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Going to the movies can be a fun treat.

However, when we dive into that bowl of Movie Theater popcorn, we end up mindlessly scarfing down more than we bargained for, including hydrogenated and partially-hydrogenated oils (trans fat), salt, naturals butter flavors, preservatives, and toxic chemicals, dyes, and additives. On top of it all, the corn they are using is a genetically modified grain, showered in herbicides, insecticides, and pesticides before it even meets its toxic fate.

Whether you are opting for butter, or not, the oil itself is typically a toxic butter-flavored oil, so you are not escaping much. Regardless of whether you are watching a movie on the big screens or not, we have been conditioned to snack in front of the tv, and pop some corn when we are getting comfy on the couch.

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Before you call me crazy, you ought to try this creamy, crunchy, and “cheesy” recipe. As you the florets in the oven, they will caramelize and become the perfect side, whether you are hosting guests for dinner and need something simple but snazzy, or creating a movie night at home. Give this roasted cauliflower dish a try.

Cauliflower is a great source of fiber, water, protein, Vitamin A, C, K, potassium, calcium, and naturally low in calories and fat. Popcorn on the other hand, even the air-popped type, does not have much to gloat about other than it’s low fat and high fiber properties. Popcorn is also a very inflammatory grain and extremely challenging to digest, where as cauliflower is naturally anti-inflammatory and is a naturally cleansing food.

I remember when I could eat popcorn endlessly, until I wanted to pop. However, because of cauliflower’s better nutrient profile and high fiber content, it satisfies more quickly than popped corn.

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Roasted Rosemary Cauliflower— Popcorn Style

Ingredients:

  • 1 large cauliflower, (about 6 cups)
  • 2 tbsp dried rosemary
  • 1 tsp sea salt
  • 4-6 tbsp nutritional yeast (optional)

Method:

Preheat oven to 375 degrees. In a medium mixing bowl, toss cauliflower with salt and set to the side for 5 minutes. Salt will force cauliflower to release water and help the seasonings to stick without added oils. Add remaining ingredients and toss until well combined. Line a baking sheet with parchment paper, or non-stick paper. Scoop cauliflower onto baking sheet and bake for 30 minutes, or until edges of cauliflower are just lightly browning (about 30-40 minutes). Remove from oven and serve hot, or at room temperature. Top with remaining spices from your mixing bowl. Serve in small bowls with a toothpick for easy snacking.

How do you enjoy your cauliflower? 😉

P.S. I came across this article if you are looking to learn more about the truth about your movie theater popcorn.

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What is on your holiday table this year?

Tis the season for family gatherings, and that generally means the Traditional comfort foods we often share this time of the year.

When I think of some of the side dishes and accompaniments served at our big family gatherings, I think of Stuffing (otherwise called “Dressing” here in the South), Gravy, and Mashed Potatoes. Unfortunately, most of these recipes thrive on butter, cream, gluten, bread, oils,  and assorted animal protein additions. Traditional though these recipes may be, they leave our bodies heavy with regret, bloat, and an insatiable appetite for something more. A common side effect of a lack of nutrients, and/or lack of absorption of these nutrients.

I wanted to seek out lighter but still flavorful versions to share with my clients, but unfortunately, I could not find one single recipe I was excited about. Instead, I found myself in a sea of vegetarian and vegan renditions that contained excess oils, soy (processed), wheat flours, gluten-free breads (processed), and vegan margarine (processed).

Taking matters into my own hands, I did a little testing myself and I am pleased with the results. I think you will absolutely love these two holiday steals. Bursting with flavor and aromas from an assortment of wild mushrooms, which serve as an excellent and more alkaline replacement for meat, and coupled with traditional herbs, rest assured that you will be sharing these recipes both joyfully and energetically.

Even better, none of these ingredients are too “out of the ordinary.” All of the ingredients can easily be found in your Whole Foods Market or health food store, and many of them in your traditional supermarket.

