Easy Lacto-fermented Ketchup

Ketchup is rich condiment that gives everything a little extra umami and sweetness, however most ketchups contain a shockingly high amount of sugar. Swap out conventional ketchup for this nutritious version with probiotics.

2, 6 ounce cans of tomato paste
1/4 cup sucanat or natural sweetener of choice
1/3 cup water
2 tablespoons raw apple cider vinegar
1/8 teaspoon clove
1/4 teaspoon cinnamon
1/8 teaspoon mustard powder
sea salt to taste

In a small saucepan dissolve sucanat in warm water.
Combine sugar water, tomato paste, vinegar, clove, cinnamon, mustard powder and salt in a quart jar and stir until well combined. Cover with a lid and allow to ferment in a warm spot for 2-5 days, then transfer to refrigerator.

Chocolate Avocado and Banana Cookies

Sometimes chocolate cookies are very necessary. Here’s a scrumptious gluten-free cookie recipe I will be making for my grandmother, who drastically reduced her arthritis by going gluten-free.

1 ripe avocado
1 banana
2 tablespoons raw honey
1 egg
½ cup cocoa powder
Dark chocolate chips, to taste
½ teaspoon baking soda

Preheat your oven to 350 F.
In a large bowl combine the avocado, banana and honey until smooth.
Mix in the egg, baking soda, cocoa powder and chocolate chips.
Drop spoonfuls of cookie dough on a greased baking sheet pan.
Bake until cookies are firm, about 8-10 minutes.

Enjoy these bad boys while you soak up some spring sun.

Nourishing Our Whole Selves

Nourishing Our Whole Selves

I am a confident and outgoing person, yet I struggle with chronic anxiety and depression. I often wake up at night overwhelmed with worry and doubt. Towards the end of 2017, my depression was near crippling. I laid awake at night running over lists and scenarios in my head and would rise the following morning exhausted. I was uninspired and became irritable. I wasn’t enjoying motherhood or spending time with friends and family. With a little push from a friend and client, I decided to get help.

Less than six months later, I feel like a new person. With a few daily homeopathic supplements recommended by Miriam Mackey of Likewise Homeopathy, whom I highly recommend for all your physical and existential troubles, I continue to practice mindfulness techniques to keep me grounded and present. From the afternoon of our first visit to the following morning I felt the ominous fog that had been usurping my life begin to lift away. My liveliness was still low from months of sleeplessness but I began to have energy for ideas. I was finally able to think again.

My First Dream, Glitter and Sisterhood
I wanted to put together a contingent for Carnaval San Francisco. But I wanted it to be more than just a weekly rehearsal. I wanted to start finding my people, to create a beautiful community where we can support each other through all of our various struggles. Together in a sea of glitter while we practice our Samba. I want to strengthen our bonds, or as a friend once said “tighten the hoop” in a fun and exciting way.

Nourishing Our Bodies
I’m still a holistic personal trainer and cannot negate the fact that the Carnaval Grand Parade is essentially a marathon. And to be able to maintain the same amount of energy and sparkle Sambaing down the first block until 1.7 miles later, you need to train. This means building up endurance, which entails proper nutrition as well as cardio and strength training. I want to support my dancers to be as explosive at 17th and Harrison as 24th and Harrison. So I consulted the talented and deeply generous Executive Chef, Jefferson Sevilla, of the Town Kitchen, a great social enterprise that I suggest you order your next lunch from, to compose a meal plan that is rich in nutrition and delicious. It is designed to enhance your digestion so you can beam from within as you leap, twirl and blow kisses through the decorated streets of San Francisco…or while taking out the trash.

Our bodies are designed for movement, our muscles and joints allow us to pivot, hinge and glide. I constructed a workout series that focuses on using our bodies in ways that will enhance grace and coordination. It centers on core engagement, flexibility and limb isolation. Thank you and rest in power Katherine Dunham, who gave the world a lexicon for Afro-Caribbean dance.

The Event Horizon
Wow. After weeks immersed in social media ad buying, wholesale fringe and listening to an endless amount of Favella Funk, our first rehearsal happened. And I’m so proud. I’m proud of myself for conquering my anxiety. I’m proud to have so many people in my life who support me. I’m proud of the womyn who came out and are as excited as I am about this journey. I am finding my people and spending time with them is empowering. My soul is nourished and I want to share this feeling with others.

Join us
The parade is still many weeks away and you can still join our sisterhood (and potentially brotherhood). Rehearsals are Monday nights at 7:30 at Rhythmix Cultural Works in Alameda.

Show Up for Yourself

Why Hiit Works (1)

Injuries are a drag. In our fast paced world we are constantly exploring more ways to be efficient, we are often thinking about our next move, which can be dangerous. When it comes to exercising it is important to leave that busy mind at the door and take the time to connect with yourself. It’s easy to slip into thinking about our to-do list but when you let your mind wander you might let your form wander too and that is what often leads to the aching back or knee.

