Saturday, February 26, 2011

Some Spring Recipes

It's hard to image today, with all of the snow that keeps falling, that spring is just around the corner.

We had a great class today!
I am loving getting to know all of you. 

Today we talked about how as we plan for what we will feed and nourish our bodies with, we can remember that for The BEST nutrition, we're better off eating closer to the source and relying on Mother Nature
for seasonal produce to keep us in balance.

In the Spring
it's our bodies time to renew, to lighten up, gain mental clarity, energize ourselves, and feel youthful!

Today each of the class members went home with about 20 new recipes 
using produce that is fresh, healthy and in season 
in the Spring.

Because it's almost time to 
enjoy Spring's delicious bounty
I wanted to share a few of the recipes that we prepared today:
(For the rest of the recipes, you can sign up for our next class)
 Lemony Artichoke Dip:

1 garlic clove, peeled
1 shallot, peeled
1 C vegan mayonnaise
1 TBS apple cider vinegar
3/4 C. great northern beans
1/4 tsp sea salt
1/2 tsp mustard
1/4 tsp ground pepper
1/2 C chopped green chiles
2 1/2 C artichoke hearts

With a food processor (or blender) running, drop garlic clove in and process until minced. Turn off processor, scrape down sides and remaining ingredients except artichoke hearts and process until well combined. Add artichokes and process briefly so that small chunks remain. Season to taste with salt and pepper and serve fresh.

Spring Greens with Apricot Vinaigrette

6 C spring greens and herbs of your choice
(try baby bok choy, fennel, fennel fronds, escarole, romaine lettuce, mustard greens, dill, chives...)

Vinaigrette:
1 garlic clove, minced
1 sm shallot, minced
Juice of 2 Meyer lemons
1/2 C apricot juice
1/4 C balsamic vinegar
1/2 C E.V.O.
1 TBS mustard
2 TBS pure maple syrup
Pinch of salt
Tear greens into pieces and place in a large bowl. In a seperate bowl, whisk together vinaigrette ingredients. Pour vinaigrette over greens, , garnish with edible spring flowers and serve.

Sweet Potato, Corn and Kale Chowder

1 TBS grapeseed oil
1 sm onion, diced
3 stalks celery, diced
3 carrots, diced
3 med. sweet potatoes, peeled and diced
3 C corn, fresh or frozen
2 tsp dried thyme
2 C vegetable stock
2 C rice milk, plus more if needed
2 TBS cashew butter
1 bunch kale, chopped into small pieces
Sea salt and freshly ground pepper

In a lg. pot over medium heat, saute onion in olive oil until soft (about 3 minutes). Add celery, carrots, sweet potatoes, corn, thyme, and stock, simmer 5 minutes. Add enough rice milk to cover vegetables. Bring to a boil, reduce heat, cover and simmer until vegetables are soft (about 20 minutes). Remove from heat and add cashew butter. Add kale, return to heat, thin to desired consistency with water or stock and cook until kale is tender. Season to taste with salt and pepper and serve.

Sweet Things
T.L.C.&C Chia Bars
(Tropical lemon, cranberry, coconut

3 tablespoons chia seeds
6 tablespoons fresh lemon juice (approx 1.5 lemons)
1.5 cups regular oats, ground into a flour in food processor
1/2 cup regular oats (not ground)
1 tsp baking powder
1/2 tsp kosher salt
1.5 cups unsweetened shredded coconut + additional for sprinkling
2 tablespoons lemon zest
1/2 cup unsweetened applesauce
1/3 cup Agave nectar
4 tablespoons coconut oil, melted
1/4 cup pistachios
1/2 cup dried cranberries

1. Preheat the oven to 350F. Line an 8 inch square pan with parchment paper.
2. In a small bowl, mix together the chia seeds and lemon juice. Set aside to gel up while you prepare the rest of the ingredients. Take your 1.5 cup of oats and process them in food processor until a flour forms.
3. In a medium bowl, mix together the oat flour (regular oats processed into a flour), baking powder, 1/2 cup regular oats, kosher salt, lemon zest, dried cranberries, pistachios, and shredded coconut.
4. In another small bowl, whisk together the melted coconut oil, applesauce, and agave nectar. Mix in the gelled up chia seed mixture until combined.
5. Add wet to dry and stir well until blended. It will take a while to mix it thoroughly.  Scoop the mixture into the prepared pan and spread out smoothly with a spatula. Sprinkle additional coconut on top before baking.
6. Bake for about 20 minutes at 350F until golden around the outer edge. It will very lightly spring up when pressed.
7. Cool in pan for about 10 minutes before transferring onto a cooling rack for about 30 minutes. Cut into 16 squares. Approx 200 calories per square.


