Wednesday, January 12, 2011

Snapshots from the Road and Green Smoothie Recipe


Just wanted to share a few snapshots from the road and an accidentally amazing smoothie that made the journey 'up' very easy for me.

Although it hasn't snowed since last week's rain, it's frozen hard and tight again, which means that every drop of moisture in the atmosphere has frozen on to any available surface. The result is so beautiful that I don't know why I persist in trying to describe the ineffable.

It was like that all the way up and all the way back. Many hours of beauty backlit by the sun. And good company! Phil's daughter and her fiance and a big, comfy car: it was a very different experience than the last couple of escapade.

Not to forget the two dogs. Buddy, who is 'super-good' and very ready to relax (when he's not on snowshoe hare hunt alert, which is what he loves most, of course) blended in perfectly with his camo blanket.

Meanwhile, Roxy, who means so well and is as good as she can be, needed to get down and explore often, although she did spend a good chunk of the trip on my lap, some of it licking all over the windows!
We stopped at a cute little mercantile for lunch on the way up on Monday: one of theses little general stores with a cafe attached and a surprisingly extensive inventory, from kitschy souvenirs to not-so-kitschy souvenirs to produce to dry goods to hardware to tools to a cafe on the side! We watched ravens and eagles performing acrobatics (didn't get the camera out in time to capture, alas) and I ate my apple and drank some tea while everyone else ate, and then dug out my green smoothie when we got back on the road.
It looks just like any old green smoothie, but not only was it delicious, it kept me full for about as long as anything can without making me feel sick! A good three and a half hours!

What was in it? Well, I had made coconut milk from that beautiful brown coconut I pictured in this post--chunks of it plus water, lecithin, a little xylitol and salt, blend and then strain. A wonderfully thick, creamy milk, unlike the colored waters I usually tend to make (I've mentioned before how weak I tend to make my nut milks: am thinking I may need to change that).

This smoothie had about a quarter cup of that coconut milk, a half cup of coconut kefir whey and a couple tablespoons coconut kefir, a couple tablespoons irish moss gel, a pinch of stevia, some lecithin, a handful of cilantro leaves, a big handful of spinach leaves, a tablespoon of spirulina, and three drops of pineapple flavor extract from Medicine Flower. I had just thrown it together before we left and was totally unprepared for how delicious, creamy, filling and generally wonderful it turned out to be. I love the taste of green, but really it didn't even taste green. It tasted like a decadent but nourishing pina colada.

I make smoothies all the time and rarely do more than mention them, but this was worth recording for posterity.

Do you love the taste of green? Or do you prefer your greens disguised?
much love

Monday, January 10, 2011

Celebrations-Restaurant Review and Goodies, and Some Fun Stuff


Happy New Week! We're up in Anchorage again after a much less stressful day on the road. Our anniversary, and it's been very social, in a happy kind of way. I hope you enjoyed my review of Tropical Traditions coconut oil and Hawaii stories. It's turned cold here again today and I sure enjoyed my coconut oil today. Later this week, I will talk about fats some more.

We went to Cafe Cups a few days ago to celebrate our anniversary together early. I've eaten out very little in Homer and this was a fun experience.
It was so pleasant to eat out in such a mellow, peaceful atmosphere. We were not rushed at any point, the two waitresses were friendly and fun, and enthusiastic.

I felt grateful for my easygoing cooked-vs-raw dynamic at the moment, as they were easily able to make their veggie curry gluten-and-dairy free for me.

And it was so beautiful!
Very interesting presentation: having the rice (which I didn't eat) in the middle with the curry in a moat around it. Lots of very interesting textures, where a lot of curries tend to have all the veggies in cubes. I appreciated that a lot of the veggies were almost raw, just barely steamed, including the carrots and mung bean sprouts (a great touch), although the eggplant pieces were a little underdone. There were even some olive pieces in there! It wasn't a 'traditional Indian' curry, but it was so delicious: lots of cardamom in the spice mix, which I love most, and lots of heat, which I also adore! I was surprised how much of it I ate, how good it tasted and how happy my tummy was afterward.

