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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Sprouted Wheat Soup

A client sent this to me after she got frustrated making sprouted wheat bread – instead she made soup!
To add to the story, her husband is from Oaxaca, Mexico, where they celebrate their dead relatives on a special day called ‘dia de los muertos’. One of the things they do is cook their dead relatives’ favorite food and take it to the cemetary and “eat” it with them. Like a picnic, but at a cemetary. So she made this soup, packed it up, and ate it at the cemetary sitting on the earth between her grandmother and brother’s graves!

She entitled it: Sprouted Wheat Soup for the Dead

5 cups water
1 large bunch collard greens, stems removed, chop leaves into strips, stems diced
1 large onion
2 small carrots
1 Tbsp. olive oil or ghee
1 cup wheat sprouts
1/4 cup parsley, chopped
1 Tbsp. dried herbs (I had basil, thyme, and oregano)
2 tsp. miso
1 Tbsp. Bragg’s aminos

(I also threw in a dash of garlic salt and topped it with hot sauce because I love pungent hot sauce and I live with a Mexican. Oh, and my brother likes hot, pungent things and this was for him, too. You could leave these things out if you eat more purely than I do.)

I boiled the water and then turned off the heat. I didn’t want to boil the miso, sprouts, or greens. In a skillet, saute onion and carrot in oil until soft. Add cooked onion mixture, collards stems and leaves into the pan with other ingredients except miso. Let it sit for 15-20 minutes. Put soup in your bowl and stir in 1 tsp. miso. Yum!

Sprouted Wheat Soup

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Is there much room in your diet for mushrooms?

Asian mushrooms are commonly known as a super food, and this Japanese variety are no exception.

They are most noted for enhancing the immune system, and benefiting the stomach. At a cellular level, shiitake mushrooms are said to contain a natural source of interferon, which appears to help fight against cancer and viral diseases. An abundant source of the element germanium, they aid in cellular oxygenation which further enhances the immunity.   They also increase the body’s resistance to pathogens and bacterial infections due to high levels of vitamin D and polysaccharides.  Super foods indeed!

But aside from all that, I wonder what they contain that makes them so delicious!! The smell of them dried is intoxicating, and soaking them just heightens that even further.

It’s best to soak them for quite a few hours. Put them in a bowl with luke warm water, and they will slowly start to reconstitute, the stems being the last piece to get soft. They can stay in their soak water and be kept in the fridge for quite a while, but also, you can strain and save the soak water for soups, stocks or cooking rice, because it too, is so incredibly flavourful! I used it to sautee some kabocha, the mushrooms and leftover rice and beans. The mushrooms can be cooked into rice, sauteed, or put into soups, and I’m sure many other applications. Here I’ve sliced them thinly and sauteed them with the kabocha, and then added the left overs.

[styled_image size="medium" lightbox="yes" alt="Cooking shiitake mushroom and kabocha"]http://www.michaelfisher.ca/wp_images/posts/11_10/kabocha.jpg[/styled_image]

As a note, all mushrooms should be used sparingly by long term vegans or during times of convalescence, due to their strong cleansing properties. However, mushrooms are excellent for drying Dampness, removing fat and cholesterol in the blood, removing mucus and digestive residues (especially in the stomach), and discharging excess residues of accumulated animal protein.

(Pronunciation and link from www.dictionary.com)

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Japanese Futari


Japanese Food

Roasted Daikon and Eggplant

Soft Tofu with Green Onion and Ginger

Even though there are many dishes, this is a meal prepared for two people!

Typically, each food item is placed in its own separate bowl, and then the group eating the food take from the bowl with their chopsticks and serve themselves as they go. Rice and tofu are typically served per each guest eating, and you use these bowls to eat from as you select different foods from the rest of the table.

Here is prepared, from top left and clockwise:
- Nori paper (for mochi)
- Roasted daikon and eggplant
- Green tea
- Adzuki beans
- Brown rice
- Tofu with green onion and ginger
- Butter (for mochi!) :)
- Mochi
- Sauteed kabocha with shoyu
- .. more tofu, beans, tea and rice

This is probably one of my favourite things to make and eat. It’s fun, whole food, and more socially interesting than just chowing down a huge plate of food and then stretching back uncomfortably from a heavy over feeding. With Japanese food, because you are constantly selecting little portions at a time into your bowl, the eating process is a lot longer, more mindful, with more variety.