Raw Balls

1/2 C walnuts
1/2 C pitted dates
1/2 C raw Cacoa Powder
1/2 C pure maple syrup
1/2 C almond butter
1/2 tsp vanilla extract
1/4 tsp fine sea salt
1/2 C whole almonds
2 C shredded unsweetened coconut

Place walnuts in a food processor or blender until coarsely ground. Add the dates, and pulse until well combined with nuts. Add cacoa powder, syrup, almond butter, vanilla extract, and salt. Process until the mixture is thick and smooth. Add almonds, and pulse a few times until combined; you want them to remain in crunchy chunks.
Form the mixture into golf ball size balls with your hands. Roll in coconut. Place in a sealed container in the freezer until hardened.
Get cooking and enjoy!

Cody

P.S. Next class is next Saturday, March 5 at 10 am. $15. We may be holding it in a different location due to the demand. I will keep you posted. Also, I will be requiring an RSVP and payment in advance to help pay for food and materials, so let me know if you are planning on coming.... Can't wait!

Tuesday, February 22, 2011

The Word of Wizzum is the Shizzum!

Yo, the W.O.W. is so inspired. 

Have you read and studied it recently?
It lays out all that we need to know about how to feed our bodies and how to protect us from harm.

 As a Mormon, I have learned about the Word of Wisdom over and over again. The parts that have always stuck out to me are the parts about what to abstain from, but I think it's important to not only focus on that part of the revelation. It's equally as important to learn and live what it teaches about what to take into our body.

I find it so amazing that way back in 1833, a warning was given that is for us in our day:

4. Behold, verily, thus saith the Lord unto you: In consequence of evils and designs which do and will exist in the hearts of conspiring men in the last days, I have warned you, and forewarn you, by giving unto you this word of wisdom by revelation-...
Conspiring Men in the last days..tobacco companies.

We've seen how the warnings about tobacco use and alcohol use have been proven to be true, and those that are Mormons aren't unique any more because we abstain from these, which is awesome!

BUT...
The Word of Wisdom also teaches us to live much differently then the 
average American does (Mormons included).



Conspiring men in the last days? The Government and Big Food Companies? Maybe.

S.A.D
(standard American diet.)
But true.

I like the 
W.O.W.
diet!

Eat a diet filled with mostly whole grains, clean fruits, vegetables and herbs in their season, plant-based proteins and fats, and meat SPARINGLY, only in the winter and times of famine.

This is for everyone, Mormon or not.
We all can benefit from eating from this plan.

I am addicted to healthy eating, I feel so amazing! Just as was promised in the W.O.W....
and I'm loving being in my kitchen while it's cold outside 
and trying new raw and whole food recipes.

I'm looking forward to Thursday Night's Wellness Workshop at 
ELEVATE in Orem
147 West 400 North

and to my nutrition class that is being held this Saturday at 10am.
All the best will be there!
Thanks for letting me get on my soapbox again. 
I'd love to hear what you think about all of this.
And, 
am I the only one who feels unstoppable when I feed my body the best?


Have a super day full of wisdom,

Cody

Monday, February 21, 2011

Oh, hello internet. I haven't see you in a while.



Hi everybody!
I like to imagine that there are tons of you out there reading this!
We had a busy and wonderful week, but most of it would only interest people that read my family blog,
So,
I'll spare you the details.

Most importantly I want to remind you all about
4
amazing events
that are happening this week,
starting tonight!

First off, tonight:
Mother's Without Borders
Charity ZUMBA

Do you Zumba?
Well you should, 
'cause it's fun, and I'm telling you I burn just as many calories doing an hour class as I do running for an hour!

One of my good friends Lindsi is teaching. 
Lindsi Stevens is known as one of the BEST Zumba and group fitness instructors in Utah!
Luckily she works with us up in Sandy at The LifeCentre Athletic Club, 
so we get to take advantage of her talent often.

Also, my friend Kathy Miner is the founder of 
Mother's Without Borders.

Check out her site.
You will be amazed at what this woman and her organization
have done to improve the world we live in.
She inspires me so much!
I figure the least I can do is Zumba, for heaven's sake!
This is Kathy's husband Phillip. He is the Model for many paintings of Christ.

Come join me tonight at Noah's in South Jordan
322 West 110 South

There is a class for beginners that starts at 6:30pm-7:15pm
$5
and then for all you Shakira's out there, there's a class for you from
7:30-9pm.
 $10
All proceeds are being donated to benefit the Zambia Project.
If you do both classes, you'll be able to eat what ever you want guilt free for the rest of the week...
and you'll get a t-shirt that says
"Give 'em $5"
Please come and support!
Your Hips won't lie, at least what's left of them after you do this fat-melting class!