Wild Mushroom and Quinoa Stuffing, Gluten-Free, Oil-Free, Soy-Free, Vegan by Lauren Talbot 

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Ingredients:

  • 1 cup uncooked quinoa (about 3 cups cooked)
  • 2 cups water (to cook quinoa)
  • 1 pound baby bella mushrooms, stems removed, cut into thin slices, then in half
  • ½ pound shiitake mushrooms, stems removed
  • ½ pound wild mushroom, or shiitake (to add to texture and flavor diversity) *I Used Oyster
  • 1 medium yellow onion, finely diced
  • 4 cloves garlic, minced
  • 1 cup dry white, divided (I used my favorite Organic Frey Chardonnay)
  • 1 1/2 cups finely chopped celery
  • 1 tsp dried rubbed sage leaf
  • 1 tsp dried thyme leaf
  • 1 tsp dried rosemary
  • Coconut oil for greasing pan
  • ½ tsp sea salt, or to taste, divided
  • ½ tsp fresh ground black pepper
  • 1/8 cup fresh parsley leaves, for decor
  • Sea salt to taste, if needed

Method:

Preheat oven to 375 degrees.

Prepare quinoa according to package instruction, and place to the side. Very lightly grease a large, oven-safe, casserole dish with coconut oil, only enough to prevent sticking, and set to the side.

In a large frying pan, or pot, sprinkle mushrooms with ¼ tsp salt and cover for 2 minutes on medium-high heat, stirring to prevent from sticking. Salting is important, as it will let mushrooms secrete their own juices, and reduce the need for water, oil, or broth. Turn heat up to medium and sauté for 5 minutes, or until mushrooms are darker, and juicy. Scoop mushrooms into your “greased” casserole dish, leaving their juices behind.

In same frying pan, turn up the heat again to high, and add the garlic, onion, and celery. Sauté vegetables until remaining mushroom liquid has evaporated and then sprinkle vegetables with ¼ tsp salt and cover. Allow vegetables to steam on medium-high heat for 3 minutes, stirring if needed. On low heat, uncover and sauté for an additional two minutes, or until onions appear translucent.

Turn up heat and add ¼ cup wine, spices, and herbs. Sauté until wine has evaporated and has been absorbed into the vegetables. Continually sautéing, add in the remaining wine in ¼ cup intervals—each time allowing the liquid’s flavor to be absorbed, before more is added. When all wine has been absorbed, spoon in your quinoa and use a large spoon to combine. Pour mixture into your mushroom casserole dish and combine ingredients, until well integrated. Place in oven for 25 minutes, until quinoa is just barely browning. If you are looking for a crunchier stuffing, stir halfway through. Keep oven on warm until ready to serve. Dish can be made a day in advance and then reheated if necessary. 

Gluten-Free, Vegan, and Paleo Gravy by Lauren Talbot 

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Ingredients:

  • 4 T Coconut Flour, more depending on desired consistency
  • 2 medium yellow onion, diced
  • 1 cup dried porcini mushrooms
  • 6 garlic cloves, minced
  • 2.5-3 cups low sodium vegetable broth, depending on desired thickness
  • 1/2 tsp salt
  • 1 tsp sesame oil
  • 5 tbsp coconut aminos
  • 1 tsp dried thyme
  • ¼ tsp dried oregano
  • ¼ tsp black pepper
  • 2 tbsp nutritional yeast

Shown with baked eggplant as a base for this gravy marinade. 

Method:

In a medium frying pan, or pot, sprinkle onion with ¼ tsp salt and cover for 2 minutes on medium-high heat, stirring to prevent from sticking when needed. Add garlic, thyme, oregano, pepper, and ¼ cup vegetable broth. Sauté until onions are translucent.

Add an additional 1/4 cup broth and porcini mushrooms. Cover and allow to steam on low for 3 minutes, or until mushrooms are tender. Uncover, add in remaining broth, and then slowly add in coconut flour, 1 tbsp at a time. Stir until all flour is well combined, and not lumpy.

