Saturday, June 30, 2012


Good Food Bad Food…

a primer for the anti-aging gastronomy neophyte

 Thereis good food and there is bad food.  There is food that when consumed will nourish our bodies, make our hair and skin glow, our fingernails and teeth strong, our bones straight and our eyes bright.  Good food makes us think quicker, see better, run faster, grow taller, move with grace and live longer with a high degree of wellness. 
What, then, does bad food do?  When we consume bad food, our bodies are not nourished, our cells are deprived and our organs pay the price.    Consuming bad food results in inflammation, fat building, malnutrition, bad skin, bones, teeth, hair and nails, slow thinking, aching joints and eventual age related chronic disease.  All of which is preventable.  You could say that healthcare reform begins in your kitchen.   
If you are reading this blog, I assume that you have the same interest as I have in the benefits of preparing and eating foods that keep us young, foods that slow the aging process.   The aging process to which I refer is cellular aging, a complicated process of cell replication that takes place in our bodies as new cells replace old.  But, simply put, cellular aging was once described to me in this way.   Think of your favorite photograph, a self portrait of you at your best.  Now make a photocopy.  You can see that it is not exactly as perfect as the original.  Now take the copy and make another copy.  You can see this one is even less perfect than the second one.  The sharpness dulls, the contrasts lessen.  Now take that copy and make another copy and so forth and so on.  That is what happens to our cells as they replicate.
So, you can see that if we cause our cells to become damaged or imperfect, as they replicate, the damage and imperfections are magnified time and again.   That is why at fourteen years old we feel well and physically fit eating a diet of hamburgers and fries, but at forty-four years old, our arteries are lined with plaque, our joints ache and our fasting glucose has risen from 85 to 115, a mere one point per year.  Who would notice?
I noticed, first, in my forties when I began to experience osteoarthritis, then in my fifties when I began to experience swelling in my ankles and pain in my back, and finally nearing sixty, when my medical history described me as pre obese, pre diabetic, pre hypertensive, pre high cholesterol, and pre hypothyroid.   I was suffering from symptoms of non specific origin (although my physicians were quick to assign labels such as adult onset diabetes, hypercholesterolemia, hypothyroidism, adult onset asthma, psoriatic arthritis, rheumatoid arthritis, and pseudo gout), symptoms that included swelling in knees, fingers and ankles, muscle pain, extreme fatigue, chronic sinusitis, hair loss, dry skin, occasional short term memory loss as I searched for  forgotten words.  I was prone to skin infections and my weight had ballooned out of control.  I had none of these problems in my past history. 
Always the skeptic, I rejected my physician’s offer of pharmaceuticals, one for each of the symptoms, his glib assessment that my symptoms were part of the inevitable aging process and his advice to accept it as a natural part of life.  Instead, I took the advice of my wise and learned chiropractor, Dr. Eleanor Rolnick, who gently but persistently advocated for nutrition as a remedy.   Her advice, her patient and outstanding care and the concern and attention of her staff (and by that I mean her Girl Friday, Pam Gaudette) started me on a path to wellness.  Thank you, my friends.
As a chef educator I have had the experience of teaching in our public schools, teaching young adults how to cook.  We are all aware of the obesity epidemic and the rapid increase of adult onset diabetes and assume it is the result of fast food giants and soda pop. It is, but not that alone. It is also the fault of the parent who prepares quick fix foods, the pop tarts, hamburger helper and pizza, sandwiches with 12 oz of meat and 6 oz of cheese, refined flour products, and all the over salted over sweetened foods from quick service restaurants.  These are the foods my students dined on every day.    
Even the weight conscious teens, the young women especially,  who strive to be model thin and are told to eat less meat, more pasta, salad and cheese, even they are at risk.  Alfredo anyone?  Do you know what a fig is, or what tortilla chips are made from or have you ever roasted a red beet?  "What's a beet", one of my students asked. 
 It didn’t take much research for me to discover the connection between my years of feasting on the western diet of meat and bread, meat and pasta, pasta and cheese and cheese and bread and my burgeoning weight.  I was convinced that my adult onset symptoms were also, in fact, the result of years of consuming inflammatory foods even when I thought I was dieting. 
Diets like Atkins, the Zone, South Beach, and the Mediterranean diets successfully led to weight loss, but you talk about yoyo diet.  That was me, down ten, up five, down five up ten.  Never once did it occur to me that the whole time that I was feeding my body food to lose weight, what I was really losing was my health.  Yes, most of these diets encourage fewer carbohydrates, but they recommend replacing them with excess meat and dairy.  Or, they discourage fat, eliminating meats and replacing them with grains.  In either case, these inflammatory foods accelerate cellular aging. 
The only publicized diet that I know of that resembles the anti aging diet is one followed by my older sister, Michael’s mother, who like her son, at age eight was diagnosed with juvenile diabetes.  After 60 years of eating good food, she now looks 10 years younger than me, is far more physically fit and is never bothered by the nagging aches and pains that I battled for decades. 
The diabetic diet may not be referred to as anti aging or anti inflammatory, but that is exactly what it is.  The same foods that are considered to be inflammatory are the foods that also cause havoc with how our body processes sugars which in turn causes more inflammation and symptoms of disease.  So, whether it is called the diabetic diet, the anti inflammatory diet, the anti aging diet, or even the alkaline acid diet, it is one in the same. 
Based on the principle that foods which are alkaline producing are also anti inflammatory (good foods that promote wellness and therefore are anti –aging) and those that are acid producing are inflammatory (bad foods which promote cellular aging), I embarked on a dietary change that lead to my recovery.  Alkalinity and acidity, the ph to which I am referring is not the ph of the food itself, but the ph of the food after it is metabolized by the body.  So, for example, a lemon has an acidic ph, but when processed in the body it is alkaline forming.  Don’t confuse the two.  There are dozens of websites that explain in detail the science behind the acid or alkaline diet including lists of foods with their corresponding ph as the result of the metabolic process in the body.  Do your own research, and you will find that they correlate with lists of anti inflammatory vs inflammatory foods as well. 
Eating a diet that consisted of at least 60% alkaline producing foods had a dramatic effect.  My blood glucose returned to 85 and my hypothyroidism disappeared along with all of the other age related symptoms.  And although it was not the goal of my new anti-aging dietary habits, my weight dropped considerably as well. 
As time went on and I became more accustomed to eating and preparing an assortment of vegetables, the  proportion of alkaline producing food was easily bumped up to 70% and 75% simply by adding alkaline producing garnishes such as almonds or sunflower seeds, sprouts, chili pepper flakes or my own sauces like blueberry ginger chutney or cilantro salsa verde.  It was not a matter of counting calories or weighing out portions to reach those proportions, but much simpler.  It was just how much of my plate was covered with what type of food.  As long as more than half of my plate was filled with alkaline producing food, I was good to go. 
Here’s an example.  The dinner plate of a typical western diet is a center of the plate meat such as steak, pork or ham (takes up ½ of the plate) with a sauce, splash of ketchup or applesauce, mashed potatoes (1/4 to ½ of the plate) sprinkled with cheese and a spoonful of peas (or none at all).  The dinner plate of a typical anti aging diet is a portion of protein such as chicken equal to about 4 oz. (1/4 or less of the plate) topped with fresh chili and cucumber salsa, an even smaller portion of starch, if at all, such as brown rice (1/8 of the plate) garnished with scallions, and the rest of the plate filled with steamed fresh green beans sprinkled with cilantro, and a garden fresh tomato and watercress salad drizzled with canola oil and fresh squeezed lemon.  Our wellness requires a change of mindset from the current concept of center of the plate protein to center of the plate fresh vegetable---from this
Center of the plate short ribs
to this.

