Chocolate Coconut Almond Bars
Posted: June 24, 2015 Filed under: Recipes | Tags: #BeyondPaleo, #Chocolate, #Paleo Dessert Leave a comment
Serving Size : 12
5 egg whites
1/2 cup coconut sugar
1/4 teaspoon stevia
3/4 teaspoon pure vanilla extract
1/3 teaspoon almond extract
3/4 teaspoon salt
5 cups sweetened shredded coconut
1 3/4 cups whole almonds
1 3/8 cups chopped dark chocolate – melted
1) Preheat the oven to 325°F. Oil a 9-inch square baking dish with butter.
2) In the bowl of an electric mixer fitted with the whip attachment, whip the egg whites and sugar on medium speed until well incorporated and the sugar is nearly dissolved. Add the vanilla and almond extracts and salt; mix to combine.
3) Stir in the coconut by hand, then pour the mixture into the prepared baking dish. Press into an even layer.
4) Sprinkle the almonds over the coconut and press gently to secure.
5) Bake until the coconut begins to turn golden brown at the edges and the almonds are toasted, 20 to 25 minutes. Cool to room temperature.
6) When the coconut mixture is cool, drizzle the melted chocolate all over the surface. Transfer the pan to the refrigerator and chill until the chocolate is set.
7) Slice into 12 even squares. Store in an airtight container until ready to serve, up to three days.
Eating Chocolate Gets Another Thumbs-up for Heart Attack, Stroke Prevention
Posted: June 24, 2015 Filed under: Food and it's Impact on Our Health | Tags: #BeyondPaleo, #Chocolate Leave a commentMore good news for chocoholics: New research has found that devoted consumers of chocolate — including some who consume the equivalent of about two standard candy bars a day — are 11% less likely than those who eat little to no chocolate to have heart attacks and strokes, and 25% less likely to die of cardiovascular disease.
Chemists discover secret to dark chocolate’s health benefits
That news emerged from a long-running British study that tracked nearly 21,000 adults in and around Norfolk, England, for an average of 12 years, making frequent surveys of their consumption habits, lifestyles and health. Those in the top one-fifth of chocolate consumers owned up to eating the equivalent of about a half an American-sized candy bar; those whose chocolate consumption landed them in the bottom 20th percentile averaged a paltry 1.1 gram per day.
Those in the highest chocolate-consuming group not only had lower rates of heart attack and stroke, but they also had, on average, lower body-mass indexes, lower systolic blood pressure and inflammation, and lower rates of diabetes. They also tended to exercise more.
The study was published Monday in the BMJ journal Heart.
Those findings jibe with a welter of other “observational” studies, those that track people over lengthy periods and draw links between some factor or habit or input — in this case chocolate — and a specific outcome. Indeed, the authors of the Norfolk study also lashed together the findings of nine other such studies — a so-called meta-analysis reflecting the outcomes of 159,809 people — to undergird and provide further context for their findings.
That meta-analysis found that compared with chocolate abstainers, heavy chocolate consumers were 25% less likely to suffer a wide range of cardiovascular ills and 45% less likely to die of those ills.
But Dr. Farzaneh Aghdassi Sorond of Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston says it’s time for such observational studies to give way to trials that probe deeper questions: Is it chocolate, or something else that comes with a chocolate-eating life, that makes people healthier? And if it is chocolate, what is it specifically about this long-consumed bean that confers better health?
Studies like this one, Sorond says, can’t draw a clear line of cause and effect between eating chocolate and better health.
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One shouldn’t jump to conclusions from observational studies without supporting data/studies. Hormone replacement therapy (HRT) was associated with lower risk of cardiovascular disease in observational studies, but when a randomized, blinded trial was finally done, it was found that HRT…
“Causality is the issue that remains unanswered and that’s going to have to be explored through clinical trials and interventions,” said Sorond, whose research has shown that when elderly people at high risk of stroke and dementia were given high quantities of cocoa to consume, the blood flow to their brains improved.
Sorond noted that in the current study, authors did little to distinguish grades of chocolate — and thus, the cocoa content of that chocolate — in their reckoning. Much of what was reported consumed appears to have been milk chocolate, which contains low levels of the plant flavonoids in cocoa that many researchers have focused on as chocolate’s beneficial ingredient.
That makes the findings all the more perplexing, she said, because “the brown stuff that is sweet doesn’t necessarily have any chocolate in it.”