Then, tomorrow night we have another opportunity to give back...
Join Melissa Chappell and help support her Charity:

MamaBaby Haiti Fundraiser

You can visit her Facebook page mama baby haiti fundraiser for a bigger view of the poster.    
She is heading to Haiti this week to go and serve with this organization.
We want to send her on her way with a little help.

Come and enjoy 
FOOD, 
Music, Art
and fun!
(My husband and Brother and Sister-in-law are playing, plus other awesome bands!)

See you on Tuesday Night
from 7-9pm
at
The Underground in Provo
65 N. University Avenue

Then, on Thursday Night...
Join me at ELEVATE in Orem
147 W. 400 N.
7pm
For a 
FREE
WELLNESS WORKSHOP!
Special guest
Dale Allred
Dale Allred at www.jacobscove.net
 I've mentioned this one a few times, but it's a night you don't want to miss!

Just when you are asking yourself, how much more fun can one person fit in in one week, well, let me mention at least one more, plus a few others...
So, you've been doing my 21 Day Detox, you're feeling like a superhero, but now you are wondering what to do after you hit 
DAY 21???
Well, I'll tell you, that's what I'll do...
in my class this Saturday that is all about
After the Cleanse.
February 24, 10am-11:30am
You will learn how you can keep feeling as great as you are right now and 
how to make this a permanent thing.
We will go over the plan that includes eating guides, recipes, lifestyle musts, etc.
I only charge 
$15
and that includes the SUPERHERO MANUAL with all of the information covered in class.
Space is limited, because I hold the class in my home.
So, please RSVP ASAP so that I can fit you in!
email me at cody@elevateutah.com

 And a few honorable mentions:

Thursday morning we will be having our first "Be Nourished" co-op group meeting at 10am. 
We will be sharing recipes using RAW DAIRY!
If this sounds like fun or of interest to you, you can join our group!
again contact me by either commenting on the blog or emailing me at cody@elevateutah.com

Also, I love a good dump...
and I want to go and play in it!


Join me for a snowshoeing outing this Wednesday during your lunch break.
12-2pm
or earlier if you need to skedaddle back to the office 
We will be going to Big Springs and it it takes about an hour to 
hike there. 
Bring your lunch!


The more you give...the more you get!
Cody

Wednesday, February 16, 2011

Bundle up! 
Let's GO!
This is my darling friend Marie and her little girl Sophie ( and dog Lucy).

We are partners in crime for sure. 
She and I find every possible second that we can be on one trail or another.
She is going to help me in guiding groups on snow shoeing outings in the winter
and on hikes once the snow melts.

We are working out a schedule and coming up with some awesome adventures.
I can't wait to let you know all about it!
Look for the schedule to be posted this weekend.

We have only a little winter left to enjoy the beauty! 
(That's one way of looking at it, right?)


Just a little bit of news for those of you that are part of our ELEVATE family...
We kicked the BYU Tri Teams Trash!
We love you BYU, no hard feelings right?

We had a 24 hour triathlon challenge last Friday and Saturday between 
the 12 members of TEAM ELEVATE and 12 members of TEAM BYU. 
(I had the 10pm slot. It was interesting doing a Olympic length Tri that late at night, but once I got going I felt great!)

Oh, it will be so much better when I can actually get outside to do this. But, being able to train through the winter is a HUGE advantage, so I won't complain!

Here are a few more pics of our Valentines Day Dinner. 
It was so great to be surrounded by people who enjoy good food and good peeps as much as I do. 
David and Leanna Hunt

Stephani Hewlett and Marie Macfarlane

Trevor and Lexy Rumsey

Peter and Emily Clark

Me, Dave and Leanna

Mostly wanted to show the table setting.


Someday I would love a real dining room with a big round table so that we can all feel like we are sitting close, but luckily everyone is pretty chatty, so it all worked out nicely.

Hans Franz and Melissa Chappell
So, this has been a whole lot of updating on the personal stuff, I did this to honor a request from my husband Trevor, who said less information, more pictures please. 
I love making these people happy...when I can.

I Promise. I will try to post a variety of things. 
My goal for this blog is to make things happen, invite ya'll to come, enjoy the best things in life,  encourage healthy living
and can I say it again? 
KEEPING THINGS FRESH! 
So, a little learning and a little fun all mixed up into one fresh package of a blog.
You cool with that?
You are cool. 
I know that for sure.

Thanks for reading,

Cody

Tuesday, February 15, 2011

Why Eat Local?

