Posts tagged bone broth
Eating in Captivity
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For me, this is easy. I am (healthily) obsessed with cooking - most of the time I would choose to eat my own food to eating out.

Eating healthy is one of the most important things we could do for ourselves and our families - all the time. But right now, when keeping our immune systems performing at the highest capacity could determine life or death, it is indispensable. We need vitamins A, D, E, and C, and minerals like zinc, selenium, iron, and copper to keep our immune systems working well and getting them from food, not supplements is the best way to go.

Now that we are in captivity and spending much more time at home, we have an opening to embrace home cooking and all the physical, emotional and creative joys that come from it. I realize time spent in the kitchen may not be as cathartic to others as it is for me - chopping onions may bring tears to your eyes in more ways than one.

And for you, I write this. Here are some ways to simplify home cooking - and reset the way you think about it.

1. Focus on nutrient density. When I cook, I try to prioritize getting as many nutrients as possible. You may be thinking, great, no wine, no carbs. This mindset around food would make me very unhappy - deprivation has nothing to do with this. It is more about choices. (Low sugar, natural wines, smart carbs). Let your nutrient rich foods be the stars of the show, and let the rest be the supporting actors. (Some examples: dark leafy greens, cruciferous vegetables, a rainbow of colored vegetables and fruits, wild salmon, organ meats, bone broth. With every decision we make in life, inclusive of food choices, we are either choosing to a longer and better life, or the opposite.

2. Remove vegetable and seed oils (canola, sunflower, safflower, soy). Stick with extra virgin olive oils, grass fed butters, ghee, tallow, lard.

3. Choose simple recipes and be flexible.  You can do a lot with 5 simple ingredients - and if you find you don’t have all the ingredients you need for a specific recipe, there are many ways to substitute. Often an online search can help you do this. There are thousands of recipes online and thousands of different ways to search for them. (One site I love to explore for new ideas is Food52). Here is a link to a few of my favorite soups, perfect for chillier days. And here is a gut-healing, super nourishing bone broth recipe.

4. Get creative. Find your cooking voice. Different seasonings, dressings and sauces can turn a “plain” meal into a transcendent experience. Be adventurous and willing to experiment.

5. Make more than you think you need. Our neighbors have a guava tree in front of their house. We opened the door a few days ago to find a lovely handwritten note and a jar of homemade guava paste. A thoughtful gesture like this has the ability to change a person’s day - as it did mine. Share your abundance with friends and neighbors. Or, save them for another day. Leftovers can (usually) be frozen.

6. This is a bonus. Have you experimented with intermittent fasting or compressed feeding windows? Now would be a good time. Inadvertently, you’d be cooking (and eating) less and doing your body good - it can help boost immune functioning and cellular clean up. If this is new to you, here are some ways to go about fasting.

If you’d like to talk about meal planning, prepping or even just some ideas for recipes, contact me. It would be my pleasure to help.

Do you have any cooking secrets or stories to share? I would love to hear them.

Live longer and better
Image by Michael Regalbuto

Image by Michael Regalbuto

It is what we are all striving for. What ultimately shapes our behaviors around diet, exercise - and swallowing a mouthful of vitamins, probiotics, fish oils, etc, on a daily basis. But for how long and how well can we, human beings, live? I can say with confidence that we can live over 100 years at least. According to Chinese lore, there was a man named Li Ching-Yuen who lived to the age of 256 years. A French woman, Jeanne Calment recently died at 122 years. Currently, the oldest known living person is Kane Tanaka of Japan, aged 117 years.

If we were to take a snapshot of the life extending efforts in the US, we would guess the average life expectancy to be up there - at least close to the 100 year mark. Yet, despite all the attention being given to extending lifespan in the scientific community - metformin, resveratrol, NAD, human growth hormone, stem cells, exosomes, severe calorie restriction, transferring blood from the young to the old - the average American only lives to about 77 years, and this number is steadily dropping.

