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Friday, April 22, 2011

Sharing Some Cookbook Titles, by Request


These are a few of my favorite things…..

When guests starting wandering in to look through our cookbooks after breakfast, then went back to get their camera to take pictures of the titles used to prepare their food- I finally got the message. So here are a few of my favorite cookbooks:











Vegan World Fusion Cuisine
Healing Recipes & Timeless Wisdom From Our Hearts to Yours
Mark Reinfeld and Bo Rinaldi

This is the one I'm turning to lately for the vegan version of scrambled eggs...but it's really so much better; kind of an Indian twist and beautiful!  Be sure to take time to press out the tofu by wrapping it in paper towels and setting it under a heavy skillet, cutting board, etc. Well loved so far~

Guilt Free Indulgences
For special treats, non dairy and gluten free, The Ice Dream Cookbook is perfect. Coconut milk has the "right" kind of saturated fat. Made with stevia and a bit of honey, it is really quite wonderful....a few fresh strawberries or raspberries...maybe a handful of dark chocolate chips in the mix - Mmmmm. There are gluten free cooky recipes to go along with it. Being mindful of taking care of ourselves doesn't have to mean excluding- but including better options!

Awesome for Dinners....Madhur Jaffrey's, World Vegetarian


I love this cookbook. Excellent curries, soups...all the things that make Adytum smell sinfully sensuous and enticing. Your spice drawer will grow as well as the pleasure quotient at your table.


It is always a pleasure to inspire others to greater health as well as having truly exceptional meals. When our recent guest, News Director for Channel 11 in Alaska went back home and bought all these titles, I knew that Adytum had worked her “magic” once again. Donn loved talking "news" with her and discovering how she selected which stories would run. She loved getting some new ideas for her kitchen, her life... We all stimulate each other here to rise to higher levels and we’re grateful to have these books to share with you as we're grateful to receive all our guests bring to us!
If the Buddha Came to Dinner; The Ice Dream Cookbook; Whole Life Nutrition Cookbook
All Excellent in Adding Pleasure to Life and Increasing Health!




Thursday, April 21, 2011

A New Recipe For You...And Guns, Raccoons and Tender Hearted Men




Adytum is becoming known as having the corner - the “niche” -  on accommodating any healthy dietary desire our guests present us with- We cater to foodies, food snobs, fastidious eaters and those that would otherwise send a great cook into a private little panic. Once you’ve tried all the ways of eating for yourself, it’s not that big a deal to recreate it for guests. If you haven’t…well, it can be just plain terrifyingly daunting. At the latest PAII (Professional Innkeepers of America) seminar I noticed that entire blocks of time were dedicated to teaching gluten free, vegetarian, vegan, etc. breakfasts.

When I made my diet changes in my early 30’s, I went from the typical SAD (Standard American Diet- or Shortcut Along-the-way-to Death) to a vegan lifestyle overnight. No one thought the changes would last because I went “cold turkey”. I have little willpower and agreed, however I made one crucial decision: to ask for supernatural help and I lived as a vegan for three years, until I married Donn and we added eggs and cheese (and instant cellulite… Hmmm….) into our lives.

Being vegan made all the difference and I watched my body change in ways that seemed impossible for my age and having three kids. Coupled with Donn surprising me with my first mountain bike, a bright yellow Santa Cruz, it was the total ticket to becoming bikini ready/cellulite free in 6 weeks- not only in body composition, but in the creation of lean, defined muscles. 
Christmas 2010


What a fallacy the Cross Fit teams are propagating- that you have to eat mostly animal protein to create muscle. Muscle is 70% water. It takes massive amounts of energy to extract protein from animal sources; vegetable sources are much more easily absorbed and kinder on the kidneys. My trainer at the athletic club where I worked at the time was a vegan and had bigger biceps and chest measurement than any meat eater I ever trained. Hands down. I saw it work.

Over the years we have lost the vegan emphasis, adding some dairy from sheep and goats primarily, and clean eggs- we will always be vegetarian although we take fish oil daily. But when it’s time to get the bikini out of the drawer however, those “animal extras” fall to the wayside in favor of embracing the vegan approach once again- but this time with the addition of gluten free.

