A Good Food Day: Reboot Your Health with Food That Tastes Great (5 page)

CHOCOLATE
SHAKE
MAKES 1 SHAKE
Chocolate for breakfast. That’s basically what’s going on here. Thanks to raw, unsweetened organic cacao powder, you can start your day or feed a post-dinner sweet tooth with a decadent, disease-fighting shake. If you need a chocolate fix, this shake’s deep, rich chocolate flavor does the job. The sweetness comes from the ripe banana, so if your bananas still have a green tint when you freeze them, you may want to add a teaspoon of honey to the shake.

Unsweetened raw cacao powder is high in flavonoids, which are powerful antioxidants found in plants. When raw cacao beans are made into packaged chocolate products, the flavonoids and all their benefits are lost. So, your healthiest option is unsweetened organic raw cacao powder. Use it in this shake, stir it into oatmeal, bake with it, or make a killer hot chocolate.
1 ripe banana, peeled and frozen
1 tablespoon raw almond or cashew butter
2 tablespoons unsweetened raw cacao powder
1 cup unsweetened almond milk
½ teaspoon ground cinnamon
Add everything to a blender and buzz until smooth and creamy, about 1 minute.
SHAKES
The only shake I used to drink was one made from a half-quart of ice cream. Of course, a few hours later I was nursing a milkshake hangover (with some form of bread).
When I started creating the breakfast habit, my focus on high-protein options led me to protein powder, and a shake was the easiest way to use it. I’ve since moved away from protein powders, because I’m more into using whole foods to get my necessary nutrients. However, shakes still do it for me, especially in the spring and summer when something cold for breakfast seems like a good idea. I also love shakes because of the mobility factor: I’m usually pouring the contents of the blender into a glass jar and flying out the door.
My morning shake is the only time I’m okay with drinking my calories, because I know it’s filled with quality whole foods. The protein comes from ingredients like almond butter, chia seeds, Greek yogurt, and oats. The liquid base varies, but it’s typically almond milk—it’s thinner than cow’s milk, but it still has body; and its nutty flavor and faint sweetness work well in all kinds of shakes. The key to thick, creamy shakes isn’t milk or ice cream—it’s frozen bananas. I recommend cutting peeled bananas into chunks before freezing them, especially if you’re not working with a high-powered blender. Frozen fruit in general is great for shakes because it adds flavor, fiber, and a frosty quality that eliminates the need for ice.
ODE TO ORANGE JULIUS SHAKE
MAKES 1 SHAKE
Orange Julius stores were a huge part of mall culture in the ’80s, and my teenage weekends of cruising the mall always included their sweet, frothy orange drinks. My play on the classic Julius is just as cold, creamy, and bright, but it’s naturally sweetened and uses Greek yogurt to boost the protein factor. I also use whole fresh fruit, not just the juice, to add fiber and thickness. We send out a complimentary shot glass of this shake to brunch guests at Hearth.

Most commercial honey, like the kind in the squeezy bear bottles, is treated with a high heat process that destroys some of honey’s natural vitamins, minerals, and enzymes. I prefer to use raw, unprocessed honey. It has not been heated or filtered so it still contains bee pollen and all of its beneficial nutrients. Raw honey looks different than processed versions—it’s opaque and solid at room temperature. Buy it at your local farmer’s market, and save it for recipes where it won’t be heated, like this shake.
½ grapefruit, peeled
½ orange, peeled
½ teaspoon pure vanilla extract
1 tablespoon raw honey
1 cup ice
½ cup full-fat plain Greek yogurt
Add everything to a blender and buzz until smooth and creamy, about 1 minute.

Goji Berry and Banana Shake

GOJI BERRY AND BANANA SHAKE
MAKES 1 SHAKE
This filling shake skews sweet, so if you’re trying to wean yourself off sugary cereals, give this one a go. Goji berries, the star of this bright orange-red shake, get a lot of buzz for their antioxidant powers. Here, their tangy sweetness is balanced by ground flaxseed, which adds a nutty flavor, good fat, and fiber. Don’t skip soaking the goji berries; this plumps and softens them. If you don’t have a minute to spare in the morning, soak them overnight.

Goji berries are commonly found in dried form and look like red raisins. Some of the goji berry hype is overblown and related to an ancient Chinese myth that they can cure anything and help you drastically extend your lifespan_ But their crazy-high levels of beta carotene (which converts to vitamin A in the body) and vitamin C, and high concentration of protein (more than any other fruit), make them worth adding to your shakes or munching on as a snack.
¼ cup dried goji berries, soaked in water for 10 minutes and drained
1 ripe banana, peeled and frozen
½ cup unsweetened rice milk
2 tablespoons ground flaxseed
½ cup ice
Add everything to a blender and buzz until smooth and creamy, about 1 minute. Give it a taste and add more rice milk or ice if you like a thinner shake.
PEAR
-
MAPLE OATMEAL SHAKE
MAKES 1 SHAKE
When you think of oatmeal, a beverage probably isn’t among the first things that come to mind. It wasn’t for me either until one sleepy morning when I was deciding between making a shake and grabbing some leftover steel-cut oats. I ended up with a mash-up of breakfasts that’s reminiscent of a thick, creamy milkshake. It has all the fiber and staying power of steel-cut oats in the conveniently portable form of a shake. There’s a slight chew to it, which helps signal a sense of fullness. Bartlett pears are sweet and juicy, the two characteristics you need to balance the heft of the oatmeal. The fall flavors of pear and maple are made to go together.