Center of the plate green beans
 In addition, it was not a matter of either or, but how alkaline or acidic producing as well.  For example, lemon and watercress are extremely high alkaline producing, while blueberries are alkaline producing but not as high as lemons or watercress.  So, knowing that, there are little tricks to having your cake and eating it too, so to speak.  If I want to indulge myself by having a glass of red wine which is slightly acid producing, I add a big squeeze of fresh lemon juice and throw in the lemon rind as well.  Or if I am craving beef which is highly acid producing, I accompany it with a gigantic watercress salad.
The difficult part at first, was creating interesting, flavorful, and feel good meals without the use of many of our favorites from our western diet.  A hamburger patty and bun is 100% highly acid producing.  Spaghetti and meatballs is 100% highly acid producing as is pizza with pepperoni.   I was raised in an Italian/Scottish household where pasta of some kind was served almost every day unless we were eating beef and barley soup.  What is the food group with the highest acid producing rating?  Grains!  What is the meat with the highest acid producing rating?  Beef!  This created a challenge for me.
We love our companion pets, primarily ourcats and dogs and wouldn’t think of deliberately feeding them food that causes inflammation or leads to chronic disease.  No, we feed them only the best---the foods that are especially prepared for them to promote shiny coats and bright eyes.  Why, then, do we not do as much for ourselves? 
I can’t go back and redo my youth, undo the harm that has been done, but I can go forward and continue reaping the benefits of eating an anti-aging diet, one that is rich in good foods---foods that are anti-inflammatory, promote wellness and reduce my risks for age related chronic disease like heart disease, arthritis and diabetes.   And, I can teach others to do the same. 