Phil was very pleased with his fish special. And I wasn't so pleased with the picture I snapped! Beautiful red kale garnish though...
A few other things to share: I took advantage of The Raw Food World's 17.5% off everything offer over the holidays and was once again delighted with how quickly my goodies arrived.

I got more Irish moss, my new favorite food, and some yacon syrup to try (man, that stuff is expensive! But a little goes a long way, I'm told). And a whole gallon of coconut nectar! It's low glycemic enough that I feel ok about using a little in dessert recipes, and it's so expensive in the 12oz bottles, as well as shelf-stable,  that this seemed by far the most sensible way to get it. That's probably going to last me at least a year.

I love to get things in bulk and know that I have a supply for long enough to make plenty of variations or experiments on a single theme, or just have a staple readily available. I think living far from the source might be part of why.

How about you?

My other splurge: some recipe books and some poetry books!
That pile of paper made me so very happy. The Poet's Companion is one that I've enjoyed using quite a bit before, and had borrowed and wanted to own. On Speaking Terms is a poetry collection that I'm reading to broaden my experience: and am so far loving. And the three raw recipe books--what can I say? I miss being part of that world 'in the flesh,' I owned no raw recipe books at this point, and I will use these lovingly until I have learned all I can from them, and then consider them beautiful things to share more widely.

A couple of final silly little things:

Check out our 'pant-tree'--we freeze-dried our laundry strung up right on the edge of the bluff. We agreed that some clothes-pins would be a good investment. Yes, we wheelbarrowed our laundry down from the truck! The bedsheet in the wheelbarrow looks quite stylish, no?

Check out that sunset reflected in the outhouse window!
And I personalized one of my notebooks!
I covered it with Yogi Teabag tags! Been meaning to do that for ages, and finally got around to it. I love how some of them are naturally dyed/teastained.

It's the perfect decoration for my notebook: lots of inspiring words, which often speak more to me than pictures. Given the size of my handwriting, it's especially fitting--here's a random page from inside the notebook!

Saturday, January 8, 2011

Product Review Time: Tropical Traditions Gold Label Virgin Coconut Oil

I was so excited to be sent a jar of Gold Label Virgin Coconut Oil to review from Tropical Traditions! And their generosity extends to you too: read on to find out how.
I think I could rightly claim the title of coconut connoisseur.
Aside from being an avid gatherer of mature brown coconuts and maker of coconut cream when I lived in Hawaii, I also used to climb and trim coconut trees (with equipment, I share some of the story in this post). Aside from the fact that I have noticed that I feel better when I eat coconuts, they make me happy: the palms, the nuts, the water, and ooh, the oil!


Even though coconuts are ubiquitous and freely available in Hawaii, it was while I was living there that I really tuned in to the benefits of the oil. It is a wonderful component of smoothies and desserts and it's so good for the skin! Reputed to have antiviral, antifungal and antibacterial properties, it was surely soothing on the sunburns and staph infections that most people experience at some point while living on the Big Island in the jungle.


Naturally, I've had all kinds of coconut preparations, and prepared many myself, but what makes me feel especially qualified as coconut oil connoisseur is that I made some myself in Hawaii! I just left some coconut cream (hard coconut meat run through a wheatgrass juicer: labor intensive but worth it) to stand, covered, in the warm ambient temperature for some weeks.  The liquid portion fermented, yielding a delectable cheesey substance, and the oil settled on the top. It was an amazing experience to be present as the oil simply 'made itself' in response to the environment: it felt like true alchemy. The cheesy substrate and the oil itself had an earthy and yet ethereal taste: full of life, full of vigor.


This is why I was particularly excited to try Tropical Traditions' Gold Label Virgin Coconut Oil, since it is produced by a fermentation process. Plant-derived oils are typically either centrifuge-extracted (spun at high speeds so that the oil is thrown off and collected) or expeller-pressed, both of which processes can generate some heat mechanically. Of course, fermentation can create some heat too, but it's the heat of living organisms doing their thing rather than of cogs spinning. It may be illogical, but I love fermentation and its products, and feel more drawn to this. (As a side note, coconut and its oil are very heat-stable, so I am not especially concerned about how absolutely low the temperatures remain for its production.)



