I spoke with Domino about doing a dry January aka "dry-uary". A little insight on how our Squeezers feel sans alcohol and what to do when a Cabernet craving hits.
Any of you bypassing the booze this month? Or, have you in the past? What works when you want a cocktail but are trying to avoid have one?
Showing posts with label kombucha. Show all posts
Showing posts with label kombucha. Show all posts
Friday, January 5, 2018
Wednesday, January 11, 2017
How to Kill Carb and Sweet Cravings
We tend to draw a line between foods we’ll try (anything)
and what we’ll suggest to clients and readers. It’s affirming, that we’re headed
in a healthier direction, when foods we previously felt were offbeat become
mainstream. One such category of foods is fermented vegetables. Consumer Reports, Eating Well Magazine and Foodtrainers’ friend
Max Goldberg, of the Living Maxwell blog,
all list fermented foods as a trend for 2017.
If sauerkraut, kimchi
and pickles come to mind, you’re on the right track. I realize kimchi isn’t
for everyone; there are also carrots, beets and other, slightly more
user-friendly, fermented veggies available. As you may know, we’re also partial
to shots. I mean, why beat around the bush? Our favorite, fermented food folks
at Farmhouse Culture have “gut shots” (see photo). And, just yesterday NYC-based Lulitonix sent us their super shots too.
If being trendy is not a draw (and trust me, food trends are
the only trends that interest me), there are still convincing reasons you should have
fermented or “ferm”, as we affectionately call them, vegetables in your diet.
First, ferm veggies have a staggering probiotic count. One tablespoon has as high
a count as many supplements. And if you’re not already obsessed with
your microbiome (the state of real estate in your gut), you should be.
Fermented foods help with mood. The majority of our serotonin
is produced in your gut. I got a kick of this study which connects fermented
foods to lower social anxiety, specifically “neuroticism”. Fermented foods also
play a role in reducing food cravings, specifically for carbs and sugar. They have beneficial effects on your weight via glucose metabolism.
Bacteria-free mice were found to have higher levels of the stress hormone
cortisol. And higher cortisol leads to weight gain. If mood, cravings and
weight aren’t a draw (not sure why you’re reading this blog) it’s worth a
reminder that fermented foods help us combat pathogens. They can knock out h pylori,
that leads to ulcers, and even eradicate some forms of e coli…yum yum.
There are kits galore if you want to be a home fermenter. I’m
less of a DIY-er. Personally, I’d prefer SEDI (someone else do it). As I said above,
check out Farmhouse Culture (I’m already babbling but the kraut explosion that
occurred, with a package from them, is a sour story for another day). I mentioned their gut shots but their
fermented orange, ginger carrots are delicious too. We also love Bubbies
Pickles, Mother in Law's Kimchi and Hawthorne Farm's red cabbage. Look for these foods in the refrigerated section of your health food stores or Whole Foods.We featured ferm veggies as one of our “secret weapons” in
our New Year’s Whipping Weeks but we have other ferm friends. Kombucha, kefir
and miso are worth checking out. Your goal should be to have 1 “ferm” food
daily but when it comes to good bacteria, the more the merrier…or less neurotic.
Labels:
2017,
bubbles pickles,
cravings,
farmhouse culture,
fermented foods,
fermented veggies,
food trends,
gut shots,
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kimchi,
kombucha,
Living Maxwell,
miso,
mood,
probiotic,
weight
Wednesday, June 29, 2016
Foodtrainers' Fancy Food Show Finds
Yesterday was our annual summer trip to the Fancy Food show.
Basically, the Javitz Center is filled with a million food booths, some
healthier than others. I have to give us a little credit and say we have become
pros at the food fair thing. We didn’t eat ourselves into complete food comas
or sample any more ice cream. Plus, we hit
our 10k steps right away. It was great to see many Foodtrainers’ friends – Banza, Organic LivingSuperfoods (love the new look) and Grady’s cold brew . As always, we
were on the hunt for new products too. Here are a few Fancy faves we’ll fill
you in on, others we’re keeping a secret for our September Squeeze program and
the Foodtrainers’ shop.
