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Some Earthly Eating Knowledge-(Count Down To Christmas Recipe Of Sweets-Day 2)

Monday, December 24th, 2007

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• Cashews are more than just nuts. Allergic reactions to cashews are even more severe than those to peanuts. Since cashews may be hidden in a variety of processed foods (from cakes and chocolate to Asian meals and pesto sauce), it’s important to read all ingredients labesl very carefully to insure you don’t have a reaction and are at a loss as to where the reactions started from.

• If you are looking for a great soda to quinch your thrist and not give you any other unnecessary ingredients, then check out airforce® Nutrisodas®. They’re delicious, refreshingly carbonated nutrient-enhanced sodas with zero sugar, caffeine, sodium or aspartame. Natural fruit flavors, with meaningful levels of vitamins and minerals. They even have a drink option for ones trying to quit smoking.

• Is it a Spice or an herb? Although the same plant might be considered both a spice and an herb, the difference lies in the way the plant is used. A spice is any various aromatic vegetable products such as pepper or nutmeg is used to season or flavor foods. An herb is a plant or plant part valued for its medicinal, or aromatic qualities. Before using an herb or a spice for medicinal reason, do your research to ensure you are using it for the correct reasons.

• During the winter the main issue most parents have is cold and sniffles with their children. Hyland’s homeopathic children’s cold remedy, Sniffles ‘n Sneezes is a great way to nix those winter issues. Cutting the duration of colds by almost half, these quick-dissolving tablets relieve cold symptoms using all-natural ingredients with no adverse side effects.

**Utah opened the bowls with a 35-32 victory over Navy. That means Bowl season is under way. Over at NCAA Endzone, Matthew Andenora has the full story behind what’s coming up and what’s happening now.**
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Earthly Eating Recipe-Count Down To Christmas Recipe Of Sweets

Papaya-Blueberry Smoothies
Serves: 8

6 cups papaya, peeled, seeded and diced
4 cups orange juice or pineapple juice
3 cups ice cubes
2 cups lowfat milk or soymilk
2 cups blueberries, fresh or frozen and thawed
2 cups vanilla, mango or peach lowfat yogurt
3 bananas
Honey, to taste

1. Working in batches, place one-third of the ingredients in the blender and pulse until smooth.

2. Pour into a pitcher and repeat with remaining ingredients.

3. Chill until ready to serve.

4. Stir well before serving.

Happy Eating!

Making Candy Cane Milk-(Count Down To Christmas Recipe Of Sweets-Day 14)

Wednesday, December 12th, 2007

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Use seedless strawberry or raspberry jam. (Using seedless for this fun treat is better because it won’t have more of a tendency to run faster down the side of the glass.) Or use fruit flavord syrup. The same kind you would buy for your banana split or ice cream sundae.

Be sure and use a glass that has smooth sides on the inside and not a pattern within the glass. This will make it harder for the jam or syrup to stick to the sides of the glass.

Using a spatula or knife, make thin stripes or spirals even down the sides of the inside of the glass. You can make your childs name or even designs of your liking.

It is best to put the glass in the freezer for about 20-30 minutes. It will stay on the glass longer this way and not run down the sides of the glass when the liquid is added, plus an added bonus is, the chilled glass is great for ice cold milk.

When you pour the milk in make sure it is in the middle of the glass and not down the sides, so that your jelly or syrup doesn’t get mixed into the milk when it is added.

If you don’t frost the glass in the freezer after adding the the jam the stripes will hold for about 20 minutes and then they will begin to incorporate into the milk.

For a black and white version, try chocolate syrup and while chocolate syrup. For a creamier version try butterscotch or carmel. You can even go as far as melting white chocolate chips in the microwave in a microwave safe bowl and use the melted chips as the stripes. (This fun treat can also be used with sugar-free jams and syrups, as well as soy milk and goats milk.)