Let’s set aside these tactics predominantly geared towards the well-heeled and consider those who are actually living over 100 years - and more importantly, living them well. I don’t know about you, but the only way I’d like to extend this particular life is if it can be lived with immense joy and passion, emotional and spiritual fulfillment, with physical grace and ease and continuous growth. In the book The Blue Zones, by Dan Buettner, highlights areas of the world where people are living to at least 100 years - Okinawa, Japan, Sardinia, Italy, Nicoya, Costa Rica, Ikaria, Greece, and the 7th Day Adventists in Loma Linda, California. Though these communities are geographically worlds apart, their lives shows how close they are in lifestyle practices. The way I see it, the people living in the Blue Zones have figured out the essence of living well and almost accidentally live longer as a result.

Here is how I breakout down.

SELF-LOVE.

There is an element of connection and care that goes into the food eaten in the Blue Zones. They primarily eat home-grown or locally grown, nutrient dense foods consisting of mostly plants, including wild foraged plants. The plant food they eat is traditionally prepared. This involves soaking, sprouting, and fermenting. Their diets are also supplemented with some animal protein, consisting of free range, grass-fed or pastured meats, and wild fish. They eat nose to tail with plenty of glycine-rich foods such as bone broth and marrow and their diets are free from any added chemicals, antibiotics and growth hormone. Packaged foods, excess sugars and processed vegetables and seed oils are never on the menu. This attention and care to what is put in the body clearly reflects self-honor and respect - self-love.

Closely connected to self-love is stress management. Stress is inevitable no matter what color your zone. What sets the happier, longer living folks apart are the ways in which they manage stress. For the Okinawans, it is their mindset. They live by the concept of “tangay” or having a going-with-the-flow vibe about them. For Sardinians, it means a nightly dinner with family and/or friends and a glass of locally made, natural wine.

We can all get a little closer the the Blue Zones way of eating and managing our stress by cooking more often (aim for 80% of the time), sharing time with loved ones, having a meditation practice, using breath work to alleviate stress.

One final note about loving yourself. Don’t smoke. If you do, quit. You are not doomed to an early death. Your body has the capability of reversing the damage.

CHALLENGES.

We are all susceptible to repetition. Routines. I champion (and am highly protective of) my morning routine. If all else crumbles as the day unfolds, I have, at the very least, had an experience of expansive optimism, calm and fluidity first thing in the morning. It grounds me.

But a strong argument can be made for balancing out the sweet and comfortable with challenges. Our physical, mental and (dare I say) emotional health depend on it. Challenges are the only way we are able to move forward.

So, challenge yourself through food. Eat wild plants.  Plants, especially wild, have a mildly toxic built-in defense mechanism to protect themselves. Every time we eat wildly, our bodies react to these toxins and we experience a positive physiological effect. This is the concept of hormesis and with regards to plants, xenohormesis. The Blue Zoners eat a large amount of wild plants, herbs, and spices.

Another way to challenge yourself through food is to not eat it. Fast sometimes. Calorie restrict sometimes. Almost every culture has built into their lifestyle periods of fasting, eating less or abstaining from certain foods at specific times of the year. Your mitochondria will thank you. Every few months I challenge myself with a bone broth-mini fasting reset week or my riff on an Ayurvedic calorie restricting cleanse using kitchari.

Challenge yourself through movement. Engage in high intensity movement every so often. While you could find this type of high intensity training at the gym in the form of interval classes or Crossfit, you can also create it at home. Challenge your kids to a game of tag. Pick something heavy up and move around a few times a day. Having a heavy kettlebell hanging around helps with this and cranks up the heart rate in a hurry. I make an effort to pick mine up and do 30-50 swings a few times a day.

Be temperature challenged - get very hot and very cold. Not only is this good for your physical body by helping with detoxification, the creation of brown fat and improving vagal tone, but has numerous psychological and cognitive benefits as well.

Trying new things falls into the challenge category. Be adventurous. Take trips. Learn new activities. Your body, brain and sense of happiness are improved when you break out of the norm.

