Sunday, December 25, 2011

Simple to Make Sweet Treats!

!±8± Simple to Make Sweet Treats!

Simple and quick! These sweet treats are especially great for Valentines Day!

1. Celebration Cake -- EASY, EASY! Looks beautiful and NO cooking at all!

You'll need: 1 prepared angel food cake, 1 can pie filling and 1 tub prepared cream cheese frosting. Place cake on a cake plate. Frost it! Pour the pie filling in the hole in the middle of the cake. Serve slices of the cake topped with some pie filling. Decorate with added coconut, nuts, or candies! Cherry pie filling is perfect for Valentines Day!

2. Love Cakes -- Extremely beautiful, yet simple to make!

NO cooking! You'll need 1 prepared pound cake, 1 tub prepared vanilla frosting, some red food coloring, 1 tube chocolate decorative frosting with a plain tip for writing, 1 (14 oz) bag M&M'S Milk Chocolate Candies for Valentine's Day.

Line a cookie sheet with waxed paper and top with a wire cooling rack; set aside. Cut pound cake into 1-inch thick slices. Using a heart-shaped cookie cutter, cut out cake using cookie cutter. Place the heart-shaped cake pieces
on the wire cooling rack. Spoon 1/4 cup of vanilla frosting into a zipper-seal plastic bag and set aside. Tint the remaining frosting to a light shade of pink using food color and spoon it into a glass-measuring cup. Heat the pink frosting in the microwave for 5 to 10 seconds, or until it can be poured. DO NOT OVERHEAT. Pour the pink frosting over the heart-shaped cake pieces, covering the tops and the sides. Reuse the drippings and reheat, if necessary.

Refrigerate until set (about 30 minutes). Fill a zipper-seal plastic bag with frosting, then snip a tiny corner of the bag and use it to pipe lacy designs on the tops and sides of the heart-shaped cake pieces. Add candies to make different designs, then pipe messages on the tops with the decorative chocolate frosting.

3. Flavorageous Crispy Treats -- Kid Tested!

5 T butter or margarine

9 C miniature marshmallows (16 oz)

1 envelope Kool-Aid, any flavor**

9 C Crispy rice cereal

Grease a 10x15x1" pan. Melt butter; about 45 seconds on high in the microwave. Add marshmallows; toss to coat with butter. Microwave on high 2 1/2 minutes or until smooth; stirring every minute. Stir in drink mix. Immediately add cereal, mix lightly until well coated. Using greased spatula or wax paper, press into prepared pan. Cool. Cut into desired shapes with cookie cutters or cut into squares.

**Favorite Kool-Aid Flavors are Fruit Punch and Cherry


Simple to Make Sweet Treats!

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Saturday, December 10, 2011

Rice Krispies Squares

*** Rice Krispie Bars *** 6 cups Kelloggs Rice Krispies 1 bag of white marshmallows 3 tablespoons butter or margarine No-stick cooking spray Melt the margarine in a no-stick pan and add the entire bag of marshmallows. Stir over medium heat until the marshmallows have completely melted. Add Rice Krispies and mix together well. Pour mixture into a 9" x 13" pan that has been greased or sprayed with no-stick cooking spray. Use a baggie that has been sprayed with no-stick spray to spread and flatten mixture. Cut into squares when cool. Kids love making and eating these easy treats!

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Tuesday, December 6, 2011

Original Shortbread - A Classic Biscuit Recipe

!±8± Original Shortbread - A Classic Biscuit Recipe

Following is a classic recipe for shortbread lovers everywhere that can be made as a tasty treat to be shared with loved ones.

Ingredients:

4 oz caster sugar

8 oz butter at room temperature

4 oz rice flour

8 oz plain flour

Pinch of salt

Using a mixing bowl, whisk the sugar and butter together until nice and creamy. Add in all the flour and a pinch of salt and briefly whisk so that the ingredients just come together.

Put the ingredients on to a work surface and knead into a soft dough. Make it circle shaped, wrap it in clingfilm and leave for 30 minutes.

Cut the dough in half and roll the pieces on a floured surface to an 8 inch round. Put the 2 pieces onto ungreased baking sheets and use a knife to cut it into 8 equal measures and prick them with a fork.

