Monday, June 11, 2012


 Here's a prepublication preview of the next book in my series Cooking Skills for Life, Good Food Bad Food.      Publication is planned for September and it will be available on Amazon as is my first in the series, As Good As It Gets, Cooking Skills for Life, Volume 1 which is available now.  Let me know what you think by posting a comment here or on my facebook page  https://www.facebook.com/ChefAngelaB   

Buon Appetito and Buona Salute, Chef AngelaB 



Lesson One

Good Food Bad Food


There is 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 book, 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 who gently but persistently advocated for nutrition as a remedy.   Her advice started me on a path to wellness. 
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 70% 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. 
Most of the time, my plate was 75% to 80% alkaline producing and the rest slightly acidic producing.  It was not a matter of counting calories or weighing out portions, but rather, 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, three quarters was better, 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), a heap of starch like mashed potatoes (1/4 to ½ of the plate) 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), an even smaller portion of starch, if at all, such as brown rice or whole grain ziti (1/8 of the plate), and the rest of the plate filled with steamed fresh green beans, and garden fresh tomatoes and cucumbers with 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
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 our
cats 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. 
So, it is for all of you who believe as I do, that bad food leads to cellular aging and chronic disease, and that good food leads to wellness and longevity, that I have written this book, a compilation of information, cooking methods and recipes, the basis for anti-aging gastronomy.  In the words of the father of western medicine---Let food be thy medicine…Hippocrates.

Lesson Two

Sugar is Sugar


First, I would like to give some discussion to three foods that are a huge part of most American diets, but which should be completely eliminated for the devastating effect that they have on our health.  These are common ingredients found in almost all store bought prepared packaged foods.  They are ingredients for which there are no recipes or cooking methods to discuss, for they are additives which for all purposes of nutrition, have no value.  The first is sugar. 
Sugar is sugar.   A true statement, one that is used as a marketing tool to convince the viewer of the television advertisement that corn sugar, the new moniker for what was previously known consumer wide as high fructose corn syrup, is simply nature’s sugar in another form.  Whether it is corn sugar or cane sugar, the body doesn’t know the difference, says the concerned parent as he strolls through the corn fields while his school age daughter holds onto his hand and skips alongside.  Using a clever framing technique, the producers get the viewer to make the decision that if corn sugar is the same as cane sugar, then it follows that high fructose corn syrup is okay for our kids. 
Well, they are right about one thing.  Sugar is sugar.  Whether it is high fructose corn syrup, corn sugar, natural sugar in the raw, brown sugar, beet or cane sugar, or the refined white sugar in just about every cake and cookie in the world, they are all equally bad.
Food has always been the focus of social and familial events in my life and always will be.  Sometimes I think it would have been nice to have been brought up in a family environment where food was a bothersome interruption, a nuisance to have to stop a task in order to feed oneself because one had to it order to survive.  NOT!  I love everything about food, the hunt for new ingredients, the buying, the preparation, the camaraderie, the rituals, the experience of serving and being served, and mostly the tasting.

Speaking of hunting for new ingredients, I am currently on the hunt for a nutrition bar that can be used as a supplement for energy in support of all dietary limitations, low sugar, no gluten, no dairy, no trans fat, no fructose, whole food, paleo, balanced macronutrients, and most of all, and this is the most important to me, this blog and my mission to advocate anti-aging gastronomy, anti inflammatory.  It is the anti inflammatory nature of the food which has been elusive and I have already looked at the nutritional breakdown and ingredients in 101 bars.  I could not find one bar claiming itself to be a health bar, protein bar, energy bar or nutritition bar that could claim it to be anti inflammatory as well.   And yet, if the bar is anti inflammatory, by the very nature of the ingredients that are used to make it such, it follows that it will also be low sugar, no gluten, no dairy, no trans fat, no fructose, whole food, paleo and balanced.

Of the 101 bars I looked at, most contained some sort of grain, refined flour, white sugar,  cane or rice syrup, whey protein, and hidden fructose.  Who knows agave nectar is high fructose corn syrup?  If you can find a bar that has no grains and no added sugar in any form, please send it to me posthaste or I will be forced to make one myself!