You can do this with any food. Prepare lunch items, or Mediterranean food in many small dishes, and spend hours picking at the variety of foods.

Something that made this especially Asian – we sat on the floor! :)

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Kale for What Ails..

I’ve got more kale and chard in my garden than I know what to do with. Luckily the kale will continue to keep as the snow falls so long as its roots are in the earth, but I really wouldn’t mind getting it out of the garden so I can spread some compost piles and till them in before the snow falls so that I have clean compost pits for the winter. So we’re incorporating chard and kale in what dishes we can, which is nice. Green leafy vegetables do wonders to the body: improving iron levels, building and purifying the blood, alkalizing, aiding in liver function, stopping bacterial growth, deodorizing, counteracting radiation and inflammation (arthritis, rashes, ulcers, sore throat, etc), renewing tissues and promoting healthful intestinal flora. So as I stood out in my muddy garden with a knife and box plucking sturdy green leaves from the earth I was reminded of a man who taught me a simple and lovely little recipe using kale and miso paste that I love and may never forget:

Sautee garlic, onion and/or leek
Add water to make soup and add kale
Cook the kale for just a few minutes and then blend it up
Add miso paste at the very end so not as to cook it.

That’s it!!
While sauteeing I added a few fresh peanuts and blended those up with the soup for a little extra yum.
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Fall is Squashing us into Soup

We picked up some squash at the market this week, and after being away in Bali for the month of September, the stark transition from spring/summer (in Bali) to fall (Canada) wasn’t anymore noticeable than at the local market. Hearty storing vegetables abound at this time of year, and my appreciation for gathering peaks as I imagine myself buying 50 lb bags of root veggies and squash to stow away in the cellar for the year. The idea of it sounds amazing, but the reality challenges me. I may look into what I need to get my cellar or sun porch set up to accommodate huge amounts of storing vegetables for the winter – besides, I have several rows of leeks waiting patiently in the garden to be pulled, but I love the fact that I can just leave them out there as they endure the cold weather better than I do. I wonder if this super-hero like ability to survive through cold weather is transferred to us when we eat it, but indeed, it does! Leeks are a warming tonic for the body, and especially kidneys, which have the hardest time enduring winter, and so yes, leeks do help us keep warm through the winter… which brings us to soup.
I’m eating a great deal of animal foods right now, which is a little unusual for me, but my kidneys are thanking me sincerely. I shed over 5 lbs at the Healing with Whole Foods retreat and the animal foods/fats seem to be just the medicine! So, this recipe turned out pretty rich, but thankfully acclimatized me to Canadian weather.
I feel like I need to write this in every post I write, food is to be created by you. A recipe is merely an idea – a sketch to inspire and illuminate the creative culinary process, and so as I start the dish off with warming butter in a pan, may I remind you that you can use other fats, or oils, or simply water (and which oils and fats to use is a WHOLE other discussion which I cannot get into right now), but feel free to use what seems right to you. Same with squash- because I used butternut squash doesn’t mean you need to. You could use any squash, or even cooked carrots, potatoes or whatever! This is my aversion to recipes, it seems to enclose people and keep them from being creative, which is not my intention. Also, I rarely use measurements and encourage trial and error, common sense and a little intuition. So here goes…
Recipe
Butter fried garlic and leek
Cooked butternut squash mushed into the pan
Curry, cumin, coriander, turmeric and chillies
Leftover rice (use just a bit because this made it REALLY thick!..)
Cashew butter
(blend)
Top with:
Bacon (the good kind :)
Toasted pumpkin seeds
Mochi
I almost don’t want to post this because of the heavy fat content in the dish, which most of my clients can’t handle. Fat will help build the body with the cooperation of a well functioning liver, but most folks don’t have this privilege and may make any conditions they have worse until the liver is improved. But that is not for me to decide. Here is the recipe and I hope it inspires you to make a fall soup!

