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Archive for the ‘Desserts’ Category

Why hello!

I wanted to breakaway and share this delightful little breakfast inspiration for those of you that are steering away from gluten, but still looking for that muffin-y feel.

This recipe was inspired by Katie, at ChocolateCoveredKatie.com and is meant to be enjoyed after your green smoothie or juice.

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Cinnamon Bun Oatmeal Loaf

Serves 10-15

  • 8 cups of Organic Rolled Oats
  • 2 tsp of Vanilla, or Vanilla Stevia (I Like NuNaturals)
  • 2 cup unsweetened Organic Applesauce– I used Cinnamon
  • 10 tbsp raw coconut butter
  • 2 cups, or 1 can of coconut milk (I used the can only to avoid the fillers found in most of the “milks” these days)
  • 8 tbsp Maple Syrup, Grade B
  • 1 tsp salt
  • 1-2 tsp cinnamon
  • 2 boxes of raisins, optional

Preheat the oven to 375 degrees and grease or spray 5 small baking loaf pans. I used the aluminum disposable kind because I did not have another option. Heat your coconut milk and coconut butter in a stove stop pot for 10 minutes, on low heat. When coconut bits are melted, stir in your remaining liquid ingredients. Combine well and remove from heat. In a large mixing bowl, combine oats, salt, and raisins if using. Pour in your liquid ingredients and stir well. Scoop out mixture into your loaf pans. The mixture will not rise, as it does not contain any agents that cause this reaction, so don’t worry about saving too much space on top.

Bake in the oven for 12-15 minutes and let cool until you can safely pop out each loaf. Heat them back up to serve, or! Eat them right out of the tin!

Sorry for the unappealing photo. I did not have the time to get it ready for the camera!

All my love,

Lauren

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Hello and Happy February 14th!

After an exhausting day yesterday, I was eager to jump in bed. But before I did, I wanted to leave you with two quick and romantic recipes. Trust me, they taste much more desirable than they look in this sleepy photos. 

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Cashew Sun Milk

Makes about 4.5 cups.

  • 3/4 cup organic raw cashews
  • 1/4 cup organic raw sunflower seeds

Soak the nuts and seeds for around 3-4 hours in a bowl of water. (You do not have to soak but it is preferred– I made this beverage last night without soaking. The soaking softens their density making it easier to blend and for the water to absorb more flavors). Drain water and add nuts and seeds to a high-speed blender. Blend with 4 cups cool water. Strain through a “nut milk bag” (which can be purchased on amazon), over a large bowl. Squeeze the liquid into the bowl, leaving the “pulp” behind in the bag. Toss the pulp (or use it for another recipe), and add 2 tsp ground cinnamon, 14 drops alcohol free NuStevia, and/or 1 tbsp Maple Syrup, Grade B (optional). Stir and serve cool, or add to your tea or hot cacao.

Creamy. Delicious. A wonderful source of beautifying minerals.

Next up… Got a date? 

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Grab two Medjool dates. Cut little slits down the top, exposing the pit inside. Remove pits and “stuff” each date with 2 tsp of raw almond butter. Sprinkle with ground cinnamon and sea salt. Serve.

Dates are a great source of potassium, and fiber.

Bursting with sugar, dates taste like candy. This treat is decadent, delightful, and if you were planning to reach for a reeses, or commercial candy, it is a much better alternative to your traditional candy coated desserts. I had one of my client’s call this a healthy peanut butter cup, though clearly there is no chocolate.

Enjoy!

I personally love the cashew sun milk!

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The other night I celebrated my one year anniversary with my husband.

In all honesty, it feels like we have been married for elevenAt least ten years.

I never imagined being married with three children in my twenties! It has been quite the three hundred and sixty five days. I have absolutely fabulous kids, but without family around, it can be especially overwhelming at times– lunches, dinners, work, clients, love, juicing, health. I have learned that my time is oh-so-valuable and very little. I am learning to cherish each moment to myself, as well as to cherish every fabulous and fun moment that I have with the kids. Their giggles and bliss are contagious. It makes every hardship worth it.