Buon Appetito and Buona Salute, Chef AngelaB




Friday, June 8, 2012

Some days it just doesn't pay to wake up and get out of bed.  Today was NOT one of those days.  Today, I am just a little closer to my dream of opening the first "eat smart" bar and restaurant serving anti-aging (anti-inflammatory) food to be located near the AnMed Medical campus on Rte. 81 in Anderson, SC.  If you are anxiously awaiting the opening, you still have a little more waiting to do.  I am hoping to open in September this year in order to participate in the Clemson football season, and we are still on schedule for doing that with just one small obstacle, funding.  However, I am still $ 20,000 away from the funding needed to open, but I am not to be deterred.

This idea of mine that we can eradicate age related chronic disease by getting Americans to change to a diet of anti aging (anti inflammatory) foods from the current popular diet of meat, bread and soda, is catching on.  The change to embracing the anti-aging diet also known as the anti inflammation and diabetic diet, is not going to happen over night, but already since I have been blogging here about anti aging gastronomy, the number of views has exponentially increased, and the concept is being blogged and written about all over the web.  

If we can change the American palate to accept and even like or, wow, CRAVE anti inflammatory foods, we can change the entire medical industry.  It is possible.  My recipes are to die for and no one will ever miss the french fries, fried chicken, pizza with pepperoni or burgers on white buns (yuk!)  Imagine our kitchens as the key to real healthcare reform.  Image how much the cost of caring for the elderly would be reduced if there were no diabetes II, heart disease, pain of arthritis or immunological diseases.  Imagine children growing up without the fear of obesity and all the chronic diseases associated.  Imagine taking that first step, here in the upstate, here at Beyond the Bull in Anderson, SC.  Here is where it will happen.  We have a lot of work to do.

Hop on the "eat smart" bandwagon, America.  I need investors at $ 2500 per share, I need 8 more to make this happen.  Better return than a bank and what a great feeling knowing you were there to take the first step for the next generation. I am positive that this venture will be profitable as well as worthy, so much so that I am investing $ 20,000 of my own, hard earned savings that I have been able to scrape together.  I will not be deterred.  To read more go to http://www.indiegogo.com/projects/97093?a=559839  .  Don't pledge but do think about investing.

Buon Appetito and Buona Salute, Chef Angela B.

Thursday, June 7, 2012





This is my first in a series of books written to teach young adults and homemakers how to cook and is now available on Amazon.  As Good As It Gets, Cooking Skills For Life, Volume 1 teaches the skills the same as I have taught them to students in the past, the same methods I learned as a professional.  It is not a book of recipes, but rather a how to for the person who wants to know how to set up a kitchen, learn about food safety and sanitation in the kitchen, and the basic methods of cooking from scratch.  When you are done, you will have the basic skills on which you can build your own family food legacy as I have built mine, thanks to my parents who showed me that it is around the dining table that good friends are made and families unite. At the end of the day, good food and good people coming together is as good as it gets. Perfect life skills gift for any celebration and part of an ongoing collectible series.



I am currently working on Volume 2, Good Food Bad Food which teaches more about cooking methods and ingredients, but more importantly concentrates on ingredients that are anti aging and therefore reduce the risk of adult onset chronic disease.  Volume 2 should be on Amazon before September, both in time for the holidays.


Buon Appetito and Buona Salute, Chef AngelaB 

Friday, June 1, 2012

June 1 and I have lost 5.5 lbs but most importantly, my pain level is greatly reduced.  Even the inflammation at the base of the right thumb has been reduced, the pain at 1, not consistent, and no longer warm to the touch.  No more pain in the knee, between the ribs or tightness in joints or the right arm, the site of a previous fracture.  Overall, mobility and range of motion has improved in all joints.  There is no doubt in my mind that as long as I continue to eat food that is anti-aging, inflammation overall will continue to decline.  Still have another 10 lbs to go, but I am no hurry.  My primary goal is to rid myself of as much inflammation as I can.

I am currently writing the second in a series of cooking skills for life books.  The first, As Good As It Gets is now available on Amazon.  It is a lesson by lesson how to cook from scratch for the beginning homemaker.  This volume, volume 2, is all about anti aging gastronomy, Good Food Bad Food.  There are introductory chapters on anti inflammatory foods in general followed by specific foods with recipes and meals, more lessons on fresh vegetables and fruits with photos.  As was the case with the last book, it is filled with familial anecdotes for human interest.

Beyond the Bull is still in funding phase and I now have a package to send out to investors.  Anyone interested can invest with as little as $ 2500 per share, with a return on investment from quarterly profit sharing.  


