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~ Eating healthily easily

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Tag Archives: Fermentation

Morning Glory and Amazing Afternoon Juice.

10 Saturday May 2014

Posted by Aissa in Fermentation, juice, Natural Health, Superfoods, Vegan

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Fermentation, Juice, Natural Health, Superfoods, Vegan

So i am only having juices today all made with organic ingredients, in order to kick start my extra healthy detox-ish eating plan. If you have any underlying medical issues or have not fasted before have a chat with your natural or medical practitioner first! Arose this morning – quite late, major glorious lie on! I had warm water with lemon,tiny pinch of cayenne and a teaspoon of organic apple cider vinegar. Great for your kidneys!

I followed this with my Morning Glory juice!

Morning glory prep!

Morning glory prep!

  • Half an organic unwaxed lemon
  • An inch/ 2.5cms of cucumber
  • Some beetroot- I used a 1.5inc squared piece
  • Three pak choi leaves
  • Two stalks of celery
  • A small chunk of ginger (about size of the top of your baby finger)
  • A small chunk of turmeric (about size of the top of your baby finger)
  • A little bit of wheatgrass- again to flavour roughly half inch thick bunch
  • A shot of homemade (or a no added ingredients) Kombucha

This is super tasty. The chlorophyl from these green goodies helps oxygenate your blood. The beetroot is a vascular dilator. Got the usual suspects of vitamin c, b vitamins, minerals and enzymes all on fast track delivery by being juiced! I am very lucky to work a place where I can get all these organic veggies and fruit.

Morning glory

Morning glory

I was out and about for the afternoon. After I had finished my Sauerkraut post. While out I had a wheatgrass shot at the farmers market. Also got the catalogna leaves for my Amazing Afternoon juice! Bought a second hand dress for a fancy dress I’m going to!! 🙂  On the way home I had an organic beetroot and lemon juice.

Amazing Afternoon Juice!

So the ingredients may seem intense and odd in flavour, but trust me the combination works!

Amazing Afternoon Juice prep. So colourful antioxidants galore!

Amazing Afternoon Juice prep. So colourful antioxidants galore!

  • One pointed red pepper
  • Half a tomato
  • Half an unwaxed lemon
  • Half an unwaxed lime
  • Two stalks of celery
  • Three pak choi leaves
  • Half a green apple
  • A green pear
  • Two carrots
  • Four stalks of coriander
  • Ten catalogna leaves
  • A small finger nail size piece of organic ginger
  • A slice of lemon
  • A teaspoon of apple cider vinegar
  • The tiniest pinch of organic cayenne powder- tiny like a millimetre.
Amazing Afternoon Juicetasticness!

Amazing Afternoon Juicetasticness!

The fruit balances out the bitterness of those amazing catalogna leaves. Bitter green leaves help feed your good bacteria and stimulate your digestion. The coriander lifts the flavour and it adds more green. I have mentioned in previous posts coriander is recognised for it’s health benefits e.g a digestive aid and possibly helping remove heavy metals from the body.

I feel great, having healthy juices all day to make sure I do not go hungry or miss out on nutrients. I will have another juice this evening. Looking forward to a big green smoothie brekkie tomorrow. I will eat raw tomorrow and prob clear my kitchen out of brazil nuts, walnuts, almonds and avocados! 🙂

Hope you try these out! Xs Aissa

Sauerkraut – the new old superfood.

10 Saturday May 2014

Posted by Aissa in Fermentation, Gluten Free, Natural Health, Savoury, Superfoods, Traditional

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Fermentation, Gluten free, Natural Health, Sauerkraut recipe, Savoury, Superfoods, Traditional

Fermented foods, how do I begin to sing their praises? I suppose I did already with my brief posts declaring the life force of my water kefir. I also have a wonderful kilner jar inhabiting kombucha scoby. These two and my sauerkraut all live and grow together in the corner of my kitchen named “ferment-ville”. I will rave a bit more about them after my “How to make sauerkraut”. There are many variations, lots of traditions but this is the one I made Thursday night!

How to make sauerkraut! I may be bordering on a Kimchi, because of the ginger.

First the Organic cabbage- organic because who wants to ferment chemical sprays!

Beautiful Organic white cabbage!

Beautiful Organic white cabbage!

Second get a kilner jar, I used a 1 litre( 1+3/4 pints) jar, as I intended to do two cabbages. It is important to have sterilised the kilner with almost boiling water (that’s what I do) or steam sterilise. This is what your sauerkraut will be living in, it is better that it be really clean than risk bad bacteria getting a foothold.

  • Two white cabbage- remove the outer leaves and discard. The leaves not the cabbage!
  • Two inches of organic ginger
  • Optional: some organic cucumber, three inch piece (approx. 7.5cms)
  • Generous teaspoon of organic cumin seeds
  • Six cloves of organic garlic
  • Three dessertspoons of fine sea salt
  • Roughly 400ml of still mineral water
  • Extra optional: A dessertspoon of sauerkraut you have made before or a good quality raw one from your health store.

Rinse your hands, make extra sure there is no soap residue on them. Soap will kill the bacteria and inhibit the fermentation.

Cut the base off each of your cabbages, hold onto the hard stem as you can use this later. It can be a useful “cap” to hold your sauerkraut down with.

I was given a spiralizer for my birthday by my lovely work mates. I am attempting to spiralizes everything at the moment. Including the cabbage for this! It spiralized for a bit. It then became stubborn and I stubbornly persisted for another bit. The wonderful contraption certainly sped things up.You can of course put it in a food processor or just chop it finely, think of the thickness you would expect in a slaw.

Measure half the water, add two and a half dessertspoons of the salt and give it a stir.