Sprinkle on the sugar. Preheat the oven to 375 degrees Fahrenheit and bake the mix for up to 20 minutes, or until browned. Take out the mix and divide into wedges whilst still hot, then leave to cool for about 5 minutes and transfer to a tin.

This recipe will serve up to 16 people, has a preparation time of 15 minutes and a cooking time of up to 20 minutes.

Why not replace the rice flour with your favourite nuts to create a delicious, nutty shortbread to enjoy as a tasty treat as a snack or as a dessert after your main meal for all the family to enjoy.


Original Shortbread - A Classic Biscuit Recipe

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Thursday, November 24, 2011

All Kinds of "Kitchen Hints" From Those Who Have Been There!

!±8± All Kinds of "Kitchen Hints" From Those Who Have Been There!

Age has a way of letting you collect many wonderful hints to use at any given moment. These hints can be applied to a variety of different areas of our lives. I am looking forward to collecting many more of these hints as I go from mid to late middle age (autumn season of my life) to being among the older and aged (winter season of my life).

I would like to start sharing some of these helpful hints with all of the younger ages (spring and summer seasons). Sharing with people, which do NOT already think that they know-it-all could prove very beneficial to these youngsters.

Some of the hints were handed down by word of mouth, some I found in cookbooks and magazines and in more recent years, on the computer and through e-mails. These hints are for the KITCHEN. There will be hints for cooking, hints for cleaning up, hints to not have to clean up, dessert hints, fruit hints, and annoying fruit fly hints.

For dry fluffy rice, every time, make sure and put a slice of dry bread on top of the cooked rice and cover.

To keep muffins from burning around the edges, fill one of the middle sections (cups) with water instead of batter.

When boiling potatoes, put a little butter in the water to keep it from boiling over.

To keep a double pie from running over, stick two or three pieces of macaroni in the center of the top crust. The juice bubbles up through these macaroni.

Before melting chocolate, run the inside of the pan it is to be melted in, with butter. The chocolate will not stick to the pan.

To warm up cold biscuits, muffins, or rolls, dampen a paper towel and wrap the biscuits, muffins, or rolls. Then, place the wrapped bread either on a tin into a warm oven for a few minutes, or on a microwavable plate and into the microwave for a few seconds.

When cream will not whip, add the white of an egg. Let the cream and egg thoroughly chill and then it try again.

To keep warming milk (from cows, soy, rice, etc) form scorching so quickly, rinse the pan with water, before heating the milk in a saucepan.

Sprinkle a little flour in the pan before frying eggs. This will prevent the eggs from popping.

To get Brazil nuts to come out whole, freeze them for a couple of hours before cracking them.

For crispy pie crust made with pure vegetable shortening, substitute one or two Tablespoons of apple cider vinegar for = the water. Doing this will moisten the dough mix.

To eliminate the mess with ground cranberries, wash, sort, drain well and FREEZE them before grinding them.

Rubbing salt into your wet fingertips will remove the odor of onions. After rinsing off the salt, repeat if necessary.

Peel a banana from the bottom and you will not have to pick the little "stringy things" off of it.

Pull your bananas apart when you get home from the store. If you leave them connected at the stem, they ripen faster.

Store your opened chunks of cheese in aluminum foil. It will stay fresh much longer and not mold. (I personally am NOT into aluminum foil-look up "dangers in aluminum").

Peppers with three bumps on the bottom are sweeter and better for eating. Peppers with four bumps on the bottom are firmer and better for cooking.

Add a teaspoon of water when frying ground beef. It will help pull the grease away from the meat while cooking.

To make really rich scrambled eggs or omelets, add in a couple of spoonfuls of sour cream, cream cheese, or heavy cream and then beat them.

For a cool brownie treat, make brownies as directed. Then, melt Andes mints in a double broiler and pour it over the warm brownies. Let it all set for a wonderful minty frosting.

Add garlic immediately to a recipe if you want a light taste of garlic. Add garlic at the end of the recipe if you want a stronger taste.

Before you pour a sticky substance into a measuring cup (like peanut butter), fill the cup with hot water. Dump out the hot water, but do NOT dry the measuring cup. Immediately, add your ingredient and watch how easily the peanut butter (or whatever) slides out.

Say goodbye to those pesky fruit flies by taking a small glass, fill it half way with Apple Cider Vinegar and two drops of dish washing liquid; mix well. You will find those flies drawn to the cup and gone forever!