You can see more on the specifics of  Tropical Traditions' oil in this short youtube video: "How We Discovered Virgin Coconut Oil - An Interview with Brian Shilhavy, CEO Tropical Traditions” http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=4h6eycjf29M

Coconut oil is even more important to me now that I live in Alaska. Young coconut is an occasional luxury: as ubiquitous as it is in raw food cuisine, I virtually always substitute it with something else. Although I was excited to find it frozen in an Asian market in Anchorage...

...it does have some added sugar, that I'm less thrilled about. And although we do love to get mature coconuts for snacks and recipes, a young white coconut is an occasional splurge: they cost over $4 each! I used to be able to get them for less than a dollar in Oakland, and in Hawaii someone just had to climb for them, sometimes me.
Incidentally, that mature coconut held more than a quart of water--an amazing gift!


But for everyday eating, coconut oil is an important staple for me. Aside from the culinary and gustatory delight that it offers, I find that it helps with my digestion and general sense of wellbeing. I have thyroid problems, gut problems and yeast problems, and the 'medium-chain triglycerides' that form the bulk of coconut's fat molecules are said to be very beneficial for all of those. When I started working with my naturopath last April, he said that I needed to be 'pounding' the coconut oil, up to a half cup a day! I don't think I've ever managed to have quite that much, but since then it has definitely become an important staple of my diet. Phil often comments that my skin has become gorgeously soft and smooth since I've been eating so much of it.


So, I have all kinds of occasion to appreciate coconut oil both from the culinary and from the general wellbeing perspectives. And I was so excited to have some of this virgin coconut oil produced by 'live fermentation,' as I like to think of it. The taste is just as I hoped it would be: the epitome of coconut, with a slightly smoky note just like I remember from my fermented coconut cream's oil. There's nothing rough about this smokiness, though: it's like a really good single malt whisky.


I always have some of it in my smoothies (my number one favorite meal)
...and of course, 'bark,' (my number one favorite snack) is totally based on coconut oil!
I share several 'bark' recipes on this blog: here's a fairly compendious offering. I'm planning on submitting a bark recipe to add to Tropical Traditions' wonderfully rich and varied, kitchen tested site of recipes:
http://www.freecoconutrecipes.com


I've been roasting some veggies recently and enjoying that wintertime fare. As I mentioned above, coconut oil is very heat-stable, so I feel really good about putting some of this oil on the roasted veggies. The flavor combination is just exquisite.


I like to stock up on things that I use a lot of, and my final seal of approval of this Virgin Coconut Oil is that I ordered a 5 gallon bucket of it! I also ordered a bucket of the expeller-pressed oil, for the times when I want the oil without the strong coconut flavor. I was impressed with how quickly this was shipped up to me, and even more impressed to receive a personal phone call from the company's CEO right after I made the order, just to verify that I had indeed placed such a large order! Wonderful, personal customer service, and I'm looking forward to interacting with them more.


I hope that you might consider supporting them too: to me, it feels like a win-win. You can acquire your own complimentary copy of their Virgin Coconut Oil book as part of their referral program. 


Choose “Referred by a Friend” when you place an order with them, and enter My User ID: 6758186 on your first online order. The book will be automatically added to their order. If you need any help with this, their customer service page is helpful and responsive.


Disclaimer: Tropical Traditions provided me with a free sample of this product to review, and I was under no obligation to review it if I so chose.  Nor was I under any obligation to write a positive review in return for the free product.



Enjoy!!

Friday, January 7, 2011

Driving on Ice--Fear! Accident Prone?

In a dangerous situation, if you had to choose between an able-bodied novice and a slightly crippled expert to be your pilot, which would you pick?

I think most people would choose the expert, right? It was that thinking that helped me not to feel too humiliated on the way home from Anchorage, when I had to pull the truck over in the dark and pouring rain, on the icy road, and let temporarily-one-eyed Phil take over the wheel. He's been driving on ice since before I was born, and this is only my second year of doing so. Even though there was little traffic on the road, everyone else was driving fast (part of the reason why there were so many wrecks on the road?) and I simply couldn't make myself go more than about 45mph. Even though my eyes are working fine and my night-vision is better than Phil's even on a good day, it was better to have him take over.