CONNECTION.

The last piece of the The Blue Zones puzzle is having a sense of deep connection. To the community, to family, to nature, and perhaps most importantly, to their purpose. This has something to do with the notion that there is a bigger meaning in life.

Having social rituals helps instill this feeling. Some people find this in church. Others in sharing meals with family and/or friends. It may be helpful to join a club surrounding something you love to do. Think back to when you were a child. What did you most look forward to doing? Might it be time to rediscover that hobby?

Movement is also tied into this. Low level movement all day long keeps us connected to our bodies and more scientifically keeps chemicals and hormones flowing, keeping our joints fluid and our brains healthy. Moving in nature is even better. Nature nurtures us in many ways. Sunlight (dose dependent) heals. Gardening, walks on the beach, spending time in the forest amongst the trees are all great ways to do this.

I find connection through cooking. I love the friendships I’ve made at the farmers markets here in LA. I am passionate about learning new recipes, trying new techniques and spices, experimenting with different varieties of foods and flavors, and sharing my creations with my family and friends. Food is spiritual for me and cooking meditative. I am present in every moment of it. I have deep appreciation and gratitude for the goodness the earth offers us and revel in the ability to be a part of it through my cooking.

Meditation is a wonderful practice for creating space for connection. Why not make a commitment to try 21 days of meditation. It takes about that long for a new habit to form. If you’d like some ideas on how to start, send me a note.

So now that we are on the path to a long, joyful living, let’s connect.

How can we best serve you? Would you like to see more events from us? What do you want to hear about?

7 steps to better gut health, naturally
The New Potato

The New Potato

Turns out Hippocrates was right. All disease begins in the gut. He made this statement over 2000 years ago and now we are discovering how true it really is. An unhealthy microbiome is linked to a myriad of illnesses including allergies, autism, blood sugar dysregulation, depression, diabetes, autoimmunity, cancer, heart disease, fibromyalgia, eczema, and asthma - so much so, the microbiome is being referred to as the second brain. Keeping your gut in tip-top shape is arguably the most important thing you can do to living a long and healthful life.

What is the microbiome?

The microbiome is the community of microorganisms including bacteria, fungi, protozoa and viruses living in the human body. The human gut is home to approximately 100 trillion microorganisms. The are 100x more bacterial DNA in the gut than all the DNA in the human body. According to Chris Kresser, Functional Medicine and ancestral health clinician and educator, gut microbes regulate 70 to 80 percent of the immune system, influence blood sugar control, modulate the function of the brain, bone, heart, skin, eyes and muscle tissue.

How does the microbiome become unbalanced?

  1. A poor diet. The Standard American Diet chock full of pro-inflammatory processed foods, refined carbohydrates and industrial seed oils will do the trick. Couple this with low fermentable fiber intake and essentially, the ecosystem of the gut is starved of the bacterial diversity.

  2. Chronic stress. Your gut is influenced by thoughts and emotions. Stress directly signals the release of chemicals that disruptively impact gastric secretion, gut motility, and gut permeability. Conversely, an impaired gut microbiome also affects mental health and wellbeing.

  3. Chronic infection. Underlying viral, bacterial and fungal infections, often undetected, negatively impact the make up of gut bacteria.

  4. Medication. While the use of antibiotics and the degradation of the gut microbiome is quite well known, other medications such as birth control, NSAIDs (non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drugs) and Proton pump inhibitors also significantly alter the gut..

  5. Lack of sleep. We are obsessed with good sleep in our house. With good reason. One is the impact it can have on the gut. A dysregulated circadian rhythm and not getting enough good quality sleep can contribute to imbalances in the gut microbiome.

7 steps to better gut health.

  1. Eating real foods is the first step.

    • Focus on eating unprocessed, unrefined real food - meaning as close to the way nature delivers it as possible.

    • Cut out refined sugars and other refined carbohydrates.

    • Eat lots of plants, including prebiotic foods that feed healthy gut bacteria.