Super Sauces: do you believe
in love at first bite? Filfil garlic hot sauce was my first taste of the day and my favorite.
With over 20 cloves of garlic per bottle you may not want to consume this before a
date or important meeting, but I promise you’ll fall in love
with this spicy new Brooklyn based brand. We are also all about Primal Kitchen’s paleo Avo-mayo which now comes in chipotle lime And you might
know The New Primal from their super spicy jerky but they have a new, clean bbq sauce line – sweetener from pineapple juice which also
helps tenderize meat before you BBQ.
Alternative flours: Almond, cassava
and chickpea oh my. We love seeing these gluten free alternatives in wraps,
snacks and yup even pizza. Our faves go to Cappello’s pizza and pasta, Siete cassava
wraps and Simple Mills
crackers.
![]() |
| the far right had basil, wow |
Chocolate: we are so happy
that chocolate isn’t going anywhere - we are forever Eating Evolved and Hu faithful (Hu assured us single serves are coming) but the beauties from Moonstruck and the drinking
chocolate from Treehouse Chocolate caught our eyes and tastebuds too.
There wasn’t a ton of new kombucha but we did dig Revive, which uses alternatives
to black tea for some fermenting… coffee kombucha anyone? That was Lauren’s pick of the
day and we also loved their white tea with cucumber and mint.
We have some ideas for summer travel snacks and our next September
Squeeze. Make sure you are signed up for our newsletter to stay in the loop. Have a wonderful long weekend!
Which of the items mentioned are you most curious about? What do you see as the current trends in healthy eating?
Monday, April 4, 2016
I freaked out majorly: warning 1st world problem
I haven’t written in a bit but I have a good reason. I
was in food shock. It started a few weeks ago. We decided- I should say I
decided to replace our cracked kitchen tile and countertops. My husband gave me
the “is this really necessary?” line.
The truth is that his kitchen experience amounts to occasional coffee
making, gluten free beer opening and table clearing when he’s in a helpful
mood. I could’ve wasted my time pointing out that the kitchen to me was the
equivalent of the golf course for him but I had a more productive idea. I
selected the countertop material (Caesar
stone) and flooring (light wood planks). I presented my husband with two
samples of each that were basically the same so he could “choose” and put him
in touch with the kitchen guy. Our division of labor for any renovation is
design- me and construction- him. This proved to be a mistake.
Two weeks ago today, the boys had started spring break and I
was enjoying not having to be out of the house at 7:30AM. The doorbell rang and
I answered it in my pajamas. There were five men with tools standing outside
with the head honcho kitchen guy. I had been told the kitchen work would be
done while we were away. As I stood in the doorway, Marc emerged freshly
showered and smiled at the guys “that’s great that you’re getting an early
start.” And the unraveling began. I guarantee these nice men will tell the
story of the crazy upper west side lady for years to come.
“You told me this was
happening when we were away”
He said
“I thought it was a
good idea for them to start before we left in case there were questions.”
While that’s totally logical in retrospect I said
“It’s a good idea for
you but what about me, I am supposed to eat days of take-out food right before
a vacation?”
And he said
“I think having a new
kitchen is worth a few days of non-organic food.”
It went downhill from there and I decided to go get dressed
and calm down.
When I came downstairs, four men were carrying my fridge
into the dining room.
The fridge was unplugged. The fridge with a freezer full of
grass fed meat and wild salmon, the fridge with my kombuchas and organic
berries.
And while I now know I must’ve sounded like a spoiled baby,
I freaked. Mid fit the kitchen guy
plugged the fridge into a dining room outlet. The light went back on and I
started to breathe.
I will never admit this to my husband but I kind of liked
running out to Juice Generation to get smoothies breakfast for all of us and a
few newspapers. Having no kitchen meant no pillaging for dark chocolate. And we
plugged the coffee maker in the home office and it was fine.
