we wonder why so many of us are unable to sleep well or concentrate, why we're angry or resentful, depressed or despondent, sick and tired, and disillusioned with life or without hope.

Increasing numbers of children are diagnosed each year with attention deficit disorder (ADD).  Adult attention deficit disorder (AADD) is being diagnosed with progressing rapidity.  Melancholy, despair and other aspects of mental depression are now more common than ever.  People today have ten times the depression rate of our parents and grandparents.

We will fail to survive if we continue this way. 

Not only are deadly diseases and pollution proliferating but sperm counts in industrialized countries have dropped 50% on average and are predicted to be near zero within the next few generations!  We could soon be extinct if our health and awareness aren't drastically changed.

If the results of our choices in life are intolerable - disease, pain, and mental disparity - we need only make better choices!

As your health improves you'll have fewer feelings of hopelessness and separation and gain a greater sense of belonging and unity.  Stress melts away and you'll feel light, clear, easy, and content.

Foods that help depression are brown rice, cucumbers, apples, cabbage, fresh wheat germ, and apple cider vinegar.  Including one in each meal is adequate.

The American medical and research communities have totally overlooked diet and nutrition as an impact on our health, including mental health.  Six of the ten principles of death pertain directly to diet.  Yet only some medical schools even offer a basic course in nutrition.

Doctors have a tendency to learn about nutrition within the narrow area of the illnesses they treat.  Cardiologists can tell you plenty about fat and cholesterol.  Rheumatologists know calcium and vitamin D.  OB/GYN doctors know folic acid.  Cancer specialists know about fiber and fat - not necessarily the fact that broccoli can prevent cancer because it contains sulforophane, which causes the liver to produce an enzyme that blocks carcinogenic activity (also present in cabbage and brussel sprouts).  But few know any more about nutrition than the average person. 

How often does your doctor ask you what you eat?
 
Courtesy of Healthy Cooking Tips
 
Chef Tim Johnson
Remember...Grace is upon you so eat to live!™
 
 
 

REBUILDING,MIND,BODY AND SOUL

How to Buy
Nutritional Foods


If you've been following along with the sequence of this site, there's only one more thing we need to discuss:  How to successfully apply all this to your life.
 
The first step is to go grocery shopping keeping these things in mind:

-Never go grocery shopping on an empty stomach. That's rule number one.

-Rule number two is shop the perimeter of your food store. The fruits and vegetables (organic is best), nuts and seeds (in the shells only), dairy (skip the margarine), and meat (buy lean) departments.

-Only go down the aisles for destination items like brown rice, dried beans and peas. 

-Don't go down the canned food or cereal aisles.  Don't even think about frozen dinners!

-You probably won't be able to get unrefined oils at your local supermarket. You will probably have to get them at your health food store. Even if the canola oil on your grocery shelf says 100% pure, it is refined and rancid. And, by the way, just because a food item is at the health food store, it's not necessarily healthy. 

-Read the labels.  Look for "unrefined", skip anything that includes the words "hydrogenated", "partially hydrogenated", "enriched" or "fortified".  Be careful not to be deceived. 

- Learn more about wholesome products and how to identify them.

It's not going to be difficult to make wholesome meals.  It's just a matter of getting used to a new way of doing things.  Change is sometimes hard to do at first but if you stick with it, it will get easy.  Eat simply.  Feel the difference!  Notice how your mind and body feel clearer, brighter, and stronger!
Courtesy of Healthy Cooking Tips
Chef Tim Johnson
Remember...Grace is upon you so eat to live!™
 

MY INSPIRATION

     Health and Nutrition
 
 
At no time in history has there been as much concern over nutrition as at present. As scientific understanding of nutrition grows, restauranteurs are feeling the pressure. It is unquestionably the responsibility of chefs to provide their clientele with healthful, nutritious food.

Many chefs feel a responsibility not only to provide such foods, but also to help educate their customers about nutrition. They welcome the challenge to develop menus that offer good health as well as good taste. They may, for example, supplement their regular menus with “spa” menus or “healthy” menus offering special dishes low in fat, calories, and sodium.

Or they may include such dishes on their regular menus and highlight these items with asterisks or other symbols. On the other hand, many operators insist, “I’m running a restaurant, not a hospital.” Not a few restauranteurs have had the experience of investing time and money in developing nutritional menus that people claimed they wanted, only to have the menus fail because no one ordered them.

It is important for cooks to find some kind of balance. Restaurants are businesses and can be successful only if they offer people what they want. Preaching to customers about the dangers of eating the wrong foods is not a formula for success.

