Green Living

My Morning Ritual – MY Perfect Cup of Coffee!

I sit every morning at my computer in my lovely studio in the heart of downtown Wauconda. I answer emails and check updates on Facebook, while sipping the most perfect cup of coffee – now what makes this cup so perfect has taken some time to perfect.  First it starts with the coffee and I have used Rogers Family Coffee now for over 5 years. I like the the 3-pound bag of Organic San Franscisco Rainforest. I am not a fan of strong coffees – this is fairly mild. I use 1 T per 8 oz of water – the water I use s Mountain Valley Spring, I have this water delivered to my home (and studio) in 2.5 gallon glass bottles.  While the coffee is brewing I add hot water in my Thermos mug and let sit for 10 minutes. Now the “putting” together of that perfect cup – empty the hot water – pour about 1/3 cup of coffee in your favorite mug. I add to this 1 T of coconut oil, now stir until coconut oil is blended. I then add (and this is based on how you take your coffee)  1 T simple syrup and 2 T raw heavy whipping cream – and stir until those ingredients are blennded. Add the remainder of the brewed coffee. It is my opinion that coffee needs to be hot and this method has proven successful for me. Enjoy!

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Chocolate Marshmallows

I have always wanted to try chocolate marshmallows and this weekend I did and they came out awesome!!

In a mixing bowl place 1/2 cup water. Layer on top  3 T non-hydrolysized Great Lakes Gelatin – (orange canister). Let sit for 10 minutes.

In a saucepan combine 1/2 cup water, 2 cups sugar and 2 T raw organic cocoa (this gives a mild flavor of chocolate – you may try more). Heat to 220 degrees.

Add sugar and chocolate mixture to gelatin and water. Mix until stiff- about 5-10 minutes, depending on your mixer. Place into a well greased 8 X 8 pan. I used coconut oil. When cooled place in refrigerator for a few hour and then cut. Enjoy!

Doing the Devil’s Bidding; One of Monsanto’s Little Helpers

By Tim Koegel www.organicpasturedpoultry.com

Long before now, everyone in the organic community as well as most of the conventional community, has

become thoroughly familiar with RoundUp Ready Alfalfa (RRA). Of course there have been countless outcries

against Monsanto, and it has been Monsantoís name in virtually every print and web article as well as radio and

TV show. But if Monsanto is the devil as many would say, then there has been little if any mention of those

doing the devilís bidding here, in this case that disciple being Forage Genetics International (FGI). FGI is a

wholly (or rather ìunholyî) owned subsidiary of Land Oí Lakes. While Monsanto owns the patented RoundUp

Ready (RR) gene, FGI is the developer of RR Alfalfa and licenses the patents to do so from Monsanto.

Click on the link below to read the rest of this artice

http://www.windyridgepoultry.com/gmo_alflafa1.pdf

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USDA Certified Organic – Dirty Little Secret: Neotame

USDA Certified Organic’s – Dirty Little Secret: Neotame
Published on 01-02-2011

By Barbara H. Peterson – Farm Wars

Just when we thought that buying “Organic” was safe, we run headlong into the deliberate poisoning of our organic food supply by the FDA in collusion with none other than the folks who brought us Aspartame. NutraSweet, a former Monsanto asset, has developed a new and improved version of this neurotoxin called Neotame.

Neotame has similar structure to aspartame — except that, from it’s structure, appears to be even more toxic than aspartame. This potential increase in toxicity will make up for the fact that less will be used in diet drinks. Like aspartame, some of the concerns include gradual neurotoxic and immunotoxic damage from the combination of the formaldehyde metabolite (which is toxic at extremely low doses) and the excitotoxic amino acid. (Holisticmed.com)

But surely, this product would be labeled! NOT SO!!! For this little gem, no labeling required. And it is even included in USDA Certified Organic food.