For our anniversary, my husband surprised me by arranging for a sleepover for each of our three kiddos… ON A SCHOOL NIGHT. My first thoughts were a combination of fear and pleasure! “Oh my gosh! Fun! I won’t have to worry about their safety” vs. “Oh my word, these parents… another child? A school night… aye!” Of course I knew our kids would be 100% delighted, so that surely was not a worry. 

Thank goodness the kids have wonderful friends, and we have such great neighbors.

As part of the surprise, my husband, took me to the restaurant where we had our very first date and very first kiss. Although the food was… what I remembered, and the owner (who made us feel special), out of town… they were sweet enough to bring out a fancy creme brûlée to celebrate our big night together. Spoiled as I may be with my own recipes, and perfectly content with dark chocolate, I loved the gesture (which was clearly a concoction of milk and eggs). 

Did I feel left out? Oh no. I had bigger plans in mind.

Later that eve, while my husband was making a fire in the fire place, I decided to celebrate with something far more fabulous, and hormone, lactose, casein, albumin, and sugar free.

The “oh-so-fabulous avocado chocolate mousse” I cannot keep my hands off.

Just you wait.

Ready??

That evening I made the  60 second version (cocoa, avocado, and vanilla stevia). But you should carve out the 10 minutes to make this one!

Serves 4-6

  • 4 large avocados, halved, pit removed
  • 1 cup raw cacao (or 1/2 cup unsweetened cocoa) 
  • ½ cup dates, pitted and soaked in warm water for 10 min (if you are sugar sensitive, you can use more stevia and no dates!)
  • 1 tbsp vanilla (or Vanilla Stevia) I like mine extra sweet! You can also use powdered stevia.
  • 6 tbsp raw cacao nibs + some for sprinkling decor

Combine all ingredients in a food processor except for cocoa nibs. Process until smooth. Add cocoa nibs and process until mixed. Scoop out and chill in the fridge, or serve at room temperature. Garnish with cocoa nibs and unsweetened coconut flakes (optional).

You will love this mousse!

Creamy. Rich. Chocolaty. Indulgent.

On the upper upside? You can love this recipe without reeking havoc on your radiant skin and figure. Done. and Done.

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It’s been done before.

Just not by me.

While your typical treat is unarguably tasty, more often than not, the “bad” usually outweighs the pleasure. A lack of quality ingredients, generally a concoction of processed flours, refined sugars and artificial additives, leaves you satisfied only for the moment it tantalizes your tastebuds. You will need more to continue on that temporary high.

This is because Supermarket Fantasy Foods offer no real nutrients. They add no value, but rather temporarily feed the body’s desire for glucose, fill the stomach, slow digestion, and fuel the overgrowth of toxic bacteria. So while you may feel like you’ve eaten a lot (or maybe that you “can’t get enough”), the ending result is usually none to pleasant. Which is not so satisfying.

I call these “treats” –TRICKS.

NOT treats.

(Read more here about Emotional Eating, and how I decipher treats from tricks).

These raw brownie truffles, on the other hand, are composed of blended whole raw foods and are a far cry from Supermarket fluff (poison)

Naturally rich and creamy (without the cholesterol, milk, butter, or excess sugar), these truffles are a wonderful source of magnesium– an essential beautifying mineral found in nuts and many veggies.  Sweetened with medjool dates, and a bit of Vanilla, these truffles are both decadent, and satisfyingly delicious.

While I cannot guarantee you will only want to eat one of these little delights, contrary to their “processed boxed fantasy” counterparts, these desserts are quite nutrient dense (especially in comparison), and filling.