Buon Appetito e Buona Salute,  Chef AngelaB

P.S.   You can purchase As Good As It Gets, Cooking Skills for Life, Volume 1  
available on Amazon now...
 All proceeds from the sale of my books will be used to open the first EAT SMART restaurant in the upstate SC the first to offer anti-aging gastronomy.



Friday, June 29, 2012


A Cucumber A Day Keeps The Doctor Away


Grow cucumbers on wire
fencing for easier picking
Cucumbers have the highest alkaline forming rating of all the vegetables available in your local grocer or your  backyard garden, so eat them as often as you can and any way you can.  My favorite way is to pluck them off the vine and eat them as a snack.  A cucumber fresh off the vine is crunchy and sweet and cool---cool as a cucumber.  But, cucumbers also pair well in condiments with the heat from chilis and spices, and they are excellent alkaline boosters to accompany poultry and fish.  You know the old saying an apple a day keeps the doctor away?  I am officially replacing it with a cucumber a day!  Here are five ways to use cukes in your daily meal planning, each starring the smartest of all vegetables---the cucumber.   Eat smart, America!

 1.       Cucumber dip

             Dice a cucumber, add a dollop of Greek yogurt, a few jalapeno slices, cilantro and an avocado.  Blend until smooth and use it to dip crudités or whole grain pita wedges.

          2.        Cucumber soup 

            In the blender combine mint, cucumber, chicken stock, and goat cheese for a cool as a cucumber refreshing chilled soup starter before any meal.

3.       Chopped cucumber salad

Cucumbers can be sliced, diced, curled or rough chopped and make an eat smart salad when paired with radish, tomatoes, basil, with or without a goat cheese garnish.  Even on their own, they are perfect with fresh herbs and a sprinkle of oil and lemon.

4.       Cucumber condiments 

             Ice box pickles are easy to make with no cooking required.  Just pack cucumber slices in a jar of cider vinegar, a little brown sugar, some onion and celery.  Add celery seed, mustard seed, a pinch of sea salt and refrigerate.    Or for a zesty cucumber salsa follow my recipe below.
A cucumber a day
keeps the doctor away!


5.       Wholey cucumber

            The perfect snack food eaten whole! 

Cucumber jalapeno salsa 

This recipe yields 6 cups.  Cucumbers don’t last very long in the refrigerator once cut so make only what you can eat a day or two at a time.

Yield:   Approximately 6 cups          
Preparation Time:  20 minutes 
Cooking Time:  0

Ingredients

3 each cucumber, Mexican, small dice, peel on
2 each jalapeno, brunois
1 cup corn, frozen whole kernel
4 each scalliions, diced, green part only
8 sprigs cilantro, fresh, rough chopped
1 cup vinegar, apple cider
1 pinch sea salt
2 tablespoons sugar, dark brown, real molasses
1 each juice and zest of lemon, optional

Directions

Combine apple cider, salt, lemon and sugar and whisk until sugar is dissolve.  Fold in the remaining  ingredients.  Chill and serve.