This past Friday, the men were putting the kitchen sink in
and the kitchen guy said “was it worth it?” and, with my tail between my legs,
I apologized knowing that nothing I cold say would erase my crazy. It was
totally worth it. The problem is that now
I don’t want to cook and mess any of the newness up.
Monday, March 14, 2016
Coffee, Crickets, Kombucha and other trends from Expo West
![]() |
| So sad this is among best photos with both of us from the trip |
I’m sitting on the plane. My magazine binge is complete (Food
& Wine’s “The New Healthy” issue good but Bon Appetit’s Culture even better),
inbox has been cleaned out, the book I’m reading at a lull and it’s not yet
time for a snack…so I thought I’d tell you a little about Expo West. Expo West
is this massive Natural Foods Show; all the big players have booths and events
and rookie players or new food companies come to get a jump-start. People spend
days at this show. Carolyn and I were determined to see it all in one day and
23, 000+ steps later we did.
If I were to pick out a few trends or things we saw a lot of
I’d say jerky is a big deal. These new offerings are a world away from Slim
Jim. If you don’t think you’re the jerky type I’d do some taste testing. Carolyn
said she felt many more products geared toward men and I’d agree. “Mancakes” is
an example of this (get it man +
pancakes?). We saw some tea but coffee, particularly jazzed up coffee, was
everywhere. There was coffee mixed with other ingredients (maca and guarana)
and also coffee blended with nut milks. And our favorite of course….lattes on
tap.
There was a whole lotta kombucha happening but many of the
newer brands had more sugar than the Heathade and Synergy we covet. In terms of
other beverages, a few of our favorite companies have come out with unsweetened
versions. We’re saving our winner for May and our Pre-Summer Squeeze program (so good,
sorry to tease). In terms of sweeteners, monk fruit is making a name for
itself. It’s zero calories and has no aftertaste. To be honest, I haven’t
monkfruited a lot and initially dismissed it so I have to do some tasting.
And for anyone who said gluten free was a fad, read this study and take our word for it, it’s bigger than ever. And I’m not talking
gluten free treats or gluten free crap but gluten free meal items like our
beloved Banza. See their new packaging?
Carolyn and I were determined not to over sample. We tried
to divide and conquer- Carolyn would taste sweet and I’d cover savory. We ended
up both tasting both. I refuse to really ponder what I ingested but there was
gluten free pizza (sample size but it was 9:30 am), Banza’s new mac and cheese,
every coffee product offered, apple cider vinegar and more. Did I mention we walked 10 miles? I said to
Carolyn we’d need to do it again to make up for our excessive testing.
Oh and the nastiest item of the day was definitely a
nutrition bar made from crickets (not
Exo…those are fine) and flavored with matcha. It had the worst aftertaste and we
felt ill but as we rounded the corner Hu Kitchen to the rescue, a chocolate
chaser makes every better.
Which of these trends
or categories would you like to hear more about? Would you eat products made
from crickets (you will likely see more…protein)? What’s your favorite magazine
or podcast these days?
Labels:
bon appetite,
chocolate,
coffee,
expo west,
food trends,
gluten free,
healthade,
healthy travel,
Hu Kitchen,
jerky,
kombucha,
la colombe,
steps,
synergy,
travel
Wednesday, November 4, 2015
Well and Good Said This is the Next Kombucha
It's always funny to me when I first learn of something and then seem to see it everywhere. I'll explain. About a year (or more) ago, I ordered a jar of the beverage pictured above. It's called switchel and I believe it's from Vermont. Then I saw other switchels at the farmer's market and Well and Good asked how I felt switchel stacked up.
I told Well and Good that I loved the idea of switchel. After all, it contains apple cider vinegar and ginger, two of my go-to ingredients. But it's sweet, 16 grams or 4 teaspoons per serving sweet in the brand above. So despite the Vermont angle (we spend a lot of time there) and the intriguing ingredients, the kombucha crowd that's present in my fridge at ALL times (the lengths poor Fresh Direct must take to deliver this bubbly drink) is safe from switchel. If you're sad about switchel, I did green light switchel as a drink mixer for cocktails, although I must say Be-Mixed is my number one for that. We also did a Foodtrainers' riff on switchel and the recipe is on Well and Good.