The food labeling requirements required for aspartame have now been dropped for Neotame, and no one is clear why this was allowed to happen. Neotame has been ruled acceptable, and without being included on the list of ingredients, for:

USDA Certified Organic food items.
Certified Kosher products with the official letter k inside the circle on labels. (Janet Hull)
Let me make this perfectly clear. Neotame does not have to be included in ANY list of ingredients! So, if you buy processed food, whether USDA Certified Organic or not, that food most likely will contain Neotame because it is cost-effective, and since no one knows it is there, there is no public backlash similar to what is happening with Aspartame. A win/win situation!

But that’s not all. Just love chowing down on that delicious steak? Well, that cow most likely will have been fed with feed containing…..you guessed it…..Neotame! A product called “Sweetos,” which is actually composed of Neotame, is being substituted for molasses in animal feed.

“Sweetos is an economical substitute for molasses. Sweetos guarantees the masking of unpleasant tastes and odor and improves the palatability of feed. This product will be economical for farmers and manufacturers of cattle feed. It can also be used in mineral mixture,” said Craig Petray, CEO, The NutraSweet Company, a division of Searle, which is a part of Monsanto. (Bungalow Bill)

Why would we feed animals food that is so distasteful that we would have to mask the unpleasantness with an artificial sweetener? Most animals will not eat spoiled, rancid feed. They know by the smell that it is not good. Enter Sweetos (Neotame). Just cover up the unpleasant tastes and odors, and you can feed them anything you want to, courtesy of the oh, so considerate folks at Monsanto and company.

But of course, Monsanto is no longer associated with NutraSweet. In the time-honored tradition of covering its assets, Monsanto has a proven track record of spinning off controversial portions of its company that generate too much scrutiny, such as it did with the Solutia solution.

Says the Farm Industry News, “Monsanto, which has long resided in the crosshairs of public scorn and scrutiny, appears to have dodged at least one bullet by spinning off its industrial chemical business into a separate entity called Solutia a couple of years ago. Solutia has since been hammered by lawsuits regarding PCB contamination from what were once called Monsanto chemical plants in Alabama and other states” (Source Watch)

So what is the solution to this problem? Buy local organic food, know your local farmer, and don’t buy processed foods whether they are labeled “Organic” or not. This requires a drastic change in lifestyle that most will not want to make. For those who choose to ride the wheel of chance by succumbing to this genocidal adulteration of our food supply by those who stand to profit from our sickness and early demise, my only comment is….it is your choice. But for those of us who have decided to fight this battle one bite at a time by hitting these sociopaths in the pocketbook where it hurts……viva la revolucion!

Contact Linda

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On Vegetarianism

By Venri Gurd

People choose to be vegetarian for many reasons, such has to avoid supporting cruelty to animals, for personal health, and for the health of the planet. Is vegetarianism really the best choice for achieving these objectives?

I’ve spoken to a lot of vegetarians as they come through my door for various reasons, and I know that the decision to avoid eating meat is not taken lightly. These people have struggled with the ethics of the issue, and have concluded that vegetarianism fits best with their integrity. I too have given the issue a great deal of thought, but ultimately I’ve concluded that it is possible to eat a diet that includes meat in a way that fully values the life of an animal as much as a vegetarian would, and does not compromise the planet.

Many people believe that eating red meat is inherently unhealthy. They believe that red meat causes cancer and heart disease among other things, so becoming vegetarian would ensure greater health. But what would one have eaten 1000 years ago if one lived in a northern climate where the land was covered in snow for 6 months of the year? What would one eat in the middle of winter? Would it be even possible to be a vegetarian under those circumstances? I would bet that in the winter, animal foods would provide most if not all of the food eaten.

According to scientists and medical doctors that travelled the globe visiting traditional cultures before contact with “white man’s food”, those cultures were all extremely healthy, had perfect teeth and bone structure, and NONE of those cultures were vegetarian. They did not even have words in their language for today’s chronic diseases.