You might think this is impossible in our neck of the woods. 
No, not so.
Luckily it is getting easier and easier to find and enjoy
fresh, local and organic foods.

Why is it so important to eat organically?


10 Reasons to Eat Organically—and Locally

By Steve Edwards
"Think globally, act locally" isn't just for bumper stickers anymore. This grassroots politics-type slogan has become an important way of thinking about where your next meal should come from. But the implications here are far more than political. Buying local—as well as organic—foods allows you to protect your family by feeding them in the safest way possible. Here are 10 reasons to add "visit the local farmers' market" to the top of your to-do list each week.
Vegetables in Wok
  1. Local foods are safer. Or at least you can find out if they are. Organic food standards are high, but there are still companies out there attempting to cloud the rules. When you buy locally, it's easier to check out what you're buying, and you won't have to hire Magnum, P.I., to do it. The great thing about local media is that they love to cover this stuff. If for any reason a local farm is mixed up in nefarious activities, there's a good chance your paper has a reporter dreaming of a gig at The New York Times who'll be on the job for you. Even if this isn't the case, you can be inquisitive at the farmers' markets—you'll be surprised how quickly you can get up to date on the local scoop. Farmers who adhere to a strict code of ethics love to talk about others who do, and those who don't.
  2. Organic TurnipsOrganic foods are safer. Organic certification standards are the public's assurance that their food and products have been grown and handled according to sustainable procedures, without toxic, synthetic, irradiated, or genetically modified elements, including chemical fertilizers, pesticides, antibiotics, and other additives. At least that's what the law says. But even though many companies still cheat the system, most of them play by the rules. These rules are in place to help both soil longevity and the health and safety of the consumer. Many Environmental Protection Agency (EPA)-approved pesticides were registered long before extensive research linked these chemicals to cancer and other diseases. Now, the EPA considers 60 percent of all herbicides, 90 percent of all fungicides, and 30 percent of all insecticides, none of which meet organic criteria, to be potentially cancer causing. You can't always be certain you're getting safe food, but eating organic foods stacks the odds in your favor.
  3. Organic food tastes better. Many people would be amazed to taste the difference between garden-grown fruits and vegetables (and wild meat) and the offerings you find down at your local mega-grocery-mart. The main reason for this disparity has to do with something called trophic levels, which is determined by where plants and animals fall on the food chain. When food—even natural food—is manufactured, as when plants are grown in poor soil with some added nutrients, or animals are raised using drugs and a nonnative diet, their physiological chemistry is altered. This doesn't just change their nutrient content—it changes the way they taste.
  4. Vegetables on a ForkOrganic food is more nutritious—which stands to reason, based on the whole trophic levels thing. When soils are depleted and then fertilized, only certain nutrients are added with fertilizers. This results in the loss of many of the plants' original phytonutrients. While these lost phytonutrients aren't necessarily a major component of any individual plant, they add up in your diet and become a major component of who you are. This lack of phytonutients in the plants in our diets has a lot to do with many modern-day maladies. With regard to meat, it's basically the same story. Animals that are fed a poor diet are, as you might imagine, less healthy to eat, because they're also missing out on essential nutrients thanks to the trophic level paradigm—just like you are.
  5. You won't have to eat genetically modified organisms (GMO). A GMO is a plant, animal, or microorganism whose genetic sequence has been modified to introduce genes from another species. Because the long-term impact of GMOs on our health isn't known yet, they're forbidden by the Soil Association Standards for Organic Food and Farming. Furthermore, in order to qualify as organic, animals can't be fed GMOs, nor can they be fed antibiotics, added hormones, or other drugs. It is not currently required, however, that GMOs be mentioned on food labels, so it's very likely that anything not certified organic contains some GMO ingredients.
  6. WaterYour drinking water will be safer. The EPA estimates that pesticides contaminate groundwater in 38 states, polluting the primary source of drinking water for more than half the country's population. Because organic farmers practice water conservation and don't use toxic chemicals that leach into your groundwater, organic farming leads to less waste intrusion into our aquifers, which helps keep your drinking water healthier.
  7. Your kids will be healthier. The toxicity of pesticide residue is determined not only by the chemicals used, but by our body weight in relation to how much we consume. This means that your children are even more at risk than you are. It's estimated that the average child receives four times more exposure than the average adult to at least eight widely used cancer-causing pesticides in food. To try and minimize this risk, buy organic, but also make sure that your family eats a wide variety of foods.
  8. Local FarmerTo help farmers and farm communities. It's estimated that the U.S. has lost more than 650,000 family farms since 1990. The USDA predicts that half of the U.S. farm production comes from only 1 percent of farms. Organic farming may be one of the few survival tactics left for the family farm and rural communities. The majority of organic farms are still small-scale operations, generally on fewer than 100 acres, and using an average of 70 percent less energy. Small farms use far more sustainable and environmentally friendly practices than large-scale farms do. For example, small farms use manure to fertilize soil, naturally recycling it to keep the land productive.