On the other hand, a responsible operator will work to prepare healthful, nutritious food that people will order because it is flavorful and enjoyable to eat in addition to being good for them.

 

  Courtesy of Healthy Cooking Tips
 
 Chef tim Johnson
 
Remember...Grace is upon you so eat to live! ™

AS IT WAS, SO SHALL IT BE

Top Ten Reasons to Go Vegetarian



Gone are the days when vegetarians were served up a plate of iceberg lettuce and a dull-as-dishwater baked potato. With the growing variety of vegetarian faux-meats like bacon and sausages and an ever-expanding variety of vegetarian cookbooks and restaurants, vegetarianism has taken the world by storm.

With World Vegetarian Week here, without further ado, are the Top 10 reasons to give vegetarian eating a try, starting now!

1. Helping Animals Also Helps the Global Poor
While there is ample and justified moral indignation about the diversion of 100 million tons of grain for biofuels, more than seven times as much (760 million tons) is fed to farmed animals so that people can eat meat. Is the diversion of crops to our cars a moral issue? Yes, but it's about one-eighth the issue that meat-eating is. Care about global poverty? Try vegetarianism.

2. Eating Meat Supports Cruelty to Animals
The green pastures and idyllic barnyard scenes of years past are now distant memories. On today's factory farms, animals are crammed by the thousands into filthy windowless sheds, wire cages, gestation crates, and other confinement systems. These animals will never raise families, root in the soil, build nests, or do anything else that is natural and important to them. They won't even get to feel the warmth of the sun on their backs or breathe fresh air until the day they are loaded onto trucks bound for slaughter.

3. Eating Meat Is Bad for the Environment
A recent United Nations report entitled Livestock's Long Shadow concludes that eating meat is "one of the ... most significant contributors to the most serious environmental problems, at every scale from local to global." In just one example, eating meat causes almost 40 percent more greenhouse-gas emissions than all the cars, trucks, and planes in the world combined. The report concludes that the meat industry "should be a major policy focus when dealing with problems of land degradation, climate change and air pollution, water shortage and water pollution, and loss of biodiversity."

4. Avoid Bird Flu
The World Health Organization says that if the avian flu virus mutates, it could be caught simply by eating undercooked chicken flesh or eggs, eating food prepared on the same cutting board as infected meat or eggs, or even touching eggshells contaminated with the disease. Other problems with factory farming -- from foot-and-mouth to SARS -- can be avoided with a general shift to a vegetarian diet.

5. If You Wouldn't Eat a Dog, You Shouldn't Eat a Chicken
Several recent studies have shown that chickens are bright animals who are able to solve complex problems, demonstrate self-control, and worry about the future. Chickens are smarter than cats and dogs and even do some things that have not yet been seen in mammals other than primates. Dr. Chris Evans, who studies animal behavior and communication at Macquarie University in Australia, says, "As a trick at conferences, I sometimes list these attributes, without mentioning chickens and people think I'm talking about monkeys."

6. Heart Disease: Our Number One Killer
Healthy vegetarian diets support a lifetime of good health and provide protection against numerous diseases, including the United States' three biggest killers: heart disease, cancer, and strokes. Drs. Dean Ornish and Caldwell Esselstyn -- two doctors with 100 percent success in preventing and reversing heart disease -- have used a vegan diet to accomplish it, as chronicled most recently in Dr. Esselstyn's Prevent and Reverse Heart Disease, which documents his 100 percent success rate for unclogging people's arteries and reversing heart disease.

7. Cancer: Our Number Two Killer
Dr. T. Colin Campbell is one of the world's foremost epidemiological scientists and the director of what The New York Times called "the most comprehensive large study ever undertaken of the relationship between diet and the risk of developing disease." Dr. Campbell's best-selling book, The China Study, is a must-read for anyone who is concerned about cancer. To summarize it, Dr. Campbell states, "No chemical carcinogen is nearly so important in causing human cancer as animal protein."

8. Fitting Into That Itty-Bitty Bikini
Vegetarianism is also the ultimate weight-loss diet, since vegetarians are one-third as likely to be obese as meat-eaters are, and vegans are about one-tenth as likely to be obese. Of course, there are overweight vegans, just as there are skinny meat-eaters. But on average, vegans are 10 to 20 percent lighter than meat-eaters. A vegetarian diet is the only diet that has passed peer review and taken weight off and kept it off.