Pour the salt water (brine) over the cabbage. Mix things up and knead the cabbage for a couple of minutes. The salt and kneading helps draw water from the cabbage.

Prepare your ginger. I rinse it and peel off bits that still seem dirty. Chop it finely and throw it in with the cabbage.

Add your cumin seeds.

Chop your cucumber. Add this to the rest. Toss the mixture and give it another knead.

It will look like this picture, if you look at it before you add your cucumber! 🙂

Spiralized and chopped!

Spiralized and chopped!

Next put a plate on top of it and weigh it down with something, I use a 1kg/ 2.2lb bag of flour. Leaving it sit gives the salt a chance to draw more water from the veg. During this time I usually clean up the bits of cabbage I have scattered to the four winds about the kitchen! Give it twenty minutes if you can.

Cut your cloves of garlic in half.

Grab your sterilised kilner jar. Uncover the almost sauerkraut. Grab handfuls of the mixture and press it down into the jar. if you find that there is not enough water to cover the cabbage add half a dessertspoon of salt to the left over water and add this to the kilner jar. Really get in there and try and compress the mixture as much as possible. Ideally it will nearly be to the top of your jar, maybe an inch/ couple of centimetres gap. Now arrange your garlic over the top, garlic is a powerful anti-bacterial and anti fungal, but won’t kill the friendly bacteria we want inhabiting the cabbage! Now grab your cabbage base, slice off any dirty bits, place in the jar and press every thing again. Everything should be covered in salty water. Make sure there are no bits of food sticking up out of the water or left on the dry sides of the jar and lid. These bits that are exposed the air will go mouldy and ruin your sauerkraut.

Keep your sauerkraut out of direct light and away from extremes in temperature. Every day open your jar once. This will leave out gases and leaves in air so it ferments to grow good bacteria as opposed to alcohol. Prevents the jar exploding too. After maybe a week you should start to notice the smell changing. It will take on more vinegary notes, a sign all is going well. You could could eat it at this point, it would be like fermented slaw. If you would like a softer texture and more sour flavour I’d say a minimum of two months. The white cabbage takes longer to soften, if you shred so it is EXTREMELY fine it will soften faster. Once opened I keep mine in the fridge.

It will be sauerkraut!

It will be sauerkraut!

Troubleshooting

If you have lots of space in the jar and everything is not covered in water you can grab a whole bulb of garlic and sit this onto. When you close the jar everything should be compressed. If a bit of the garlic is sticking out the top that is okay. Second option: if like me you decided one and a half cabbages would probably fill the jar and gave the rest to your partner so he could make amazingly yummy vegan coleslaw. You may have even more of a gap. So what I did was sterilise a really small jar,  roughly 7cms / 3 inc. high. After I put my garlic and cabbage on top of the mixture, I put in the jar and pressed everything again. I then closed the jar. I have done this before and it worked out fine.

Things to never do. Never use a plastic container A:It can not be sterilised and B: the sauerkraut produces lactic and acetic acids (hence lacti- bacteria being in it). Acids will eat into plastic so not a good combination. Never change jars after you have made it. It upsets the sauerkraut, it does not like change. I speak from experience. I had not left enough of a gap in my jar the first time I made sauerkraut and it all started to try and escape. I transferred it and it started to grow a white mouldy bloom within two days.

What makes Sauerkraut Super. A bit about fermented foods.

Most people in the western world do not regularly consume fermented foods, if at all. Western diets are also high in processed foods and people do not eat enough fresh foods. Vegans and vegetarians generally do better but most people think store bought yogurt is the only fermented food about. Store bought yogurt is nothing in comparison with traditional yogurts or milk kefir (my Nana called it her yogurt plant). Being vegan clearly I am going be staying clear of the poor cow’s milk. But there are plenty other healthy fermented food that one can make or buy in good health stores.

Pre canning and fake pickling (bought jars of cooked things in vinegars) foods were preserved by real pickling and fermenting. They were made from scratch or with live starters, such as sourdough for bread making. The benefits of consuming these fermented foods are many. One benefit is that the food’s nutrients are broken down and delivered to your body in an easily absorbable form. There is of course the delivery of millions if not billions of living good bacteria and good yeasts to your system. These live and active cultures have grown out in the world (not labs) and there is an arguement that therefor they are stronger, more adaptable and therefor better at surviving and setting up home in your digestive system! What I like about sauerkraut is cabbage is a good source of glutamine an amino acid that has been shown to help the gut to repair itself. It also tastes good, which is important! 🙂

If you would like to know more Sandor Katz has a great book called “The Art of Fermantation”

Xs Aissa

Image

It’s ALIVEEEEEEEEE!

17 Thursday Apr 2014

Tags

Fermentation, Natural Health, Superfoods, Vegan, water kefir

It's ALIVEEEEEEEEE!

Water Kefir is alive and growing! Doubled since my last post. Just giving it a large dessertspoon of raw whole cane sugar- rapadura/ turbinado, a dessertspoonful of organic golden caster sugar and a couple of slices of organic ginger. Takes about two and a half days to ferment. Billions of live bacteria!

Posted by Aissa | Filed under Fermentation, Natural Health, Superfoods, Vegan

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Water Kefir

15 Tuesday Apr 2014

Posted by Aissa in Fermentation, Natural Health, Superfoods, Vegan

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Tags

Fermentation, Natural Health, Superfoods, Vegan

This post is for Denise, I have been without my beloved water kefir since last September, there was an accident. Denise so kindly gave me beautiful living grains and I was able to give her a baby kombucha scoby! But today Denise came into the health shop where I work with spare dried water kefir grains and a lovely jar/ bottle for me to store them in. I will put up a “how to look after water kefir” post soon, maybe even followed by a kombucha and sauerkraut one!water kefir

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