Buon Appetito and Buona Salute, Chef Angela B.
also on facebook  https://www.facebook.com/ChefAngelaB

Monday, May 7, 2012

Hello ladies and gentlemen.  So good to be back.  If you are wondering where I have been, I have been writing up a storm, just not here on this blog.  Today was the deadline for some projects I have been writing so I should have more time now.

I also managed to complete a guide to crowdfunding that I have been working on, How to Kickstart Your Dream, All You Need to Know About Crowdfunding, uploaded to Amazon last week.  You can now purchase it for the Kindle for $ 2.99.  If you have an idea and need funding, it is a must read.  Also, watch for a feature on crowdfunding starring moi (that's French for me) in the Greenville News coming up soon.  Will let you know when I know!  Also, check out my project at indiegogo let food be thy medicine.  I have 45 days to raise $ 19K so that Anderson, SC can be the first city to have a restaurant dedicated to eating smart, anti-aging gastronomy.

I have not been steadfast with my balance of a 60/40 goal, alkaline producing food to acid producing food.  As is usually the case when I am working on a project, I forget to plan meals ahead.  That is a sure way to wander from the intended path because it is much faster and easier to grab a sandwich or chips than it is to make a salad.

And although I have not lost as much weight as I would like to have lost, this morning I was 4.5 lbs lighter than when I started.  Still have pain at the base of right thumb, about a 4, now, and mild muscle spasms continue off and on between my ribs which are easily inflamed with exercise.  With 24 days left, we'll see what happens if I am diligent from now on.  All other sites of pain and tightness are gone.

Tomorrow day 33 menu

Breakfast:  Hard boiled egg, whole grain toast, fresh strawberries and black coffee
Lunch:  Leftover chicken thighs without the skin, brown rice, arugula and tomato salad
Dinner:  Chargrilled lamb shoulder with raisin cinnamon sauce, steamed broccoli, mixed greens with radish and cucumbers

Buon Appetito and Buona Salute, Angela B

Tuesday, April 24, 2012

Wahooooooo... I've finally been noticed.  The Greenville News is coming to interview me this week for an article on anti aging gastronomy, crowdfunding and entrepreneuralism, three topics in which I have become well versed lately.  The writer agrees that Anderson needs .Beyond the Bull and also agrees when it comes to the mom and pop small business start ups, if you don't have the cash, you ain't gonna get it.  Thus, the drive to crowdfunders like kickstarter and indiegogo.  Will let you know what happens!


Buon Appetito e Buona Salute, Angela B

Monday, April 23, 2012


I saw an interesting slide show today on the Top Doctors Labs Facebook page.  The opening slide said Your beauty is not in question, your health is.  I then entered the term anti-aging into the Google search engine and there were thousands of hits for anti aging this or that for the face, but very few for anti aging in relation to health.  And in the top ten were 7 of mine from this blog. 

Although my blog is titled anti-aging gastronomy, it is really about the positive effect alkaline producing foods have on the human body, namely the prevention of chronic disease.  Or, inversely, it is about reducing the amount of inflammatory foods consumed, foods that promote chronic disease.

For those of you who are new to my blog, I am going to repeat my introduction and explanation to the philosophy in which I believe very strongly, that is---inflammation is the cause of chronic disease.  Although my field of expertise is not medicine, and I have been told by my personal physicians that “there is no scientific evidence that supports that”, there is a great deal of anecdotal evidence that does.   So, here is a repeat of my first post, from 23 days ago.

If you are reading this journal, I assume that you have the same interest as I have in the benefits
of eating foods that keep us young.  Sounds simple, but it is not.  The aging process is the replication of cells.   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 them 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 are well and physically fit eating a diet of hamburgers and fries, but at forty years old, not so much.  

I am a writer of songs, screenplays, poems and novels.  And, although I have never been published or produced, it is not that I am not good at it, it is that I choose to live a life which excludes networking and living within the culture of similar writers, producers and others.  So, as a substitute I have turned my creativity to food and with a dollop of scientific inquiry I have arrived at a place in my life where I long to share what secrets I have learned to the benefit and longevity of mankind.  Oh, I am also a chef!