    • Take a high quality probiotic supplement. I take SEED.

    • Remove inflammatory vegetable oils from the diet and replace them with healthier oils such as extra virgin olive oil, coconut oil and avocado oil.

    • Eat plenty of fermented foods such as kimchi, sauerkraut, yogurt, and kefir to help boost the population of healthy bacteria in the gut.

    • Eat healing, collagen-rich foods such as bone broth which fights inflammation and nourishes the intestinal lining. Here are some additional benefits of bone broth along with a delicious homemade recipe.

  2. Manage your stress levels.

    • Here are some ways to cultivate a healthy mindset.

    • Here are a few breath work protocols to effectively help manage stress.

    • Use resources to help to start a mediation practice. Headspace and Insight Timer are my favorites.

  3. Check for possible underlying infections. Stool testing is a valuable tool - ask your doctor.

  4. Exercise. Regular movement helps keep gut microbes in tip top shape. Develop a sustainable routine. Here are some ideas.

  5. Tidy up your sleep hygiene. Seven to eight hours of high quality sleep are ideal for supporting gut health. Need some tips on how to get there? Turn your room into a dark, cool cave, minimize blue light post sundown and try to maintain a regular sleep-wake schedule, even on the weekends. You can find many more tips here.

You’ll be surprised at how much of an impact reseting your gut will have on your overall life. It will positively effect your sleep, help you lose those extra pounds you can’t seem to shed, give you more energy, improve your digestion, reduce inflammation and clear your brain. Oh, and your skin will glow! Join us on our inaugural Bone Broth and Mini-Fast Reset in January. For more information, see here.

By the way, this would make an awesome holiday gift to a loved one or yourself!

Souper Power!
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Summer is no longer lingering here in NY. As the weather has become crisp and chilly - as fall should be - my focus lies on two things. First, making the house feel warm and cozy. We begin to enjoy dinners by candle or oil lamp light. Thick, yummy blankets come out of their summer hiding places to snuggle with us on Friday “movie nights”. Second, I shift how we nourish ourselves. The Instant Pot is out on heavy rotation as I busily conjure up a vast array of chilis, soups and stews. Vast, to keep things interesting for me to make and the rest of the Cooks to eat.

At the base of all my wintry preparations is none other then bone broth. It is the foundation of every chili, soup, stew and the like that I make all fall and winter long. Why?

In a nutshell, the big secret here is collagen (and gelatin). Collagen is found only in animal flesh and connective tissue and is a fundamental part of bone, containing a large amount of amino acids. Aside from water, it is the most common material found in the body. It makes up 70% of the skin, 90% of bone mass and 90% of connective tissue. Believe it or not, our endogenous production of collagen begins to slow down in our 20’s!

Our ancestors practiced nose to tail eating. They never knew when they would have their next successful hunt and couldn’t really afford to waste any part of the animal including skin, bones, hooves, tails and knuckles. What they discovered was that by cooking down the tougher scraps, they were able to draw out all kinds of beneficial nutrients such as magnesium, calcium, and collagen protein. Eating this way is no longer common practice and boosting our collagen is therefore crucial. Bone broth contains the most bioavailable form of collagen.

Here is a list of some of the key properties of bone broth.

  1. Bone broth helps heal your gut. It contains glycine, and amino acid that helps heal and protect the gut through it’s anti-inflammatory, immune regulating and cell protecting properties. Glycine is also a major player when it comes to detoxification, reducing oxidative damage, enhancing insulin sensitivity, and regulating human growth hormone.

  2. Bone broth contains the joint healing nutrients glucosamine and chondroitin.

  3. Bone broth aka Mother Nature’s Botox, does wonders for your skin. The collagen in it helps smooth out wrinkles and stretch marks and can even help reverse sagging skin. Bone broth also contains glycosaminoglycans which help keep the skin plump and supple. In addition, bone broth strengthens nails and encourages hair growth.

  4. Bone broth helps fight inflammation - glycine, proline, glucosamine and chondroitin all have anti-inflammatory properties.

