Tag Archives: raw

Healthy Alternatives: Grass Fed Beef Stir Fry with Kelp Noodles

With the wife preoccupied with our new boy, I figured I should step up on the nutritious suggestions.  We’ve received much positive feedback from Ashley’s previously posted recipes and would love to share more.

My normal regimen (which I’ll start to include as well in an effort to provide ideas and spark your own culinary creativity) consists of various versions of salad, raw veggies, fruits and nuts, hormone and antibiotic free chicken and eggs and your occasional sweet potato, grass fed beef, wild fish or on the go/recovery protein drink.

While preparing a Friday night meal for my wife and I, it dawned on me that I should share these slightly more involved dishes that are great tasting AND nutritious.

So here you go:

GRASS FED BEEF STIR FRY WITH KELP NOODLES

1lb. Grass Fed Beef      (Publix carries multiple brands of this now)

1 Bag Kelp Noodles      (clear noodles, can be found at most health food stores)

1-2 Organic Eggs

 

1 Green Pepper

1 Purple Onion

1 Portable Mushroom

1 Stalk of Celery

1 Avocado

1 Tomato

1 Clove of Garlic

Cashews

(Preferably organic for all the above.  No sense in derailing your honest efforts with a good dose of pesticides and gut/immune system destroying GMOs).

 

Seasoning of Choice for Beef:

Turmeric

Cumin

Ground Pepper

Oregano

 

Organic Extra Virgin Olive Oil

Coconut Oil

 

Preheat two pans (preferably ceramic or cast iron, PLEASE avoid cooking with aluminum or non-stick teflon) coated with coconut oil on LOW to MED LOW heat.

Prep Veggies:

Thinly slice purple onion and green pepper

Dice celery, garlic and tomato

Slice avocado

Chop cashews and mushrooms

photo 4

Add beef to one pan and noodles to the other. The larger pan should be used for the noodles.   (I also like to go heavy on the coconut oil in the larger pan.)

Season beef (light turmeric, cumin, oregano, ground pepper: facilitates better turmeric absorption, diced garlic) and mix with spatula.

photo 2

Continuously stir noodles.

(Like my wife, I’m not a big exact time & measurement guy when it comes to cooking. This is fine for personal preparation, but leaves a recipe somewhat devoid of precise steps, so bear with me.)

Once the noodles begin to soften and separate, begin adding veggies (green peppers, onion, celery and mushroom).

photo 3

Don’t forget to keep stirring the meat until it reaches a temperature you prefer.  I prefer a juicy, slightly pink MED RARE, while the Mrs. prefers a more cooked (slightly drier) texture. So naturally we eat the dry meat.

Personally, I prefer the veggies to be warm but still retain that crunch. Once they warm add a raw egg (or two) to the mixture. Stir occasionally as the egg slowly separates and cooks, leaving small sections of egg that is connected to and slightly coating some if your fixings (just like the Thai restaurant, minus the MSG).

Once the meat and noodles meet your desired standards, plate the stir fry (I like to pour some olive oil on the noodles at this point) and cover with the beef.

Top it off with your sliced avocado, diced tomatoes and cashews and you’re good to go.  A delicious dinner that leaves you feeling mentally and physically strong.

photo 5

A Proper Diet (Part 2): Healthy Preparation

By now I hope that you’ve at least begun the journey towards better health through your diet, no matter how small the change may be.  Remember, changes are more likely sustained when they are the results of many small changes practiced daily.  But enough philosophizing…

Once you’ve modified the menu, the next step involves what you do to that food before it reaches your mouth.  This is crucial and worth stepping your knowledge up for.   If you’re going to practice the discipline at the store, you may as well not waste your good intentions by destroying or contaminating that cauliflower during the preparation.

GO RAW

You can ensure you get the most out of the majority of your fruits and vegetables by consuming them raw.  I’m talking about simply washing and eating.  Various sources recommend as high as 90% of your diet being raw, and fruits and veggies are the most obvious and convenient choices.