Raw Chocolate Cashew Truffles

  • 1 cup raw hazelnuts
  • ½ cup raw cashews
  • 1 ½ cup medjool dates, pitted
  • ½ cup raw cashew butter (or almond butter)
  • 4 tbsp raw cacao, or unsweetened cocoa powder
  • ½ teaspoon vanilla extract (or ¼ tsp Vanilla Stevia, Not HSH)
  • 3 tbsp unsweetened, shredded coconut

Place hazelnuts and cashews into food processor and process until finely ground. Add dates, raw cashew butter and cacao powder and process until completely mixed. Add more or less cacao depending on how rich you would like the truffle. Scoop tablespoon portions onto a tray, and then use hands to roll into a ball shape. Sprinkle organic dried coconut shreds onto a separate plate and then roll the truffles in the coconut until delicately covered.

Not bad for my first go.

I’ll try to get more creative next time around…

What are your favorite raw treats?

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The men go out and play, and the girls stay home and…

slave over the oven?

Okay… maybe not slave. When not invited to the 10-year-old birthday celebration at some trampoline warehouse, I decided to try my hand (again) at baking– something that I am pretty close to terrible at doing (simply because I cannot help myself to attempt to make something “healthier” than the norm). 

Inspired by the insane and awesome work of ForgivingMartha, I desperately wanted to pretend I could do something even close to as beautiful and tasty. The result? Well… after a fun-filled sugary evening and some “ingredient risk-taking”, they were most certainly enjoyed (even after a filling birthday dinner for the boys). 

Thank goodness, because instead of using traditional wheat and treated (unbleached, bleached, enriched, etc.) flours, I decided on millet; a fluffy flour also the most alkaline of the grains. I also chose buckwheat as an additional flour.

  • Buckwheat and Millet are both technically “gluten-free,” and in a grand hierarchy of grains– they are both at the top. The top of the hierarchy is nice. Check! Check! 

The other challenge? I did not use an ounce of any type of milk, or a single egg. While I cannot say I am too impressed with my photography, these cookies were pretty impressively tasty, while still being infinitely more balanced and better for the body. The good news was, because they were not stripped of all of their nutritional values like most grains, they were also filling (in a good way– not an empty and deprived sort of discomfort). 

Apparently, I just might have the potential to do some occasional baking.

Phew. Not so evil of a step-mom after all… and the boys were excited to bring some to school in their lunch boxes.

Millet Double Chocolate Cookies– Makes about 32 cookies

“light. rich. chocolatey” — husband

Preheat oven to 425 degrees.

Mix your dry ingredients in your mixing bowl of choice.

Dry Ingredients

  • 2 cups Millet flour
  • 1/2 buckwheat flour
  • 3 tsp baking powder
  • 2 tbsp cocoa
  • 1 cup Enjoy Life Vegan Chocolate Chips (if you are looking for more of a chocolate chip look, add these in at the very end) 
  • 1/2 tsp Himalayan sea salt

Mix your wet ingredients separately.

Wet Ingredients

  • 3 tbsp raw coconut butter (Artisana)
  • 14 tbsp hot water
  • 2 flax eggs (2 tbsp ground flax seeds soaked in 4 tbsp warm/hot water. Allow to sit for 10 minutes)
  • 4 tbsp Grade B Maple Syrup
  • 1.5 tsp Vanilla NuStevia
  • 4 tbsp raw honey

Then combine wet and dry. Whisk until mixture is smooth. (Add in your chocolate chips). Put the whole bowl in the fridge to allow mixture to harden for at least 8 minutes. Spoon out desired cookie size onto a sprayed cookie sheet.

Cook for about 10-12 minutes. When cookies are finished, carefully remove each cookie onto a new platter (or they will continue to cook on the hot pan). I baked 3 sheets of 12– one at a time. 

Serve warm with a glass of coconut milk, or… I hear they taste even better the next day after a cool evening in the fridge. Hello fudge!!

I dare you to give these cookies a try, and also do me a favor and make this recipe even better! What are your favorite dessert recipes? Do you have any millet suggestions?