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Green things that grow round


WELL.. it is a new year. Allow me to crack the freshness of the blog air with a story about my garden. By now, my frozen-over, barely visible back yard dirt patch has totally glaciated my remaining Brussels sprout plants, but amazingly they are still edible and in good shape! With a shovel and frozen fingers, I hacked it out of the snow bank and brought it indoors for thawing. Beauties. I can’t believe what a yield one plant can produce, and I have two more sprout statues encased in ice in the back yard ready for harvesting.

In the mood for green (typically a spring colour, but New Year’s has that energy to it anyway; rejuvenation and newness), I decided to make a green meal, or at least a tasty side dish that was hearty, gentle – and green.
Brussels sprouts and peas are BOTH high in protein, as most sprouts are. About 30% of their calories are from protein. Amazing! Since they’re both green; we know they contain chlorophyll, and I’m a big fan of chlorophyll.
So. My green dish. Bring water to a boil and add the cut Brussels sprouts and peas. Add whatever herbs/spices you like; I chose fennel and cumin – my favourite! You can also add a little garlic. I wouldn’t argue that garlic goes well in everything.
Cook at medium heat until soft. Remove the veggies and put them in a bowl.
Add raw apple cider vinegar (about 1 tsp), a little tamari/shoyu (soy sauce, but not the MSG kind please), and drizzle with good quality unrefined oil – ideally flax or hemp. UNREFINED!
THAT’S IT FOLKS! Piece of cake. Actually, peas and sprouts, but so simple to make!
Here’s a tip! I left my cook water out over night, and then in the morning I cooked my brown rice in the water in the same pot! That way I was able to use what nutrients were left behind in the cook water, and fortified my rice! Yes… I’m so thrifty.
Here’s to a green new year, and hopefully more frequent blogging!

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Cooking for one… pot!


I LOVE one-pot meals. Really, there’s nothing more satisfying then the coming together of flavours in one dish, which really, makes digesting quite easy. Consider the pot acting as your stomach, working out all the chemical differences, so that by the time you eat it, it is chemically like ‘one food’! Oh yes – the finest of food combining – cook it all together!

I cook things in order from slowest to fastest, obviously. So this is how I might cook myself a one-potter:
- Put a little water in the bottom of the pot and bring to boil, or at least hot
- Add spices to infuse like a tea… such as cumin, fennel, mustard, bl. pepper (my favs)
- Add pungent vegetables like onions, leeks, garlic, etc. I think I used ginger and leek here
- Add hearty root veggies, like potato, carrot or beet. I think I only used carrot in this dish
- When roots are soft, add other veg like zucchini, which is what I did here
- I tossed in some nuts and seeds as well – which soaks and cooks them a little, which is good
- From here, you can add more water and add some grain, as I did with quinoa! Cover and cook until grains are soft, for quinoa – about 15 minutes. I threw in some brown rice pasta because I was having a party for myself that night, and pasta is pretty fun.
- Add herbs at the end, like thyme or whatever else. I added my fresh ones at the very end though
- Serve a dishfull, and that stir in some leafy greens like kale, and they’ll cook in just the heat of the food.
- Prepare a small dressing/sauce, or simply just pour over a little flax/hemp oil, apple cider vinegar, or whatever inspires you.
- Add fresh chopped herbs, like basil, parsley, chives, or whatever ya got!
This is pretty elaborate, but my entire meal came from one dish! It made enough for two servings, and I had just ONE POT to clean up! Isn’t it amazing.. ONE POT!! :)

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Spicy Summer Salad

This was a preferred breakfast, lunch or dinner for me when I felt the urge to eat something crunchy, cool, and raw in the heat of summer. However, I don’t really like the watery, overly moistening and cooling effects of just regular leafy greens, especially ice berg lettuce, but I found these amazing ‘spicy greens’ from the Organic Oasis near my home that contains a mix of mustard greens, and other little pungent-bitters that appeal to me much more than the watery-crisp block of ice that normal grocery lettuce is.

To add some substance and richness to my salads, I always add pumpkin seeds (usually hand pan-toasted), or almonds, and then added some cut apple, and then a few fresh things from my garden such as tomato, basil, parsley, shiso, and then add a dressing made up of flax oil, garlic, apple cider vinegar and a little miso. I sprinkle on a little dulse too, if I’m in the mood for it. I usually have something heartier with this as well, like a cooked veg or grain, but sometimes just the freshness of a simple salad, especially with the rising sun, is all that I need to make me grin and feel centered.