Might it be that the reason red meat is linked to these diseases is that we are eating red meat from feed-lot animals that are not given their natural diet but instead one filled with antibiotics and hormones? They are kept confined in tiny pens so they get no exercise, and they are never let outside? Sick animals cannot make a healthy human.

However there is no evidence to show that eating meat from animals that ate their natural diet during their lifetime, and spent their days outside in the fresh air and sunshine is unhealthy. Pastured meat has a completely different fat profile than GMO corn-fed factory farmed meat. Pastured meat is higher in omega 3s and ALA, and is lower in saturated fat. Pastured animals have no need for antibiotics as they are healthy.

Most often when someone initially becomes a vegetarian their health improves dramatically, not only because this diet forces one to eat more vegetables, but also because usually vegetarians eat a whole-food diet and are more likely to avoid processed and packaged food. They are more likely to cook their food fresh, and will eat more of their food raw. These are huge steps in the right direction for improving health.

But human beings are omnivores, meaning our digestive tracts are designed to eat flesh foods. Some nutrients that we need to be healthy are extremely difficult to get without eating meat, and after a few years on a vegetarian diet, health can become compromised. A diet without meat means a diet very high in carbohydrates, which might be very problematic in sensitive individuals, even if those carbohydrates are whole.

If one needs animal foods to be healthy, is it a good idea to avoid them altogether? Do we fault the lion for eating a deer? Should the lion become a vegetarian too? Everywhere one looks in nature, life eats life and often killing in nature is far more brutal than what one would find in a meat-packing plant.

I agree that factory farming is terrible for the animals that have to endure that life. The animals spend their entire lives indoors crowded together, often standing or lying in their own excrement. They frequently don’t even have enough room to turn around. Beaks of chickens and tails of pigs are cut off. They are fed an unnatural diet they would never choose for themselves – one that accelerates their growth so they can be slaughtered sooner.

And because the pace that big-agribusiness animals are moved through the killing floor, sometimes the kill isn’t clean, and the animals also suffer a painful death. Anyone with a heart that sees animals in these terrible, smelly, over-crowded places would be horrified, and it is understandable that knowing of such cruelty, one might choose to become a vegetarian.

But what if the animal lives its life fully expressing its cowness, or chickeness, or pigness, ending with only one bad day? Cows and chickens out in the fields, the cows doing what cows do best – grazing with the herd, and chickens doing what they do best – scratching in the cow paddies for the maggots they like so much. Pigs wallowing in mud to keep themselves cool. To me it is different if I know the animal had a good life, and that I’m eating it after its one bad day. After all, we all will have to face that one bad day too, at some point.

If we were all to become vegan (a vegetarian that consumes no animal products at all, including no eggs nor dairy), which is certainly what some vegans believe is the right thing to do, one might ask what would become of the animals we currently raise to eat? I think if there were no more need for them, it would make no economic sense to raise them, and they would soon go the way of the dodo bird. Do we really want a planet with no cows, chickens or pigs? Would cows, chickens and pigs choose extinction for their species if given the choice?

I also wonder sometimes why we don’t seem to have the same concern over killing plants to eat. They are also life-forms that communicate and interact with other life-forms. Is it only life that has eyes and a beating heart that ethically we should not kill? Furthermore, many plants actually eat animal protein in the form of insects, so if it is okay for a plant to eat meat, surely we can feel okay about it too?

Then there is the question of saving the planet. Raising animals in factory farms is not sustainable. The “excrement ponds” full of antibiotic and hormone-filled animal waste leaches into ground water and runs off into streams, polluting our drinking water as well harming the fish and amphibian life. There is a huge carbon footprint farming this way due to the chemical fertilizers used to grow the feed, and the transportation costs to carry the corn to the animals. Feed-lot animals are raised on oil. Not raising animals this way would be far friendlier to the planet, and this is another reason that people turn to vegetarianism.