In the next 57 days I am going to eat my way to the best health I can be.   I have started and stopped this journey a number of times, having a specific goal, but never quite making it, as life often happens to interfere.  I have in the last four years, shed 40 pounds, rid myself of joint pain and  swollen fingers and feet,  reduced my glucose from 109 to 85, lowered my cholesterol to normal levels, reversed hypothyroidism, and eliminated those pesky so called “age” related symptoms such as short term memory loss, dry skin and hair loss.   Now I am going to attempt the last lap.   My final goals are simple, using the anti aging gastronomy that I have developed, I am going to lose the last 15 pounds and be totally free from all pain.

Four years ago my medical history described me as pre obese, pre diabetic, pre hypertensive, pre high cholesterol, pre hypothyroid and pre…    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, and muscle pain that “moved” from neck to upper back, lower back, hips, knees, and ribs.  I had extreme fatigue, chronic sinusitis, hair loss, dry skin, occasional short term memory loss (searching for forgotten words), prone to skin infections that sometimes abscessed 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 and glib assessment that my symptoms were due to my age.  And luckily took the advice of my wise and learned chiropractor who gently but persistently advocated for nutrition as a remedy.   I thank God every day that I decided to listen to my chiropractor and put my trust in food.  Her advice started me on a path to wellness.

Assuming that my chiropractor was correct when she suggested that my symptoms were the result of an inflammatory process, consuming too many inflammatory foods, I read everything I could find on the internet and at the library, on the relationship between pain and inflammation until I was convinced that inflammation was, in fact, the reason for my ill health.  Next, I read everything I could on the relationship between food and inflammation, food and pain, food and arthritis, food and diabetes, food and cellular aging.  I knew that if I was going to feel well again, the remedy had to be at the cellular level. 

 It didn’t take long to see 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, but it didn’t explain why the downward spiral of my health now and not at a younger age until I understood the process of cell replication that I have already explained.    I was convinced that my adult onset symptoms were in fact the result of years of consuming inflammatory foods even when I thought I was “dieting”.   Based on the philosophy that foods that are alkaline producing are anti inflammatory and those that are acid producing are inflammatory, I embarked on a dietary change that lead to the successes I have already described.  Now it is time for the final leg of my journey to be as well as I can be.

Acid producing food and alkaline producing food should not be confused with acidic such as a lemon is acidic.  The ph is determined by burning (similar to metabolizing) so it is not something you can assume, but can only get from a scientific table of tested foods.  You want to keep your body on the alkaline side to avoid inflammation.    The difficult part is creating interesting, flavorful, and feel good meals without the use of many of our favorites from our western diet.  For example, a hamburger patty and bun is 100% highly acidic.  Spaghetti and meatballs is 100% highly acidic 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 acidic forming rating?  Grains!  What is the meat with the highest acidic forming rating?  Beef!  This created a challenge for me. 

The meals do not have to be 100% alkaline producing to have a profound effect.  I found that as long as I maintained a proportion of at least 60% of the meal to be alkaline forming, I was successful.   Most of the time, the plate was 75% alkaline and the rest slightly acidic.  It is 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.  So, knowing that, there are little tricks to having your cake and eating it too, so to speak.  If I want to have a glass of red wine which is acidic, I add a squeeze of fresh lemon juice and throw in the lemon too. 

I have an idea that I can make a difference to the community in which I live.  I have found the upstate South Carolina to suit me well, so much so that I would like it to be the location of the first “eat smart” restaurant serving anti aging food which I am marketing as anti aging gastronomy.  The restaurant will offer the community an alternative to meat and bread and deep fried foods, a menu offering a higher proportion of anti inflammatory food choices.  It will also be a teaching kitchen, a place where those who share my philosophy can learn to prepare foods for an anti-inflammatory or anti-aging diet and an incubator for other food industry entrepreneurs who need help getting a start.    

I have been working for over a year to raise the other half of the funding that I need to open Beyond the Bull.   The name Beyond the Bull was chosen for several reasons.  First, the ingredients go way beyond beef.  It won't be missed, I promise.  Second, when you step inside, you must leave all the bull*** out on the sidewalk.  Third, as my culinary mentor and favorite instructor once told me, I wear my emotions on my sleeve so what you see is what you get---no bull.  Last, I am a huge fan of the equities market and have always been way beyond the bull.  And besides, it makes for a great logo!  The location is chosen, the plan is ready, the alliances have been made.  Anderson, SC could be the first restaurant in the nature to offer anti aging gastronomy.  If you want to learn more about Beyond the Bull and its progress, go to http://www.indiegogo.com/projects/97093?a=559839 .