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Easy Pickles!

These were a real hit at Paul Pitchford’s Healing with Whole Foods intensive in New York. Probably because they were so garlicky and pungent with apple cider vinegar!
Since garlic fosters desire, perhaps the appeal for these grew deeper the more you ate them?
In an attempt to rid some cucumbers, Sharla quickly sliced them on a mandolin along with some spices and garlic, and then topped up the jar with half water and half apple cider vinegar.
That’s it!! Use raw/unpasteurized apple cider vineger, and it will ferment the vegetable so that it will keep for quite a while. Healthy, crunchy, tasty and desire-y!

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Tatters

Did you know that sauteeing and stirring your food gives an invigorating effect to the food, and thus the person, where as long, patient cooking in the oven gives a patient quiet quality to the food, and thus person?

I LOVE potatoes, perhaps because this was the staple food growing up for me, and for my parents too, coming from a German background (might be pronounced ‘Cherman’ at my grandma’s house, and washed down with a bratwurst and pint of beer) anyways, I do potatoes, that is my thing. Especially in the colder weather because of the warmth they bring to the body when out of the oven, yet they are one of the best yin-builders known to the Asian (the West still deems this food as unnecessary because of the high starch content, which is ridiculous, just stop eating sugar and crap, and you’ll realize potatoes are so nourishing and a far better ‘sweet’ than any granola bar or any other sweet garbage on the grocery shelf). Yin-building = immune boosting and hormone supporting by the way. Did you know two German lads survived during the war for THREE years on just potatoes alone? JUST potatoes, no health concerns. Or was it three guys for two years? Whatever, that’s a long time for just potatoes. I digress…
If cooked for a long period of time, potatoes require almost no seasoning – the time will bring them to life. I cooked these with onion and cumin I believe, and then slipped into the oven for an hour at 350F. Grease is not necessary, just use water.

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Tempeh-tation!

Tempeh is one of those magical foods that is very healthy but also satisfying.  A little bit goes a long way in satiating the appetite.  Tempeh is like the cheese of Indonesia, cooked soybeans are inoculated with a bacteria starter and it is left to get “funky” as in moldy and fermented.  The end result is a dense cake that has a nutty taste and ‘shroomy aroma.  Vitamin B12 forms as result of fermentation and is one of the only vegetable sources of natural B12.  Fermentation breaks down the proteins and natural sugars in the soybean, eliminating digestive issues with other soyfood products. Tempeh is relatively inexpensive and can be found at most health food stores, try different grain varieties to see which is the most tempeh-ting!
Miso Mustard Tempeh

8 oz tempeh
1 Tbsp oil
1 cup hot water
3 Tbsp sweet white miso
1/4 cup Whole grain dijon mustard
2 cups thinly sliced leeks or or a combination of leeks and shallots
2 garlic cloves, chopped
1/2 a zucchini, sliced
2 carrots, peeled and sliced thin
1/2 lb cremini mushrooms or shiitake
1/2 cup dry white wine or stock
3-4 leaves of kale, collards or cabbage
salt and pepper to taste
Cut tempeh into 1/2 inch strips, lightly coat each side with oil.  place them in a skillet and brown on all sides.  Remove to cool and then cut them into blocks..
Make the sauce by combining the mustard, miso and water.
Heat the oil in a skillet over medium heat, saute garlic and leeks and or shallots until cooked through, about 4-5 minutes, add the reserved tempeh, zuchhini, mushrooms, carrots, and mustard/miso sauce.  Bring to a boil, cover and then lower the heat to simmer for 10-15 minutes, until vegetables are crisp tender.
Add the white wine or broth, stir in the greens and cover and simmer for an additional 10 minutes.
Voila, fini!  Serve this with fresh chopped chives or tarragon.  Place atop cooked quinoa for a complete meal.
*experiment with different in season produce and adjust the flavors for maximum intensity.