“Are we really chasing the right thing focusing on the flavonols?” Sorond asked. “Or is there something else? Does chocolate consumption represent a socioeconomic status or some other kind of healthy factor? This paper underscores the issue we face.”
Such work is underway on a broad front, with scientists, confectioners and pharmaceutical companies all vying to play a role in chocolate’s next chapter.
Sorond says that may take four to five years to produce results, so it may be best to sit back, crack open a bar of dark chocolate and take heed of the advice dispensed by the authors of the latest research: “There does not appear to be any evidence to say that chocolate should be avoided in those who are concerned about cardiovascular risk.”
A Path to Health
Posted: June 18, 2015 Filed under: Food and it's Impact on Our Health, Going Green; How and Why..., Non-Toxic Choices | Tags: #BeyondPaleo, #healing, #health, Paleo 1 Comment1. Eat whole, natural foods. Nothing from cans or boxes.
2. Eat only foods that will spoil, but eat them before they do.
3. Eat naturally-raised meat including fish, seafood, poultry, beef, lamb, game and eggs.
4. Drink filtered water, NOT distilled. A reverse Osmosis water filter is the most cost effective way to get clean water. You can get one that filters your kitchen sink water, or a system for the whole house. If you do not have water filters on your shower heads, then bath with the window or door open, to minimize breathing chlorine.
5. Avoid dairy, grains, flours.
6. Utilize the glycemic index, work off the bottom half.
7. Use only traditional fats and oils including butter and other animal fats, Minimize the use of extra virgin olive oil, expeller expressed sesame and flax oil. Get these delicate, fragile oils in the foods they came in; olives, avocadoes, green leafy vegetables, sesame seeds.
8. Eat lots of fresh fruits and vegetables.
9. Prepare homemade meat stocks from the bones of chicken, beef, lamb or fish and use liberally in soups and sauces.
10. Make demi-glace, use it for depth of flavor and nutrients.
11. Use filtered water for cooking and drinking.
12. Use unrefined Celtic sea salt and a variety of herbs and spices for food interest and appetite stimulation.
13. Make your own salad dressing using raw vinegar, whole foods like carrots, avocadoes, tomatoes, coconut oil.
14. Use natural sweeteners in moderation, such as raw honey, maple syrup, dehydrated cane sugar juice and stevia powder.
15. Use only unpasteurized wine or beer in strict moderation with meals.
16. Cook only in stainless steel, cast iron, glass or good quality enamel.
17. Store food in glass or stainless steel containers, NOT plastic.
18. Use only natural supplements from FOOD sources.
19. Get plenty of sleep, do what it takes to be able to awaken naturally at dawn. Open the windows, get your circadian rhythm going by letting the brain get the light it needs to become awake quickly and effortlessly, looking forward to your day. This becomes normal after the initial detox.
20. Get plenty of exercise, yoga, core body work, walking, dancing, hula hooping, swimming…the more in motion you stay, the better you feel.
21. Get plenty of natural sunlight, for happiness, for Vitamin D.
22. Normal bathing should not require soap. A loofah will do…maybe in strategic spots like under your arms, but use an all-natural soap. I use Dr. Bonners.
23. Sleep on chemical free beddings; a organic wool and cotton futon topped with a feather bed costs less than $500.00 and is heaven to sleep on!! The fire retardant chemicals in a normal mattress is 100 times more carcinogenic than nicotine and contributes to lowered sperm count, infertility and interferes with normal hormone production.
24. Use 100% natural fibers to wear and to sleep on.
25. Think positive thoughts and minimize stress.
26. Practice forgiveness.
27. Choose peace, and happiness in every moment.
Awesome Fudgy Brownies!
Posted: June 17, 2015 Filed under: Recipes | Tags: #BeyondPaleo, #Paleo Dessert, gluten-free, Paleo 2 CommentsTwo clients called to tell me today that the Brownies we delivered today were perfect!! Wahhooo!!
These brownies have the best flaky, crunchy tops of any brownie I’ve ever made, the coffee adds depth of flavor and the blueberries help hold the moisture!
