Eating Simply

Tempeh with cabbage, kale and brown rice

I haven’t been posting a lot on my blog lately, because I feel it is just all too simple. Yet still, people will see or taste what I eat, and have no clue how to prepare it, or wouldn’t have been able to think of it – so I feel it is important to share, even if it is simple.

Simple is what is satiating for me. Like the purity of a bowl of cereal from your childhood (or as a young adult.. or maybe you still dive into the occasional bowl of cereal with the same enthusiasm that I am describing from my youth). It’s the grilled cheese sandwich, mom’s potato soup, spaghetti and meat balls – it’s the simplicity.

One of my favourite movies, “Ratatouille”, features a scene where the very best food critic in Paris comes to a restaurant to taste the food from a new and highly acclaimed chef. The chew knew of the critic’s past, and so decided to make him ‘peasant food’ – which was the ratatouille dish which titled the movie. The memory of the simple farm dish touched him so deeply, the emotions from eating the food overwhelmed him, making the dish a great success. If familiarity were a flavour, it would be our favourite. We yearn for what we know, and often resist new flavours, at least initially. Similarly for simple dishes, we often turn to these because they are comforting and uncomplicated – perfect for our stressed out and chaotic lives. This may be the reason so many people like ‘macaroni and cheese’ right out of the box, or in my case – right out of grandma’s oven.

This dish may look complicated, but it was so incredible easy to make. I don’t even think I could come up with a recipe to include in this post if I could. Underneath, sadly not captured by the camera, was a bed of brown rice. Nothing added, just water and rice cooked in my favourite little ceramic pot.

Next, I steamed some red cabbage in a little water with black pepper and a bit of chopped up garlic. At the last minute I included some chopped kale. Kale typically only needs a moment of steaming to cook. The water level was just about an inch, enough to somewhat boil the cabbage, but steam the kale.

In a cast-iron enamel fry-pan, I heated up some butter and added chopped leeks, cumin seeds and garlic. Once the onions got a bit clear, I added chopped tempeh and a bit of mushroom.

While these items cooked, a dressing was made to pour overtop of the tempeh. This was made up of brown rice vinegar, miso paste, sesame seeds, garlic and flax oil. It was poured on just as it was finished so as to avoid heating the oil.

Everything was piled into a bowl, and then a dollop of my favourite vegan mayonnaise was plunked on top to give the cabbage a bit of moisture – et voila! Simple.

The thing is, the ingredients of this dish were chosen based on what was in my fridge, and it could have been any combination of vegetables. Chopped squash, zucchini, carrot, etc would work. I could have easily scrambled in an egg to the fried leeks, and added that to the bowl instead of tempeh as well.

This is why I hesitate to use recipes. Cooking should be conceptual and very flexible, which you’ll see from more of my other blog posts. Sometimes though, a good recipe just can’t be beat. But otherwise, simple cooked foods can make preparing food so easy, and comforting to the soul.

Let me know if you try to make something like this and post it in the comments! Would love to hear!

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Peanut Butter Been Better



I pilfered this awful nearly non-food product from my guest that stays with me a few days a week. I irk slightly every time I see as it is an unusual sight for my otherwise whole foods kitchen. What especially ruffles me is the label on the product, as it is extremely misleading for shoppers trying to find their ol’ staple jar of peanut butter like they used to eat in the good old days. Not that peanut butter was any better back then, but some how this grocery item has weaselled its way to ‘health food’ status, probably because its made from nuts, and has protein.