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An “ice cream and sweets loving” family, you can imagine the excitement that ensued upon the arrival of two large SoDelicious boxes– just in time for the July holiday.

I was blown away by the generous amount of products that came out of those insulated boxes! We had enough to host a SoDelicious Coconut party, and would have, if only we were already moved into our new house! 

Now, with those boxes added to the ones we have all over our current habitat, and many of the frozen treats “cleaned up”, it seems only fair to give a little review.

The Ice Cream Review– From the Peanut Gallery 

Cherry Amaretto- Sweet coconut flavor complimented with tart, dried cherries reminiscent of a after dinner beverage.

about as delightful, sinful, and well-rounded as the title suggests.

Coconut- Subtly sweet coconut. The perfect sorbet for a pool party.

refreshing and fun like a summer drink, but not overpowering like an artificially flavored pina colada

Mango- Tangy, sweet, and tropical

just as any mango should be.

Vanilla Bean- Traditional and smooth.

dress it up. dress it down. it’s all good.

Chocolate- Traditional, smooth, and chocolatey.

dress it up. dress it down. it’s all good.

Turtle Trails- Smooth and creamy ice cream complimented by mysterious chocolate covered pecans that add a subtle nuttiness and crunchy texture.

tasty. surprising.

Pomegranate Chip- Refreshingly sweet but tart pomegranate is uncharacteristically paired with rich and creamy chocolate chips.

The Fourth of July Favorite. Unexpectedly fruity with sharp chocolate flavor gloriously cutting through any tartness.

Mint Chocolate Chip- cool mint ice cream is refreshing and positively shocking against rich chocolate chips.

always a pleasure. Though not included in our package, the family loves this one so much I had to include it.

Vanilla Mini Ice Cream Sandwiches- sweet and cold vanilla creaminess complimented by soft and cake like layers that stick to your fingers if not eaten quickly (which is not a problem in our household).

Tasty– what you would expect from a little ice cream sandwich.

Fudge Bars- mildly chocolatey, and perfectly sweetened, these frozen treats melt more slowly and pleasantly linger longer.

the perfect summer treat.

Coconut Almond Ice Cream-Sicles- cool creamy insides compliment rich and crisp chocolate outsides. Almond slivers add a subtle crunchy and nutty flavor, but not enough to deter those mildly opposed to almonds.

NOW…

From a Nutritional Standpoint

Going on the ice cream alone– I love coconut. The meat of a young Thai coconut is reminiscent of a full-bodied ice cream when blended with ice and choice of sweetener. For this reason the “home-blended” raw fleshy insides of a young Thai coconut are a delicious and healthful alternative for ice cream lovers– and anyone really. However, when anything goes beyond the produce section and ends up in pristine packaging, I raise my eyebrows.

While I won’t go as far as to claim that SoDelicious products have health benefits, I do think they are a tasty alternative for those looking to enjoy a creamy dessert without the dairy, lactose, casein, eggs, gluten, and soy found in most sweets.

What are the mainstay ingredients in their coconut ice product line?

The ingredients in their Vanilla Bean ice cream (one of the more basic flavors I would recommend to a client) are as follows:

Organic Coconut Milk (water, organic coconut cream), organic agave syrup, chicory root extract, carob bean gum, guar gum, vanilla extract, natural flavor, vanilla bean specks. 

Take Note:

  • The Gums (Locust bean gum, Guar gum, Xantham Gum, Chicory Root)– found in all sorts of processed foods under the sun, these non-starch polysaccharides are traditionally used to sweeten, thicken, and stabilize the ingredients in a product. The gums– derived of complex carbohydrates, a.k.a. sugar, these special agents are often used to replace fats, and sweeteners. In other words, where you may have added more fat to a creamy ice cream, Xantham gum may be used to give the product that creaminess, without increasing the fat content of the product.

My argument?

What’s the source?