But the other option is to raise animals on solar power, not oil. Fence off a portion of a field, let the cows in and allow them to eat the food they are meant to eat – grass. The following day, move the electric fence to another part of the field, and give the cows access to fresh pasture. Three days later, let the chickens into the area that the cows were, so they can tramp through the cow paddies and find the maggots and other goodies. The chickens will also fertilize the field with their manure, and they will spread all this manure around with their pecking and scratching. Because the grass is now short due the the grazing, the roots will drop to match the height of the leaf above the ground. This further nourishes the soil, and causes rapid grass growth. In about 5 weeks, that area of pasture can be grazed again, and the process repeats itself.

The key to make the system work is it must be a mixed farm rather than a one crop / one animal farm. We need to copy how nature works, and help it along to make it more efficient. Plants nourish the animals, which nourish the plants with their waste, and around the circle we go. No antibiotics needed since the animals are not sick. No chemical fertilizers needed because the animal waste provides the nourishment the plants need. Far less expensive an operation, because there are fewer big, expensive, permanent buildings involved. Chickens are moved from field to field in light, wheeled structures that can be pulled by a tractor, and the cows can walk themselves. The cows are happy, the chickens are happy, the farmer is happy, and to top if off, this system of farming improves soil year to year, and it sequesters carbon! For more on this, read The Omnivore’s Dilemma, see Food Inc. or Fresh. Furthermore, this system of farming raises an enormous amount of food – as much or more than a factory farm.

We need to honour the food that nourishes us, and say thank you to the animals and plants that were sacrificed for our meal. This can be as much a spiritual practice as the spirituality that people seek by becoming vegetarian. We CAN choose what food we eat carefully, making sure the animals we eat lived a good life and only had one bad day rather than a lifetime of bad days. We CAN choose to shop from farmers who grow food in a sustainable way, and replenish the earth rather than deplete it by only choosing pastured animals along with organic, biodynamic or permiculture farming methods. In this way, even if we do choose to include animal foods in our diet, we can feel good about giving our bodies, our spirit, our conscience, and our planet what it needs to be healthy

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It is About the Processing of Our Foods

The most important factor now, when considering food, nutrition and public health, is not nutrients, and is not foods, so much as what is done to foodstuffs and the nutrients originally contained in them, before they are purchased and consumed. That is to say, the big issue is food processing – or, to be more precise, the nature, extent and purpose of processing, and what happens to food and to us as a result of processing. Specifically, the public health issue is ‘ultra-processing’, as defined here. This is my basic proposal. It is illustrated and symbolised by the mass-produced double cheese-and-bacon burger above. Such products are made at distance as separate items that are trucked in, assembled, and made ready-to-heat and –to-eat at a fast food site.

The proposal that food processing has an impact on public health may seem obvious. But it is largely overlooked by conventional nutrition science. As now applied in policies, programmes and interventions, nutrition science has failed to have much significant impact on what is currently the uncontrolled pandemic of obesity. As a result, it is now seen by policy-makers and the public as not particularly relevant to their needs. To be blunt, our science has become somewhat discredited. One reason, as I maintain here, is that it continues to depend on concepts and food classifications devised almost a century ago, which are now obsolescent.

This commentary concerns the impact of food processing on human health. Its scope is relatively modest. It only very briefly touches on cultural and other social impacts of ultra-processed branded products, their use by transnational and other giant industries to displace traditional food systems and small businesses, and other economic impacts (1). It does not touch on the effects of the globalised food system in its present form on national and international stability, the living and physical environment, and the biosphere (2,3). Proper discussion of these fundamental and crucial issues is for a later

To read the rest of this article, click on this link

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Tips for Choosing a Grass Fed Supplier

1. Make sure your rancher raises grass fed beef so that you can take advantage of the health benefits associated with higher omega-3 fatty acids, CLA, lower saturated fats, lower cholesterol, and fewer calories.

2. The cattle should be grazing in an open, clean pasture and with no use of artificial supplements, grain or animal by-products (mad cow disease is transmitted via cows eating animal by-products).