Carefully scoop hot mixture into high-speed blender. Blend until smooth, adding nutritional yeast, coconut aminos, and toasted sesame oil. Blend again until well combined and season with sea salt to taste.  Serve when ready. Gravy can be made a day in advance and refrigerated. Serve on top of baked eggplant, or baked portabello mushrooms.

Happy Healthy Holidays!

If you want to jump start your metabolism and improve your digestion in the New Year, send me an email at Lauren@theglowdetoxdiet.com and get educated and empowered. 

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Most veggie trays make me sad. Dry baby carrots sit apart from raw cauliflower and broccoli, and look forlorn next to the celery sticks which, at this point, are just begging to get away from the Deviled Eggs, and Shrimp Cocktail. Truthfully, one cannot blame these dejected vegetables from wishing to drown themselves in the creamy-white-mayonnaise-mixture in the center of their pristine plastic home.

A bit dramatic? Yes. But it is as if someone has announced, “Yep. Checked that “Vegetable Item” off the list, and now it’s time for the good stuff.” All the same, I am always grateful when there is a veggie tray at all, at any function. I just cannot blame veggie newbies from not getting overly overjoyed and in the holiday spirit munching on plain celery sticks, and prickly raw broccoli.

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In an effort to jazz up your typical tray, and kill two birds with one stone, I opted for a new approach. If you are anything like me, and get excited, or want to get excited about greens, by all means make more salads, but… this functional veggie tray can serve as both. By leaving the majority of our veggies whole, people can use tongs to grab a few peppers, and not feel obligated to climb into a plate of greens. On the other hand, this dish is bursting with so much color, it just might invite people to put a little more on their plate, and try something new.

Party Size Veggie Tray

  • 1 box cherry tomatoes, whole
  • 1 bag organic sweet baby peppers, whole
  • 1/4 cup diced shallot
  • 2 cups marinated artichokes, Monterey Farms
  • 6 oz mixed baby greens
  • 4 oz baby arugula
  • 1/8 tsp sea salt
  • 2 tsp Pizza Spice blend, or Italian blend (dried herbs)
  • 2 cups rainbow carrots, peeled, then sliced into medallions on a mandolin
  • 2 tbsp raw apple cider vinegar
  • 2 tbsp fresh curly parsley leaves, for flavor and decor
  • 2 large avocados, largely diced into chunks
  • Fresh ground black pepper to taste

Method:

Toss greens and shallot with raw apple cider vinegar, pizza seasoning, and salt until well combined. Arrange on tray and the sprinkle the outside with carrot slices, followed by baby peppers. Decorate the edges with baby tomatoes, and build a mountain of veggies up across the top for more color. Top with artichokes, and avocado, then sprinkle with fresh parsley and black pepper to taste.

Lay out your colorful dish with tongs, and allow it’s radiant color to put an end to the snickering from the candied nuts and cookies.

Yep. Checked that one off the list.

No excuse party people.

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Happy Thanksgiving Week!

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I am doing my best to round up some of my favorite newer recipes for my client’s festive and healthy holiday meals! I have had so much excitement regarding this Brussels sprout recipe, I wanted to go ahead and post it.

I have never seen (healthy) Brussels sprouts disappear so quickly. The combination of their natural crunch and unique flavor profile, matched with the chewy, tart and sweet bite of the cranberries, all to contrast a refreshing and caramelized fennel, and dressed with the sweet and salty flavoring from the coconut aminos, is the perfect celebration of fall. 

Roasted Brussels Sprouts with Dried Cranberries

  • 1½ lb. Brussels sprouts, trimmed and halved
  • 1 tbsp raw coconut aminos, or gluten-free tamari
  • 1 small fennel bulb, thinly sliced
  • 1 clove garlic, minced (1 tsp.), or 1/8 tsp granulated garlic
  • ¼ cup coarsely chopped dried (fruit infused) cranberries (you can find these in the bulk section of Whole Foods Market).
  • Salt to taste

Method:

Preheat oven to 400 degrees. Toss prepared Brussels sprouts and fennel with aminos, garlic, and 1/8 tsp Himalayan salt and black pepper. Place sprouts in a baking dish and bake for 25 minutes. Carefully remove from oven and stir in cranberries. Return to oven for 10-15 additional minutes, or until Brussels sprouts are golden brown/ crisp on the outside, and tender on the inside. Transfer to serving dish, or keep on warm in the oven until ready to enjoy. 

