Tuesday, September 02, 2008

Raspberry Scones

The last tarot class I made these and Tido the fabulous puppy has asked for the recipe.

2 cups unbleached flour
1/3 cup sugar plus a bit for top
1 tablespoon baking powder
2 teaspoons lemon zest
1/4 teaspoon salt
4 tablespoons (1/2 stick) butter cut into bits
1 large egg
1/2 cup heavy cream plus a bit to glaze
1 teaspoon almond extract
3/4 cup fresh or frozen raspberries (can use other fruit of choice)

*Preheat oven to 400 lightly butter baking sheet or use a pizza stone
*Mix dry ingredients well then add butter and combine until butter is no longer in clumps. The book says use 2 knives I just use my well washed hands to crumble it all together.
*place egg, cream and almond extract in a bowl, whisk then combine with dry ingredients
* turn out dough onto lightly floured work surface and knead lightly, gently fold in raspberries at this time
*form scones into one or two mounds place on baking sheet, cut with knife but do not separate.
*brush lightly with cream and sprinkle with sugar
*bake until golden brown about 15-20 minutes
*let cool 10 minutes, re-cut then serve

Enjoy !

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Wednesday, July 09, 2008

beautiful food

It's my favorite time of year! The farmers markets have beautiful organic freshness in all shapes and colors.

Here's a favorite salad dressing

1 small avocado
1 cup orange juice
1/4 cup plus 2 TBSP lime juice
1 handful cilantro
1 green onion chopped
1 TBSP shallot
1/2 small jalapeno
1/2 tsp sea salt
1/2 cup olive oil
fresh ground pepper

Blend it all in a food processor until it's your desired consistency. It will keep in an air tight container for 2-3 days.

Pour it on your favorite greens, herbs, and other veggies or use it as a dip. It is so good you could drink it as a smoothie :D

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Wednesday, October 10, 2007

Tips for a Healthier Home

Since it's Breast Cancer awareness month I thought I'd share some healthful tips to reduce your exposure to toxins. These tips are modified from ones that printed in Body and Soul magazine.

1) Inspect all products you put on your skin. Shampoo, lotion, cleaners, dish soap, bath, cosmetics, etc. Your skin is your most absorbent organ, everything you put on it goes through it. Check labels and reduce your exposure to petrochemicals, talc, and other harmful poisons. Here's a list of companies that have gone toxin free.

2)Assess your clothing. Where does it come from? What is it made of? What is it dyed with? Choose to educate yourself on where clothing is made and the fabric that are best for the earth. Yes you may spend a bit more for organic clothes, however you will save a ton on the impact of the earth. Reduce your carbon foot print even further by buying used clothing at thrift stores, vintage shops and consignment spaces. Better yet host a party with all your friends and trade.

3)Food. READ INGREDIENTS. I know it's a chore but sneaky marketing laws allow nasty stuff to get through the organic label. Buy things with ingredients you can pronounce and save a bundle by visiting local farmer's markets for fresh produce, herbs, cheese, breads, and flowers.

4) Assess you home. The big surfaces in your home affect air quality the most. Consider using hardwood, ceramic or stone flooring instead of chemically derived carpet. If painting consider paints low in VOCs (volatile organic compounds) better yet try a natural plaster finish tinted with earth based dye.

5) Sleep. Since you spend roughly a third of your life here "green" this area first. Invest in a mattress of latex foam, cotton, or wool batting. Replace synthetic pillows with wool or cotton, and look for unbleached untreated linens. I can attest since we bought out organic bed a year ago I sleep much better. We bought ours at Soaring Heart and the best thing the latex mattress will last minimum 20 years and we can replace the cotton futon (get it re stuffed every 3-5 years) for cheap!

6) Car. make sure you aren't leaching car fumes into your home. Obviously if you need a car it'd be best to have an electric on, if you can't afford that buy one that's less hard on the environment. If you own a car, participate in bike to work, riding the bus or walking anytime it's possible. If you work from home consider why you need a car and play with the idea of finding a flex car. There are 298 flex cars in Seattle, 11 in west Seattle, 4 within walking distance to my house. My goal by the end of 2008 is to get rid of one or both of our cars. It's a waste of money, time and frustration. Always keep a window cracked in the car as the inside of a car is the most toxic place you come in contact with on a daily basis.

7) Keep informed. My favorite sites are Tree Hugger, GreenOptions
and this amazing woman has committed to 365 days of finding solutions to live a greener life...

8) Evaluate how you cook and store food. Plastic is handy but evil... limit your usage. Non-stick pans kill birds and small dogs with their toxic fumes, should you be eating out of that? (I still use mine too) When you buy new things take these thins into consideration, store foods in glass and cook in stainless steel.

9)Dump the "magic" cleaning products. If you have to call the poison control center after ingesting it you shouldn't expose it to your skin or lungs or eyes. I used Method products, my friend uses Seventh Generation. both you could ingest and only end up with a tummy ache, yet they kill germs, clean well, and smell amazing.