  5. Bone broth is helpful for weight loss. Through its anti-inflammatory and gut healing properties, it allows your body to maintain a healthy GI tract which in turn helps facilitate weight loss. For more on this look into The Bone Broth Diet, popularized by Dr. Kellyanne Petrucci. It combines clean, anti-inflammatory eating with intermittent fasting and bone broth.

  6. Glycine found in bone broth is a sleep aid. It works on the central nervous system to improve sleep quality.

  7. Bone broth is versatile, rich, complex and soul satisfying.


Turmeric Bone Broth Latte

Turmeric Bone Broth Latte

Want to try making your own? Thousands of recipes can be found online, but these are the beef and chicken versions I make. I use an Instant Pot, but the recipe works in a regular old stock pot or slow cooker as well. Instead of the 2 hours in the Instant Pot, simmer for 12-48 hours.

*It is CRITICAL to use high quality bones as it is in the skin and bones that toxins are stored. Go to a trusted butcher and ask for 100% organic grass fed beef bones and 100% organic pastured pork and chicken.

*Adding apple cider vinegar to the pot and letting it sit for 30 minutes or more before turning on the heat will help extract the most out of your bones.

*For a richer flavor, roast the bones before adding them to the pot.

INSTANT POT (MOSTLY) BEEF BONE BROTH RECIPE

2 stalks celery roughly chopped
2 carrots roughly chopped
1 onion cut into large chunks
5 cloves garlic smashed
3.5-4 lbs grass-fed beef bones (preferably knuckle bones and joints)
1 pastured pig’s foot (optional, but is a great source of additional collagen)
2 bay leaves
2 tablespoons apple cider vinegar
Kosher Salt
Filtered Water

Instructions:

Place the bones and foot (if using) into the Instant Pot. Add apple cider vinegar, and let sit for 30+ minutes. In the meanwhile, chop your vegetables.
Drop in the vegetables, bay leaves, and sprinkle with salt.
Cover the contents with water, but make sure the pot is not more then two-thirds full.
Cover and lock the lid and set to high pressure.
Set the timer for 2 hours and let the pressure release naturally.
Strain the liquid, discard the solids and place in the fridge overnight. This is simply to let the fat rise to the top and solidify. It makes it a lot easier to skim the fat off the top.
Drink the broth alone or add to recipes - even smoothies!

To substitute chicken for the beef, use 2 1/2-4 lbs of pastured chicken bones (from another meal or a butcher). You can use a pig’s foot here too, and/or about 6-8 chicken’s feet. Follow the rest of the recipe as written.

Our favorite way to enjoy bone broth is in latte form, blended with a little grass-fed butter, ghee or extra virgin olive oil, turmeric, cumin, a dash or two of cayenne pepper, sea salt and freshly ground black pepper.

Don’t have time for make your own? We like Brodo Bone Broth, available in Wholefoods, Fairway and other grocery stores and Kettle and Fire.


Some interesting related facts:

“All disease begins in the gut”, said Hippocrates, the Father of Medicine. Documented as early as 400 BC, he recognized the healing powers of bone broth and prescribed it to those with digestive disorders.

In 1845 American industrialist, Peter Cooper, secured a patent for powdered gelatin. (Bone broth cooked over a long period of time turns the collagen in the bones turns to gelatin).

Other collagen boosting foods include wild salmon, chlorella, leafy greens, citrus fruits, eggs, berries, tomatoes, pumpkin seeds, avocados, garlic, chia seeds.


Do you eat the tendons, ligaments, joints and bones? Do you eat the skin off your chicken or turkey? Personally, these are some my favorite bits! image:www.foodinsight.org

Do you eat the tendons, ligaments, joints and bones? Do you eat the skin off your chicken or turkey? Personally, these are some my favorite bits! image:www.foodinsight.org

(Full disclosure:  There are some affiliate links above.  While we make a little bit of money if you make a purchase using our links, it is at no extra cost to you.  Rest assured, we honestly wouldn't be recommending them if we didn't believe in them)!