To prevent ice cream cone drips, stuff the bottom of the cone with a miniature marshmallow.

Use a meat baster to "squeeze" your pancake batter onto the hot griddle and you will get perfectly shaped pancakes every time.

To keep potatoes from budding, place an apple in the bag with potatoes.

Prevent eggshells from cracking; add a pinch of salt to the water before hard-boiling.

To easily remove burnt on food from your skillet, simply add a drop or two of dish soap and enough water to cover the bottom of the pan, and bring it to boil on the stove top.

Spray your plastic ware with nonstick cooking pan spray before pouring in tomato-based sauces and there won't be any stains.

If you accidentally over-salt a dish, while it is still cooking, drop in a peeled potato and it will absorb the excess salt for an instant "fix me up".

Place an apple in hardened brown sugar to soften it.

When boiling corn on the cob, add a pinch of sugar to help bring out the corn's natural sweetness.

To determine whether an egg is fresh, immerse it in a pan of cool, salted water. If it sinks, it is fresh, but if it rises to the surface, throw it away.

You can have even more fun in the KITCHEN, now that you have some extra hints to make it all easier! Happy working in the KITCHEN!


All Kinds of "Kitchen Hints" From Those Who Have Been There!

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Saturday, November 5, 2011

5 Easy Summertime Recipes For Kids

!±8± 5 Easy Summertime Recipes For Kids

Looking for fun and easy summertime recipes that don't break the bank or take all afternoon to prepare? Here are a few of my family's favorites:

1. Chocolate banana pops - Take a ripe banana, stick a Popsicle stick in one end and put in freezer. Melt some semisweet chocolate and coat the almost frozen bananas, place on parchment paper and stick them back in the freezer for about an hour. You can also add sprinkles to the pops before you freeze them or switch it up with white chocolate. Yummy!

2. Swizzle sticks - Swizzle sticks are simply cut up cubed or other fun shaped fruit (cookie cutters work best in circles, hearts or stars), pop them on a skewer, and stick them in the freezer for a bit. You end up with a great frozen treat that your kids can eat as-is, or stick them in some fun fruit juice, water or lemonade for added pizazz.

3. Dirt - There are many variations to this recipe out there so feel free to find your favorite. The idea behind this one is you take pudding, whipped cream, Oreo cookies crushed up, and any other sweet treats you can think of and layer them in a bowl. To get really creative, wash out an old beach pail or flower pot (without a hole- or cover before you begin) and layer in that - it's great to bring to a friend's house for a BBQ treat! We like to add gummy worms to our dirt as the topping for a cool effect.

4. Scotch-a-roos - A chocolate and peanut butter spin on rice crispy treats. Put 6 cups of rice crisp cereal in a bowl. Melt 1 cup sugar, 1 cup Karo lite syrup and 1 cup peanut butter (you can leave this out if you are going somewhere where nuts are a no-no) in a sauce pan. Stir frequently until everything is combined and it comes to a slight boil. Pour sugar mixture into the rice crisp and mix up well. Quickly put into an 8x10 backing pan and pack down. You can use sandwich baggies to cover your hands so you don't get the sticky mess all over them. Melt 1/2 bag semisweet chocolate chips and 1/2 bag of butterscotch bits in a pan until melted, pour over the rice crisp in the baking pan and chill for about 30 minutes. Cut and enjoy!

5. Coconut smoothies - Now these might take a little planning to make sure you have whole coconuts in your house, but they are worth it! Take whole coconuts, gently break in half with a small hammer on the floor (on a towel), and take any broken bits and scoop out the coconut meat as well as any juice that is in the coconut. In a blender - take 1/2 cup yogurt, 1/2 cup ice, coconut juice and meat, and any other fruit you'd like to add like pineapple, banana or strawberries. You can also skip the authentic coconut part and just get some coconut juice in your local grocery store and use fun plastic cups to serve your summertime treat.


5 Easy Summertime Recipes For Kids

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Saturday, October 22, 2011

How To Create Atrocious BBQ In A Pit Smoker

!±8± How To Create Atrocious BBQ In A Pit Smoker

It's easy to find tips and pointers for producing amazing BBQ in a pit smoker. It seems like everyone is more than happy to share their favorite techniques and recipes. Need a great rub? Someone will give you tip. Want to know how to transform a particular cut of meat into a delicacy? The information is readily available. Heck, you can even find comprehensive comparison charts detailing the distinguishing characteristics of various market-leading BBQ sauces. There's no shortage of information designed to help you and your pit smoker make meals to remember.