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Pear and Tofu Pudding

I made this when I lost my voice last year. I ate so much of it that I did get my voice back, but I also got the scoots, as this lovely treat is super moistening for the body, which often results in moist bowels as well.
In a blender, add pear, soft tofu (not firm!) – and really, that could be all, but I also added almond extract, fresh and dried ginger, and a little green stevia.
It was really refreshing and can quench an insatiable thirst 
(*Note – if you have an unsatiable thirst, it is better to eat fruits and moistening foods (like tofu) and even sea vegetables as oppose to continuously guzzling water, which can actually exasperate thirst when water is over drunk!)

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KILL YOUR YEASTS!

Yeast, or more specifically Candida Albicans, is a bacteria that should normally be 15% of your intestinal flora, however, with antibiotics, poor dietary habits, poor chewing habits, and excessive sweets or alcohol, candida tends to thrive and be the “man in charge” in your gut – which isn’t good because candida is also a malicious fungus that can bore holes through you intestinal lining and make its way through your body tissues, plaguing your other nearby body parts with infection and fungus (such as a yeast infection) but also can be localized in the ears, mouth, liver, etc.. AND can sometimes be systemic, which means your entire body is filled with it, greatly taxing your immune system as it’s ALWAYS cleaning up this culprit. 
The candida bacteria have the job of cleaning up your waste foods, typically unchewed food, undigestible foods (such as maltodextrin and other zero-carb sugars), but otherwise eats leftover carbs in the body.
The resulting effects of a yeast (candida) overgrowth is 
  • itchiness (ANYWHERE, nose, anus, feet, face, hands)
  • foggy headedness (as the metabolic byproduct of yeasts is ALCOHOL.. which means, you actually have alcohol in your blood stream, leaving you feel drunk and stupid!)
  • sluggish digestion and weird bowels
  • insatiable appetite, easily feel like you are overeating
  • edginess and inflammation (which go hand in hand)
  • moodiness
  • decreased energy
  • decreased immunity, and a host of other symptoms. 

Basically, this fungus is like a parasite, constantly taxing your body, and as long as you’ve got it, you’ve got an infection festering inside of you – leaving your body sick and at war for as long as you’ve got it. Antibiotics are given to kill this baddie off, but it also kills the bacteria that check and balance the candida, giving you NO immune defense, which means the candida have an even easier time coming back. I really don’t think there is a remedy that a doctor can give that will totally get rid of it that will last. Really, I believe that most people have this to some degree (more so the younger you are, because of the worsening of our diet and increase in antibiotic use) but remember that we should have some of it – but our healthy bacteria should be the majority party ruling our intestines, which keeps the bad boys in check. We’re obsessed with sterility and anti-bacteria. But really, our ancestors have grown up with bacteria all their lives, its all around us, heck – we actually have more bacterial cells in our body than human tissue cells.. isn’t that amazing? A forest floor has bacteria to help decay and breakdown to renew life, and so do we! I’ve always got something fermenting in the kitchen, whether on purpose (sourdough, sauerkraut, rejuvelac, etc) or unintentionally (leftover rice, beans, veg… these can sit out for quite a while, as long at the food is still ‘sweet’ and not foul, you’re game for good bacteria!). We’ve got this same lovely fermenting bacteria in our gut (the good ones) but when you have candida, everything just molds and turns to fungus. But really, must we sterilize EVERYTHING!? Our food is so sterile, not even bacteria can survive from it – but it is this good bacteria that we thrive from!! Did you know that US almonds are ALL sterilized with a toxic chemical, so that NO bacteria can thrive from them? Gees, we’ve got pasteurized nuts now too!! 