9. Global Peace
Leo Tolstoy claimed that "vegetarianism is the taproot of humanitarianism." His point? For people who wish to sow the seeds of peace, we should be eating as peaceful a diet as possible. Eating meat supports killing animals, for no reason other than humans' acquired taste for animals' flesh. Great humanitarians from Leo Tolstoy and Mahatma Gandhi to Thich Nhat Hanh have argued that a vegetarian diet is the only diet for people who want to make the world a kinder place.

10. The Joy of Veggies
As the growing range of vegetarian cookbooks and restaurants shows, vegetarian foods rock. People report that when they adopt a vegetarian diet, their range of foods explodes from a center-of-the-plate meat item to a range of grains, legumes, fruits, and vegetables that they didn't even know existed.

Sir Paul McCartney sums it all up, "If anyone wants to save the planet, all they have to do is just stop eating meat. That's the single most important thing you could do. It's staggering when you think about it. Vegetarianism takes care of so many things in one shot: ecology, famine, cruelty."

So are you ready to give it a try?

Courtesy of Healthy Cooking Tips

Chef Tim Johnson

Remember...Grace is upon you so eat to live!

HEALTHY CHOICES

Spinach Salad with Strawberries


 

This Spinach Salad may be prepared before the serving, but the dressing for this Spinach Salad with Strawberries may be prepared few hours before serving.

Take a large salad bowl and sprinkle sesame seeds of spinach in the bowl.  Add some strawberries to the salad.  After you have done this, combine the dressing ingredients provided below and shake well in a screw-top jar and chill.

This is a very simple Spinach Salad to prepare with Strawberries.  After you have parepared the dressing pour chilled dressing over the mixture of spinach salad and strawberry in bowl and toss to distribute well.

The ingredients for Spinach Salad with Strawberries.

  • Take1/2 teaspoon Toasted sesame seeds
  • 2-3 cus of fresh strawberries, hulled and halved if large
  • About 6 cups of Fresh Spinach torn leaves
  • 1/4 cup Olive Oil
  • 1.5 tablespoons sugar
  • 1/8 teaspoon Onion powder
  • 2 tablespoons of Red wine vinegar
  • 1/2 teaspoon Dried dill weed
  • 1/8 teaspoon Garlic powder
  • 1/8 teaspoon Dry mustard

Enjoy this Spinach Salad on your table.

Courtesy of Healthy Cooking Tips

Chef Tim Johnson

Remember...Grace is upon you so eat to live!

HOW TO

Modifying a Recipe to be Healthier

 

The USDA Dietary Guidelines for Americans emphasizes we need to reduce the amount of fat, sodium (salt) and added sugar we consume and increase our consumption of fiber. When buying food we can check the label, but when using a recipe we may need to make some changes by substituting ingredients or changing the cooking technique. Just like you substitute when you are out of a certain ingredient, you can make changes in a recipe so it is healthier.

This fact sheet provides you with ways to decrease the amount of fat, calories, sugar and salt (sodium) in your recipes. Ways to increase the fiber in your recipes is provided to help you make more nutritious food. Remember you can experiment with recipes and change ingredients. You may also be able to find other recipes that are similar to yours that have less fat, sugar, salt, and have more additions of nutritious ingredients. Have fun when you are cooking: Experiment!

Tips to decrease the total fat and lower calories

Instead of this: Try using this:
Shortening, butter, margarine, or solid fat. Use ¼ less liquid oil or solid fat called for in the recipe. If recipe calls for 1 cup use ¾ cup. If recipe uses ¼ cup shortening, use 3 Tablespoons oil. Use equal amounts of oil for melted shortening, margarine or butter.
Shortening, butter, or oil in baking Use applesauce or prune puree for half of the butter, shortening or oil. May need to reduce baking time by 25%.
Instead of whole milk, half and half or evaporated milk Use skim milk, Skim Plus™, 1% milk, evaporated skim milk, fat-free half and half , or plain soymilk with calcium.
Butter, shortening, margarine, or oil to prevent sticking. Fat to sauté or stir-fry. When frying foods use cooking spray, water, broth or nonstick pans.
Full-fat cream cheese Use low-fat or nonfat cream cheese, Neufchatel or low-fat cottage cheese pureed until smooth.
Full-fat sour cream
Full-fat cottage cheese
Full-fat Ricotta cheese
Use nonfat or reduced fat sour cream or fat-free plain yogurt. (Yogurt is not heat stable.) Use 2% or fat-free cottage cheese. Use part-skim ricotta.
Cream
Whipping cream
Use evaporated skim milk
Use nonfat whipped topping or cream (This is only nonfat if one serving size is used.)
Eggs Use egg whites (usually 2 egg whites for every egg) or ¼ cup egg substitute.
Whole fat cheese Use reduced fat cheese, but add it at the end of the baking time or use part skim mozzarella.
Frying in fat Use cooking methods such as bake, boil, broil, grill, poach, roast, stir-fry, or microwave.
Regular mayonnaise or salad dressing Use low fat, reduced or nonfat mayonnaise or salad dressing.
Canned fish Use water-packed canned products or canned products packed in ‘lite’ syrup.
Fatter cuts of meatt—skin on Leaner cuts of meat or ground meat, remove skin before cooking.