We thought we'd break the mold a little bit. Instead of joining the extremely loud chorus of voices telling you how to make brisket into Ambrosia or explaining how to turn something with a name as unattractive as "Boston Butt" into a tasty treat, we decided to sing a different tune. We thought we'd share three ways to create absolutely inedible, atrocious BBQ in a pit smoker.

First, don't cure your smoker. The manufacturer says you should run that baby without food in it long enough to burn off the oils from the manufacturing process, the dust and assorted other nasty stuff. The BBQ gurus second that recommendation. We say "no". If you skip the curing, you can produce a rack of ribs that tastes like a medley of old copper pennies and aluminum beer cans with the delicate finish of spray paint! Mmmm, mmmm, yuck.

Second, cook fast. All of the BBQ pros are slow-smoking meat for the better part of the day. Some guys will spend a full 24 hours on a few slabs of ribs. Haven't they heard? We're living in the 21st century. We cook with microwaves. The pit smoker needs to get with the modern program. Fire that baby up and subject your meat to a higher temperature for a shorter period of time. You'll lose much of the smoky flavor and tenderness, but you'll have food on the table faster and it will satisfy all tastes. Fans of well-done meat will appreciate the crispy exterior while those who like things a little less done will love the cold, neon pink center!

Third, buy the cheapest pit smoker you can possibly find. Why would you spend extra for quality when you can buy a lightweight pop metal tube labeled "Pit Smoker" in your local department store? Sure, the more expensive ones have sturdiness grates. True, the quality models tend to retain heat better due to their solid construction. And they last longer. And they don't have hot and cold spots that make it hard to create consistent "Q". Hey? If you want to make gut-churning "Q" that no one can eat, that stuff doesn't matter. Just buy the El Cheapo model and start hosting the lousiest cookouts your block has ever seen!

Now, if you want to ignore this advice, you might actually end up producing some great BBQ. However, those who really want to do things differently can rest assured that these three pointers will lead to some of the worst food to ever grace a plate!


How To Create Atrocious BBQ In A Pit Smoker

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Thursday, October 20, 2011

Metabolic Typing - Interview

!±8± Metabolic Typing - Interview

I feel very fortunate to introduce and interview Sally Taylor, diet therapist and metabolic typing advisor as we delve deeper into the concept of an individual approach to food.

As a diet therapist how important is metabolic typing (mt)?

MT is essential to my practice. I use it as a starting point with all clients. I call myself a Diet Therapist as opposed to a Nutritionist because it reflects the tremendous importance I put on getting the diet right. Unless clients are willing to modify their diet there's no point in their consulting me. Anything else they do will simply be nibbling at the edges of the problem. I'm not prepared to take on clients who really just want a list of supplements to buy or foods to avoid. That is an allopathic nutrition approach - it treats symptoms without correcting the underlying problems. Diet Therapy is a holistic approach that ensures the body is given all it requires to build health and vitality from the inside out. Many people, doctors included, still don't understand that it is literally true that we are what we eat. Food is the raw material we consume to constantly build, repair and replace every cell in our body. It is a waste of money to spend a fortune on nutritional supplements or gym membership if one continues to eat nutrient deficient and damaged processed, convenience foods!

Is there such a thing as a healthy diet?

Yes, absolutely, but not a standard one that can be prescribed across the board - the panacea everyone is looking for doesn't exist. The exact recipe is different for everyone, depending on their MT. The balance of macro and micronutrients required by our bodies to operate at optimal efficiency depends on our genetic inheritance and individual stressors. There are clear basic principles that apply to everyone though: eat organic, whole foods (as close to nature and as unprocessed as possible - ie fresh, raw or lightly cooked), drink plenty of water, avoid toxins such as alcohol, cigarettes, caffeine, drugs; and ensure you get adequate daily doses of sunlight, fresh air, exercise, and around 8-hours of quality sleep a night.

What makes MT different from Atkins, Zone, GI, low fat diets?