Recommended Service:  Top off fish or fowl, mix into quinoa as a salad or top off a dinner salad by adding a little oil and cucumber salsa.

Buon Appetito e Buona Salute, Chef AnbelaB


Wednesday, June 27, 2012


Ten Reasons to Eat Smart, America


Eating smart of course means eating a diet based on anti aging gastronomy of which this blog is all about.  Eating a diet based on the 60/40 ratio of alkaline forming to acid forming foods is anti-inflammatory, anti-aging and has multiple benefits.  Here are ten.


No more mood swings

You know the moodiness that plagues you mid morning and mid afternoon and sometimes results in brain fog as well?  Most likely it is from eating sugary, refined grains (cereal and bread) at breakfast and luncheon meals.  When the body gets a load of these, it reacts with a load of insulin.  The result is elevated blood glucose from the sugar (happy, happy) followed by a plunge of blood glucose (grouchy, grouchy) when the insulin does its job.  Eating smart guarantees your family and friends can tolerate you 24/7 with no timeouts in between.  

More energy

Without the mood swings from high and low blood glucose, you will find you have more energy and are more productive at home or at work.  Eating smart results in a constant level of blood glucose where and when it should be in your body to do its work---to energize. 

Higher libido

Naturally, when you feel better all around, the feel-good feeling makes for a higher libido.  There’s no more to say about that!

More awake time

With more energy and clairvoyance, you don’t need to sleep to noon anymore and still wake tired.  Your spouse will be happy to converse with you before your morning caffeine fix and your boss will be pleasantly surprised when you arrive on time.  More awake time means more time with family and friends who can now tolerate you 24/7 with no timeouts in between.

Kick the over the counter meds

You can finally stop taking anti-inflammatories for nagging aches and pains, anti-histamine for allergies and decongestants for stuffy nose and sinus.  Eating smart means eating fewer acid producing foods, foods which cause excess mucus formation in most people resulting in symptoms of sinusitis and congestion.    

Complements from family and friends

After 4 to 6 weeks you will definitely be getting complements from family and friends.  Why?  You will see a difference in hair, skin, and nails.  Hair will be shinier (maybe even thicker since it will no longer be falling out) skin less dry and nails stronger and healthier (no more ridges).  You might not see it in the mirror, but when your long lost cousin turns up to visit after a year or two of absence he will think he came to the wrong address.  Oh, and did I mention that your clothes will fit you better?  Cutting down on sugar and refined grains and increasing vegetables, legumes, seeds and nuts will also result in shedding of the extra pounds around the middle.  That pesky “beer belly” look will slowly fade away.

Reduce risk for age related chronic disease

There may not be scientific evidence that eating a diet based on anti-aging gastronomy reduces the risk of heart disease, joint/autoimmune disease and diabetes II, but there is plenty of anecdotal evidence.  I for one can document my history of success, lowering blood glucose from 109 to 85, correcting my hyperthyroidism, and turning heart disease risk factors from bad to good, not to mention reversing the joint swelling that plagued me since my mid forties.  You won’t need a scientist to prove it to you. 

Longevity

Of course you will live longer without obesity, diabetes II, auto immune disease or heart disease!

Cheaper

Even if you don’t believe eating smart will reduce your risk for chronic disease, who doesn’t want to save money, right?  A meal of 60/40 alkaline producing to acid producing food means that you are eating more vegetables than protein.  Doesn’t a tomato cost less than a chicken leg, a sweet potato less than steak? And when you dine out, eat smart and that will cost you less as well.  Choosing salads and sides over steak and lobster will certainly mean a smaller bill.   

Grow your savings account

How does eating smart mean a bigger savings account?  Here’s how:  fewer medical bills, lower household food expense, no more over the counter drugs to buy, less expensive meals out, less time off work and maybe even more overtime, a second job, who knows?  With all the extra energy you may even want to start a second career. 

I know I said ten, but here’s one more.  Be a role model for your kids.  Childhood obesity and diabetes has been on the rise for decades now and needs to come to an end.  For your kids, eat smart, and they will too.  If you have any more reasons to add, leave them in the comments for all to see.


Buon Appetito e Buona Salute, Chef AngelaB.