Good form is key to a good workout. I workout as an investment in myself. I use it as an opportunity to quiet my mind and be present with myself. When I’m being mindful of my body, my stretches go deeper, my movements are smooth and  I feel stronger. As a mom I do a lot for other people so my workout is my time for myself and I try to make to the most of it by focusing on just that, myself.

When I show up for myself, I feel the difference so I encourage you to show up for yourself and invest in your body and well being.

Overcoming Dieting

I’ve teamed up with Sheira Kahn, MFT, so that we can help get people the support they need to become their best selves. Here’s a piece she wrote about growing up with an eating disorder and how she overcame.

When I was 12, I started “watching my weight” which meant counting calories and worrying that I was fat. I wasn’t overweight, but I wasn’t skinny and when I was 13, I decided to go on this diet that my friend’s mother recommended. (It was the 9-Day Miracle Diet from Good Housekeeping, I believe. Does anybody remember it?) The diet entailed fasting for four days on weak orange-ade, then eating plain chicken for five more days. That an adult would sanction this for a child shows how crazy people were about losing weight. My jeans were falling off at the end and I got lots of compliments, but food never tasted so good and I could not stop eating. I gained back the weight and more.

It didn’t help that my parents were divorcing at the time. Other kids were joining sports and clubs but I dealt with my parents’ divorce by coming home after school and having Afternoon Snack. From a friend, I had learned how crazy you could go with food when the parents weren’t there. She showed me how to put brown sugar on piece after piece of buttered toast, and I did that alone for hours. Of course I gained weight and felt terrible. Girls in my town were admired for their looks first, and any other accomplishments second. I was failing on both counts.

After 8 months of bingeing followed by trying various new diets, my mom handed me her Weight Watchers cookbook. With a solemn voice, she told me many women had solved their weight problems with this book. I sensed it was a kind of bible and that I was being initiated into a secret of womanhood that would help me with my biggest problem. I followed everything it said and also started jogging. By the end of the summer, I had lost 15 pounds. Then I joined field hockey and lost 10 more. I was thrilled and everybody else seemed to be also, even my grandmother, who had been my one source of unconditional love.

But at the Acme supermarket in town, they made these powdered donuts filled with chocolate creme. Not cream, creme. One night, sick of the skim milk and Sweet ’n Low that served as my treat (not kidding), I succumbed to the donuts. I probably had more than one and less than three but I felt desperate not to gain back the weight that had so ruined my lovability the year before. I had read in a book that you could stick your finger down your throat to make yourself throw up and that’s exactly what I did. My eyes watering, my throat a little scratched from the fingernail, I was amazed to find that I felt free of guilt almost instantly. I don’t think I thought I would ever do it again, but that moment began 4 years of a spiral that threatened my life and took the life of my unborn children by ruining my fertility.

Let’s skip ahead, over the years of eating an entire sweet potato pie, of dismantling my boss’s gingerbread house and consuming the candy, then lying about it, over my double life of appearing to have it all together while bowing over the toilet nightly, telling no one. Let’s get to the part where it got so bad that I had to either handle the problem or give my life over to the disease. Fortunately, enough love had somehow gotten in that I chose the former. I started to read anything I could get my hands on that helped me make sense of the crazy things I did – and thought. I learned that the demon that made me punish my body was a mix of feelings and thoughts that lived in me, over which I could take control if I faced it head on. With the help of wise teachers and counselors in my twenties, that is what I did.

It did not occur to me to eat and exercise with love as the motivator. I knew that was a good idea, but too much had happened in my life that had translated into self-hatred. I had to understand this hatred before I could eat and exercise in a way that wasn’t punishing. It took a long time, but I knew that the other path, the path of hatred, was only going to destroy me so I practiced and practiced until self-love became my home station, and the hatred was the exception.

I hope it’s not as severe for you as my bout with bulimia, but if you struggle with your weight and your body, you may have a milder version of what I had, and the ways I got out of it might be useful for you. These are the practices I did that promoted me to love myself and have positive experiences with exercise and eating:

  1. I found a teacher (counselor) who saw the best in me and showed me how to do that for myself.
  2. I learned how to stop my self-hating thoughts and feelings. Related to no. 1, above, I undid the knot of painful feelings inside that had been translated into concerns about my weight.
  3. Using what I was learning about my basic lovability as a human being, I adjusted my motivation to exercise from losing weight to one of feeling the vitality and enjoyment of movement.
  4. I learned how to eat when I was hungry and stop when I was full, instead of either not stopping, or stopping when I had reached my calorie or carb limit. Eating became a source of enjoyment, satisfaction and energy, instead of a source of numbing out or feeling like a failure.
  5. I paid close attention to people who did not hate their bodies, absorbing what they said and did and how they talked to themselves.
  6. I accepted my body as it was and realized I was doing the best I could, instead of imposing a tough standard on myself.

Power to you! Enjoy becoming free.