How does the body break it down?

Sure these gum agents do exist in Nature, and do occur naturally in plants, but how natural is something after processing?

Though considered safe by most in authority, it should be something to think about.

A packaged product is never going to be a health food.

Other Ingredients to Note:

  • Agave.  Additionally, as one would expect from any ice cream, these sweet treats are just that… sweet– and contain a good amount of sugar (12 grams per 1/2 cup) though considerably lower than many mainstream desserts. The main source of sugar in each product is organic agave, which is by no means a health food, but can be considered more attractive than your typical highly processed, GMO-corn syrup product, inorganic sugar, or the majority of synthetic sugar substitutes. You may be interested in this article about Agave.
  • Natural Flavor. This really could mean anything… It should be a reason for you be wary when purchasing packaged goods.

In so many words, the more basic the treat, the better. Although the Turtle Trails was a popular flavor, I would not suggest the peanut oil, and additional coconut oils and ingredients making it more complicated for the body to breakdown. Overall, however, even the “sandwich wafer” on the ice cream sandwiches seem to be a more thoughtful combination of less offensive ingredients in a sea of polluted and wacky gluten-free, artificial options. While not a guilt-free dessert, I am impressed by the overall honesty of the company (aside from the Natural Flavor label). It is beyond easy to research the mainstay ingredients on their website, unlike many Big Food companies.

Aside from the “Natural Flavor” ingredient labeling (which is on just about everything these days), there is not a specific ingredient that gives me a real antsy red flag feeling, so if ya can’t bring yourself to whip up your own delicious coconut ice cream– and your transitioning away from the indigestible and bloating dairy/soy ice creams, these SoDelicious Ice Cream coconut ice creams can be a wonderful and “higher quality” alternative for the family in moderation. *But if you are looking for the healthiest options… go for the chocolate, coconut, or vanilla bean. Or really… just nix the packaged goods aisle and make something yourself with a young thai coconut or avocado.

Enjoy!

What is your favorite cool dessert?

Have you ever tried SoDelicious?

What is your favorite flavor?

What are your favorite coconut products?

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Have a watermelon sitting around? Worried about not getting to use it in time?

Never fear! Watermelon sorbet is here.

(Do I sound like an informercial yet?)

This recipe is so simple, it will take you but a moment to read…

and good thing too, because it is a Friday and boy has this been one wild week.

Solution:

  • Slice it up.
  • Freeze it overnight.
  • Let it defrost for a few minutes to get the juices flowing (best if allowed to defrost in the actual blender).
  • Blend it it up (you may want to add water to make blending easier)
  • Store it in the freezer like a frozen ice treat, or serve immediately like a sorbet slushee.
  • (And don’t make my mistake and put it in a glass cup)– apparently those break, when one very excited kid digs into them.

Great for kids, and what a fun and hydrating summer breakfast.

It is gorgeous in color, with no Red #40, all the while being a naturally good source of potassium, and Vitamins A and C.

Though it may be high in sugar, it sure beats those processed pop tarts and cereals.

It is all fruit!

Imagine that!

Thanks Mother Nature.

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Why hello, and Happy Friday to all. 

Today “TGIF” hardly has it’s “Oh-My-Gosh, it’s the weekend” feel, but I will be happy to at least set my alarm to a time after 5:00 am… or is that wishful thinking? I think it may be.

Despite this weekend’s whirlwind of activities and work schedules, the summer heat of Texas is upon us, and when it gets hot, I think: Frozen Dessert! More specifically, I think: Ice Cream!

Back in the day, I was quite a “low-calorie”, frozen yogurt fanatic. That stuff was like my drug, transmitting little delightful signals of bliss from tongue to brain, igniting my pleasure centers, and then… alas… the buzz would be gone, and the low would set in. Bummer.

Those days are over, however- thanks to a wonderful thing that occurs when a ripened frozen banana meets a high speed blender.