Could you make a meal for us that was vegan, gluten free; fresh, beautiful and tasted fantastic? Some of you guests have taught me and can cook me under the proverbial table, but some of you can imagine the fears some innkeepers face. But not only the hospitality or food service industry; my daughter in law, Lindsey Gritton, will make her first Easter dinner and manage to please vegans, vegetarians, carnivores, SAD diet family members and gluten and sugar free guests all at one table. I admire her for tackling such a feat! So believe me, it can happen to you. While I enjoy cooking from all venues and ranging through most all ethnic menus, it gives me great satisfaction knowing that those at the Adytum table will leave with an increase in health and oftentimes without realizing it was sugar free, gluten free or otherwise “different”.
Vegan, Gluten Free, Sugar Free AWESOME Muffins; Well Loved By ALL


When I saw the rising numbers of gluten free, vegan, sugar free guests on our reservation list I got on Amazon and started downloading cookbooks to my Kindle for PC. (a free download if you haven’t tried it). The following recipe comes from Gluten Free Vegan Waffles and Toppings: 43 Recipes From The Global Gluten Free Waffle Cookbook.  Being the “can’t color between the lines/can’t follow rules” cook that I am, I adapted it to suit my palate and conscience but the bones (pardon the pun) of this vegan recipe are excellent and it made a hearty, healthy waffle that we topped with a strawberry compote, fresh strawberries and a dollop of coconut vanilla yogurt. They were so good, they didn’t need the addition of pure maple syrup, but when I added a bit around the edges, it was even better. Sorry I didn’t think to photograph them before we devoured them….maybe next time I’ll show more self-control~


By the way a quick story to bring home the vegan point. Donn was raised vegetarian and therefore wasn’t a hunter like some of his friends back in Idaho. He did have a singular attempt at hunting as a young boy. To start, he shot a bird- just for practice. That early boyhood episode ended in humiliating tears. It broke his heart to take the life of a thing of beauty whether it would be eaten or not. Needless to say, he doesn't hunt now apart from photo safaris... (For some reason this thought process excludes moles who must be some other entity altogether…)
My Tender Hearted Lover....


So yesterday, Dash, our Cavalier King Charles Spaniel pointed to a downed raccoon just outside the First Light Suite – no doubt shaken about an inch from death by Gabriel. Gabriel showed up at Adytum just a day before we had to put our beloved Borzoi Sasha to sleep, thus “the Angel Dog” sent to mend my broken heart. He’s turned out to be a fearsome watchdog keeping predators, like the unfortunate raccoon away and dedicated friend to the rest of us.
Gabe taking a break from guard duty...


However it was sad as we watched the raccoon laboring to breathe for several hours; clearly he wasn’t going to recover. I prayed God would just take him and spare us the painful decision-making…but no miracles today; he breathed on and raked the gravel with a paw, trying to move out of the path. So I finally asked Donn to do the unthinkable: get the shotgun and put him out of his misery. I’ve never killed anything apart from  insects... It takes the heart and stomach of a man sometimes… We had to leave for work at Medical Vision Center and I couldn’t see letting the pitiful animal fear that a dog would finish him off, or die of thirst, etc.   I witnessed the struggle in the still tender, boyish heart of my husband and finally, he got the gun and with a single blast he released the poor little spirit from its own struggle.


It takes a brave, loving man to kill with dignity, empathy and compassion. So while I champion the vegan cause, there is room in the world for everyone who comes from a heart of respect and understanding. But for me, who dream of the little happy faces of our enormous Koi in the pond, I will trend toward avoiding eating anything with a face. There always seemed to be a “disconnect” to me with veterinarians who went home to a slab of meat at their table. Go figure. Everyone lives in the way they see fit. However, the rule of the Adytum kitchen is familiar to you: First, “Do no harm - to anyone on either side of the table”.
Gabe and Dash Man...




The original recipe for Buckwheat-Molasses Waffles calls for canola oil, which I replaced with coconut oil. Speaking of oil, use generous amounts of oil on the waffle iron- they stick.  I also replaced the sugar with honey, used sea salt vs. regular, Blackstrap vs. regular molasses and added more liquid- in this case Hemp Milk. The White Rice Flour can be substituted with Brown Rice Flour. Also, the addition of cinnamon and my favorite exotic spice Cardamom made the house smell seductively warm and sweet. Play around with the basics and make them your own. Don’t forget the power of the “scent of the hands” -  the ancient East Indian concept of pouring your heart and your love into the food you lovingly prepare for others. I pray for my guests as I cook for them. You cannot “measure” that and it’s really my secret ingredient that sends everyone into “mouthgasms”… If your attempts to learn new ways of cooking and eating fail just try again; besides, the dogs love and appreciate every mistake…