I was so scared! All the way to Anchorage on Sunday, driving on ice most of the way, I was so afraid, I felt sick to my stomach. There had been a couple inches of snow on the road, so with the recent warmer weather, the rain turned to ice as it hit the surface snow, and then got warmed and churned up by vehicles' wheels, and there was glare ice everywhere and constant little bumps and eminences and off-center ice-blobs to take just one wheel somewhere you didn't want it to go.  And I already mentioned the fast driving and the several badly mangled wrecks we saw en route.


How do you handle the kind of fear that is constant, persistent, impervious to reasoning and constantly being reinforced by the little slips and bumps and reminders that you're driving on a sheet of ice? Deep breathing helps a little bit.  Getting out onto the frozen lake and practicing getting the truck out of a spin helps a bit. I guess, like Averie mentioned recently, it's important to take on a learning curve. I always seem to be learning new things, and am living up here in a place that offers lots of new learning experiences. That's what mistakes are, right? As with most 'physical' things, I'm not a superstar as a driver, but on ordinary surfaces I'm perfectly good. Probably B+ rather than grade A, though. On ice, I'm not so hot. But if I can get to be a decent driver on ice, maybe it'll make my overall driving so much the better.

Any scary stories to share or any advice on how to do better besides practice-practice-practice? Or on how to overcome the fear?

Accident Prone?

I have to pay attention here, as we work through the winter and I continue to tweak diet and self-experiment. I used to be so very accident-prone, probably due to chronic undereating and then fruitarianism. When I started eating raw eggs, the problem went away blindingly quickly. Now, having been vegan once again for a year or so, I seem to be sliding toward accident prone a little this past few weeks.

It's not all my fault! These coffee beans all over the floor (yes, I can't stand coffee but I make it for Phil every day) were in the freezer compartment in a non-tempered jar and as soon as I grabbed the jar out, it broke everywhere!
Not the greatest start to the morning, and I'm glad that I quickly realized that the jar broke spontaneously, rather than beating up on myself for dropping it! I was left with the lid in my hand and shards of glass all over the inside of the fridge.

And then I busted my beloved paring knife that I've had since HI days breaking off some chocolate to melt...
Seriously busted--even the handle! Phil said even he has never broken one of those knives, and he's a notorious toolbuster. That's also not an 'accident-prone' thing, though: maybe just a little overzealous!

Now, the chocolate indulgence of the holiday season is one of my prime suspects for my current less-than-optimal coordination. I didn't eat much--as I shared here, I didn't have appetite for it. But I did eat a little chocolate every day for a good week or two, and that is too much and too often for me. So what was I doing busting my knife with chocolate?

Well, I was making another enormous batch of the chocolate fruit and nut bars from Sweet Gratitude, winging it and using slightly different ingredients as well as low-sugarizing it, for Phil's daughter.
I used dried blueberries instead of gojis, and oats and hazelnuts instead of almonds, and tweaked the ratio of other seeds a bit too. Part of the reason for the oats is just to balance the macronutrients a bit, and honestly part of the reason was so that I can't eat them! I can't do oats.

Do you ever purposely make a yummy treat that you can't have? (I loved these too much first time through in the Ela-friendly version).

Oh, but don't they look good? It's a gift that I know will be appreciated, and I'll probably save a few for Phil too, because he said they tasted great!

For myself, I'll see if laying off the chocolate and upping the algae helps with my general coordination. After many months of eating lots of spirulina and chlorella every day, I haven't been eating quite so much of them recently. I'll also continue to monitor how I feel with cutting way back on PUFAs (post to come about that soon) and eating more starch.
Any other suggestions?
Stay tuned for a product review!

Tuesday, January 4, 2011

Intentions for Life, Blogging and Everything 2011



As I underlined in my Eighty Percent Raw article that I shared a couple days ago, I believe that it's very important to acknowledge that the New Year is a continuation of what went before, not a clean slate; and that 'new years' begin every minute of every day, so that while January1st is a good time to set intentions, it should not be considered the only possible time and disproportionately loaded down with unrealistic demands on oneself.

My major intention and resolution this year is to be an excellent reviewer, payer-of-attention and stayer-on-track (also returner-to-track). I am aiming to sharpen my focus in several areas that I already work on, rather than planning to branch out in unwonted directions. 