Evolutionary Gift Guide

2017 is coming to a close and it’s a good time to take note of who we are and where we choose to direct our futures.  The political turmoil, natural disasters and other struggles we’ve experienced this year may not necessarily subside in 2018, but in unison, we grow stronger and more resilient.  How will you show gratitude to those you’ve leaned on in your life this holiday?  (By the way, did you know that the simple act of expressing gratitude is scientifically proven to improve physical and psychological health and sleep)? 

This is a busy time, so we'll keep it short and sweet, but wanted to leave you with a few (very) last minute transformative gift ideas that will redefine your own or your loved ones’ life experience. 

Have a wonderful holiday friends!

1. DEEP HEALTH EVOLUTION 6-MONTH COMPLETE PROGRAM
This is the ultimate evolutionary experience.  Over the next 6 months, this program will profoundly improve your health, physically transform, nourish yourself, sleep better, find a deeper sense of peace and contentment, calm the inner chatter in your mind, learn and implement new daily routines so you can be stronger and healthier. You will also experience much less stress and have powerful tools to deal with the stress when it does appear…and inevitably, it will.  For more information, send us an email, greggcook@deephealthevolution.com
 
2. DEEP HEALTH EVOLUTION 6-MONTH HEALTH COACH PROGRAM
Have you ever made a New Year’s Resolution involving eating healthier, working out more or prioritizing sleep, only to fall back to your usual less than optimal habits a month later?  You are not the only one.  The reason is, changing deeply ingrained behaviors is really hard.  Here is where a well-trained health coach can help.  A health coach can help discover what personally motivates you and work with you to determine goals, develop strategies for change and provide accountability and support.  Help a loved one (or yourself) successfully stick to a health goal/resolution this year and gift them a Deep Health Evolution 6-month Health Coach program with Fatima.  For more details, send us an email, greggcook@deephealthevolution.com.
 
For wrappable gifts, here are some other ideas.

 
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We personally have a couple of these Molekule air purifiers in our home.  They are beautiful, and unlike HEPA filters, they not only trap dust, mold and other airborne nasties, but also destroy them.  Use our link for a $50 discount.


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Organifi Green Juice is the tastiest, most nutrient dense, carefully crafted and easy to use green juice we’ve ever had.  The ingredient list is entirely organic and includes wheatgrass, spiralina, ashwaganda, turmeric and moringa.  You get all of this goodness with no blending, no juicing and no mess, and it really is delicious.  Use code greggcook for 15% off.

Here is a pretty BPA free, glass shaker bottle to complete the package!


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The Instant Pot simplifies home cooked meals.  It is a work horse.  This model can perform 10 functions, from pressure cooking to slow cooking and even yogurt making.  Add an elegant, heartfelt touch and include the bone broth recipe below on a handwritten note card.


INSTANT POT (MOSTLY) BEEF BONE BROTH RECIPE

2 stalks celery roughly chopped
2 carrots roughly chopped
1 onion cut into large chunks
5 cloves garlic smashed
3.5-4 lbs grass-fed beef bones (preferably knuckle bones and joints)
1 pastured pig’s foot (optional, but is a great source of additional collagen)
2 bay leaves
2 tablespoons apple cider vinegar
Kosher Salt
Filtered Water

Instructions:

Place all vegetables into the Instant Pot.  Add the bones and the foot, if using.
Drop in the bay leaves, add the vinegar and sprinkle with salt.
Cover the contents with water, but make sure the pot is not more then two-thirds full.
Cover and lock the lid and set to high pressure.
Set the timer for 2 hours and let the pressure release naturally.
Strain the liquid, discard the solids and place in the fridge overnight. This is simply to let the fat rise to the top and solidify. It makes it a lot easier to skim the fat off the top.
Drink the broth alone or add to recipes.

Our favorite way to enjoy bone broth is blended with a little grass-fed butter, turmeric, cumin, sea salt and freshly ground black pepper.