These diets work for some people, some of the time, and they address some of the issues contributing to weight gain or poor health in some people. The difference between those popular diets and MT is that MT is not "a diet" in the sense that we generally use the word. It is not something one does for a few weeks to lose a few pounds, and then returns to old eating habits. It requires a commitment to a complete lifestyle change.

Metabolic Typing is a clinical methodology for identifying the right basic diet for clients, and fine-tuning it to suit their specific biochemistry. Implemented properly, one cannot "fail" on the Metabolic Typing Diet, because it is actually an educational process that teaches clients to listen to their body's signals and adjust ratios of carbohydrates, proteins and fats to suit their unique metabolism. An individual's precise nutritional requirements are dependent on their particular interaction of genetics and environment.

In recent years controlled carbohydrate diets such as Atkins, Zone and GI have become popular, despite flying in the face of orthodox advice, because they do work for millions of people. The reason being that they are all concerned with limiting the amount of carbohydrate eaten. Most people, including athletes and active children, eat far too much carbohydrate, in the form of processed, convenience foods. Even if they have already cut out cakes, biscuits, puddings, chocolate etc, they continue to fill up on what they have been told is healthy forms of carbohydrate, such as breakfast cereals, bread, potatoes and pasta. Man is simply not designed to eat this much carbohydrate!

Research has established that stabilising blood sugar levels and reducing insulin output is essential to health. We have two metabolic pathways for generating energy. The one everyone has been concerned with is the process of burning glucose as a fuel. It is a very immediate source of energy, as it can be taken directly from our blood stream, having arrived there as the breakdown product of all digestible carbohydrate, and be stored in our cells in the form of glycogen (the human equivalent of starch). However, once the cells and glycogen stores, mostly in the liver and muscles, are full, glucose excess to requirements is converted to glycerol and fatty acids and combined to form triglycerides. This is the substance that produces body fat. Triglycerides are laid down in fat cells as an energy store. However, the fact that is commonly overlooked is that we can and should also be using fatty acids to produce energy, but we cannot burn our stores of fat when blood glucose or insulin levels are high, which they are pretty constantly for many people.

As for low-fat diets, which have been recommended by Governments and the medical professions to reduce obesity and heart disease for over 30-years, time has shown that they don't work for the majority. In the three decades since these regimens were adopted as official policy in the US and UK we have seen a huge increase in the incidence of obesity, diabetes and CVD. These concepts are explored in detail in 'Dr Atkins' New Diet Revolution' - a book that I recommend everyone interested in their health reads, together with his lesser known title 'Dr Atkins' Age-Defying Diet Revolution'.

I have a great deal of respect for Dr Robert Atkins. It was reading his books that educated me to solve my own health problems, which were weight gain (I was 3-stone overweight), fatigue, and painful knee joints. Both my parents are Type-2 diabetics, with cardiovascular problems and severe arthritis of the knees, so clearly I am at a genetic disadvantage in these areas! Now, at 46-years old, my weight, which I battled with my entire life, is perfect for my build, I have more energy than I've ever had, and no health issues. My experience with the Atkins' Diet led me to formally study nutrition, and through this I discovered Metabolic Typing, which confirmed that I need a high protein/fat, low-carb diet, as I'm a Fast Oxidiser.

MT explains why the Atkins' Diet does not work for everyone, but all those concerned with regaining and maintaining their health should be aware of the sound scientific principles upon which it is based. Basically, I still adhere to an Atkins-type diet today, but have incorporated the modifications I learnt through MT. I ensure the vast majority of my food is organic and unprocessed, and I steer clear of Soy products - it is, in fact, a cave-man style eating plan.

So why isn't MT as popular or well-known as these diets?

MT is fast gaining in popularity. It is recommended by many well-known, high profile practitioners and promoters of holistic health and integrated medicine - such as Paul Chek, Dr Joseph Mercola, Dr Dietrich Klinghardt, Dr Etienne Callebout, and the 'What Doctors Don't Tell You' team. But, it is designed principally as a clinical application, rather than a popular 'diet'.

'The Metabolic Typing Diet' book, was written by William Wolcott to fill a gap. It is suitable for those requiring a simplified self-help approach. It enables those who cannot afford the services of a HealthExcel Metabolic Typing Advisor to start down the path to correcting their health problems. If finances are tight, I suggest clients buy that book, and the Atkins' titles, and see what they can do by themselves first

Is MT difficult to follow, complicated or impractical for the average person?