3. Your grass farmer should be committed to using NO herbicides, NO pesticides, NO hormone implants, NO antibiotics.

4. Cattle must be moved directly from pasture to processor with no stop in a feedlot. The incidence of E.coli is dramatically reduced in cattle raised on forage and mad cow is not an issue with forage-raised beef.

5. Make sure your beef is processed in a plant that takes pride in processing each animal one at a time… not the big, high speed, factory assembly-line processing plants. This will contribute greatly to the purity of your beef.

6. Your beef should be processed in a USDA inspected facility whose HACCP protocol is of the highest standard. Also, this processor should use NO chemical baths, NO chlorine and NO irradiation for treating your beef… a common process in large assembly line operations.

7. Choose a grass farmer who adheres to high ethical standards in the humane treatment of livestock. Raising cattle as they were intended to be raised… on open pasture, not in confined pens full of mud and manure.

8. Your grass farmer should incorporate genetics, grazing management protocol, and low stress handling of the animals in concern for the high quality of the beef produced and the consistency of quality.

9. Your grass fed beef should be dry aged for tenderness and flavor enhancement. Grass fed beef needs dry aging for the full experience of gourmet beef.

10. Your grass farmer should be committed to a management protocol with the greatest of concern for the environmental integrity of the land. They should practice rotational grazing which naturally replaces the nutrients removed from the soil.

Josh Rubin

http://www.eastwesthealing.com

The Dirty Dozen

The Environmental Working Group (EWG) has put together a list of foods they call The Dirty Dozen – foods you always want buy organic. Read why you want to buy organic. On a budget?  Included is a list of foods that do not have to be organic.

To see the complete list, click here.

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Why Mess with Mother Nature – Raw Milk!

This is a topic I am quite passionate about. I find it maddening that in this wonderful state of Illinois, I cannot go to the store and purchase organic raw dairy. I can buy cigarettes and alcohol but purchasing quality milk is strictly illegal. Oh I can go to a farm, if you can find one because they that cannot advertise, and buy raw milk. Does this make sense? I’m not suggesting that they make pasteurized milk illegal so that everyone is forced to choose raw – all I want is the choice to be able to buy the healthy, enzyme and nutrition-rich raw dairy from pasture-fed cows grazing on certified organic land.

The only choice we have currently is the pasteurized stuff, where all the enzymes, vitamins and minerals have been destroyed. This does not even resemble milk from the cow.

The reason, we are told is it is for our own health, and that the bacteria in raw dairy are dangerous. This was true in the past before refrigeration, stainless steel tanks and when the milking barns were less clean. When one looks at the incidences of sickness from milk, just as many people get sick from pasteurized milk as raw. Even Louis Pasteur, the person that told the world that heating up food will kill the bacteria in the food, admitted late in life that the problem is not the germ, but rather the terrain.

What is the answer? Do your own research and make up your own mind, but in my opinion, best is certified organic, pasture-fed, raw dairy. If you cannot find raw dairy – do not waste your money on the the CRAP from the grocery stores.

Many people that are sensitive to dairy do well on raw, as it has the enzymes in it to help with digestion. I would not recommend consuming raw dairy from grain-fed or factory farmed cows. Remember that cows are meant to eat grass, not grain, so make sure the cows have daily access to pasture so the cows are as healthy as possible.