Have you heard of switchel? Tried it? Are you crazy for kombucha (I know, not everyone is)?
I told Well and Good that I loved the idea of switchel. After all, it contains apple cider vinegar and ginger, two of my go-to ingredients. But it's sweet, 16 grams or 4 teaspoons per serving sweet in the brand above. So despite the Vermont angle (we spend a lot of time there) and the intriguing ingredients, the kombucha crowd that's present in my fridge at ALL times (the lengths poor Fresh Direct must take to deliver this bubbly drink) is safe from switchel. If you're sad about switchel, I did green light switchel as a drink mixer for cocktails, although I must say Be-Mixed is my number one for that. We also did a Foodtrainers' riff on switchel and the recipe is on Well and Good.
Have you heard of switchel? Tried it? Are you crazy for kombucha (I know, not everyone is)?
Monday, January 12, 2015
Top 5 Healthy Movie Theater snacks (if it were up to me)
As I sat through the worst half hour of movie previews
yesterday, my mind wandered. My mind has a few favorite places it wanders to
but this time it went to food. I thought about movie theatre food. While my kids
will get something from time to time, either when I’m not there or when I
choose to ignore everything I know, I don’t really think about it. For my book,
I tackled sports arenas and airports and many places that trip people up with
food choices. I contemplated the movies and ran the idea by a friend who said,
“I think if people want to lose weight part of that means saying no from time
to time.” I’m pretty sure her wording was a little meaner but it was a good
point. Just for kicks though
(interrupted by my son saying, “who is that guy, I have never seen him before?”
Sean Penn) I contemplated my dream movie concession stand.
I know some theatres have real food now but I’m not a fan.
First, I am against anything in a theatre that smells. And let’s face it, it’s
total darkness and the ultimate in mindless eating, you don’t need a full meal.
I’m sticking with snacks and beverages.
- Popcorn- movies and popcorn seem to make sense and Quinnpopcorn is amazing. The Foodtrainers’ theatre would have their popcorn popped in coconut oil even though my heart belongs to smoky cheddar. I just worry about the scent issue (I have a thing about smells). Ignore the blue bowl, there would be tubs (recycled) but in normal sizes.
- If you’re not a popcorn person but like some crunch, I’d try these Snip Chips. I’ve always loved parsnips and these come in fun flavors.
- Chocolate- of course there has to be a chocolate component. There are a ton of healthy chocolates but I don’t like the idea of a chocolate bar here. My movie chocolate needs to be more snacky. I’d have Sweet RiotChocolate covered cacao nibs. It’s ok to eat the whole tin.
- Beverages- I’m sure it’s no surprise that there’s no soda happening if I’m making decisions. There are also no plastic water bottles either (something I’m almost as against as soda…almost). If you want those monster-sized cups I suppose we can have filtered water in them (and Strawesome straws). I’m really thinking kombucha. As much as I like a cocktail, I think I’d be asleep before the movie starts.
- Since we’re talking sleep, we may as well have a coffee bar. Almond milk cappuccino or some bulletproof action?
And I can’t be the only one who contemplates the “cleaning”
of the theatre. If you’re like me I’d spritz a little Clean Well (available for
purchase before you take your seats).
In case you’re wondering we saw American Sniper. My son had
a crepe and I had a Sin-o-bun from Juice press before we went to the theatre.
What’s your favorite
movie snack if life had no rules? What would be served at your dream concession
stand? Have you seen American Sniper? Did you watch the Golden Globes?
Monday, August 4, 2014
Will this popular, healthy drink make you drunk?
If you’re not kombucha-conscious, kombucha is a fermented
tea. It tastes tart and is slightly bubbly. It was been brewed and consumed for
thousands of years. Kombucha is made using something called a SCOBY (which I
thought was Scooby for the longest time) but stands for symbiotic culture of
bacteria and yeast. And this is what
results in a finished beverage teeming with good bacteria and good yeast yum
yum.