Tips to reduce sodium:

Instead of this: Try using this:
Salt Omit salt or reduce salt by ½ in most recipes (except in products with yeast). Cook foods without adding salt. Don’t put the salt shaker on the table.
Frozen or canned vegetables Choose frozen vegetables without sauces or use no-salt-added canned goods. Rinsing canned vegetables will help reduce sodium.
Seasoning Salt or spice mixes with salt Use salt-free seasonings and spice mixes. Use herbs, spices, lemon juice, or vinegar to flavor food instead of salt. Seasonings high in sodium include catsup, chili sauce, chili powder, bouillon cubes, barbecue sauce, soy sauce, Worcestershire sauce, and meat tenderizers.

Tips to reduce the amount of sugar:

Instead of this: Try using this:
Sugar Reducing sugar by ¼ to 1/3 in baked goods and desserts. If recipe calls for 1 cup, use 2/3 cup. Cinnamon, vanilla, and almond extract can be added to give impression of sweetness. (Do not remove all sugar in yeast breads as sugar provides food for the yeast.)
Sugar Replacing sugar with amounts of sucralose (*Splenda™), works well for most baked products.   Add ½ teaspoon baking soda in addition to each cup of Splenda™ used. Baking time is usually shorter and product will have a smaller yield. Try using aspartame (*NutraSweet™), saccharin, or acesulfame potassium in other products that are not baked. The sweet taste will vary with product combination or amounts of each sweetener used.
Fruit-flavored yogurt Plain yogurt with fresh fruit slices or use light versions of yogurt.
Syrup Pureed fruit, such as no sugar added applesauce, or sugar-free syrup
Sugar in canned or frozen fruits Decrease or eliminate sugar when canning or freezing fruits or buy unsweetened frozen fruit or fruit canned in its own juice, water, or light syrup.

Ways to increase Fiber:

Instead of: Try using this:
White rice, enriched grains Whole grain, brown rice, wild rice, whole cornmeal (not degermed), whole barley, bulgur, kasha, quinoa, or whole wheat couscous.
All purpose flour Substitute whole wheat flour for up to ½ of the flour. For example, if a recipe calls for 2 cups flour, try 1 cup all purpose flour and 1 cup minus 1 tablespoon whole wheat flour. Use “white whole-wheat flour” or “whole wheat pastry flour” for total amount of all-purpose flour.
Pastas, crackers, cookies, cereals Whole grain pastas, crackers, cookies, and cereals.
White bread 100% whole wheat bread and 100% whole grain bread.
Iceberg lettuce Romaine lettuce, endive, and other leafy lettuces, or baby spinach.
Meat Use more dried beans and peas. Add legumes and lentils to many different dishes: try adding lentils to your spaghetti sauce.
Peeled fruit and vegetables Add extra fruits and vegetables, such as adding carrots to spaghetti sauce, leaving apple peels in apple crisp, zucchini bread, etc. Add extra fruits and vegetables to recipes and include the peel when appropriate.

* Use of brand name does not mean an endorsement of the product.

Courtesy of Healthy Cooking Tips

Chef Tim Johnson

Remember...Grace is upon you so eat to live!

LUNCH or DINNER

Asian Chicken Salad with Snap Peas and Bok Choy

 

Ingredients

2 skinless boneless chicken breast halves (about 1 pound)
5 fresh cilantro sprigs plus 1/3 cup chopped cilantro
1 whole green onion plus 2 green onions, chopped
1 8-ounce package sugar snap peas
3 baby bok choy, thinly sliced crosswise
1 English hothouse cucumber, quartered lengthwise, thinly sliced crosswise
1 red jalapeño chile, thinly sliced
1/4 cup ponzu*
2 1/2 tablespoons seasoned rice vinegar
2 1/2 tablespoons vegetable oil
1 tablespoon minced peeled fresh ginger

Preparation

Fill medium skillet with salted water; bring to boil. Add chicken breasts, cilantro sprigs, and whole green onion; reduce heat to medium and poach chicken until just cooked through, about 20 minutes. Using tongs, transfer chicken to plate; cool. Add snap peas to same skillet; increase heat to high and cook until crisp-tender, about 1 minute.