    Industrial farms produce so much manure that it's a human health risk. The overspill of manure has contaminated water wells with E. coli and other pathogens. This brings up another subject: Industrial farms still—though now illegally—feed animals the ground-up remnants of other animals that aren't naturally part of their diet. This has led to pathogens like E. coli getting into our foods in the first place.

    Furthermore, farm workers are much safer on small farms. A National Cancer Institute study found that farmers exposed to herbicides had six times more risk of contracting cancer than nonfarmers did. Due to their direct exposure, field workers on conventional farms are the most vulnerable to illness as a result of pesticide use. Organic farms eliminate that risk by eliminating harmful pesticides and other chemical inputs from their practices.
  9. For more humane treatment of animals. Factory farms treat animals like commodities. They are usually kept in tightly confined pens or cages and often never move more than a few feet for their entire lives. They are also fed the cheapest foods available, no matter how it affects their—and then our—health. Besides the fact that a host of illnesses have entered our world as a direct result of this practice, it's also just not nice. Animals on organic farms are far likelier to be raised without cruelty. They are also fed a diet much closer to what they would eat naturally, and studies tell us—surprise!—that these animals tend to be significantly healthier than their factory-raised counterparts.
  10. EconomyTo promote a vibrant economy. Organic products only seem more expensive because people base their cost on their sticker price alone. However, retail price represents a mere fraction of their true cost. Market prices for conventionally grown foods don't reflect the costs of federal subsidies to conventional agriculture, the cost of contaminated drinking water, loss of wildlife habitat and soil erosion, or the cost of the disposal and cleanup of hazardous wastes generated by the manufacturing of pesticides. Compared to local farms, there's also transportation—and the pollutants that result from it—to consider. All of this means that essentially, you can pay now or pay later—just remember that you're going to be charged interest, mainly in the form of a socially and ecologically diminished world to live in.
 Here, Here!
Some of the questions I get asked frequently as I teach and encourage people to choose organic, whole foods is how can people afford it, 
how do we know that it is any better for us, 
does it really make a difference?

My answers include:
1. It's not as expensive as you think. When you buy organic, you are buying more nutrient dense food. So, you actually eat a lot less then you normally do, because your body fills nourished and it isn't sending you constant hunger signals in a desperate attempt to get in missing nutrients that aren't found in non-organic foods and processed packaged foods.
2. Go to any grocery store and look at the difference in color of a non-organic tomato and an organic tomato. Better yet, go to a local farmers market or to someones backyard garden and see the difference from a grocery bought tomato (or any other fruit or vegetable) and these tomoatoes. 
Now taste the difference. Big difference, right?
 3.You feel the difference! I know that this alone won't convince many of the skeptics out there...
So, I say read about it and educate yourself on what the difference is. You can come to our 
Wellness Workshop on February 24 at 7pm at ELEVATE in Orem, and hear what Dale Allred 
has to say about all of this. He goes beyond organic, and it shows!

Some of my favorite local resources for fresh food include:
 To buy:

To eat:
Cafe Fresh
Visit these locations and you literally vote with your fork and make it more likely that we will be able to have the best food we can possibly get. 
Try each day to make the best choices for you, your family and our community.

We have had fun this past week in the most local place I can get...my house! 



Saturday we had a big group of detox enthusiasts that are ready to take back their health and bring back balance to their bodies.

We had fun and stayed way longer than the allotted time just sharing ideas and tips and getting to know each other better. 
Unfortuately I forgot to take a picture of everyone until about half of them left. 
So, I'm sorry if you aren't in the picture.

Thanks for coming!

Our next class 
is on what to do after the detox.
We will be meeting at my house again on Saturday Feb. 26 at 10 am. Sign up by commenting below with your contact information or contacting me at cody@elevateutah.com
We will cover healthy eating of whole foods and daily practices that keep you from absorbing and forming 
those nasty toxins that are out there.
 $15
(Also, we will be having another 21 Day Detox class on March 5)

Can I also suggest enjoying some of this local ladies (which we determined last night is a perfectly suitable name for any man to call a woman) gifts:
 We had Melissa Chappell of 
rawmelissa.com
come and chef for our Valentines Dinner last night. She is lovely and the food was amazing!

and her friend and assistant Hans was pretty awesome himself...
and very handy with a knife and a plunger.

Hope you had a very Happy Valentines Day!

Love,

Cody