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**Do you fear god? Bridget Wright over at Spirituality Guide does and she states the reason you should as well. Read them here.**
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Earthly Eating Recipe-Count Down To Christmas Recipe Of Sweets

Cheesecake Minis
Serves: 12 (Makes 1 dozen)

12 vanilla wafers
1 phg. (8 oz.) Cream Cheese, softened
1/3 cup sugar
1 tub (8 oz.) Whipped topping, thawed, and divided
1/4 cup Flake coconut, toasted
12 paper cupcake liners

Place 1 wafer on the bottom of each 12-paper-lined medium muffin cups; set aside. Beat cream cheese and sugar in a large bowl with an electric mixer on medium speed until well blended. Add 2 1/4 cups of the whipped topping; and mix well. Spoon evenly into the muffin cups.

Cover and refrigerate 3 hours or overnight. Spread tops with remaining whipped topping. Sprinkle coconut just before serving. Store leftover cheesecakes in the refrigerator.

Happy Eating!

What Is The Wiser Choice? (Count Down To Christmas Recipe Of Sweets-19)

Friday, December 7th, 2007

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• Eggs or Egg Beaters? Egg Beaters has less fat and cholesterol than eggs so its is healthier?
Actually: Egg consumption is not linked to heart disease, as many people still think. Eggs are actually an excellent, inexpensive source of essential nutrients. Much of the best things for you are in the yolks of eggs. This part of missing for the Egg Beaters variety. Egg Beaters includes vitamins, such as A, D, and E, but real eggs still have a nutritional edge. Specifically, eggs supply micronutrients such as choline, which is essential for healthy brain and central nervous system functioning and zeaxanthin and lutein, carotenoids that protect your eyes from cataracts and macular degeneration. They also contain vitamin K, which helps build strong bones, guards against cell damage and encourages healthy blood clotting.

• Soy Milk or Cow’s Milk? Anything made from soy is the healthier choice?

Actually, the low-fat versions of both soy and cow’s milk have about 80-100 calories, 8 grams of protein (soy has about 6 grams of protein), 10 grams of carbs and 2 grams of fat. Because soy comes from plants and is often fortified, it also delivers phytochemicals such as isoflavones that may help protect your heart as well as vitamins and the minerals, folate, selenium and zinc, which you don’t get from regular milk. Just make sure any soy milk you buy is fortified with vitamin D, an essential nutrient for bone health.

• Butter or Margarine? Margarine is better for the heart than butter?

Actually, stick with the margarine, but not with the sticks. Hard stick margarine contains dangerous trans fats. But there are a number of tub margarines that not only leave out trans fats, but also contain plant sterols that interfere with cholesterol absorption in the body, so they can help lower LDL cholesterol levels and protect against heart disease. Look for brands like Benecol and Smart Balance that are trans-fat free and heart smart.

• Veggie or Meat Burgers? If it’s vegetarian, it must be good for me?
Actually, if you’re a vegetarian, the choice is obvious. But if you’re making the switch for health reasons, you may be surprised. Health-­conscious eaters often choose veggie burgers because they’re lower in fat and calories than ground beef, though if you buy lean ground beef, the difference is less dramatic. A quarter-pound burger made with lean beef contains 5 grams of fat and 140 calories, compared with 3 grams of fat and 90 calories in a Boca burger. But the beef patty also has nearly twice the protein (23 grams, as compared with 14 grams in a soy burger) as well as healthy doses of other essential vitamins and minerals such as zinc, selenium and choline. Veggie burgers have the advantage of being easier to prepare because they’re precooked. But there’s room for both in your diet.

• Pasta or Rice? Pasta is the carbo-loading king, but rice is better because it’s a whole grain?
Actually, the whole-grain or brown varieties of both are a healthy choice. Each supplies about 35 grams of slow-burning complex carbs and between 150 and 170 calories per serving. Whole-wheat pasta often delivers more protein and tends to have more fiber, as much as 6 grams for whole-wheat spaghetti compared with just 2 grams for quick-cooking brown rice. But there are advantages to both: Brown rice is rich in heart-healthy antioxidants called lignans, for instance, which you won’t get from eating pasta. When you’re trying to decide between one healthy food and another, the best choice is often both. When it comes to your diet, variety is almost always best. (Source: Some information pulled from Bicycling 2007)