The beauty of MT is that there is no strict daily diet sheet to follow. You are given clear guidelines as to what constitutes an optimum diet for you. Once you become familiar with your best foods it becomes second nature to eat as per your MT. It's not something you have to endure for a few weeks before you can return to your previous habits - it's a lifestyle change. It teaches you how to listen to your body and respond to its messages. And, this is what we must do in order to ensure we can integrate healthy eating into normal, everyday life.

Is someone's MT fixed in stone? Or can it change with circumstances- if so when?

There are two aspects to our Metabolic Type - our Genetic Type, which is predetermined by internal factors that are inherited - and our Functional Type, which is fluid and affected by external factors. These are all physical and mental stressors basically, such as environment (eg climate, pollution, toxins), illness, activity levels, and the food we eat.

Clearly we can't alter our genes, so what we are doing with MT is tweaking our biochemistry and affecting our Functional Type. Retesting is recommended after following your prescribed MT diet plan for 3-6 months precisely because your functional imbalances will have been corrected, and that may reveal a different underlying Genetic Type. If you continue to follow the original plan you may find that your body chemistry is pushed too far in the opposite direction.

Are all carbs the same?

Definitely not! This is a very important point, Craig. The type of carbohydrate we eat is really key to a diet being healthy or not. Basically, the difference lies in how much the carb has been messed around with! The fresher it is, the closer to nature, the more it looks like it has just come off a tree or out of the ground, the healthier is the carb. In fact, this principle applies to all the macronutrients (ie carbs, fats, proteins), but it is carbs that we tend to process the hell out of and eat in enormous quantity (because it is convenient, and has an addictive quality, totally unlike fats and proteins)! The raw material is cheap and once processed, the finished products keep for a long time, and therefore are very profitable for the food manufacturers and very convenient for consumers.

But these highly processed, convenience products are not real food. They bear no resemblance to anything that appears in nature - they are the Frankenstein of food stuffs! Real food goes off quickly; this fake food lasts and lasts! When processed most of the goodness (micronutrients like vitamins, minerals and antioxidants, and fibre) is destroyed or discarded and the natural sugar content is concentrated. Artificial preservatives, colours, flavours etc are added - and you end up with a relatively cheap, filling product, with an addictive quality, devoid of nutritional value. For example, whole-grain rice is a perfectly healthy, natural food. By the time it's been turned into something like rice krispies or rice cakes, it has had all the goodness removed and the sugar content concentrated. It then comprises a whopping 84% carbohydrate - and this is ALL converted to glucose, resulting in a huge blood sugar hit very soon after eating (just look at the total carbohydrate box on the nutrition panel of any packaged foods). Other examples are fresh oranges vs. orange juice, corn-on-the-cob vs. corn flakes, strawberries / blueberries / apples vs. Kellogg's Fruit Winders (a popular product in children's lunchboxes), lightly boiled potatoes vs. crisps. It actually drains our body's reserves of nutrients in order to process this stuff, which is why the manufacturers of breakfast cereals have to add vitamins and minerals to it.

To illustrate this, a famous experiment fed one group of rats on commercial breakfast cereal, and another group on the empty cereal boxes. The group fed the cardboard boxes outlived the group fed the breakfast cereal! I believe the details of this are quoted in a Paul Chek article, available on www.mercola.com

To sum up, we should get the majority of our carbohydrate from fresh vegetables and fruits, in their natural, unadulterated state, with some coming from whole grains if your particular MT can take it. This is what we have evolved to eat - not the fake stuff from packets! No-one needs bread or pasta - despite public and medical opinion, they are NOT health foods!

How long generally does it take for a person to notice significant differences in terms of energy levels, and clarity once they are eating correctly for their metabolic typing?

It can take as little as three days to notice significant improvement but certainly by two weeks many people feel like a new person! The longer you continue eating to your MT (and don't forget, what is recommended is a lifestyle change, not a two week 'diet' fad) the better you will feel, the stronger your body will be and the healthier you will become. In short, you will regain control of your emotions, hormones, weight and health.

Can people react differently then to vitamin and mineral supplements if we react different to the macronutrients? any rules?