Drain; rinse snap peas under cold water to cool. Discard whole green onion and cilantro sprigs. Coarsely shred chicken. Toss chicken, chopped cilantro, chopped green onions, snap peas, and next 3 ingredients in large bowl. Whisk ponzu, vinegar, oil, and ginger in small bowl. Add dressing to salad; toss to coat. Season to taste with salt and pepper.

Courtesy of Healthy Cooking Tips

Chef Tim Johnson

Remember...Grace is upon you so eat to live!

HOW SWEET IT IS

Nutrasweet - the History of this Toxic Chemical and Its Promotion



In December of 1965, while James Schlatter, a chemist for G.D. Searle & Company, was working on an anti-ulcer drug candidate he accidentally discovered aspartame. He was recrystallizing aspartame from ethanol when the mixture spilled onto the outside of the flask he was using. Some of the powder landed on his fingers. Schlatter discovered the sweet taste of aspartame when he absent-mindedly licked his finger later. He realized that the sweet taste must have been the aspartame.

The first report of the discovery of the artificial sweetener was in the Journal of the American Chemical Society. It stated:

"We wish to report another accidental discovery of an organic compound with a profound sucrose (table sugar) like taste... Preliminary tasting showed this compound to have a potency of 100-200 times sucrose depending on concentration and on what other flavors are present and to be devoid of unpleasant aftertaste."

G.D. Searle has spent the last 40 years aggressively and recklessly promoting their accidental discovery with total disregard to the evidence they have gathered that show how dangerous and toxic this chemical is to human beings.

As early as 1984, studies were performed that clearly indicated the toxicity of Nutrasweet (aspartame) to living organisms. In 1984, the State of Arizona completed studies showing that aspartame in carbonated beverages can break down into free methanol (among other things) in 99°F temperatures. Compare this to human beings' average body temperature and we begin to see a problem.

On May 13, 1998, the University of Barcelona produced a study clearly showing that Aspartame was transformed into formaldehyde in the bodies of the living creatures, and that upon later examination the formaldehyde had spread throughout the vital organs of their bodies.

The chemical breakdown of Aspartame in the human body is as follows:

Methanol, from Aspartame, is released in the small intestine when it meets the enzyme chymotrypsin.

The methanol is then converted to formaldehyde. The formaldehyde is next converted to formic acid. Formic acid is toxic and is commonly used as an activator to strip epoxy and urethane coatings. Phenylalanine and aspartic acid (90% of Aspartame) are amino acids normally used in the synthesis of protoplasm when supplied by the foods eaten. When unaccompanied by other amino acids, they become neurotoxic.

The FDA has established at least 92 medical/health problems that have symptoms associated with Aspartame. These include abdominal pain, anxiety attacks, Arthritis, Asthma and asthmatic reactions, bloating, edema , blood sugar control problems, brain cancer, breathing difficulties, burning eyes or throat, burning urination, chest pains, chronic cough, chronic fatigue, confusion, death, depression, diarrhea, dizziness, excessive thirst or hunger, flushing of face, hair loss or thinning of hair, headaches/migraines, dizziness, hearing loss, heart palpitations, hives , hypertension, impotency and sexual problems, insomnia, irritability, joint pains, laryngitis, marked personality changes, memory loss, menstrual problems or changes, migraines and severe headaches, muscle spasms, nausea or vomiting, seizures and convulsions, slurring of speech, swallowing pain, tachycardia, tremors, tinnitus, vertigo, vision loss, and weight gain.

Aspartame disease mimics the symptoms and many times worsens the following diseases:

Fibromyalgia, Arthritis, Multiple Sclerosis, Parkinson's Disease, Lupus, Diabetes, Epilepsy, Alzheimer's Disease, birth defects, Chronic Fatigue Syndrome, Lymphoma, Lyme Disease, and Attention Deficit Disorder.

These studies were destroyed and kept from the public and from health investigators.

Courtesy of Healthy Cooking Tips

Chef Tim Johnson

Remember...Grace is upon you so eat to live!

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