I'll be going into my third full year in Alaska, and living here is a challenge all of its own that demands its own respect. Learning how to read the weather, drive on ice better, cope with bugs in summer and fall, do a better job with root vegetables in this year's garden, and many more things, all fall under the 'reviewer' intention here, as do things like cleaning, going to the laundromat and hauling water in timely manner.
water runs out fast, but the Vitamix and the home internet have been amazing additions this year

Phil and I will be going into our third year of marriage: our wedding anniversary is coming up on January 10th. Continuing to cherish our love and to build our relationship together, to support one another in our continued changes, to go on adventures together and chill out at home together, be solitary and social together and apart: these are up there at the top of the intentions list for both of us.

2010 was a year of great consolidation and resultant progress for me. Living in one place, in a stable relationship with someone extremely supportive, gave me the opportunity to really pursue my writerly vocation. Other things fell in to support that, like the book clubs and writers group in town, the Kachemak Bay Writers Conference in June, the Fairbanks Summer Arts Festival in July, the translating and editing jobs, getting internet at home, as well as working at the used bookstore in town occasionally. More recently, I've connected with another poet in town and we're starting to meet regularly to read and discuss poetic works.

Most exciting of all was the news, just before Christmas, that I've been accepted into the Rainier Writing Workshop. Going through an MFA program will help me steer my craft and remain on track. In structural terms, that's what I'm looking forward to most of all in this new year. Having creative writing be at the center of my life is what I've always either most wanted or assumed would inevitably, naturally happen when I finally got things together. May this be the year!

The stability also created potential for healing. At the beginning of 2010, I found myself firmly back in the 'Raw Foods' camp but with a much lower-glycemic and superfood-heavier emphasis than previously, and without the craziness of insisting on being '100%,' whatever that even means. And I started working with a Naturopath and a therapist to address some of the serious longterm physical and other issues resulting from a long eating-disorder history. I begin 2011 so much healthier, happier and more energetic than I did 2010: surely far more important than any size-measurement. And while I have been creative in culinary ways all along, toward the end of 2010 I've really been reconnecting with the joys of raw gourmet cuisine, aided in this by a very appreciative audience of friends.



Despite the stability, we also traveled. It was great to spend time at Phil's family farm in Oregon and visit with his mom, and to go to England after so many years, catch up with parents, brothers, old friends and the new niece. Of course, the birth of my niece and becoming an aunt was a major event this year too!

It's just about six weeks until this blog's one-year anniversary as well! I'd kept online journals of one sort or another for years before this, off and on, but this one feels more like an entity of its own. It brings so much into my life, in terms of the great connections that it offers, the smart people that I come into contact with through it, the opportunity to share stories from my life with friends who are far away. It also gives me the opportunity to give of myself and share insights, experiences, recipes, stories and more. Additionally, blogging is currently the main medium in which my writerly vocation and my passion about nutrition and raw foods intersect, which makes it very desirable. 

The 'reviewer' intention has lots to do around the blog: I definitely have the desire to continue to write about food and nutrition, and to deepen and broaden the scope of this writing with more book and product reviews and more in-depth discussions of nutritional research, healing and self-experimentation. I hope to share more about the creative writing process and more non-food-related book reviews also.  My intention is that my blog will grow in many ways this year.

However, I am going to need to monitor my blogging time very acutely. Much as I love to comment on every blog I read and to blog very frequently myself, I have to accept that there will be times when my workload and creative writing demands will have to take precedence over this. I know that everyone who reads blogs, let alone writes them, will understand this, and will also understand how hard it is to tear myself away! I already know that daily blogging is not realistic for me. For 2011, I'm hoping for an average of three posts per week. Some weeks may well bring more and others, especially if we spend much time in the wilderness come spring and summer, less. I'm hoping that this will allow me to put more time and thought into my posts, rather than rapidly firing something off to get it out there (although that style has much to commend it also).

Many thanks and much love to all my readers.

Sunday, January 2, 2011

Catching Up--Orange Flan and Phil's Eye: Lasik Warning

Resolutions/intentions post is coming soon, but as it continues to pour with rain here and melt all our beautiful snow, we're heading back up to Anchorage today for the surgeon to check Phil's eye, so I'm accepting the continued discombobulation and working the intentions within the spaces.