¾ cup cooked, cooled
Steel-Cut Oats
1 Bartlett pear, chopped (about 1 cup)
½ cup unsweetened almond milk
1 tablespoon maple syrup
Add everything to a blender and buzz until completely smooth, about 1 minute. If you feel it’s too thick, add a few extra tablespoons of almond milk to reach the consistency you like.
CHERRY-VANILLA OATMEAL SHAKE
MAKES 1 SHAKE
This shake was inspired by Ben & Jerry’s Cherry Garcia, still one of the world’s greatest ice cream flavors (and one I haven’t had much of since I changed my eating habits). The cherries and vanilla are great on their own, but I occasionally toss in a little cacao powder for added richness.

¾ cup cooked, cooled
Steel-Cut Oats
1 cup fresh or frozen pitted Bing cherries
¼ teaspoon pure vanilla extract
½ cup unsweetened almond milk
2 teaspoons unsweetened raw cacao powder (optional)
Add everything to a blender and buzz until completely smooth, about 1 minute. If you feel it’s too thick, add a couple tablespoons of almond milk to reach the consistency you like.
POT OF
STEEL-CUT OATS
SERVES 6 TO 8
In the colder months, no other breakfast feels as hearty and fortifying, or keeps me satisfied as long as a bowl of hot steel-cut oats. There’s an incredible nutty creaminess that happens when the starch releases from the oats and mingles with almond and coconut milks. Their cooking time isn’t conducive to the morning rush, so we make a big batch in the evening and eat it for the next three or four days as a quick no-brainer breakfast. Steel-cut oats are chunkier than rolled oats and have a sturdy, chewy texture that holds up well to reheating (unlike rolled oats, which can get gluey). I find they’re even better the next day, after having some time to sit with the milk and cinnamon. There are mornings when I dig in as is, but toppings help keep it interesting from day to day. My go-to combination is dried fruit with chopped hazelnuts and a tablespoon of maple syrup, but you can take it any direction you like with fruit, nuts, spices, and natural sweeteners.