**Over at Discussing Autism, Marcie has a gingerbread train recipe that is great for kids at any stage. It is allergy-free approved and great for kids to help in the making process. Read her story and get the recipe here.**
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Earthly Eating Recipe: Count Down To Christmas Recipe Of Sweets

Pumpkin-Coconut Flan
Serves: 8

1/4 cup water
1 1/2 cup sugar, divided
5 eggs
1 can (15 oz.) pumpkin purée
1 can (12 oz.) low-fat evaporated milk
1 cup coconut
2 tsp. vanilla extract
2 tsp. ground cinnamon
1 tsp. ground allspice
1/2 tsp. ground nutmeg
1/2 tsp. ground ginger
1/2 cup toasted unsweetened coconut (optional)
1 cup lightly sweetened whipped cream (optional)

1. Preheat oven to 300°F. Have a 9″ or 10″ round baking dish ready.

2. Heat water and 1 cup sugar in a small, heavy-bottom saucepan over medium heat. Once sugar starts to melt, stir constantly using a wooden spoon until the sugar turns a rich carmel color.

3. Pour browned sugar into a baking dish, tilting the pan to coat the bottom evenly.

4. Place baking dish into a larger baking pan. Set aside.

5. Whisk together eggs, pumpkin, evaporated milk, coconut milk, vanilla, spices, and remaining sugar. Pour custard into sugar-coated baking dish.

6. Pour hot water into larger baking pan so that it reaches halfway up the side of the smaller baking dish.

7. Bake 60-to-70 minutes until the center is set. Cover and chill at least 2 hours before serving.

8. To serve, run a kniofe around the edge of the flan, place serving platter on top of the baking dish and invert. Carefully remove the baking dish.

9. If desired, top with whipped cream and toasted almonds.

Happy Eating!

How To Get The Right Milk

Monday, November 26th, 2007

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Decoding the labels from conventional to organic to soy milk can be over whelming. To help you choose the healthiest and most delicious milk, here’s some hints in the different categories so you can choose just the right one for your family or yourself.

• Conventional: Cow’s milk is an excellent source of high-quality protein and eight vitamins and minerals: Calcium, niacin, phosphorous, potassium, riboflavin, and vitamins A, B12, and D. It is recommended that every person more than two years old drink skim or one percent milk in order to limit the consumption of artery-clogging saturated fat. An eight-ounce serving of whole milk contains 150 calories and eight grams of fat. Two precent milk contains 120 calories and five grams of fat. One precent milk contains 100 calories and 2.5 grams of fgat. And skim milk contains just 80 calories and 0 grams of fat. Skim milk is also less likely to contain toxins as well. The bottom line: This milk is the cheapest, but the savings may be hard to justify if you are concerned about health issues and the welfare of animals.

• Made Without Artifical Hormones: This means that the cows were not given the synthetic bovine growth hormones rbST to incease production. The bottom line: You may pay a bit more for artifical-hormone-free milk and you won’t taste a difference, but the quality is better. Healthier cows, give healthier milk.

• Organic: Organic milk comes from cows that are not treated with synthetic growth hormones and antibiotics and whose feed is free of animal by-products, prohibited pesticides, and animal waste in their feed product. The bottom line: You will pay up to twice as much per gallon as for conventional milk because most organic dairies are small-scale farms that don’t have the capacity to mass produce. But you will notice a difference in taste and you will get a big nutritional boost.

• Soy: Made with the liquid extracted from soybeans, this milk has a taste that varies from beany and thin to sweet and velvety, depending on the brand and flavor (it’s available in vanilla, mocha, and strawberry, to name a few). The bottom line: Just like soy burgers, soy milk is an appreciated taste. But the nutritional value over cow’s milk is there and will be noticed within the health of your whole body over all. Introducing soy milk into your diet is wise and to start, try adding soy milk flavors to your coffee or even bran cereal in the morning.