There are many who believe that once milk is pasteurized there is absolutely no point in drinking it at all, and this is true. If one can’t access raw and you must have milk, chose low heat pasteurized, non homogenized full fat certified organic milk. Homogenization is the process milk undergoes where it is passed through a micro filter so that the fat globules are broken down into tiny little bits and stay suspended in the milk. The smaller fat molecules have more surface area, which makes them more prone to oxidation. You will be able to tell if the milk is non-homogenized, as the cream in the milk rises to the top of the bottle. The reason for full fat is we cannot absorb the minerals in the milk without the saturated fat which acts like a carrier. So if you are drinking skim milk to get the calcium, it isn’t working, unless you are having some quality fatty meat with it. Secondly, most milk producers put milk powder in lower-fat milks in order to keep the consistency smooth, and these powders are made by spray-drying the milk proteins and fats, which oxidizes the cholesterol in them. Cholesterol is not harmful, but oxidized cholesterol is very dangerous and is linked to heart disease. Milk manufacturers are not required to list milk-powders on the label.
Be sure to read the ingredient list on the dairy you choose, and select a brand that does not have extra stuff in it.
Again this is a personal decision, but my thoughts are we should not mess with Mother Nature!

Need help finding raw milk – then contact me I can help you find a source

Contact Linda

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Why Not MSG!

• MSG – is an addictive neurotoxin that accumulates in the tissues, causes weight gain and a host of other problems. Things to know about MSG:

  • Neuroscientist agree that MSG is a neurotoxin, killing brain neurons by exciting them to death
  • Despite the fact that in 1980 MSG was added to the FDA’s list of additives needing further study due to the uncertainties that exist, MSG has been increasingly added to food products
  • Studies reveal that when fed to pregnant rats MSG causes the offspring to suffer from learning disabilities
  • In other studies on small animals MSG has been proven to cause brain damage to the young. As a result many baby food manufacturers have removed MSG from their products. However, there are still junior food products and baby formulas on the market that contain MSG. Ironically, many formulas for allergic infants contain larger amounts of MSG than the regular formulas.
  • The leading reaction to MSG, which may take up to 48 hours to appear, is migraine headaches.
  • MSG also effects the hunger center of the brain causing those who eat it crave it more. That is why food manufacturers put it in their products – it keeps you coming back for more!!!!!!!!
  • MSG causes weight gain. It is actually fed to laboratory animals to fatten hem up for research without increasing their food intake.

When you consider that an estimated 60-90% of processed, packaged and frozen foods contain MSG, and the majority of the foods consumed in this country are these, it is understandable why so many people are sick, tired and overweight.

Food Manufactures disguise this toxic additive under more than 27 different names, MSG can be avoided. The best way to do so is to eat primarily whole, fresh natural and organic foods.

Symptoms Associated with MSG:-Headaches/migraines
-Lethargy
-Dizziness
-Weight Gain
-Pressure Around the Eyes
-Anxiety/Panic Attacks
-Extreme Fatigue
-Blurred Vision
-Hyperactivity/ADD
-Depression
-Runny Nose
-Behavioral Problems
-Burning Sensation -Sneezing
-Irritability/Angry Outbursts
-Numbness/Tingling
-Shortness of Breath
-Muscle/Joint Pain/Stiffness
-Chest Pain/Tightness
-Asthma Attacks
-Bloating
-Rapid Heartbeat
-Frequent Urination
-Nausea
-Drowsiness
-Seizures
-Vomiting
-Foggy Thinking
-Insomnia
-Stomach/Intestinal Cramps
-Weakness
-Chills and Shakes
-PMS/Menopausal Issues

Terms that ALWAYS Indicate MSG:-Monosodium glutamate
-Plant protein extract
-Autolyzed yeast
-Sodium caseinate
-Yeast Extract
-Calcium Caseinate
-Hydrolyzed protein
-Textured protein
-Hydrolyzed plant protein
-Hydrolyzed oat flour
-Hydrolyzed vegetable protein
-Potassium glutamate

Terms that Frequently Indicate MSG:-malt extract
-flavoring
-malto-dextrin
-natural flavoring/artificial flavoring
-bouillon
-natural beef or chicken flavoring
-broth
-seasonings
-stock
-spices
-salad dressing mixes

Terms that May Indicate Hidden MSG:-soy sauce
-protein fortified
-enzyme modified
-gelatin
-fermented
-carrageen
-ultra-pasteurized

Contact Linda

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