I’ll admit my bias; I love the stuff. I first enjoyed the
gingerade from Synergy, love the blue green from BKkombucha, the cayenne Kombucha from Heathade and most recently
fell in love with the milder kombuchas from Organic Avenue. Everyone at our
office is dying to try Buchi’s sea buckthorn kombucha. Buchi- can you help us
out?
I have always been aware kombucha contains trace amounts of
alcohol. But while wine is generally 10 to 14 percent alcohol and spirits
40-something percent kombucha usually is .5 percent. So I was shocked when a
client came in saying, “I had a few sips of kombucha and I felt something, was
I drunk?” I hadn’t ever heard that, I thought about GT Dave the Synergy brand
founder who drinks a gallon or two of kombucha a day “like it’s his job” oh
wait, it is.
Back in 2010 there was a blip for the kombucha producers.
Many kombuchas were pulled from the shelves. There was investigation into the
alcohol content. The more sugar in kombucha the more alcohol it can ferment.
Generally speaking the longer kombucha ferments, the more alcohol produced.
Companies looked at their protocols to see how they could eliminate the alcohol
without compromising the benefits. You can pasteurize and “solve” the problem
but in order to have the probiotic benefits, kombucha needs to be
raw/unpasteurized. Companies found ways to reformulate their brews, probably
changing the SCOBY in order to control the alcohol content. Generally speaking
unless in recovery/AA or pregnant continue to knock back kombucha.
Detractors will say “no real evidence” but as a superstar
nutritionist (who has been at this for way longer than I have) said on a phone
call last week “for many things in our field there will never be studies.”
Kombucha is helpful for joint pain (contains building blocks for glucosamine)
and helps with digestion (many clients report reflux improvements). Ironically,
given the subject matter today, kombucha’s beneficial effect on the liver makes
it an excellent hangover remedy.
So why did my client feel loopy? I dug around, spoke to some
fermentation experts and there’s something I was unfamiliar with called
histamine intolerance. Some people react to fermented foods with symptoms that
mimic drunkenness as they lack an enzyme called DAO that breaks the histamine
down. You can read more about histamine intolerance here. There are digestive enzymes you can use if
the thought of avoiding fermented foods (which help with mood and cravings not
to mention immunity and more) worries you.
My only issue with kombucha is that Lindsay Lohan loves the stuff, ick. Are you a kombucha
drinker? Do you make your own? Should I try? Do you have a favorite brand? Any
kombucha concerns?
Monday, July 7, 2014
5 Sane Ways to Feel Better Today
I had one of those
“what day is today?” moments when I woke up. It soon sunk in that it’s Monday
and the weekend is over which makes me a little sad. As long as I’m complaining, I’m also tired.
We were in Montreal for the 4th (so patriotic I know) but it’s not
always about going away, relaxing can leave you just wanting to relax
more. And then there’s that feeling, you know it I'm sure, “uh oh I need to undo some of
what was done this weekend.”
![]() |
| I only speak menu or "food" French |
Before you get all “I didn’t eat ________” on me this weekend. I ate well
too. There was lots of seafood and green juice and salad. My Fitbit was
happy with 15-20,000 steps a day (love this about vacation) but there were also
lots of meals out and cocktails so here we are. Forget the cleanse or emergency
boot camp- instead try these five ways to feel better today:
Stay home tonight (and tomorrow too). Before we get all technical with this debloating you simply
need to spend less time with salt. Takeout and restaurant meals make this
impossible. Cooking is key but "cook" can mean scrambling eggs or making a smoothie. If you're saying "I should be able to go out and feel good" you can just not today.
Pursue Probitoics Is your tummy telling you something? Something not so good?
Pop your probiotic supplement and also consider my favorite Sunbiotic nuts (who says atonement needs to be miserable?) or cayenne kombucha or good old
ACV (apple cider vinegar), do you own it? OK go take a tsp. If you're in NYC we can send over probiotic goodness and Fairway has these healthade drinks.