**Are you looking for that alternative to the everyday run of the mill, “You Cut” trees? Over at Earthly Garden here at 451 Press, Susan Walsh has some splendid ideas on that very topic. Live trees are beginning to become more popular in homes, and it helps the earth as well. Check out her posting and bring a live tree into your own home this season.**
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Earthly Eating Recipe:

Confetti Breakfast Burrito
Serves: 4

2 large eggs
4 egg whites
2 tsp. olive oil
1 medium tomato, seeded and chopped
1/4 cup diced green pepper
1/4 cup diced red pepper
1/4 cup diced yellow squash
1/4 cup chopped green onion
Salt and freshly ground pepper, to taste
Cayenne pepper, to taste (optional)
4 tbs. soy bacon bits, to taste (optional)
4 whole-wheat tortillas, room temperature or warmed

1. In a medium bowl, beat egg with egg whites. Set aside.

2. Heat olive oil in a nonstick skillet over medium heat. When oil is hot, add tomato, peppers, squash, and onion. Cook 3 minutes, stirring constantly.

3. Add eggs and scramble with a fork.

4. Add salt, pepper and cayenne pepper, if using.

5. When eggs are cooked, stir in soy bacon bits, if using them.

6. Divide eggs evenly onto tortillas. Roll up tightly, burrito style, and serve immediately.

Happy Eating!

Some Earthly Eating Knowledge (Day 3 of Low-Fat Eating)

Wednesday, November 14th, 2007

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The Truth About Folic Acid:
Foods to which folic acid has been added (like cerals and pasta) are what’s really responsible for the recent improvements in folic-acid blood levels not in dietary supplements found in common form which is unfortified items as recently thought.

How To Build Your Own Food Pyramid:
If the food pyramid was based on your eating habits instead of the ideal diet from the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA), what would it look like? Go to USDA/CNPP. Click on the link under the “Healthy Eating Index” , register and list your lastest meals. In return, you will get a non-hold-barred analysis of your diet, including a personalized pyramid. If it’s a little off, don’t fret. You can record up to 20 days’ worth of eating habits, so you have the opportunity to build a better pyramid.

Organic: What It Really Means:
Don’t give up if you don’t know the difference between products labeled “organic” and “100% organic.” Though the U.S Department of Agriculture just implemented its national standards, the word is still slow in getting out on what the many newly defined terms actually mean. To learn more, check out A Practical Guide to Understainding Organic by Stoneyfeild Farms.

**MAC’s newest holiday collection is more than just shiney it’s almost antique. Marco Felgueiras over at Hot or Not Beauty has the entire story on how popular it is and where you can get your own MAC’s shiney collection. Read how here.**
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Earthly Eating Recipe: (Day 3 of Low-Fat Eating)

Low-Fat Milk And Your Diet:
Drinking low-fat milk before or with a meal helps you feel more full sooner and eat less the next time. The lighter the milk, the greater the effect. That is, fat-free milk works better than 1 precent, and both work better than 2 precent. Going low-fat also takes a load of calories out of your diet. Nearly every successful strategy for cutting fat from your diet includes drinking lower-fat milk.

Low-Fat Frozen Desserts:
Many people keep eating until the have had something sweet. Fortunately, that doesn’t have to be bad. Frozen desserts are a good way to satisfy a sweet tooth without piling on calories. A Creamsicle® weighs in at just 100 calories, and a Tofutti Cutie® vanilla or wild berry sandwich is only 120 calories. A half-cup of chocolate frozen yogurt adds a modest 115 calories to your dinner. Of course, people who have gotten used to this appraoch can use another treat. Have a satisfying amount of low-energy density food at your meal and then for dessert eat one piece of the most delicious chocolate you can find.

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Raspberry-Orange Smoothie
Serves: 2

1/2 cup orange juice
1/2 cup frozen raspberries
1 orange, peeled, seeded and chopped
1/4 cup raspberry or orange flavored yogurt

In a blender, combine all ingredients and blend until smooth. Pour into glasses that are fluted and serve.

Happy Eating!