Tomorrow’s menu Day 24 

Breakfast:  Poached egg on whole wheat toast, topped with tomato salsa fresca, half grapefruit
Lunch:  Spinach salad with apple cider vinaigrette made with a touch of mustard, black olives, crumbeled bits of hard boiled egg whisked, topped with some hummus and pickled red onion
Dinner:  Roasted bone in skin on, crispy chicken breasts, smeared under the skin with unsalted fresh sage butter, served with whole kernel corn, brown rice (red style with the salsa cooked in),  fresh steamed green beans and a side of cucumber, tomato and flat leaf parsley with lemon

Don’t forget the dried figs, apricots, sunflower seeds, almonds and fresh fruit between meals.  Eat smaller portions more often and don’t forget 6 16 oz glasses of water a day!

Next blog, the eating out nightmare!


Buon Appetito e Buona Salute, Angela B



Saturday, April 21, 2012


Today was an awesome day!   I decided to make one more attempt to raise the funds I need to open an anti aging gastronomy restaurant , also known as “eat smart”,  in Anderson, SC.  For those of you who know me, you know I don’t stop until I get what I want.   It’s easy to “eat smart” at home, but most of us don’t eat at home.  We need better choices when eating out and it is my goal to be the first to provide it.  You can go to www.indiegogo.com where I will be launching my project to raise the second half of the funding I need.  You can also see me on youtube at  http://www.youtube.com/watch?feature=player_detailpage&v=_ZZPFtzwZo4 or just search for let food be thy medicine and look for indiegogo. 

Tomorrow’s menu Day 22

Breakfast:  scrambled eggs and salsa, whole grain toast, fresh blueberries and water, water, water!
Lunch:  canned tuna mixed with celery, black olives, scallions, Dukes mayo, and canola oil, with celery seed and lots of black pepper, over mixed green salad and topped with my favorite cucumber salsa
Dinner:  roast turkey breast with blueberry bbq sauce, sweet potato puree with lots of
cinnamon, marinated medly of roasted brussel sprouts, red peppers and onion, and a wedge of iceberg lettuce with green goddess dressing

Buon Appetito, Angela B

Thursday, April 19, 2012


Wow, 6 days since my last blog post.  How time flies when you are having fun.  I have been offered a few writing gigs, one of which combines writing with food, my two favorite pastimes and have been busy with articles and recipes.  When I know where they will be posted, I will let you all know.  Back to my challenge!

Weighed in this morning and total weight loss is 3.0 lbs.  Doesn’t look like I am going to reach my weight loss goal of 15 pounds by Memorial Day, but I am not a quitter so onward I go.  As far as pain, I am still experiencing some minor muscle spasms (level 3 pain) in between my ribs in the middle back, and near my right shoulder blade.  And the pain at the bottom of my right thumb persists although it is still only about a 2.  Pain in the back is better with ice and stretching so I assume it is from the use of a new machine at the gym, a seated elliptical which has just been returned to use after being out of order for two months.  Although I have used it in the past for strength and stretching of upper and lower limbs, this was my first time back in the saddle and I think I worked too fast and too long for the first time back.  We’ll have to wait and see.

Menu for Day 20

Breakfast:  What?  PB and whole grain toast, you say?  Quel surprise!  Wait, I added half a grapefruit, as well.
Lunch:  4 oz of chicken salad prepared just the way I like it with celery, parsley, a touch of Dukes mayo, and scallions, vinegar and chopped pepper,  served on baby spinach and topped with fresh cucumber salsa, Yummm!
Dinner:  Baked haddock with tomato salsa fresca, more mixed salad greens, fresh tomato slices, sprinkled with fresh cilantro, a touch of tartar sauce I make with dill pickle, Duke’s, horseradish, lemon and lots of cracked black pepper, topped with pickled red cabbage

My basic pickling recipe is vinegar, jalapeno slices, a small amount of brown sugar and sea salt, bay leaf and whole peppercorns.  Thin slices of red onion are my favorite, but you can pickle green beans, red cabbage, cucumbers, radishes, and any of your favorite veggies that can be sliced thin enough to absorb the liquid but still stay crunchy.  It adds zing and an extra texture to any food. 

Buon Appetito, Angela B