Vegetable side dish at the table?

Check!

Oil-free? Check!

Gluten-free? Check! Check!

Vegan, wholesome, and simple?

Check, check, check!

Happy Thanksgiving to all, and to all a good night.

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Mayonnaise scares me and thus, so does Ranch dressing.

When I think of ranch dressing, I think of children dunking prickly, raw broccoli into a glob of white mess, and smiling, as their mother’s applaud their new approval of vegetables. Woohoo!

Kids, I hear ya!  Personally there is not much I find ultra appealing about plain raw broccoli, or raw cauliflower… but as a whole, vegetables should not be seen as the villainous creation they are made out to be, and ranch as the glowing heroine, here to save the day!

Ranch does not make vegetables a health food. 

Hidden Valley Ranch Dressing contains: Vegetable Oil (Soybean, and/or Canola), water, egg yolk, sugar, salt, cultured non-fat  buttermilk, natural flavors (milk, soy), less than 1% of: spices, dried garlic, dried onion, vinegar, phosphoric acid, xantham gum, modified food starch, MSG, artificial flavors, disodium phosphate, sorbic acid, calcium disodium EDTA, disodium insonate, disodium guanylate, contains: eggs, milk, soy, gluten-free.

That last tid-bit made me laugh.

“gluten-free”. Really? So presumably this dressing, laden with chemicals, preservatives, poisons, like: MSG (monosodium glutamate), inflammatory oils and fats, sugar, and salt…  is okay for the gluten-intolerant? Hardly! Nor is okay for vegetables.

Instead of acidifying and coating veggies in something hazardous, try salsa, a homemade honey mustard, guacamole, or try this dip on for size. Sure, it may be green, and less bleached and pristine than a glistening white and creamy ranch, but it is a natural and healthier source of fat, and naturally contains fiber, protein, calcium, magnesium, and a list of nutrients that are far more satisfying and sustaining than a blob of chemicals. And parents, instead of raw broccoli and raw cauliflower, peeled and cut carrot, celery stick, bell peppers, cucumber, fennel, and sweet cherry tomatoes can be entirely more appealing.

Creamy Avocado “Ranch” Dressing

  • 3 cups mashed avocado, (or about 2.5-3 avocados)
  • 1-2 cups water, depending on desired consistency
  • 1/2 tsp garlic powder (or 2 cloves of garlic, minced)
  • 2 tsp onion powder
  • ¼ tsp black pepper
  • 2 tsp of raw apple cider vinegar
  • 1 tbsp lemon juice, fresh
  • 2 tbsp finely chopped parsley
  • 1 tbsp finely chopped dill
  • 1 tbsp finely chopped chives
  • Sea Salt to taste (1/8 tsp)

Combine avocado with water and blend until smooth. (You may wish to add more water for a smoother, less thick consistency). Add in garlic powder, onion powder, black pepper, lemon and apple cider vinegar. Blend. Add in chopped herbs and quickly pulse just enough to combine. Store in a glass jar in the fridge until ready to use. Should keep for 2-3 days. If brown appears on the top, just remove the oxidized avocado with a spoon, and use the remaining green underneath.

As for the salad…

Garden Salad with Creamy Ranch Dressing

Serves 6-8

  • 1 box organic girl baby kale, 9 oz
  • 1 head of romaine, chopped
  • 1 cup shaved carrot
  • 1 cup frozen organic peas, thawed
  • 1/8 cup red onion, thinly sliced or diced
  • alfalfa sprouts, optional
  • sea salt and pepper to taste

Toss greens and peas with 1/2 cup dressing until well coated. Plate, and top with remaining ingredients. Enjoy!

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