When we got home on Friday, I threw together some roasted veggies and something delicious, beautiful, low-glycemic and delectable to take to the low-key new year's party at Phil's daughter's house:

It's based on the 'bitter orange creme caramel' from Everyday Raw Desserts but I low-glycemic-ized it (xylitol syrup) and once I'd put it in that container, it wouldn't pop out again, so I just served it like that, with thinly sliced mangoes and fresh blueberries as accompaniments.

I think I'm in love with irish moss... The texture was to-die-for, as was the taste, of course. It was very well enjoyed. I was delighted with how quickly I could put it together, and it was the perfect therapy for having ended up in the ditch driving home!

Phil's eye underwent a 'trabeculectomy' last week.
The intra-ocular pressure is too high (an effect of glaucoma) and the pressure gradually damages the optic nerve. He has already lost some vision and other methods have not reduced the pressure enough. The trabeculectomy is essentially a notch cut into the eye to allow excess fluid to drain. The success of the operation depends on the notch/hole, which is a wound, not healing. Bodies always want to heal wounds, so it's a tricky thing and they put some chemistry in there too to retard the healing.
Soon, his eye will be looking much better and seeing much better too!

I wanted to share this important piece of information, though: Phil had lasik about twelve years ago and he did not know that having laser surgery gives artificially low eye pressure readings (because the cornea is so thin). He has a family history of glaucoma and checked his pressures regularly, and they always looked good. He'd already lost some vision when he finally saw an eye specialist who said 'You've had lasik? Then your pressure is much higher than the actual reading.' They even have an algorithm to tell them what the 'true' pressure is depending on how it reads as measured.

So, anyone who's had Lasik (as I have, and I think it's a wonderful thing), please be aware (especially if you have family history of glaucoma) that it gives falsely low eye pressure readings and make sure that your optometrist knows that you've had it.

Phil is an intensely visual person...

And his twinkly, beady little eyes are one of his most noticeable and endearing features.

He's been doing wonderfully so far in maintaining a good attitude to convalescence (rainy, yucky weather and no skiing=removal of temptation, thank you, weather gods!) and no doubt will be goofing around again soon,
love to all

Saturday, January 1, 2011

Happy New Year/The View From Here/Eighty Percent Raw and Article

Happy New Year, one and all!


First, my apologies for the blog hiatus: we spent most of last week up in Anchorage, where Phil was having minor eye surgery, and were offline pretty much the whole time. And we're going back up again tomorrow, just for an overnight.


I have all kinds of thoughts about what to look back on and what to look forward to as the calendar changes over, as well as some more delicious creations to share photo-wise. For today, however, I'm going to share the article that I wrote for this month's Eighty Percent Raw Magazine. The magazine isn't going to be continuing and I'm sad to be without that outlet and opportunity for sharing. However, my article was ready to go, and it's all about healthy ways to make resolutions and to be healthy in the winter.


After all that gorgeous, clear weather I was bragging about, and weeks of temperatures in the low 20's or less, we are in the midst of a warm front from the south and a huge windstorm. Here was the beach this morning--an ice rink!
Pretty tough hiking and we didn't last long.


A far cry from this snow-covered, crunchy, lovely hiking.
And whereas for the last few weeks our own property has been snow-clad...
...it's now in full and ugly 'breakup' mode--melting ice, like a luge run. The roads were that way too. Thank goodness for four-wheel drive!
I have to do all the heavy lifting at the moment, which is a very strange reversal, and have slammed my butt on the ice twice so far carrying or wheelbarrowing heavy things down to our cabin from the truck. Spare a thought for Phil: how hard must it be for the most physically capable and mighty man ever to be compelled to lift no more than 10lbs for the next couple of weeks? Especially when I skidded us into the ditch when we were 40 miles from home and he couldn't single-handedly dig us out...


I'm looking forward to catching up on others' blogs and getting back on track here: 2011 promises so much that is exciting, and it's very empowering to talk about that and be in the process of creating it. For now, though, I leave you with the article and much love.