 

Sheira Kahn is a Marriage and Family Therapist and Coach with an online practice and an office in Alameda, CA. She is co-author of The Erasing ED Treatment Manual, available on Amazon. She teaches in the UC Berkeley Extension Certificate Program for Eating and Weight Disorders. For her blog and more information about working with her, go to www.sheirakahn.com.

 

Breathe in the Calm

Toddlers are constantly learning and processing information. Part of that learning is about boundaries. Enforced boundaries can often lead to yelling, tears, mean words or some horrible combination. When my patience is tested with difficult behavior or my little one needs help calming down, we use some breathing techniques that help us both get centered and able to communicate better.

A Cooling Breath

When tempers flare and one of us or both of us are feeling hot headed we take a cooling breathe to chill us out.

Slowly inhale through pursed lips or a curled tongue, hold the chilled air in for a few seconds and then slowly exhale through the nose.040917 Molly exercice outdoor-19

Dragon’s Breath or Fire Breathing

When sadness consumes us and the world feels like it’s falling apart we take a warming breath to strengthen ourselves.

Make a fist and raise them above your head while sticking your thumbs out towards each other. Slowly inhale through the nose and exhale either over your teeth to make a “ch” sound or through your nose, in short burst so that your stomach is making a series of quick contractions.040917 Molly exercice outdoor-30.JPG

Lion’s Breath

When everything is annoying and there is no physical way my eyeballs can roll into the back of my head enough, we let it all out.

Slowly inhale through your nose, forward fold and open your mouth as big as you can while sticking out your tongue and releasing all the air at once with a big “ha” noise.

Dancing Candle

For moments of deep sadness we dance with the flame of a candle.

Light a candle and slowly blow on the flame just enough to make it dance but not enough to blow it out to.

 

Benefits of Enjoying Bone Broth

Benefits of bone broth

Bone broth is a powerful wellness tool. It is full of nutrients that aid in digestion and has many restorative properties. Here is a brief overview of how each component helps our bodies.

Bone Broth is High in Minerals

Macro and trace minerals (calcium, magnesium, potassium, trace minerals) and electrolytes from cartilage and bone marrow help our body grow and develop.

Calcium

The majority of the calcium found in our bodies is in our bones and teeth.  It also helps to contract our muscles, send messages through our nervous system and clot our blood. We loose minerals daily through our skin, nails, hair, sweat and waste.

Magnesium

Magnesium supports many other bodily functions such as bone integrity, nervous system maintenance and energy production.

Potassium

Potassium is an electrolyte that helps our cells and muscles communicate. Our cells use it to move nutrients in and waste out

Trace Minerals

Trace Minerals such as copper and zinc help support our general bodily functions. We need them in smaller quantities (less than 100mg/day) than the macro minerals (greater than 100mg/day).

Protein

Protein in the form of arginine and glycine can bond with other amino acids to form complete proteins.

Increases Digestion

Hydrophillic colloids from gelatin are clusters of water loving molecules that attract our digestive juices to the food suspended in our guts for rapid and effective digestion.

All of the nutrients in bone broth are bioavailable, making it an excellent multivitamin!

Need some ideas to incorporate bone broth into your life? Check out my 3 favorite ways enjoy bone broth for breakfast.

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3 Ways to Enjoy Bone Broth for Breakfast

3 ways to Enjoy Bone Broth for Breakfast

Enjoy 3 flavorful broths for breakfast

Breakfast is the most important meal of the day but that doesn’t always mean I’m ready to eat something when I first wake up. Bone broth is a great way to start the day because it is packed with minerals and anti-inflammatory properties that nourish your body inside and out. On days when food isn’t appealing in the mornings I will sip on bone broth. It’s enough to settle my stomach until I’m mentally prepared to eat actual food. .

Here are some of my go to recipes for a quick burst of nutrients in the morning.

Lemon Ginger Chicken Broth

This is a personal favorite of mine. Lemon and ginger brighten the velvety broth.

Bring 3 cups of broth to a simmer and stir in 3 tablespoons of fresh grated ginger and cover for 3 minutes on low heat. Remove from heat and allow to sit for 5 minutes. Serve in individual bowls or mugs with a large lemon slice.

Cinnamon Spice Beef Broth

I love the warming properties of cinnamon fused with the richness of beef broth, especially on cold mornings.

Bring 3 cups of beef broth to a simmer and stir in 2 tablespoons of cinnamon and 3 cloves or 1/2 teaspoon of ground clove and allow to simmer for on low heat until fragrant, about 8 minutes. Serve in individual mugs with a cinnamon stick and a dash of chili flakes.

Golden Turmeric Broth

Whenever I start to feel a little tickle in my nose or throat, I load up on turmeric for its amazing anti inflammatory and antimicrobial properties. It goes well with any broth you have available.

Bring 3 cups of broth to a simmer and stir in 3 tablespoons of fresh grated turmeric or 2 tablespoons of ground turmeric, with 1 tablespoon of cumin. Cover and allow to simmer for 5 minutes. Serve in individual mugs with minced fresh cilantro.

Want to know more about the healing and nutritious properties of bone broth? Read about the benefits of enjoying bone broth.