Buckwheat-Molasses Waffles
Makes 4 7” round Belgian Waffles
1 Cup Buckwheat Flour
1 Cup White Rice Flour
½ Cup Tapioca Flour
2 Tsp Baking Powder
1 Tsp Baking Soda
1 Tsp Salt
2 Tsp Xanthan Gum Powder
2 ½ Cups Soy or other non dairy milk
¼ Canola Oil
2 T sugar
2 T Molasses
Combine dry ingredients. Combine wet ingredients separately stirring with a whisk. Combine wet and dry mixing with a whisk and let stand 5 minutes while Belgian Waffle Iron is heating. Ladle batter onto well oiled iron covering no more than 2/3 with batter. Adjust batter with subsequent waffles, adding more or less batter.
Kindle for PC Edition of a Great Vegan Waffle Cookbook
 







Saturday, April 2, 2011


January 2009 found Donn and me in Kauai at “Island Eyes” Optometry Conference, and me in the bookstores during down time. The water was inviting, but chilly and I left my dry suit at home. So for once the mermaid in me had to sit on the shore. Even Donn was shivering while swimming with the many turtles right off the beach of our hotel, so I didn’t feel bad about turning bookish on our “learning” vacation and spending hours among the “written word” friends…


Donn has learned to anticipate these intellectual forays and left extra room in the luggage to bring home the often very weighty books. When I picked up the colorfully engaging cover of “Blossoming Lotus: Vegan World Fusion Cuisine”: Healing Recipes and Timeless Wisdom From Our Hearts to Yours,  he gave me a look I know all too well, and said, “I’ll buy it if you make it all for me”…That was two years ago.

In our 16 years together, we’ve practiced every diet from raw to vegan to vegetarian – and I was not vegetarian for the first 32 years of my life as he was, growing up. The many cookbooks/non cook books on my shelves reflect varied interests and paths we’ve traversed. The Vegan walk is a particularly hard one, as is eating only raw. There are few restaurants that cater to vegetarians much less vegan and raw foodies.  More now as awareness is rising, but back then – no.


Adytum is carving out a niche to not only feed, but to spoil these people rotten who choose to care for themselves with so much compassion and love that they step out of the mainstream SAD (Standard American Diet) to creatively care for their “self” in ways that will produce positive real and meaningful results.

I’ll never forget my days as a personal trainer, up at 4 a.m. and to on the road at 4:45 to work out my first client at 5 a.m. Getting a late start one morning, I grabbed the last night’s zucchini patty and was speeding along, literally 66 mph in a 45, and getting my breakfast down- both as fast as I could. When I was pulled over, asked for my license, and the question came, “What is THAT?” the officer let me off laughing saying, “Anyone who has the guts to eat THAT at 5 o’clock in the morning doesn’t deserve anything worse, like a ticket!” And we all thought THEY were tough…

I’ve been taking good care of myself for a long time now, and I’m so happy to brush the dust off some of the lesser used cookbooks/non cookbooks to spoil my guests…rotten. When the following attempt at “scrambled eggs, tofu style” was pronounced, “The best we’ve ever had” by a true vegan I knew that I was being seduced back into a world I inhabited for three years. Three years without knowing what cellulite looked like. Three years of incredible muscle mass and stamina. Sorry folks, but dairy leads to cellulite. Maybe not European sheep and goat dairy, but American practices are not what they are in Europe. Our cheese is not clean.
Some of my Favorite Cookbooks, Photographed by our Guests When Leaving


My mentor and boss at the Tumwater Valley Health Club – the largest in the Pacific Northwest – was and is a vegan and his chest and bicep measurements are “off the charts” amazing. I never saw this size on meat eaters I worked out. He was responsible for inspiring many of my health changes, taking a 30’s something housewife and mother of three, and in six weeks having people ask me if I was going to enter the Olympia Naturals Bodybuilding Competition. He taught me diet and exercise and was my personal trainer. I went on to teach diet and exercise too at that club and later in my own business. Miracles never cease; a new body and regained health when most women that age are cresting the top of the hill and heading down settling for love handles, depression, female problems and cellulite. I might add, that year of my changes, the doctors wanted to take all my female parts out- total hysterectomy at 32 and they put me on anti depressants that made me weave like a drunk woman and have cotton mouth. That lasted all of a week before my mentor said, “Are you ready to change your life?”