Sure, we all know about frozen banana smoothies, but how about one reminiscent of a ginger snap cookie,  and easier and healthier to make than a fresh batch of cookies to boot!

Ginger Snap Frozen Yogurt 

  • 2-3 (pre-peeled) frozen ripe bananas
  • 1 piece of peeled fresh ginger, about 1 tsp
  • 6 drops of Vanilla NuStevia*
  • Generous sprinkling of organic ground cinnamon
  • a pinch of nutmeg, optional
  • 1/2-1 cup cool water (amount will vary depending on your blender’s capabilities).

Blend it up and serve. Yields 2-3 cups of frozen deliciousness.

Even better, this is a fantastic dessert idea for kids, and is not acid-forming, or difficult to digest like those frozen yogurts, and ice creams.

And while your enjoying that icy cool treat, check out this article for a chance to win *NuNatural’s new lemon and orange liquid stevia flavors. It’s so easy to win this giveaway. Just comment here, on the NuNatural’s Facebook page, and my GLOW page, if you would be so kind.

Happy Friday. Winners announced on Monday.

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I love fruit. Especially during the warmer months when their sweet juices offer hydration and infuse my body with easily

digested and natural sugars for enhanced energy.

A naturally detoxifying food, fruit is truly Mother Nature’s most perfect offering, and also one of the most overlooked secrets to longevity, beauty, and health.

Consider the brilliant design of the human body: With our long and winding digestive tract (25-30 ft), the body absorbs nutrients beginning in the small intestine, but only after the first stage of digestion in the stomach. Large and sluggish meals therefore provide no useable nutrients until it can make its way from the stomach to the first part of the small intestine, or duodenum (and then, who knows what the body will be able to use after that tiresome and lengthy wait).

On an Empty Stomach, Fruit takes roughly around 20-40 minutes in the stomach to digest. Melons take the least, and bananas take the longest. 

Secret #1: It is a trick to think that a sandwich, or protein bar, will give you any quick and sustainable energy. In fact, these foods can take anywhere between 4-8+ hours (depending) in the stomach alone. They only provide stimulation. Not energy. If Mother Nature intended for us to seek lasting nourishment outside of her garden, she would not have made fruit to obviously accessible. When a fruit is ready to be eaten, it will actually drop right from the plant. At this moment, the fruit has the most viable nutrients. 

How brilliant!

But we’ve gone and done it again. In order to make fruit accessible throughout all areas of the land, and at every season, we pluck, pull, and ship fruits and vegetables from one end of the world, to the next. Not only is this a lot of travel time, but we don’t wait for them to jump from their branches. We pluck them early!

Oh how I wish I had a papaya tree in my backyard.

Secret #2: The best time to eat fruits (and vegetables) is when they are in season, and local. The fresher they are, and the less time the spend backpacking across the country, the more nutrients they will contain.

Secret #3: We often hear about eating seasonally, and locally, but in addition to this little secret, the best time to enjoy a fruit is when it is ripe.

Let’s face it: Fruit goes bad. This is by no means a bad thing however, nor does it mean that we should spray foods to keep them from going “bad.”

“Bad” is part of a natural organism’s life cycle. 

Instead, we should focus on the beauty that exists within living foods. The best time to eat a fruit is when it is ripe. A ripe fruit will have a more alkaline pH, and leave a more alkaline residue in the body, whereas an unripe fruit can be irritating and leave an acid residue in the body.

Additionally, a “ready to eat” ripe fruit is easier to digest, and requires less energy for digestion. The point of nourishing the body with living foods is that they are more readily digested, and that their nutrients more abundant and easily assimilated and absorbed.

What good is a raw food if the body cannot break it down?

A green banana would not fall from a tree, and it is constipating when eaten before spotted. A green banana will hang on for dear life until it has received all of the divine power and nutrients that it is going to receive from its life-sustaining branches. When it falls, or in our case, is easily plucked, it is a sign that it’s ready to give back to the earth–It is ready to provide.