Here the recipe;
Serving Size : 12
1/2 cup unsalted butter — melted
1 3/8 cups granulated sugar
1 cup chocolate chips
2 tablespoons dried coffee
1/4 teaspoon baking soda
1/3 teaspoon salt
1 1/3 tablespoons water
1 1/3 teaspoons vanilla extract
2 2/3 eggs
3/8 teaspoon xanthan gum
3/4 cups sweet rice flour
1/2 cup tapioca flour
1/4 teaspoon xanthan gum
1 1/3 cups blueberries
1) Preheat oven to 350 degrees.
2) Butter a 8×8 glass pan
3) Pour the butter into the bowl of a stand mixer. Add the sugar and cocoa powder and beat until smooth and almost creamy.
4) Add the salt, water, and vanilla. Add the eggs, one at a time, mixing in between each addition.
5) Add the rice flour blend, baking soda, coffee crystals and blueberries and mix well. The batter will be thick.
6) Use a sturdy spatula to spread batter in the prepared 8×8 pan. Bake for 30-35 minutes until toothpick inserted comes out clean.
7) Let cool, then cut into 2? squares. Try really hard to not eat them all yourself.
Or you can order them from Beyond-Paleo.com!
Asian Sweet Potato Salad
Posted: June 16, 2015 Filed under: Recipes | Tags: #BeyondPaleo, #sweetpotatoes, Paleo Leave a commentThis is one of my favorite sweet potato dishes!
4 large organic sweet potatoes, peeled, diced in 1 inch cubes
2 medium red peppers- diced medium
1 bunch scallions- sliced thin, diagonally
1 bunch cilantro- chopped coarsely
1 1/2 Tablespoons Dijon mustard
salt and pepper to taste
1 teaspoon cumin
3/4 teaspoon smoked paprika
1 teaspoon fresh ginger- grated with ginger grater, use juice also
2 limes- juiced, use zest from one in salad (use microplaner for this)
1) Toss potatoes in butter, roast in 374 degree oven until edges are browned
2) Toss with all other ingredients, let sit about 30 minutes before serving.
Millie’s One a Day
Posted: June 9, 2015 Filed under: Food and it's Impact on Our Health, Recipes | Tags: #BeyondPaleo, #smoothies, Paleo Leave a comment
For most people the idea of getting in shape or improving our health is a daunting and intimidating task…unachievable. Every choice we makes takes us further or closer to our goals.
Many need to lose weight, improve health, be more active. EVERYONE needs to improve their nutrition. No exceptions. In working with clients for 32 years, I have seen ONE food diary where the woman met all of her needs fir all nutrients. Even calcium and iron..
In this continuing column, I will give you one small item a day to tweak or choose. Achievable goals, one at a time…
One day at a time. Follow along daily, you’ll be shocked at how much healthier you are in a few months!
For today; Add a hand full of spinach to your morning smoothie.
Here’s my favorite smoothie recipe
Tropical Smoothie
1 cup frozen blueberries
1 frozen banana
1 cup frozen mango
1/3 cup coconut cream (I use Thai Kitchen organic)
1 teaspoon Metagenics Ultra Potent-C®
1 Tablespoon Amazing Grass Orac Green Superfood Powder
3 cups Coconut water
1 Tablespoon lime juice
large handful of baby spinach- I use baby spinach because of it’s mild taste. Any baby greens except kale work- it has a too strong a taste.
Blend all in blender.
Coffee, Cinnamon and Hazelnut Cakes
Posted: June 8, 2015 Filed under: Recipes | Tags: #BeyondPaleo, #Paleo Dessert, gluten-free, lactose free Leave a comment
Coffee, Cinnamon and Hazelnut Cakes
Serving Size : 8
1/2 cup sweet rice flour
1/4 cup tapioca flour
3/4 cup hazelnuts
3/4 cup sugar
3/4 teaspoon baking powder
3/4 teaspoon ground cinnamon
1/8 teaspoon salt
3 large eggs
1 1/2 teaspoons vanilla extract
3 tablespoons butter
3 teaspoons instant coffee
Preheat oven to 350F.
1) Butter iron muffin tin.
2) In the bowl of a food processor, combine flour, hazelnuts, sugar, baking powder, cinnamon and salt and whizz until hazelnuts are finely ground. Add in eggs and vanilla extract and whisk pulse until batter is smooth.
3) In a small microwave-safe bowl, melt the butter. Add in instant coffee powder and stir to dissolved. Add coffee=melted butter mixture to the batter and pulse until butter is completely incorporated.
4) Divide batter evenly into prepared muffin cups.