The vegan diet is a powerful diet, and especially when combined with eating the largest meal in the morning, smaller at lunch, smaller yet at dinner and lifting weights…One set to failure which takes about 15 minutes three times a week, and then riding the bike or doing aerobic on another machine or outside for 50 minutes 5 times a week. Now I would add, “Be gluten free”. The molecule has been skewed to raise browning levels in bread, to create more disease resistance, etc. and the body doesn’t recognize it. We have a great restaurant in Olympia where we enjoy gluten free pasta, Basilicos. The Italian owner said all kids are routinely tested for gluten sensitivity and intolerance AT BIRTH in Italy, and most ARE gluten intolerant. We in America seem to wish to remain blissfully (and sickly) unaware.

In an earlier post, I mentioned that every guest who visits Adytum leaves something of themselves here. They make a lasting impression, permanent changes and even more -  leaving their mark on us, future guests and the sacred space we call Adytum, the Sanctuary. Remember, “First we shape our houses, and then our houses shape us.” Winston Churchill said that. This weekend’s guests, here to celebrate spring break, have caused me to dust off the vegan cookbooks at a time in my life where I long to get that 30’s something body back, with all the lean definition and muscle mass and feel the relief from the estrogens and contaminants in cheese. The lungs are often the first to react or the sinuses.


I helped our vegan guests by refining their nutritional therapy protocols and they will help me to lean down by considering the vegan approach once again. There was mention that we can get limited on our diets, “I can’t do this food. I can’t eat that…” with certain programs. But in the mindset of creating ultimate health, there are endless choices that actually open up a great deal of variety to us. Not falling back on the parmesan topping and using rice based cheese under the last minute of broiling of the oven baked red potatoes is just as fine! And healthier.

Ruts are dangerous places to rest in and the best cooks among us need to venture out. Blessings to my guests who remind me of my roots and left something very precious here in the resurgence of interest in the vegan lifestyle, which is also correlated with incredible health benefits like a regression of symptoms of rheumatoid arthritis and other inflammatory conditions. Vegan diets lower cholesterol and blood pressure and prevent heart disease.  And yes, they give you one hot body!

The one flaw I’ve found in a completely vegan diet is the need for the essential fatty acids EPA-DHA, and they may be low in Omega 6 which is usually obtained by animal sources. Both can be obtained by supplementing with fish oil and GLA from evening primrose or borage oil. Flax seed oil converts rather poorly into EPA-DHA depending on several lifestyle factors.  But it needs to form a “background” in which the extracted EPA-DHA is consumed.

I noticed when involved with the raw food folks that while the women were incredibly limber, their hair looked dry and their skin was wrinkled. I say this with all due respect. Eating raw is, for many, a very hard walk that takes an incredible amount of commitment. I am just reporting my observations. When something is essential, we need to make sure we get it and not simply be committed to a label like “raw or vegan”.

Plant based diets are in the nutrigenomic spotlight now. I have long reported the Hale Project’s findings on a 50% reduction in ALL causes of death and disease, Alzheimer’s included by following a plant based diet based on the Mediterranean model.  Soy has been controversial but the research using organic, non GMO soy is irrefutable in its support of health. Metagenics in particular, which had 66 research scientists on staff when I last checked, has many excellent articles on their website by that name. So if you’re so inclined to branch out, as I did to give my guests - in their words, “A crème de la crème” breakfast this morning, you may want to experiment with this recipe, courtesy of a great trip a few years back to Kauai. 


Wakantanka Tofu Scramble
15 Minutes Pre/15 Minutes Cooking/2 Servings

2 Tbl Olive Oil                                                                 1 Tsp Sea Salt
1 C Onion, diced                                                            1 Tsp Paprika
2 Tsp Garlic,  minced                                                     ¾ Tsp Ground Black Pepper
1 lb Organic Tofu, extra firm, crumbled small         ½ Tsp Nutritional Yeast
½ C Tomato, diced                                                        Pinch Cayenne Pepper
1 Tsp Tumeric                                                                 1 Tbl Shoyu, or to Taste

Loving Preparation:
1.      Place oil in a large sauté pan on medium high heat. Add onion and garlic and cook until onions are soft, approximately 5 minutes, stirring frequently.
2.      Add tofu. Cook for 5 minutes, stirring occasionally. Add remaining ingredients and cook for 5 minutes stirring occasionally.
3.      Variations are limitless. Italian influence, Indian, Mexican, etc…

From: Blossoming Lotus Vegan World Fusion Cuisine by Mark Reinfeld and Bo Rinaldi