It seems as though most of our educated, average-grocery-store shoppers receive their food/health education from product labels, manufactures’ promotional materials, or magazine articles, which never really clearly define the subtleties of what to look for and avoid when selecting a particular food item that’s deemed healthy. You see – not all foods, or ingredients are created equally. Eating fresh, recently harvested, properly stored, good quality peanuts would be one thing, but this… this terrible food that has crept onto grocery store shelves is another thing. The average shopper doesn’t know the difference between one nut product from another. Allow me to educate!!!
First of all – notice the front of the label. I blanked out the brand name to protect the culprit, but notice the ‘health’ symbols and connotations that exist, immediately giving the impression of good health. A light blue label is reminiscent of President Choice’s (Canadian brand) “Blue Label” line of health foods, and they’ve informed the customer that one serving (how much?) is 80 calories, and 5g of fat. Totally irrelevant to the bigger picture of health when you consider the deeper aspects that underlie good health. The peanut butter is illustrated with some green apples, not the white bread that most people consume it with, then they’ve also placed a picture of a butterfly (indicating no added preservatives – but then what is corn maltodextrin?), and a giant exclamation mark on it, meaning, this food must be special, somehow. Otherwise they wouldn’t have cared to let us know about it. They should have put a skull and crossbones on it instead.
Flipping the jar over and reading its ingredients label gives the product a completely different, contradictory message. Written DIRECTLY on it: HYDROGENATED VEGETABLE OIL, comprising three poor quality oils that some how got blended together, or selected at the time of manufacture, likely which ever was the lowest priced at the time. Often manufacturers will label two or three oils so that they can choose the cheapest at the time of production and not have to change the label. So they chose the cheapest oil, and then HYDROGENATED IT!! Wasn’t this issue exposed about a decade ago when products started getting away from hydrogenation and trans-fats? Nah. They just put it right in, thinking that people will overlook it considering it appears as a health food. Or worse yet, they don’t even look or notice, all you have to look at is the label to clearly see it is a ‘health food’. Aside from that, corn maltodextrin, an indigestible (therefore zero carbohydrate sugar) corn by-product used to sweeten food is second on the list. This is useful to the manufacturer because the sweetener doesn’t get included in the nutritional facts label because it CANNOT be digested by our body, so it is not counted on the label for either caloric intake OR sugar content. But they also added sugar and molasses anyway. Because maltodextrin is indigestible, the flora in our gut have the job of breaking it down after all other nutrients are absorbed. For most people, this means it exasperates candida and parasitic infections, typically resulting in a worsened condition, but acutely resulting in gas and bloating – with no understanding of why or where it came from. Sugar does this too however. It is the food to feed unwanted infections, or growths in the body, including cancer, cysts, warts, arterial plaque, viruses and fungi. Not only that, but the rancid, rotting nuts and nut oil from the peanuts, which when are poor quality contain aflotoxins – a carcinogenic by-product from rotting plant proteins, but these rancid oils, in conjunction with the sugars and hydrogenated fat inserted into the food, create an incredibly supportive ‘house’ for the infections to thrive and grow, further worsening most health conditions in the body. These oils also create dangerous lesions in the body, especially in the arteries, damaging the tissues, requiring cholesterol to come in and create a layer of plaque to protect the damaged tissue. Hydrogenated and rancid oils also stagnate the liver creating irritability, stress, inflammation, allergies and a host of other ailments. Refined, and rancid oils, typically found in most commercially available foods, are one of the greatest contributors to aging and the destruction of precious internal tissues such as the liver, heart, arteries, and so on. Sugar contributes to this issue as well, including the added sweeteners of maltodextrin and molasses. Salt is the last ingredient, which also contributes to bodily ‘Dampness’ as known in Chinese Medicine, referring to the unwanted growths in the body, which include the list above, but also excess weight, and masses in the body. So really, there is NO one good ingredient in this food. They are all refined and/or rancid by-products from foods that are hardly deemed healthy in the first place, and all contribute to increased poor health and do not facilitate in good health in any way. I took a picture of the inside of the jar to illustrate what your arteries might look like with continued use of this product.
One last thing to note: this product has been “Health Checked” by the Heart and Stroke Foundation. YIKES!

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Probably the healthiest granola recipe ever..

Granola is so yummy, and a nice transitional food for the accustomed morning cereal eater, as it is a food that can be prepared simply and eaten with milk. However, the downside of granola, is that it is often made with refined oils, concentrated sweeteners, rancid nuts and seeds, hot spices, and generally just kinda heavy, greasy and overly sweet. What is the solution? Make your OWN with good ingredients! Here’s how I do mine:

- DRY pan toast some almonds and pumpkin seeds until aromatic (do NOT burn!)
- Add some oat flakes and stir quickly – not too much toasting time for these guys. If they are over-heated, it will not be good for your liver or heat condition, and generally not recommended.
- Chop in some fruit, like apple slices, or stir in some blueberries. The fruit may sweat and add moisture to the dish, but if it doesn’t, add a TINY bit of water, or better yet, a little bit of orange juice (fresh squeezed is best).
- I usually stop cooking at this point, even before the fruit usually, and put it into a bowl, however you can add spices and continue baking it for a little time to make it more warming.
- Add spices like cardamom, green stevia, nutmeg, etc, but cinnamon tends to be too hot, and if eaten before bed can cause things like night sweats, or worsen inflammation, etc.
- I put the warm granola into my bowl, (this is where I add the OJ, fruit and spices actually), and then pour over a little flax or hemp oil to give it some richness and greasiness.
- I was a little extra hungry, so I broke up some brown rice cake into as well and stirred it.
- I was also gifted a little dark chocolate, so I chopped that up and stirred it in as well too!
- Since I make my own goat kefir, which is really my only animal product, I topped it off with that, or I might add a little homemade almond milk with it as well.
NO sweeteners, refined or cooked oils, no salt, no flours, no junky nuts, and all fresh! YUM!

http://www.michaelfisher.ca

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Snacks for Your Stool

Oh yeah.. these are good. Try to get the imagery of gigantic stools out of your head first tho, because it makes these less appetizing.