New Year Resolutions for All the Year's 'New Years,' and Eating Fresh in the Wintertime

Happy New Year! I've mentioned before that January 1st is not the only possible time that can be viewed as 'New Year.' In the April edition of Eighty Percent Raw, I talked about ancient traditions of spring cleansing that viewed April as the year's start, and in the September edition, I pointed out that the Jewish new year and the Academic year beginning fall closer to the Fall equinox. As a little girl, I could never understand what was so special about New Year's Day. In terms of the Christmas festival, it fell right in the no-man's-land between Christmas and Epiphany. In terms of school holidays, it was an unwelcome harbinger of their end drawing near. No significance in terms of other religions to be found either (unless you count proximity to the winter solstice), and surely everyone's own 'New Year' is their birthday! I still relate to this childish perception of mine, but it's good to be pragmatic and recognize things as they are. Our arbitrary traditions will become traditions for our descendants simply because we did them! 

New Year's on January 1st is traditionally a time that people choose to make decisions about how they want to become in the future, specifically in the coming year. Of course, the 'clean slate' offered by the prospect of a new year is muddied by the picture my little-girl-self saw, of it really being just another 'tomorrow' in a series of new days, and so the 'gorgeous new me' that many of us can create in imagination of a 'new year, new life' is often quite unrealistic and gets dragged down by the simple connectedness of the 'New Year' with 'yesterday.' 

But let's keep on building those traditions, let's be pragmatic: let's accept that it's a good time to make resolutions, if only because there is a collective energy building in that direction. If you're reading this magazine, it shows that you are interested in doing your best and making the best you can out of your life. I would like to invite you to join in a collective energy toward making powerful, realistic resolutions that are actually achievable, that can effect a day-by-day transformation that recognizes you as the same, evolving, transforming person on January 1st that you were on December 31st, but that gives that evolution and transformation a gentle and inexorable nudge in the 'onward and upward' direction. I would also like to invite you to consider those other times of year that have also been considered as 'New Year' (and basically solstices and equinoxes generally) as 'waypoints' along the course of the year to check in and examine the progress of your evolution and transformation toward your best self. You could include your birthday, too: the most meaningfully personal 'New Year's day' you own. Rather than having the vast, monolithic expanse of a whole year stretching out ahead of you, have seasonal checkins with yourself and renew your resolutions. Otherwise, all the collective energy toward making resolutions, turning over a new leaf, reinventing yourself, dissipates quickly, because it has nothing to support it, no way to maintain the momentum. And this is precisely why many people get excited about resolutions but are not even surprised that they have forgotten about them by the time they remember to write '2011' instead of '2010' when writing the date (or sooner, since that can take months for some of us)!

Some Tips for How to Approach Making Resolutions

Notice that I've suggested seasonal checkins to help keep the resolutions on track. Much of the philosophy of developing healthy eating and lifestyle habits is closely related to keeping in closer touch with the seasons. This is one of the reasons why I think that seasonal checkins are a good strategy to reinforce your resolutions. 

I also think that seasonal checkins are helpful in offering a structure for your choices of resolutions: if you tailor your intentions to each specific season, it will be easier to follow up on them. So, if one of your resolutions is to grow some of your own food, depending on the climate where you live, the 'winter' portion of your resolution could be researching, perusing seed catalogues, consulting local experts, starting some seeds. In the spring, when you check in on your resolutions, you could plan to get the ground ready and get more seeds started. Summertime checkin, you might be harvesting some greens already, starting more rotations of seeds for fast-growing crops, and planning and executing a weeding and pest-control schedule. Summertime checkin is also a good time to remind yourself that even with growing a garden, as far as resolutions go, it's never too late! Even if you haven't followed through with everything and are not going to be able to produce some of the slower-growing plants, you can still have lettuce in 3-4 weeks, or baby greens in much less time. And at the fall equinox checkin, you should be happily harvesting!

Keeping the seasons in mind may also help you to be realistic and detailed. If you have 'spending more time out in the sun' as a 'New Years' resolution and it's deep midwinter where you are, it's likely that it will be harder for you to keep to that. But if you plan to get out in the middle of the day in the winter sun, when it's out, and make more ambitious and specific resolutions during your sumer solstice checkin, you will remain motivated and interested in what you thought you wanted to do all the way back then.

And if it's something that you only want to do once in the course of the year, you get three opportunities to remind yourself to make it happen! Three opportunities not to consider yourself a failure for not having done it.