10)Look to your pets, garden and outdoor spaces. Do you use pesticides, herbicides, weed block, super lawn enhancers, etc. Do you then let your pet and/or child and/or self go out in that? Once again skin is the most absorbent organ and you/your pet/your child is taking it all in. Not to mention it's running off in the rain and creating havoc in local water systems and killing fish/birds/good bugs. Try natural alternatives, companion planting and build a bird house for day bugs and a bat house for night bugs. Look at what you feed your pets. With all the scars earlier in the year people are switching to natural pet foods. again read the ingredients. Also look to pet products and search out natural alternates to poisoning them. (and then let me know cause i still use that nasty flea meds on them)

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Tuesday, July 17, 2007

edible flowers

Can you tell I am cleaning out my files? My random posting may reach epic proportions before this is all done.

Today I am giving some tips I found in the AMBP magazine: Yummy flowers
Calendulas (pot marigold): add petals to anything for a peppery taste. Also are nice addition to bath or foot soak actually all of these are a nice addition to water treatments.
Daylilies: I've never tried them, good cooked or raw it says and has been used in China to ease the pain of grief. They have tons of antioxidants.
Dandelions: The plant people love to hate. flowers are sweet and can be made into wine and the leaves are good cooked or tossed into salads, I like them but they are a bitter.
Hibiscus: The flowers are beautiful and add beauty to any meal. Cranberry like flavor with citrus overtones, the tea is beautiful pink/red and yummy.
Squash Blossoms: Yummy fried in batter or stuffed.
Pansies: Mild minty flavor and is a great garnish being beautiful in color and delicate looking.
Roses: All are edible but the darker the color the more flavor. Use them everywhere!
Sunflower: It is best eaten when in the bud stage, and apparently tastes similar to artichokes. When the flower opens can use the petals which are bittersweet in flavor.

Tips:
Do not eat flowers from florist or garden centers as these have probably been sprayed. Also do not eat flowers from the side of the road as car exhaust is not good to ingest and makes things taste awful. If you don't know if the flower is edible, don't eat it. Bad things could happen. Look in grocery stores and farmers markets for edible flowers sold in the herb or salad section. Don't eat too many flowers at once, they don't taste all that great so I'm not too worried about y'all on this one. Most important use flowers that look good and are free from bugs... unless of course you need more protein and want to get it from aphids instead of meat, then by all means chow down... just don't invite me for dinner :D

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Wednesday, November 22, 2006

the giant list of ethical food sources

Here are some resources for healthy food alternatives. Sorry this is such a long post but I did not want to loose this information. This list is part of one from the book The Ethical Gourmet by Jay Weinstein, I have omitted the very large meat section because it is 3 pages long and some of the websites below will get you that information.


Fair Trade Certified
www.transfairusa.org
www.ifat.org

Listings
www.globalexchange.org
www.fairtradefederation.com

Chocolate
www.dagobachocolate.com
www.newmansownorganics.com

Coffee
www.cafecanopy.com
www.cafelasemeuse.com
www.mountainviewcoffee.com
www.adamsorganiccoffees.com
www.cafeman.com
www.deansbeans.com
www.elanorganic.com
www.greenmountaincoffee.com
www.groundsforchange.com
www.kalanicoffee.com
www.saltspringcoffee.com
www.urthcaffe.com

wine
www.astorwines.com
www.ecowines.com
www.feywine.com

Organic Groceries
www.arrowheadmills.com
www.beanbag.net
www.celtic-seasalt.com
www.diamondorganics.com
www.edenfoods.com
www.garlicgourmet.com
www.greatgrainsmilling.com
www.greenmountainmills.com
www.lotusfoods.com
www.organic-planet.com
www.publix.com
www.sunorganicfarm.com
www.truefoodsonline.com or www.truefoodsmarket.com
www.villageorganics.com
www.woodprairie.com
www.worldofrice.com
www.yatatex.com

Rainforest Friendly
www.tradesfairusa.org
www.rainforset-alliance.org
www.chiquita.com

Ethnic and Specialty
www.deliciousorganics.com
www.agferri.com
www.asianfoodgrocer.com
www.cybercucina.com
www.ethnicgrocer.com
www.farawayfoods.com
www.goya.com
www.harvestsensations.com
www.importfoods.com
www.kalustyans.com
www.kitchenmarket.com
www.livingtreecommunity.com
www.mexgrocer.com
www.mustaphas.com
www.orientalpantry.com
www.pointshop.com

Sugar and Alternative Sugar
www.lasiembra.com
www.levelground.com
www.marquisproject.com
www.wholesomesweeteners.com

Organic Info
www.eatwellguide.org
www.iatp.org
www.lohas.com
www.foodnews.org (pesticide info)

Political/ Socially Responsible
www.lcv.org
www.sierraclub.org
www.chefscollaborative.org
www.greenpages.org
www.workingassets.com

Garden Seeds
www.seedsavers.org

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