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I love to eat veggies.  I can eat them for breakfast, lunch and dinner.  I can put veggies in eggs for breakfast, in rice for lunch and with my fish for dinner.  Leafy greens, root vegetables, tomatoes you name it I can find a way to eat it.  I am lucky I have several Farmer’s Markets within walking distance from my house. But I know many of you are SO busy you only get to shop once a week or sometimes less.

If you have the problem many Americans do veggies are dying in your kitchen — bags of stinky peppers lurking in the back of the fridge under that old container of yogurt, or worse carrots that bend from tip to tip.  Don’t let it happen!  Don’t let your fruits and veggies go bad!

I’m gonna go all Health Coach on you. Besides the fact that fruits and vegetables are the healthiest food you can eat, they are loaded with fiber making them great for weight loss, contain tons of vitamins and minerals, taste superb.  It has been proven time and time again that eating more fruits and vegetables can decrease your risk for diabetes, cancer and heart disease — If that’s not enough, I am going to ask you to change your ways, don’t be a Vegetable KillerI  In these difficult economic times just think of all the people struggling.  Some of them might even be your neighbors and friends.  They can’t always buy enough food or any fruits and vegetables and we are letting them rot in the back of the fridge.  Seems kinda selfish, doesn’t it?

So here are a few tips to make your veggies last longer.

Always separate out any bad produce. One bad apple can ruin the bunch. Same is true for storing other vegetables.

Keep carrots, celery, parsnips and radishes in a covered container with water in the fridge.  I rinse them and cut them in slices to reduce my cooking time when I’m ready to use them. They will stay crispy and fresh up to two weeks in the fridge.

Keep leafy greens and lettuce wrapped in a kitchen towel in the crisper in your fridge.  This will keep them fresh longer.  Up to a few days.  If they need a little pepping up coming out of the fridge rinse cold water on them.

Don’t suffocate your vegetables.  Let them breathe. Keeping them wrapped up tightly in a plastic bag is often the worst thing you can do.  Open the plastic bag and leave the veggies in the crisper drawer in your fridge until ready to use. Even better leave a paper bag in your crisper drawer and put them in there until you are ready to cook them.

Apples are tricky. They give off a gas that helps ripen other fruit and can over ripen other fruits and vegetables if stored together.  If you have a lot of apples you can store them in an open plastic bag in the fridge but separate from other loose vegetables.  Apples speed up the ripening time of produce such as avocados, peaches, bananas, apricots, plums, and pears.  Place an apple into a paper or plastic bag with the fruit you want to ripen faster.

Root vegetables like beets, potatoes, celery root and squash are best stored in a cool dark place. If you have a garage or cellar that’s perfect. If you are a city girl like me store them in a paper bag, yes, in the back of your crisper.

If you see your fruit is starting to get brown or too soft throw it in a pot with some water sugar and salt and make it into a compote or apple sauce. Or rinse and slice your fruit and store it in an air tight container in the freezer for use on fruit shakes or pies.  Same idea holds true for carrots or zucchini that is on it’s last legs.  You can make some fast carrot or zucchini muffins, eat some fresh and put others double wrapped in a plastic container in the freezer for months.

So my friends, love your veggies — don’t be a vegetable killer.

Food Does Matter.  It matters for your health and your mood. Eating in season is key to giving your body what it needs to flourish.  But what do you do when the weather is unseasonably cool and wet ?

All over the country it will be raining this week. Here on the East Coast it’s cool and rainy. Which can bring on cold and damp conditions in the body if not treated correctly.  Foods to avoid when it feels cold and damp are yogurt, tofu, cold wet cheeses like cottage cheese and cream cheese, oatmeal, soy milk, and milk.  All of these foods cause cool damp conditions in the body. They may weigh you down and make you feel slow and sluggish in the cool damp weather.

Food that are good to eat are ramps, onions and garlic, sauteed greens, citrus fruits, whole grain toast, stir fry vegetables, rice milks are better than soy.  Dry quick cooking grains like quinoa and polenta.  Eat dry crunchy foods like crackers.  Use warming spices in your recipes like paprika and ginger.  These foods help to cause warm and dry conditions in the body helping to fight colds and wet chest conditions.

 

 

 

 

Flow Into Spring

Spring is the season for renewal.  The earth is coming out of its long winter slumber. The April showers are rinsing off the planet and getting it ready for the flowers that are about to grow.  The warmth will invite plants to start blooming again. The Farmers Market will slowly start to turn into a rainbow of color. Our food will start sprouting from the earth giving us onions and leafy greens.  As it gets warmer our food will come from further out on the vine giving us pea pods and green beans.  Then at the peak of summer, our food comes from the tops of the trees giving us fruits and berries.

Spring Cleaning

It’s around this time when the days are getting longer and the weather FINALLY starts getting a bit warmer that I start to get our of bed with a bit more energy ready to start my day. This weekend was no exception.  In our house, it was time to start Spring Cleaning.  As much as I think I have whittled my closet down and removed every last thing that hasn’t been touched, it seems like each Spring there is more stuff to give away.

This year my home is feeling heavy.  As I look around my living room the stuff is starting to close in on me. One too many book shelves crowding our open space.  My husband and I have made a pact to get rid of enough stuff so that we can remove one of our book shelves to make more room.  We are doing quite well, I must say.

I have a theory around getting rid of old stuff… whether that stuff is books and old picture frames, excess weight, unworn clothes or bad habits.  The theory is that they all hold energy. That energy holds space whether that space is on your bookshelf or in your body. When you remove some of that energy you are making things lighter.  Lighter things have a tendency to float, to move easier, more gracefully, with more precision — to flow.

I was told once in a class by someone for whom English was not their first language that I had ‘flow’.  It was one of the biggest compliments anyone has ever paid me.  It stuck with me and changed me.  I strive for flow now. It’s a hard one to explain because really it’s a feeling that causes things to happen.  It goes with another of my sayings that when you are doing what you are supposed to be doing things just work out.  Well that’s it.  When you are in your flow things just come out of nowhere and work out.  For me the feeling is almost like floating. Like I am effortlessly moving along, almost like I’m being pushed in the right direction to have things work out.  It’s a really cool feeling.

Flow is my word.  My feeling.  Feel free to borrow it.  Try it on to see if it’s a fit for you. You may have your own word that demonstrates and celebrates how it feels for you when it’s all working out.  While you are Spring cleaning maybe it’s time to take out that word and dust it off.  As you let go of that old set of silverware taking up space in the closet, or give away those fantastic shoes you only wore once because they cut up your toes — focus on your word, get into your flow.  P.S. You get an extra dose of great karma knowing that your donations will go to someone who will use them with joy.

So this year celebrate the opportunity to Spring Clean, Get rid of the old and invite in your flow.

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