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Food Allergies

Better Food Choices=Better Body Health

Tuesday, January 29th, 2008

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Not all foods are created equal. For example, yogurt is a healthy food, but not if you buy a variety that contains high-fructose corn syrup, aspartame, and/or artificial colorings. Here are some food categories and the best choices under that category for you and your family.

1. Beverages:

• Flavored water: Wateroos
• Soymilk: Silk, Edensoy, Zensoy, Soy Dream.
• Milk: Horizon Organic, Organic Valley, Natural by Nature.
• Juice: Apple & Eve, Kagome (fruit and veggie mix), R.W. Knudsen, Whole Kids, Back to Nature, Honest Tea.
(Most available in single-serve containers.)

2. Snacks:

• Yogurt: Stoneyfield Farm, Horizon, Organic, Lifeway Probugs, Whole Soy, Wallaby.
• Smoothies: Stoneyfield Farm, Bolthouse Farms, Horizon Organic.
• Chips: Stacy’s, Snyder’s of Hanover, Glenny’s, 365 Foods, Good Health, Genisoy, Lundberg, Snack Factory.
• Crackers: Wasa, Kashi, Sesmark
• Cookies: Back to Nature, Mi-Del, Newman’s Own, Immaculate Baking Co., Healthy Handfuls, Annie’s Homegrown.
• Whole Grain or Granola Bars: Odwalla, Cascadian Farm, Kashi, Clif Kid, EnviroKidz, Larabar, Barbara’s Bakery.
• Fruit Snacks: FruitaBu, Clif, Tropicana FruitWise, O Organic Rasins, Amazin’ Rasins
• Cereals: Back to Nature, Nature’s Path, Bare Naked, Kashi, Mother’s
• Applesauce: Santa Cruz, Mott’s Organics, Eden Organic
• Pudding: Lifeway, Zensoy, Kozy Shack
• Allergy-Free: Enjoy Life, Pamela’s

3. Main Dish:

• Deli Slices: Applegate Farms, Hormel Natural Choice, Organic Valley, Lightlife (GMO-Free Soy)
• Tuna: Wild Palney, Henery & Lisa’s Natural Seafood
• Mac N’ Cheese: Back to Nature, Annie’s Homegrown
• Bread: Rudy’s Organic, Wild Oats, Ezekiel
(Source: Kiwi 2007)

**Chessmaster makes its début on the Xbox Live Arcade and Dave Parrack over at 1P Start has the details. Read them here.**
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Earthly Eating Recipe:

Cream Cheesy Chili Dip (Just in time for the Super Bowl)
Makes 24 servings

1 tub (8 oz.) cream cheese spread, softened
1 can ( 10.5 oz.) chili (canned or homemade)
1/2 cup shredded cheddat cheese
2 tbs. chopped cilantor (optional)

Spread the cream cheese onto the bottom of a microwave-safe pie plate and top with chili and cheddar cheese.

Microwave on high for 45 seconds to 1 minuteor until the cheddar cheese is melted all the way around the plate. Sprinkle on the silantro and serve. Serve with thick crackers or thick chips.

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!

Extreme Conditions With Your Health

Friday, November 2nd, 2007

It’s all you hear these days. Everyone’s talking food; pure, unadulterated organic, farm-raised, free-range, genetically unaltered food. Where to buy the best bean curd. Why the fish at the local market is unsafe. Why you should ask for soy milk in your morning latte. But obsessing over small issues with your food can become a serious problem overall. Mainly toward your health and well-being. The obsession even has its own name; Orthorexia Nervosa.

An orthorexic’s diet is often too restrictive and might be low in protein, vitmains, minerals, and fat. An orthorexic may suffer the same limitations as an anorexic-a fear of living life fully.

Though not classified as an official psychological disorder, orthorexia showcase the dangers of taking anything to the extreme, even concern about your health.

Even though it is wise to watch what we eat it is also unwise to ponder on whether the last bag of chips we ate are safe. There are concerns that are normal concerns such as food allergies. Food allergies are happening to some if not most people and they don’t even know it. If you have a food allergy, such as peanuts, most likely you are aware. But, what do we really know about food alleriges? Below is a quizz to see if you know the common food allergies and why those effected tend to react they way they do. (The answers are at the very bottom of this article.)

Personally I am allergic to radishes and green, and only the green varity of bell pepper. Here’s some pictures of my reaction to eating some radishes last Christmas eve in a dish that I didn’t know had them in there. I eventually had to head on over the the emergency room, yes on Christmas eve, to get an Epi-pen® shot to cool the reaction and hives down. As you can see from the photos, I was quite swollen in the face and I had hives all over my body. Such a terrible Christmas eve I had. But, Christmas morning I woke up with just minor pain and the symptoms had gone down quite a lot. Now I pick through anything, and any dish I am not familiar with. That has seem to be my obsession as far as my health is concerned.

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TEST YOURSELF
What do you really know about food allergies?

-Fact: Food allergies can cause itchy or even anaphylactic shock. How potent can a peanut really be?

1. If you’re allergic to soy, it is safe to eat food cooked in soybean oil.

True or False

2. Artifical flavors cause the majority of food allergies.

True or False

3. Which of these can cause an allergic reaction?

a) “Natural” cosmetics
b) Enering a fish restaurant
c) Eating egg whites
d) Any of the above

4. Kissing someone who has eaten peanuts can provoke an allergic reaction?

True or False

**See any bumper stickers lately that have caught your attention? Over at About Tulsa, OK, Candy Hollowell has seen some pretty interesting ones through out the month of October. Read all of them here.**
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Earthly Eating Recipe:

Spinach Cheese Dip
Serves: Makes 3 cups of dip

1 pkg. (8 oz.) cream cheese, softened
1/2 cup real mayonnaise
1/3 cup sliced green onions
1 pkg. (10 oz.) frozen chopped spinach, thawed, well drained
1 cup Italian style cheese crumbles
1/2 cup chopped roasted red peppers

Beat cream cheese, mayo, and half the onions in a medium bowl with an electric mixer on medium speed until well blended. Add spinach, mix until just blended.

Stir in cheese crumbles and peppers; cover.

Refrigerate at least 1 hour. Sprinkle with remaining onions just before serving.

Happy Eating!

Answers to the TEST YOURSELF questions:
1. True. Your body reacts to certain proteins in soybeans, peanuts, and sunflower seeds, and most of the oils sold in the United States are highly refined (as opposed to cold-pressed), so they contain no trace of them.

2. False. Ninety precent are linked to milk, eggs, wheat, peanuts, soy, tree nuts, fish, and shellfish.

3. D. Any of the above. Some beauty products contain enough milk or nut extract to bring on hives. Believe it or not the tiny proteins released into the air by frying and steaming seafood can also trigger allergic reactions. And most people with egg allergies actually respond to the whites, not the yolks.

4. True. If you are sensitive to goobers, as little as one-eightieth of a peanut can cause an allergic reaction.
(Source: Natural Healing )

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