Sunday, June 26, 2011

Carrot-Ginger Salad Dressing

I discovered a delicious no-oil salad dressing at the Darien, CT Whole Foods when I was staying up there for work last summer. I placed a special order for it at my local WF 3 months ago but I am starting to suspect it's never coming. So, I think I'll try to make my own! Here's my first try (totally on the fly), without much preparation:

1/4 cup carrot juice
1/2 tbs. Dijon mustard
1/2 tsp. ginger paste
Few splashes golden vinegar
(All measurements are approx. I just eyeball everything.)

You can use a blender or fork to mix it up. This took me about two minutes to throw together. I really want to experiment with a variety of preparation methods. I'd like to juice my own carrots and use the pulp to thicken up the dressing. Also, I think I'll try white wine vinegar next time and I think it needs sesame seeds.

Monday, June 20, 2011

Travel at your own risk.


The single most complicated aspect of ETL has to be: TRAVEL. For more than just the obvious reason that you can't reasonably carry fresh, natural food everywhere you go. It's also really hard to deny yourself all those things you used to eat when out and about and on vacation, no less.

This weekend I was in Tampa, FL visiting my husband. I certainly indulged while there with him (totally worth it), but on my return flight I was determined to stay focused on my Eat To Live life. So, this is was ETL looks like at an airport. If you're lucky. I've eaten dry iceberg lettuce at an airport once. The hummus had soybean oil in it, but I reasoned that at least I wouldn't eat the pita. I'll be flying A LOT this summer and I'm curious to see how I can beat this one! (Last year I had an awesome ETL meal at a cafe called French Meadow inside the Minneapolis Airport. That one wins, hands down so far.)

Wednesday, June 15, 2011

Natural beauty


Look at these gorgeous colors. Never ceases to amaze me. Truly. THIS is Eat To Live.

Salad: Spring lettuce mix, beets, grape tomatoes, lentils, Zesty Tahini dressing.

Tuesday, June 14, 2011

Zucchini & Kidney Beans


Thank goodness for ETL because even on a day like today, when I'm just really tired and on mental auto-pilot, I get to eat like this. I had a large zucchini sitting in the fridge and I just threw this together off the top of my head. It was delicious!

I water-sautéed the zucchini with one large diced clove of garlic then poured on an 8oz can of Hunt's no-salt-added tomato sauce. I seasoned it with 1/2 tbs of Mrs. Dash salt-free tomato, basil, and garlic blend then added a can of no-salt-added kidney beans and let all the flavors blend for a little bit on low. It was actually a lot of food in the end so I split it and just ate it for dinner too. Perfect for an evening of going to bed early.

Zucchini, garlic, nsa tomato sauce, Mrs. Dash, nsa kidney beans.

Monday, June 13, 2011

Farmers Market Meal


My girlfriend Anne Marie came to Casa De Schmidt on Saturday, bearing gifts from her Farmers Market run that morning. She brought me heirloom tomatoes, snap peas and a gorgeous bundle of basil. I was so inspired by the brilliant colors that I pulled out the fancy vinegar for this meal. I used a little bit of water to start off the peas and squash, then added the vinegar later with the tomatoes and basil. I find that if you use vinegar instead of water to sauté, the vinegar burns off before you can get a good infusion of flavor, so I add it as a seasoning at the end instead. This was totally delicious!

Sauté: summer squash, snap peas, heirloom tomatoes, basil, Lucini Pinot Grigio vinegar.

Sunday, June 12, 2011

Squash "pasta" sauté.


Ahhh, the water-sauté. Such an important cooking method in ETL. It's super simple, yet requires a lot of attention. The trick is in the amount of water used because veggies release water as they cook too. Best to start low (less than 1/4 cup) and add as you go. Also, it really helps to have all your ingredients prepared before you start or you might end up with soggy veggies from interrupting the cooking time. Always start with the hard, crunchy veggies like onions or carrots first and add the softer more delicate ingredients as you go along so that everything cooks evenly. Add your seasonings to taste. If I have any greens on hand, I will toss those in last and give them just a quick flash saute to wilt them.

Truly, you can add whatever you want. I LOVE to play with flavors and colors. Often I find myself influenced by what is fresh at the market, naturally.

Now to the squash "pasta". I found instructions online for how to best make these ribbons. The video tells you to discard the core, but that is just too wasteful for me. No reason for it. I dice it up and add it to the sauté.

Sauté: onions, capers, exotic mushroom mix I bought at Wegmans, summer squash, and cumin.

Thursday, June 9, 2011

Zesty Tahini Dressing


So, Whole Foods makes some no-oil dressings under their Health Starts Here brand. Everything they make under that name is from their fresh kitchens. You'll only find it in the refrigerated produce section. I've counted maybe 7 in the last year. They are always changing, I guess depending on the demand at each location. It's mostly just by chance that you will find them. I wish they were more readily available, but it has happened to me before that I go looking for them and find none. I certainly don't want this to happen to you, but there you have it. When you find them, rejoice! :)

The only sure thing about today's salad is that it had to be cold, crunchy, and refreshing. It is hot and humid in DC today and I was really looking forward to lunch! I like to toss everything in a big bowl first and then pick out the lettuce onto a plate and pile everything on top.

Salad: Earthbound Farms spring mix, steamed green beans, Zima sweet grape tomatoes, garbanzo beans and lentils.

Wednesday, June 8, 2011

Green Bean & Salsa Salad


I love, love, love salsa. Fresh, finely-diced is my favorite. It's also one of the top things I don't make myself. I just don't have the time for that much mincing of veggies. For this reason, it contains salt. Trust me, it's impossible to find salsa without salt. I've tried. A lot.

I made this up one day when I was out of lettuce AND had left-over steamed green beans. It is crazy good! I use a fork and knife to cut the green beans as I dig into the pile of salsa. I also add lemon juice to make everything swimmy.

French green beans, garbanzo beans, salsa: from the refrigerated produce section of most grocery stores. This one is from Trader Joe's.

Tuesday, June 7, 2011

Tenleytown Whole Foods Lunch


A pretty typical day in the life of baby and nanny involves a trip to Whole Foods. Today we spent the morning at the park playing in the sandbox and swinging before heading over to WF for lunch. Their raw food bar is my one-stop ETL shop. Selection varies from one WF to another. Some have a few prepared ETL salads which is always a nice surprise, but if not, I can always choose from the multitude of peeled, chopped, steamed and otherwise ready to eat veggies and fruit.

This is spinach, brussel sprouts, radishes, roasted corn, sweet peas, beets, and wheat berries. I added a no-oil creamy roasted pepper dressing available in the produce section.

My ETL Test Kitchen

It's no secret that I love my ETL life. I hope to use this blog simply to document and share all the truly amazing food that can be prepared without oil, salt or animal products. It won't always be perfect, sometimes I'm going to make lazy choices like, store bought dressing. And sometimes I won't post for days because I fell off the wagon. Never fear, I ALWAYS climb back on! 

As I go, I will talk more about Dr. Fuhrman and Eat To Live. I often get requests for ETL recipes and however happy I am to share the methods of food preparation, I feel it is lost on anyone who doesn't know about Fuhrbie and the book that truly changed my life. When you read it, you know it. It's that easy. 

I suspect that sometimes you'll just see a pic of what I ate for lunch with a list of ingredients. This will be for when I just throw something together quickly from what is available in the fridge. Other times I will follow a recipe or experiment with tools and special equipment. I will make every effort to post where I buy my produce, where I found a certain recipe and how yummy/yucky it turned out. Watch for me to sometimes throw in the towel and run to Whole Foods for an instant ETL meal. (LOTS more on Whole Foods later!)