Coconut milk is pressed from the meat of a coconut, which is a gold mine of nutritional value. It’s high in a type of saturated fat that has germ- and disease-fighting powers and may help lower total cholesterol levels. Coconut milk’s bounty also includes vitamins E and C, iron, calcium, potassium, and antioxidants galore. It’s available in cartons and cans, and for cooking I prefer the thick, rich texture of canned coconut milk: When you pop open a can, the milk may look separated, but it just needs to be stirred. Coconut milk in a carton is thinner and more drinkable, but it usually comes sweetened or flavored with a handful of questionable additives.
Steel-cut oats, also called Irish oats, are chunky pieces of whole oat kernels (oat groats). These thick pieces take longer to digest and are lower on the glycemic index than rolled oats, which have to go through more processing to get their flat shape. Steel-cut oats have more protein than rolled oats, but both varieties have the same high level of fiber and are light-years better than the sugar-bomb packets of instant oats.
2 cups steel-cut oats
½ cup canned whole unsweetened coconut milk
½ cup unsweetened almond milk, plus more for serving
1 cinnamon stick
Large pinch of fine sea salt
1
In a large pot, combine all the ingredients with 4 cups water and bring to a boil. Reduce the heat to a simmer, cover, and cook for 15 minutes, stirring occasionally, until the oats are cooked through and creamy.
2
Transfer the cooked oats and cinnamon stick to a glass storage container and let them cool before storing in the fridge.
3
In the morning, portion out your oatmeal (I do about ¾ cup per serving) and heat it up on the stove with ¼ cup almond milk to thin it out a bit.
GLYCEMIC INDEX & GLYCEMIC LOAD
Why Slow and Low Is Best
Bread is my biggest weakness, and it used to be the first thing I ate every day. Whether it was an artisanal loaf or the cheap, sliced stuff, I was in. My craving for bread was matched only by a fierce love for pasta (heaven distilled into a food). I knew they weren’t healthy foods, but I didn’t know they were making me a blood-sugar train wreck. When I visited my doctor complaining of slothlike fatigue, he pointed out that I was eating too much white flour and sugar—refined carbs that have no fiber or nutrients. This caused my blood sugar to spike and then drastically dip, cueing exhaustion and cravings. My blood tests confirmed I was prediabetic, basically the last stop on the road to full-blown type 2 diabetes.
Had I learned about the Glycemic Index (GI) and Glycemic Load (GL) a lot sooner, I could have started choosing better-quality carbs. Carbohydrates are basically long chains of glucose (sugar) molecules, which your digestive system breaks down and releases into your bloodstream to be used for energy. By ranking how high and how quickly carbohydrate-containing foods raise your blood sugar level, both the GI and GL help you figure out the best carbs to eat and make it much easier to control your blood sugar, manage your weight, and keep your body humming along with a steady (rather than spiking) supply of energy.
The GI scale is 0 to 100: Foods under 55 are low GI, between 56 and 69 are medium, and above 70 are high. The higher the GI ranking, the quicker that food can send you into a wild sugar rush followed by an exhausting crash. You can easily pick those foods out of a lineup—white bread, white pasta, French fries, potato chips, soda, candy. When you regularly consume too many servings of high-GI foods like I did, you’re more likely to pack on pounds and increase your risk of developing insulin resistance and type 2 diabetes (
see more on how this works
). The lower a food’s GI ranking, the longer it takes to break down in your gut, resulting in a slow-and-steady drip of glucose into your bloodstream. Choosing complex carbs with low GI—almost all vegetables, most fruits, and some beans and grains—is especially crucial at breakfast so you set off with a steady supply of energy for the day. These foods also tend to be higher in fiber, keeping you fuller longer.
By using the GI as a general guide, I started swapping in low-GI alternatives for my usual crew. I replaced refined and white flour breads with whole-grain breads, like the sourdough rye bread I use in the
Breakfast Sandwiches
. I chose nuts instead of potato chips, whole wheat pasta instead of white flour pasta. Simply by choosing lower-GI foods, I reversed my prediabetic state and came back to normal blood sugar levels in just a matter of months. (See the
chart
detailing the whole scale of the GI/GL index.)
But of course there are some head-scratchers within the index. The GI values for watermelon and carrots are high, and spaghetti has a lower GI than brown rice. This flies in the face of all
common sense. The solution? The Glycemic Load, a relatively new measurement that factors in a key piece of information that the GI doesn’t: the amount of carbohydrates in a realistic portion of the food. Let’s use watermelon as an example. The carbohydrates in watermelon quickly turn into sugar, so it’s high on the glycemic index at 72. But an average serving size of watermelon doesn’t have many carbohydrates; you would have to practically gorge on the stuff to get a rapid rise in blood sugar. So thanks to the GL, foods like watermelon, carrots, and cantaloupe are cleared of their former bad-for-blood-sugar reputation. A GL of 10 or less is low, 11 to 19 is medium, 20 or more is high. In a real-life portion size of watermelon (½ cup), the GL value is 4, making it low glycemic.
Ultimately, both indexes are useful. The Glycemic Index helps you choose better-quality carbs, and the Glycemic Load guides you to reasonable portion sizes. I’ve found the best strategy is to use them together: familiarize yourself with where things fall on the scale and try to stick to mostly low- and medium-GI and GL foods, only dabbling in high. At breakfast, this means going for
steel-cut oats
instead of instant oatmeal,
muffins
or
pancakes
made of whole-grain flour rather than white flour, and whole fruit instead of just fruit juice. A great reference for more information on the glycemic index and glycemic load is
The New Glucose Revolution
by Jennie Brand-Miller.
The most noticeable difference from my high-GI carb frenzy to now is my energy level. I’m no longer dragging around in a fog of exhaustion. My tastes have also changed—I now crave the nuttier whole-grain breads rather than whatever I can get my hands on. Before, I was caught in a loop of “I can’t get no satisfaction” when it came to bread. Now, by keeping my blood sugar steady with the help of low-GI eating, I’ve realized a level of satisfaction from food that I was completely missing out on before.
THE GLYCEMIC INDEX & GLYCEMIC LOAD VALUES
GI:
Low is 1–55, medium is 56–69, and high is 70–100
GL:
Low is 1–10, medium is 11–19, and high is 20 and above
FOOD
GI VALUE
GL VALUE
Grapefruit
25
3
Cashews
27
3
Chickpeas
28
8
Lentils
29
5
Apple
38
6
Whole milk
41
5
Grapes
46
8
Spaghetti
46
22
Orange
48
5
Brown rice
50
16
Banana
52
14
Quinoa
53
13
Steel-cut oats
55
13
Sweet corn
60
20
Sweet potato
61
17
White rice
64
23
Instant oatmeal
66
17
Cranberry juice
68
24
Watermelon
72
4
Popcorn
72
7
Cornflakes
81
21
Baked russet potato
85
26

Other books

The Drowned Boy by Karin Fossum
Supernotes by Agent Kasper
Girl Saves Boy by Steph Bowe
Las maravillas del 2000 by Emilio Salgari
My Russian Hero by Macguire, Jacee
Lady Vengeance by Melinda Hammond
Kamikaze (Last Call #1) by Rogers, Moira
The Labyrinth of the Dead by Sara M. Harvey