Speaking of Drinks, Drink – your magic number is 10 cups of water a day. I like
a visual and finds it helps to fill a pitcher and put it on your desk (tweet me @Foodtrainers a water photo for extra credit) or be that person who carries a water bottle with you
for today. If you’re thinking you need something more than just water try this.
Makes You-Pee Tea
(from the Little Book of Thin)
Ingredients are for 1-cup increase if you’re making a
pitcher
1 Tbs Minced parsley and stems
½ tsp fennel seeds
2-3 slivers fresh ginger or fresh turmeric
Cover these ingredients with hot water, steep 10 minutes.
Chill to make an iced version.
Consider quinoa (or consider grainlessness). Quinoa has potassium that helps you lose some
of that sodium. So ½ cup of quinoa is “kosher for debloating” but bread
(sprouted or not), rice, cereal (a whole other conversation), corn etc. are not
for today.
Have a Green day – all meals and snacks need to have something
green in them today. Green juices, dark green salads, crudité- you remember
green, right?
How was your weekend? How are you feeling today? Which of these steps will you take? Check in with me tonight, it'll be better I promise it's amazing what 24 hours "back" can do.
Thursday, December 6, 2012
No, I Haven't Started Holiday Shopping
Not once but twice yesterday I was asked “all your Christmas shopping done?” This question bugs me for a few reasons. First, I was never told holiday shopping was competitive but seems it is, second how do strangers know if I Christmas, Hanukah or Kwanza? And I guess third is the fact that I haven’t really started “holiday” shopping so being reminded of that stresses me out.
Last week I posted about some selections from our Foodtrainers’ Gift Guide. I have a few personal favorites from the list I couldn’t leave out. It’s probably no coincidence that two items are things you can do at home and the other two make me smile. Staying home and smiling sounds good to me, anyone else?
For the kombuchaholic on your list, here’s a DIY kit. Part of me is nervous to ferment on my own but I can see saving serious money doing so. Did you know Whole Foods now cards for kombucha? Yup.
Fuck Skinny
I love Catherine Zadeh’s work. She does jewelry for both women and men (the manly bracelets are great gifts). She’s not only talented but snarky and charitable. She’s donating 15% if you use code LIFE 15 to Cycle for Survival. Skinny is fine but healthy and alive is where it’s at.
There are so many things to worry about I often don’t know where to start. There’s the pulp waste from the juicer and the coffee grinds from the coffee maker. BTTR shared my waste-worry and devised a way to use coffee grinds to make dinner. Talk about resourceful, I’m thinking the kids will like this gift as much as I will. As they say “the gift that keeps on growing”. If mushroom growing sounds up your alley (not those mushrooms people), BTTR is giving one of their kits away.
Carolyn found these “geltdigger” sweaters and I love them. Hanukah starts on the 8th and I’m thinking you need to wear one of these to that party or give it to your favorite geltfiend.
Karlie’s Kookies.
My friend Meg brought these for me at our Sandy fundraiser
last week. They’re from Momofuko Milk Bar, gluten free, not too sweet. I
love everything about them but the Huffington Post didn’t. They didn’t like
that Karlie Kloss, a model accused of being too thin, is producing cookies with the
tagline “fashionably wholesome”. It appears they are saying fuck skinny.
Have you
jumped into the holiday shopping shark tank? What do you think makes a great
gift? What’s the best gift you’ve received recently? Comment for a chance to win Back to the Root's cool growing kit or tweet us @Foodtrainers. Enter by Monday 12/10.
Congratulations to our gift winners
Erin, you'll be receive Weelicious
Randi the Sprigs running wallet
Jessica the Foodtrainers Nutcase
Liz, Sam, Cameo, Gina and EA the Dram Hangover Tonic
Cheers to all of you.
Congratulations to our gift winners
Erin, you'll be receive Weelicious
Randi the Sprigs running wallet
Jessica the Foodtrainers Nutcase
Liz, Sam, Cameo, Gina and EA the Dram Hangover Tonic
Cheers to all of you.
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