5) Bake for 18-22 minutes, until the cakes spring back when lightly touched and a toothpick inserted into the cake comes out clean.
6) Take cakes out of the muffin pan and allow to cool on a wire rack
7) When ready to serve, invert cakes onto a plate and remove their wrappers. Cakes can be served at room temperature or slightly warmed.
Cauliflower Tots
Posted: June 5, 2015 Filed under: Recipes | Tags: #BeyondPaleo, #Healthy, gluten-free, Paleo Leave a comment
Pic from Hungry Empress
Serving Size : 4
2 cups cooked cauliflower florets — finely chopped in food processor
1 large egg
1 large egg white
1/2 cup onion – diced small, sautéed in butter
1 cup grated potato
3 Tablespoon minced dried basil
1 Tablespoon dried basil
1/2 cup gluten breadcrumbs
2 Tablespoons butter
1) Steam a little over 2 cups raw cauliflower florets , 4 to 5 minutes or until tender but not mushy, then drain well. I put something heavy on top of it in the colander to drain it well, left it to sit while I steamed to grated potatoes.
2) Steam potatoes about 7 or 8 minutes.
3) Preheat oven to 420°F. Butter mini muffin tins.
4) In a medium bowl, combine all of the ingredients and season with salt and pepper to taste.
5) Spoon 2 tablespoon of mixture in your hands and roll into small ovals. Bake for 16-18 minutes, turning halfway through cooking until golden.
The Spiralizer: Why Your Next Bowl of Pasta Just Might Not Be Pasta at All
Posted: June 2, 2015 Filed under: In The Kitchen with Millie- How To's | Tags: #Beyond-Paleo, #BeyondPaleo, #Healthy, #lowcarb, #spiralizer, #zoodles, Paleo Leave a commentCredit: Nick Hopper
I rarely advertise, but I LOVE this product! I have been cutting zucchini “noodles’ by hand with a knife for years, this makes it SO quick and easy!
A knife, with a little practice can do all the things a mandoline can do-
$29.97 on Amazon- Spiralizer
From Bon Appetit
MARCH 2, 2015 /
WRITTEN BY ROCHELLE BILOW
We love traditional pasta, but lately we’ve noticed a new breed of noodles. We’re not talking about rice, corn, or quinoa spaghetti—we’re talking about spiralized vegetables. The spiralizer is an inexpensive tool (one of the most popular brands retails for $39.95) that turns fresh veggies into faux-noodles (zoodles, if you will, but we won’t). It isn’t just for the carb-averse; everyone from home cooks to restaurant chefs are spiralizing.
Most models are about the size of a large toaster and function like a giant pencil sharpener. A firm, peeled veggie is held in place with a clamp over the grinder, and as the vegetable disappears into the hold, the cook uses a hand crank to make the gears work. The result is a pile of extra-long, gently curled ribbons. Interesting, but what makes this tool so great?
The Spiralizer Is a Chef’s Best Friend
Restaurant chefs, who have mountains of chopping and slicing to slog through, have a lot to love in the spiralizer. Amanda Cohen, chef and owner of the vegetarian restaurant Dirt Candy in New York City, first encountered the tool when working at an all-raw restaurant. “It made some boring jobs a lot easier,” she explains. Dirt Candy now frequently serves spiralized vegetables (using the Benriner and Kaiten models). Chef Joshua McFadden of Ava Gene‘s in Portland, first began using aTsumakirikun spiralizer because, “I wanted a way to make perfect consistent cuts of pumpkin for a salad.” The more commonplace mandoline slicer performs the same task, but the spiralizer produces prettier results.
Jonah Miller, chef and owner of Huertas, also in NYC, just may be the tool’s biggest fan. “I think we use it more than any other restaurant in the city,” he says, adding that they used their spiralizer so much, they added a drill function to cut down on the manual cranking.
But it’s not just about the functionality. Says Cohen: ”People are conditioned to be dismissive about vegetables so you kind of have to sneak up on them and surprise them…in ways they aren’t anticipating.” For a culture of eaters who grew up with meat as the star of the show and vegetables playing second fiddle, eating a veggie-forward meal can be a radical change.
