June 1st, 2008 -- Posted in Food, Recipe, Vegetarian |
Here’s an inexpensive tasty healthy sandwich that can serve as an alternative to the usual ham and cheese sandwich. Be forewarned, I’m not one who measures when I cook, so use your own best judgment.
Ingredients
Eggplant
Tomato
Onion
Feta cheese
Extra Virgin Olive Oil
Salt
Pepper
Garlic Powder
Whole grain wrap
Organic whole grain flour
Basil
Organic romaine lettuce (or whatever greenery you have)
What to do:
Thinly slice the eggplant and brush a little olive oil on both sides. Season with salt, pepper, basil and garlic powder.
In a hot skillet brown the eggplant until it’s nice and crisp on the outside while remaining soft on the inside. You don’t want an eggplant chip, nor do you want mushy eggplant. If you’re having a difficult time in getting the outside crunchy, sprinkle a little organic flour on the eggplant before putting it in the pan.
If the eggplant is burning too quickly, lower your heat and add a drip or two of extra virgin olive oil.
While the eggplant is cooking, thinly slice the tomato and a few slivers of onion (more if you like a lot of onion). Season the tomato with olive oil, salt pepper, garlic and basil. Let it sit until the eggplant is done. Put a little extra olive oil because the seasoned oil tastes great drizzled on the sandwich.
Once everything is done all you have to do is combine the ingredients.
Place the wrap on a plate; add a layer of lettuce, then eggplant, then the tomato onion mixture. Sprinkle feta cheese and drizzle some of the seasoned oil over the sandwich before you roll it up.
Depending on the size of the eggplant and tomato, you can make several sandwiches. They’re healthy, delicious and much less expensive than buying a pound of cold cuts.
Give it a try.
A couple of variations:
Add sautéed tofu, salmon, or chicken. The possibilities are endless (use your imagination)
June 1st, 2008 -- Posted in Alkalize, pH |
The other day my son’s teammate broke two bones on top of his hand when he slipped making a lay-up. It wasn’t an out of the ordinary trip and fall. Back in the day, it would mean a couple of days of ice and aspirin. Now a days, a simple trip
and fall for a child means a trip to the emergency room followed by visits to an Orthopedic Doctor which will be followed by several weeks of physical therapy.
I know this only too well as my daughter had a spiral break of her humerus bone in her upper arm. Granted she did do a swan dive off of a bar stool while she and her best friend were practicing cheerleading moves, but I still think that back in the old days, it would have resulted in a sprain.
The number of broken bones our kids have as a result of a simple trip or fall is disheartening.
Why is it happening so frequently?
Here’s my theory. As the saying goes, we are what we eat. If we continue to drink soft drinks, eat nutrient deficient processed foods and consume growth hormone infested meats at the alarming rate that we do, what else can we expect?
I’m not a scientist or a nutritionist. I’m just an ordinary person who is sick and tired of being sick and tired. I believe it all goes back to balance. When I say balance I mean it in several areas:
pH balance: Our bodies function optimally at a certain pH level (somewhere between 7.3 and 7.4). Unfortunately, the current Standard American Diet (SAD) is doing everything in its power to move our bodies from our optimal pH. Our blood must maintain its optimal level, or else we’re a goner. As a result, our bodies will take what ever it can from wherever it can to ensure that our blood maintains the right pH level.
Guess where the blood pulls the nutrients to maintain its proper pH. (Hint: Calcium has a high pH).
Nutritional balance: I’m not going to get technical, because I’m not equipped to do so, but here’s what I’ve found (please do your own research). 
Everything we eat eventually breaks down into either an alkaline ash (high pH) or acidic ash (low pH). The ash is pretty much what is left over after our bodies are done with what we’ve eaten. Sort of like a fireplace and burning wood.
Having an alkaline ash produces health and an acidic ash, well, promotes non health. The trick is to have a proper balance between alkaline ash and acidic ash. Following the SAD will produce an unhealthy amount of acidic ash. Too much acid lowers the body’s pH. The blood won’t stand for that so it pulls what ever it can to keep us alive…yep, the wonderful calcium content from our bones.
Feeding our kids candy bars, soft drinks and tons of processed foods, in my opinion, only contributes to the broken bone epidemic (this is one person’s opinion).