What do we suggest to get rid of this enemy inside us?
  1. Don’t overeat!.. and for heaven’s sake – chew your food!! Especially carbs
  2. Raw foods easily rot in the body, making it easier for the candida. “Rot” (breakdown) the food by cooking it first (therefore, eat mostly cooked foods)
  3. Exercise, as fungus can’t survive in an oxygen rich environment (picture hanging a mildewy cloth out on the line to get sun and air, and the mold disappears!)
  4. Eat little salt, and ABSOLUTELY NO SWEETS, of any kind. Natural or refined (and definitely not artificial!! Stevia is tolerated however)
  5. Avoid preservatives and other non-foods
  6. Eat fermented foods, as they contain lots of GOOD bacteria (like acidophillus)
  7. Don’t eat cold foods or drinks, but drink tea and room temperature water moderately
  8. Don’t worry – worry worsens any damp condition, and don’t force it, because you’ll worry
  9. Eat chlorophyll rich foods (green!) as it neutralizes toxins in your body and heals our tissues
  10. AVOID bad oils, packaged foods, anything refined, overly floury foods (please, just eat a whole foods diet for goodness sake!!)
As I felt the onset of yeast last week (starting with an itchy nose), I started delving into sweets and ignoring it. It really started to bother me when my food didn’t satiate me, which DRIVES ME NUTS!…  So I did this therapeutic plan for three days and seriously kicked its ass.
(From Left to Right in the photo)
  1. Dandelion tea/coffee – which cleanses the blood (especially effective if systemic)
  2. Lavender essential oil – please be cautious, use 100% botanical and only do ONE drop every three days to start.. if you get a headache, you’re using too much (cleansing reaction)
  3. Oxygen – which just destroys yeasts on contact. Good for systemic as well, please don’t overdo this as well (remedies 1-3 are HIGHLY cleansing and should be moderated) 20 drops a day to start (I did 100 drops a day, but I also had no cleansing reactions)
  4. Sauerkraut (in back) – a bacterial supplement for the body, which helps check and balance the yeasts, takes their place when they die, and is rejuvenating for the tissues (HIGH in vitamin C!). An acidophillus supplement is advised as well, but I had already spent too much money on the remedies and needed low cost bacterial support. This sauerkraut is locally made, is raw (unpasteurized), and NO SALT – which is preferred for killing candida or any infection
  5. Garlic – nature’s antibiotic!! This KILLS any pathogenic microbobes BUT leaves the good ones standing, giving them a favourable place to proliferate!! Seriously, antibiotics kill life, good and bad, but garlic just kills the bad…..  One clove eaten raw before a meal, sometimes best eaten with an apple slice, yogurt (another fermented food!) to soothe the digestive lining if the garlic burns too much. I ate a head in under 3 days! Too much!! Garlic is known in the East by sages to create emotional desire. This actually happened to me!! Desire arose, and I became very emotional. I stopped the garlic, and the desire went away – interesting lesson. (Sweets create desire as well… which just leaves us perpetually shackled to the things we desire!! Not good!)
  6. Flax oil – healing for the digestive lining (to reduce inflammation), and rebuilding. Also satiates when you are in an “unsatiable mode”! Repairs the tissues that were aggravated by infection, and cleanses the liver (the body’s filter) of junk while healing. Good stuff!
  7. Aloe juice from inner fillet (not GEL – and NOT the WHOLE LEAF!!!). This stuff is magic. The sour flavour of the juice just gives away its healing and restorative properties (the sour flavour is healing to the liver as it is like soap, or a solvent to toxins, fatty residues, and all the other crap that is stored in the liver). It is also BUILDING!! Isn’t this amazing!! It cleanses and builds at the same time!? It’s an antimicrobial, like garlic, but builds the immunity, heals tissue and reduces inflammati
    on, while keeping us cool and refreshed. This is a great pair for when using lavender oil or oxygen, as it “protects” us from the harsh reducing nature of the aforementioned remedies. Oxygen alone can create a feeling of light headedness and poor stability, but when combined with oxygen, keeps us centred, but clear as a bell. Drink 2-3 oz. a day to start (with 20 drops of oxygen) but up it if you can handle it and want to specifically heal short term. I drank the whole bottle of juice in 3 days, accompanied with larger doses of oxygen – but treated it acutely.

Typically, if the “infection” is acute, an short term and aggressive remedy is effective, however, if you suspect that you’ve had it for a while, and is chronic, it is best to do long term (.5 – 2 years?) and start with the dietary changes, while doing some remedies at a very low level for a longer period of time.

* NOTE: These are NOT to be taken as a daily preventative medicine, and we are not trying to replace the efforts of the medical system, and this is NOT a prescription. We are simply offering information, and what you do with it is up to you, and we will not be held liable for any healing effects or symptoms that may arise from it. Understood!? Any questions can be directed to Michael Fisher.

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