A fruit is thus part of a plant’s healthy growing cycle. It contains seeds so that it can bare the next generation of fruit. How cool, eh?

When talking about a fruit’s lifecyle, I cannot help but get giggly and think of a particular dinner scene in the movie, Notting Hill. Brokenhearted by the wonderful Anna Scott (played by Julia Roberts), William, (played by Hugh Grant), has been set up on a random date by his dear pals. The “date”, unbeknownst to anyone prior to dinner, is a “fruitarian.” Here is their dialogue:

Keziah: No thanks, I’m a fruitarian.
Max: I didn’t realize that.
William: And, ahm: what exactly is a fruitarian? 
Keziah: We believe that fruits and vegetables have feeling so we think cooking is cruel. We only eat things that have actually fallen off a tree or bush – that are, in fact, dead already.
William: Right. Right. Interesting stuff. So, these carrots…
Keziah: Have been murdered, yes.
William: Murdered? Poor carrots. How beastly!

Charming movie. I laugh every time. 

Keziah, however she might pronounce her name, is fortunately wrong… these fruits are not dead, but ready to be consumed. A banana, for instance, should not be consumed until it is ripe with a splattering of tiny brown spots. You will find that the peel easily releases the edible fruit for eating without a fight, and that the fruit is not only sweeter, but also much easier to digest!

So, enjoy your fruits, and do so without the consumption of other foods at the same time.

Secret #4: Eat foods alone, and on an empty stomach. With the exception of leafy greens, fruits should not be combined with other foods. Fresh fruit should not be eaten as a snack, dessert, or close to other meals (3-4 hours).

Remember, we want to get the nutrients from our meals to our small intestine quickly. Fruits will take the least amount of time in the stomach. When consumed with other, slower digesting foods, it slows down that beautiful process. The only time we should consume Mother Nature’s perfect food is on an empty stomach (so, for breakfast, for instance), and preferably when Mother Nature has given her O.K. to consume (when ripe). When we combine fruits with other foods, especially more concentrated food (animal protein, almond butter, dairy, bread), we create fermentation in the stomach (gassiness). This is an unpleasant feeling, and a common cause of headaches, lack of energy, and constipation, etc. 

Secret #5: How do you tell when a fruit is ripe? Generally, the fruit will smell sweet, and give a little to the touch. A pineapple, that does not yet smell like a pineapple, is not ready to be sliced open and eat.

Do you have any tips on enjoying fruit? What is your favorite fruit?

I love papayas, ripe bananas, crisp pink lady apples! 

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If there was anything I missed about milk it would the creaminess it effortlessly adds to everything– especially dessert. Luckily, with this Creamy Coconut Milkshake, you need not drive up to any windows, or place an order with anyone but your blender.

In fact, you can enjoy this creamy delight with no added sugar, or a single animal product.

Who needs milk?

This milk-less milkshake is a creamy, and decadent frozen treat with a mild chocolate and coconut flavor. Serve as is, or amp it up with more cocoa and fresh mint leaves. Regardless, it is sure to please, and even surer to wipe away any doubt one may have about reducing and/or eliminating dairy from the diet. You can do it. I promise.

Makes about 6 servings

In your Highspeed blender add the following:

  • 2 cans of coconut milk
  • 2-3 heaping cups of ice (Start with 2 cups, and go from there.)
  • 3 tbsp of unsweetened cocoa powder
  • 36 drops of Alcohol Free Vanilla NuStevia

Blend until creamy and smooth and serve the frozen treat in chilled glasses. I sprinkled a generous amount of cocoa on top for garnish, and completed the dessert with a few dark and crunchy cocoa nibs (by sunfood).

Easy peasy.

P.S. If you have been trying to reach me via email and receiving a bounce back message, I apologize. Please try resending your message to glowdetox@gmail.com. My new email will be up and running shortly.

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