The most spiralized vegetable at Huertas is the potato in huevos rotos, a dish that’s typically prepared with hunks of potato fried in olive oil. It’s delicious but, according to Miller, too greasy to be texturally great. Instead, at Huertas, long strands of potato get flash-fried for 8 to 10 seconds. They have the texture of al dente pasta with no excessive grease. Also, Miller explains, “The experience of twirling a vegetable around your fork, and taking a big bite is so much more enjoyable than a small mouthful.”
Produce ‘Pasta’ Is Gluten-Free, Carb-Free, and Grain-Free (But Not Flavor-Free)
If you don’t eat grains you’re inevitably going to run into a frustrating dilemma: What to cook when you miss pasta? Ali Maffucci, the author of the blog Inspiralized and the cookbook Inspiralized, began sharing spiralized recipes on her blog in June 2013. Her Italian-American heritage and love of pasta clashed with her quest for a healthier, slimmer lifestyle. She began by substituting spiralized vegetables for noodles, and now uses them for salads, casseroles, and even “rice” (she uses a food processor to pulverize the spiralized veggies).
Jasmine and Melissa Hemsley, of the UK-based blog and clean-eating lifestyle brand Hemsley + Hemsley avoid all grains. Bored with the texture of peeled vegetables, they purchased a spiralizer and began experimenting. It’s now a main feature of their blog and cookbook.
It’s a Sneaky Way to Eat More Veggies
Spiralizing advocates argue that the technique makes it easier to get your daily fill of vegetables. But if you’re going to eat a sweet potato, why spiralize it when you could just as easily chop it? In an email toBA, Melissa Hemsley explains, “It’s a way to eat some vegetables…that you may not have tried beforehand.”
Maffucci likes her spiralizer because it creates volume seemingly out of thin air. One carrot can turn out cups of spiralized ribbons, tricking the eater into thinking they’re consuming more without the penalty of added calories. Says Maffucci, “You’re like ‘I’m eating something pretty and twirly, and there’s so much of it!‘” She adds that veggie noodles don’t feel like diet food. “[Eating spiralized vegetables] is a better experience than saying, ‘I have to eat a salad.’”
…Okay, But How Does It Taste?
“I still love pasta,” says Maffucci, who doesn’t keep grain-based noodles in the house. And, “No, [spiralized vegetables] don’t taste ‘the same’ as pasta.” But, she continues, a bowl of plain pasta is nothing spectacular on its own, either: What makes it shine are the toppings: Add meat, cheese, and a sauce to anything, and you’ve got a tasty dinner. Delicious as they are, vegetables are so texturally different from grains that you’ll never really trick yourself into thinking they’re pasta.
But maybe, suggest the Hemsley sisters, that’s not the point: Because they don’t eat any grains, they’re not trying to replace or mimic them. “For us, noodle and pasta dishes are all about the sauces, and spiralized vegetables provide a tasty, nourishing base.”
Says Maffucci, “Look, nothing will ever be as delicious as a buttery bowl of pasta. But this is pretty great.”
Chocolate Brownie Cookies
Posted: May 29, 2015 Filed under: Recipes | Tags: #BeyondPaleo, #Chocolate, #desserts, #paleodessert Leave a commentYield : 36
1 pound semisweet chocolate — chopped
4 tablespoons unsalted butter
4 large eggs — at room temperature
1 1/2 cups sugar
1 tablespoon pure vanilla extract
1/4 teaspoon salt
1/4 cup tapioca flour
1/4 cup sweet rice flour — sifted
1/2 teaspoon baking powder
12 ounces chocolate chips
1) In a large bowl set over a saucepan of simmering water, melt the chopped chocolate with the butter, stirring a few times, until smooth, about 7 minutes.
2) In another large bowl, using a handheld electric mixer, beat the eggs with the sugar at medium speed until thick and pale, about 5 minutes. Beat in the vanilla and salt. Using a rubber spatula, fold in the melted chocolate, then fold in the flour and baking powder. Stir in the chocolate chips.
3) Scrape the batter into a shallow baking dish, cover and freeze until well chilled and firm, about 2 hours.
4) Preheat the oven to 375° and line 2 baking sheets with parchment paper. Working in batches, scoop 2-tablespoon-size mounds of dough onto the prepared baking sheets, about 2 inches apart.
5) Bake for about 4 minutes at 375 degrees, then turn oven to 350 and continue baking cookies 15 minutes, until the cookies are dry around the edges and cracked on top.
6) Let the cookies cool on the baking sheets for 10 minutes, then transfer to a rack to cool completely before serving.