The truth is, when you make a resolution, you need to renew that commitment regularly, you need to be positive about it and you need to be very detailed about what it is that you are setting out to do.

A final tip: be realistic, but also be creative. I gave an example above of the resolution to grow some of your own food. If you live in a climate where it is midwinter on New Year's day, you could easily make this resolution and then let it slide, because the ground is frozen right now! Or, with seasonal checkins and step-by-step planning, you could make it something you're working toward even before you get your hands in the dirt, which will help to keep up your enthusiasm.

Keeping it Fresh in the Wintertime

I want to conclude this article by pointing out again that keeping in touch with the seasons is a good way to stay well-directed, including in terms of keeping resolutions, but that eating plenty of fresh food is another part of developing and maintaining a healthy lifestyle. In my last article, I promised that this time I would talk a bit about fresh food in the wintertime. I feel well-qualified to talk about that, since I live up in Alaska! The first and most obvious thing that I would say is that if you live in a northern climate, or a place with harsh winters, it makes sense to accept that the proportion of your food that is very fresh will be lower during this season. When the ground is frozen, you won't be going out and picking your veggies right there and then, and the produce in the store has likely had to come from farther away too. 

I love using the preserved bounty from our garden in the winter - fermented veggies are a great food, rich in probiotics and vitamins, and I find the nettles that we dried on bed-sheets by the bushel in the springtime delicious sprinkled in salads, included in smoothies or made into tea. These are nutritious and powerful foods, and they allow me to feel a connection with what the earth around here can produce even when it isn't producing. For truly 'fresh' foods, however, I love my sprouts! They are so easy to grow, even with no special equipment. 

I've been growing sprouts in a quart-sized mason jar. I put around 3 tablespoons of seeds in the jar and soak for several hours (two-three hours will do it in most cases, but overnight is fine too). I then drain the water through a strainer. (You can buy special 'sprouting lids' that screw onto mason jars and have mesh of different sizes for different kinds of sprouts, but I don't have any and, although they're handy, they're not essential.) Then I leave the jar lying on its side, in a place out of strong, direct light, and rinse again morning and evening until done, which is usually two-three days. If there's any suspicion of mold growth, I rinse the sprouts with water with a good splash of hydrogen peroxide added. You can buy a sprouting mix, which typically contains a combination like lentil, clover, alfalfa and radish. Or you can sprout individual seeds. I love the mix, but also make a lot of lentil sprouts and fenugreek sprouts. They sprout so readily and quickly, which suggests that they're vibrant and bursting with life. I love the smell of fenugreek seeds, kind of a cross between curry and maple syrup: they are especially good in curry-type dishes. Fenugreek is good for blood sugar balance, as well as for stimulating milk flow in nursing mothers. Lentils, meanwhile, contain the most protein of any legume and are by far the most palatable of the commonly eaten legumes in sprouted form (fenugreek itself, of course, is a legume too, as is alfalfa). Other commonly eaten legumes can be harshly starchy and acrid if eaten just sprouted and not also steamed. 

I confess, I haven't always been a big lover of sprouts. However, living in a place where nothing will grow outside for several months of the year has helped me to fall in love with them. It's very possible that the concept of having vibrantly, immediately fresh produce on my plate is what I fell in love with before the taste. But after a few massaged kale salads with fenugreek seeds and a curry sauce, or bean salads with sprouted and steamed aduki beans, chopped green beans, mixed sprouts and a tahini-lemon dressing, I definitely came to crave the crunch and delicate fresh taste of the sprouts themselves. 

So, there's an example right there of my final tip about being creative as well as realistic in making resolutions: I accept that I can't have as much super-fresh food as at other times of year, but I am enjoying life-force-filled fresh foods even in the midst of an Alaskan winter! We live in a tiny cabin and have no extra space, but I am considering making my own resolution this winter to take it to another level, spread some dirt on some trays and try growing some 'microgreens' or wheatgrass! Although they're never quite as good when grown indoors, without the direct sun and contact with the ground, fresh baby lettuces and spinach greens in the deep of winter here would seem luxurious indeed.

Happy holidays to everyone and all the best of freshness and transformation in resolution-making!