Yes, very much so. As with foods, supplements will affect our pH balance and other aspects of body chemistry, depending on one's MT. With the Intermediate Level test results one is provided with a list of specialist MT supplements that will push body chemistry in the right direction. It gets complicated but, as an example, Fast Oxidisers have a need for more Calcium whilst Slow Oxidisers require more Magnesium. There is a range of specialist supplements developed to support the three basic MTs. However, usually I recommended clients concentrate on getting the diet right first, then we can consider supplements later, adding them if needed to address specific health issues. But, I must underline the fact that getting the food right that we put into our bodies three times a day - that's around a thousand times a year- is the most important factor!

As a Metabolic Typing Advisor and health professional what do you believe is behind our current state of poor health and record obesity levels?

21st Century lifestyles are the problem. I could go on about this for hours! But it's probably best to recommend everyone read 'Lights Out' by TS Wiley, which looks at it in depth. It explains why our hormones are out of whack, why our immune systems are unable to cope, why we have obesity, diabetes, CVD, cancer etc, etc.

From the dietary viewpoint, the problem is that as a society we have become totally dependent on convenience foods - which means carbohydrates. We all lead busy lives, filled up with work and family commitments, and say we have no time to buy fresh food and prepare meals from scratch. But this mentality is killing us! Man has not evolved to live like this - in cave man times carbs were scarce, particularly so in northern climes. They were more abundant in warmer climates, but not in the huge quantities we have available now. Since the advent of agriculture, 10,000 years ago, our eating habits began to change, and in the past 100-years, have changed out of all recognition. Today's common Western diet bears no relation to that which our grandparents ate as children.

We have lost sight of what real food is. We need re-educating. Jamie Oliver's campaign is right on the button. Our kids don't know that chips come from potatoes, or what broccoli looks like!

Thank you Sally for your thoughts on metabolic typing and diets. If you would like to find out more about metabolic typing and diet therapy you can contact Sally at:
Sally@Diet-Therapy.co.uk or check her website at www.diet-therapy.co.uk


Metabolic Typing - Interview

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Saturday, October 15, 2011

Fried Rice Recipe Ideas

!±8± Fried Rice Recipe Ideas

Fried rice is a popular dish in most countries around the world. In America, the dish can be found at any Chinese-American restaurant or on tables in many homes. Cooking this dish is a wonderful way to use up leftover rice and spice up a humdrum dinner. Fried rice can be made with vegetables and served as a side dish or with the addition of meat, poultry or seafood, fried rice can be a meal by itself.

The basic ingredients in the dish are pre-cooked white, long-grain rice, scallions and egg. The wok is pre-heated, an oil with a high smoke point such as peanut, canola or grapeseed oil is added, and then the egg is fried until it is just soft. The egg is pushed outward up the side of the pan while the rice heats. To finish the dish, the egg, rice and scallions are stirred together until heated thoroughly. Soy sauce or oyster sauce can be added at the end, although some people believe that the rice should be seasoned with nothing more than salt.

Fried rice is a versatile dish that can be made to suit any person's tastes by adding a few extra ingredients. Vegetables like carrots, broccoli and pea pods make a colorful, tasty side dish that go well with chicken main courses, while adding bean sprouts, water chestnuts and bamboo shoots makes a wonderful accompaniment to a beef meal. Garlic, onions and bell peppers also make a great tasting dish that complements just about any entrée.

Adding diced beef, pork, chicken, shrimp or prawns to fried rice creates another dimension to the dish. A popular Japanese dish is Omurice, or Omelette Rice. In Omurice, the dish is made with vegetables and meat, encased in an egg omelette and seasoned with ketchup. Yangchow or Yangzhou Rice is a Chinese dish named after the city that the dish is believed to have originated from. It mixes prawns, roast pork, peas and scallions, and is sometimes found in Chinese-American restaurants under the name of Special Rice.

Authentic recipes often include the flavors and ingredients indigenous to the area they are created in. For instance, Thai Fried Rice uses aromatic Jasmine rice instead of white rice and is generally served with cucumber slices and a spicy sauce made with fish sauce, Thai chili and garlic. Hawaiian Fried Rice combines egg, peas, carrot and green onions with either Spam or Portuguese sausage, or sometimes both. The best recipes incorporate the cook's favorite ingredients stir-fried in a seasoned wok to produce a splendor of flavors.


Fried Rice Recipe Ideas

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