The reason I called them Snacks for Your Stool is because it’s mostly ground flax. I put flax in a grinder, and then added tahini, flax oil and molasses. That’s it – spread it on something snacky, e voila! A Snack for Your Stool 
(I used at least 1/4 cup of flax seeds for this, plus I added some sesame seeds too, and I think pumpkin seeds got in there sometime too.. I like experimenting with something over and over to see what comes of it, and so I tried different seeds, and I’m sure nuts would work well too – but they’re a little too rich for me right now, so I’m eating few of them).

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Goose Poop Sandwich

Doesn’t this look like s#!+?

Well, it’s home-made, and I know what you’re thinking. I don’t own any geese, or wild animals for that matter. This treat does looks weird… but I guess, yeah, it was weird – but pretty good!!
So I was in the mood for bitter and building. Why bitter? It reduces things, or at least gives it a descending nature, and I wanted something to bring me down a notch and solidify my base. So this I did.
What did I do to create this messy snack food that I need not worry about running to the patent office with due to its gastly appearance?
First I ground up some almonds (let’s pretend they were soaked and then drained/dried, as I usually do, but I actually forgot in this case), along with.. well heck, I’ll just write down the recipe for you:
Grind in a magic bullet/mini-mill thingy
-almonds
-black sesame seeds
-raw cacao nibs
-flax seeds (brown ones)
-spirulina
-goat colostrum… yep, threw that in there to make it a “SUPER FOOD”.. colostrum is my new superfood, I don’t think science has got a whiff of it yet, and so I’m glad so it’s not abused and on every product in the health section of the grocery store.. like acai… that word makes me gag due to it’s over-popularity.. it’s a berry for crying out loud!! It’s not gold.. anyways, I digress..
Blend that super fibery weird mess in the mill until it’s pasty. Add:
-flax oil
-molasses (all I had on hand, not by choice, otherwise I would’ve used yacon)
-drop of goat milk to make it a little liquidy
Blend again (put this time it will be buttery and mushy)
Dollop the goop out onto a rice cake or something not-bitter (that would just overload the bitter senses of your tongue) and prepare for some building and grounding. It would actually make a lovely Yin tonic for women just after, or during their menses. The black colour in food magically replenishes blood and gives us some support during this time.
Also, don’t forget that I made this whole thing up (like alot of things), so if you want to play with it, try anything. Just grind up stuff, add some oil, .. and spices go nicely too, like cinnamon,.. eh voila!!  Goose poop.

http://www.michaelfisher.ca

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Poo Balls


Eat these and then poo them out.

1/2 cup sesame seeds
1/3 cup honey or yacon
2 Tbsp raw sunflower seeds
2 Tbsp tahini or almond butter
1/2 cup ground flax
1/8 tsp salt
1/2 cup unsweetened shredded coconut, plus more for garnish
1 tsp vanilla
1-2 Tbsp carob or cocoa powder

Pulse sunflower seeds in a blender or food processor into a rough powder. Combine all ingredients into a stiff and slightly crumbly dough. Press into balls and roll in the extra shredded coconut. Eat em and poop em out!

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Buckwild Sesame Soba Noodles


I am on a buckwheat soba noodle kick right now!  Buckwheat is a wonderful way to obtain your Bs; B1 and B2.  Some of the nutrients go into the water when cooking soba, so add some of the cooking liquid to your sauce.  This noodle dish is made with black sesame paste (tahini), if you can find it, it is wonderful and more nutritious than its paler counterpart.  I like the darkness of this dish, almost black in color, I want to put it on my head and wear it like hair!  Well, it is probably better to eat it than wear it.

Cook the buckwheat soba noodles in boiling water until al dente (tender firm), strain, run under cold water until noodles are hot but still warm.  Set aside.
For the sauce:
3 Tbsp black sesame tahini or light tahini
1 Tbsp almond or cashew butter
1 tsp agave nectar or honey
2 Tbsp brown rice vinegar
2 Tbsp shoyu soy sauce or tamari
1 tsp unrefined toasted sesame oil
1 1/2 tsp ground coriander
1 Tbsp water (cooking liquid)
Combine all ingredients for sauce until it is a smooth paste, adjust flavors to your liking.
Stir sauce into the noodles, top with shredded carrots, scallions, sesame seeds and shredded nori.

http://www.michaelfisher.ca

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