Calcium And Health (Day 2 Of Low-Fat Eating)

Tuesday, November 13th, 2007

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Most of us look to calcium and vitamin D to protect our bones and teeth, but the benefits of these nutrients are more than just that. Taking calcium in preganancy may help reduce the risk of high blood pressure in your children.

Premenopausal women with higher intakes of vitamin D and calcium also have lower risk for more aggressive forms of breast cancer. WIth calcium and almost three times the recommended daily amount of vitamin D3 of their age group are 60 precent lower risk factors for common cancers.

Most women should take a calcium supplement with vitamin D when they hit the ages of 18-21 and continue to take these supplements the rest of their lives. Taking a calcium supplemts with vitamon D in it helps promote the effective absorption of calcium. Beyond that, get your bone building necessities from vegetables, fruits and whole grains as well.

Calcium can also help cut your blood pressure, sheild you from colon cancer and ease or end PMS symptoms. It can also help keep you slim. Lots of food, from beans to sardines, are rich in calcium. But, few people eat enough to hit their daily goal.

Caffeine can rip away at the calcium storages of women who are already running short. One of every two American women will at some time in her life suffer and osteoporosis-related bone fracture without the caffeine taking away what every women needs already.

How Much Calcium Do You Get?

Food:

• Yogurt, low-fat (1 cup): 447 mg
• Orange juice, calcium-fortified (1 cup): 350 mg
• Sardines, canned (3 ounces): 325 mg
• Milk, 1 precent (1 cup): 300 mg
• Cheese, Swiss (1 slice): 272 mg
• Spinach, cooked (1 cup): 245 mg
• Tofu, firn (1/2 cup): 204 mg
• White beans, cooked (1 cup): 161 mg
• Figs, dried (1/2 cup, or about 5): 143 mg
• Parmesan cheese (2 tbs.): 138 mg
• Frozen yogurt (1/2 cup): 103 mg
• Breakfast cereal, calcium-fortified: 100 mg
• English muffin, toasted: 98 mg
• Broccoli, cooked (1 cup): 72 mg
• Almonds (1 ounce, or about 24 nuts): 70 mg
• Green beans, boiled (1 cup): 58 mg

**Over at Joss Stone-Fan, KiKi writes about the recent breast cancer charity event Joss Stone participated in. Frosted Pink Benefit, Joss sang “Bruised but not Broken”. Read and watch the video of Joss Stone here.**
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Earthly Eating Recipe: Day 2 of Low-Fat Eating

Low-Fat Diet

With so many diets out now and the pressure to be thin by the media, what diet will work best for you?
The Atkins Diet?
The Zone?
Weight Watchers?
Or do you even need a diet plan at all? Give yourself point for each of the following questions that you answer yes to. If you score six or more, you may want to reevaluate your eating habits. Talk to a nutritionist if you need additional diet help.

1. Do you spend more than three hours a day thinking about healthy food and planning or shipping for your meals?

2. Do you often dwell on tomorrow’s menu today?

3. Do you care more about the virtue of what you eat than the pleasure you receive from eating it?

4. Has the quality of your life decreased as the quality of your diet has increased?

5. Do you keep getting stricter with yourself?

6. Do you sacrifice experieces you once enjoyed to eat the food you believe is right?

7. Do you feel an increased sense of self-esteem when you are eating healthy food?

8. Do you look down on others you don’t?

9. Do you feel guilt or self-loathing when you stray from your diet?

10. Does your diet isolate your socially?
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Herb Pesto At Home
Makes 3 cups

1 cup watercress leaves
1 cup Italian parsley leaves
1 cup basil leaves
1/4 cup thyme leaves
1/2 cup oregani leaves
1/2 cup chopped nuts (such as macadamia nuts, almonds, walnuts or pine nuts)
4 garlic cloves, rouhgly chopped
1/4 cup grated Parmesan cheese
3/4 cup olive oil
Black pepper, to taste

Place all ingredients in a food processor or blender, and process until combines but still fairly coarse. Use with breads, high-end crackers, or even. Keep in the freezer for about six months to enjoy pesto anytime of the year.

Happy Eating!

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