The other food to make sure you’re consuming raw, are nuts.  Like certain vegetables, the switch from the cooked variety can be flat out disappointing to your taste buds at first.  But trust me on this, it is an acquired taste and eventually you’ll come to enjoy the raw, unsalted nut in both taste and peace of mind that it provides.

The potential issue with cooking is that when you heat food, various chemical reactions and changes take place.  Depending on the item and your method and intensity of heating, beneficial proteins denature or breakdown, and you can actually attenuate or outright eliminate those vitamins and minerals you were admirably looking for in the first place.

METHOD OF HEATING

I do realize however that most of us will continue to cook our food.  (And it’s usually considerably over the recommended 10-20%.)  The next thing to consider is how you’re going to heat it up.

When it comes to cookware, two of the least offensive include titanium and cast iron.  Notice I say “least offensive” and not best.  There is nothing “best” about these choices.  When you cook with these or any pans, it has the potential to leach the metals contained in the pans into your food.  This leads to enzymatic alteration of the food and deposition of that metal in your system.

If you do use any of these pots or pans, you can hedge your bets by turning down the heat.  I know it may take longer to cook, but harmful metals and chemicals are less likely to leach at lower heats.  Also, if you are fortunate enough to have a variety of pots and pans, mix it up to prevent overexposure to one particular metal.

Cookware you should absolutely not be using anymore is of the non-stick, Teflon variety.  Seriously, if you still have these, do yourself a favor and throw it out.  These contain the harmful chemical PFOA which has now been linked with cancer, high cholesterol, thyroid disease and reduced fertility.  So much so that manufacturers are actually mandated to eliminate all PFOA from cooking products by the year 2015.

(My guess is they couldn’t stop production or sales immediately because of the massive blow it would’ve dealt to the manufacturers’ wallet.  In the meantime the public still unknowingly serves up some PFOA infused eggs.  Delicious.)

The second major thing to be cognizant of no matter how you are cooking is the color changes of your food.  More specifically, you want to try to avoid that scrumptious browning reaction from taking place.

This reaction signifies the formation of acrylamides (carcinogen), and AGEs (advanced glycation end products).  AGEs also form in the body whenever carbohydrates react with internal proteins.  As mentioned in previous posts, our body does come equipped with a mechanism to break these down, but not when presented in a large volume.

AGEs can attach to and react with any tissue that contains a receptor for them, known as a RAGE.  RAGEs are known to be present in smooth muscle cells (heart and intestines), endothelial cells (blood vessels), cells of the immune system, lungs, liver, kidneys, pancreas, etc.  These chemical complexes damage proteins, enzymes, DNA, and hormonal receptor sites and contribute to normal aging and the diseases we attribute to it like Alzheimer’s, CVD, peripheral neuropathies, deafness, etc.  This link demonstrates the power each one of us possesses to prevent or at least lessen the severity of ample conditions.

My wife and I are always on an evolving quest to discover the safest way to heat foods like chicken, brussel sprouts and sweet potatoes.  We currently utilize cookware glass (such as Pyrex) to bake chicken and a ceramic steamer for the sprouts or sweet potatoes.  (Yes, these two veggies need to be heated.  I tried them raw.  It wasn’t pretty.)

Steaming vegetables has long been a healthy recommendation, but the problem with simply following the steaming advice is that most steamers are plastic.  As mentioned in our discussion on water, when plastic is heated, the chemicals contained in the plastic leach into the food or water.  Simply stated, you should never cook with plastic.

Last thing to remember is that sometimes there is no better substitute than some common sense.  Hopefully you realize the potential power the food you put in your body has.  Hopefully you’ll respect this and make some good choices.  But ultimately you’re going to eat what you’d like.  Enjoy your life.  If need be, indulge in cheat meals every so often.  Just don’t go tricking yourself into thinking that deep fried broccoli and those honey roasted nuts are in any way, shape or form healthy.