Exploring recipes, local restaurants, businesses, farms and fun places in and around Atlanta, GA that promote good wholesome food AND that make a gluten intolerant / plant based eater, a meat-eater and two young girls with ever evolving taste HAPPY.

Thursday, May 24, 2012

Summer Trail Mix

Oh the challenge of getting the girls excited about healthy snacks!  We went today and bought these nifty containers, one for each of them.  I laid out all the goodies on our counter and let them make their own trail mix.  I had cashews, pistachios, gluten free pretzels, raisins, dried cranberries, dried pineapple, gojii berries, coconut flakes, vegan chocolate chips, toasted pumpkin seeds all out for them to choose.  They LOVED this afternoon activity and are so proud of their creation.  

Wednesday, May 23, 2012

Gluten Free Vegan Brownies

My father-in-law brought us a new gluten free, dairy free chocolate brownie mix to try!  Dolci Di Maria out of Asheville, NC.  I loved that it is from Asheville, I liked the packaging, and the whole food ingredients - but what would the taste be like?  It called for oil, which I replaced with apple sauce, and two eggs which I replaced with 2 TB ground flax seed mixed with 6 TB warm water.  This made the brownies not only gluten free, but vegan and low fat.  I did have to bake them longer than the package recommended, about 30 minutes. 
 

The toughest critics ranked the brownies top notch!  Ry said they were really, really good.  Si gave a thumbs up and polished off two of them.  Which is saying a lot considering she was recovering from the stomach bug. 

Thank you Poppa!

This Maybe Useful To You and ME!

I am still learning my way around this blogging world.  Techie stuff is definitely not my thing.  But I realized I could not even find recipes on my blog that I had fixed without scrolling through all the dates.  I am sure there is an easier way to do this, but I finally made a page and linked all my meals to it.  You can go to the Recipe tab on the home page and find a listing. Hopefully all the links work!

Tuesday, May 22, 2012

Hopefully My Answer To "Gogurts"

I hope these fun little things will be my savior this summer.  I read about them on 100 Days of Real Food and bought them on Amazon.  I used to buy the girls "gogurts" or "squishers" once a month as a treat.  They go crazy for them in the grocery store. I guess their shape and packaging is what they love about them and that all their friends "have" them.  But its just regular yogurt on the inside.  I used to cave about once a month and buy them for the girls.  But I have decided I am not going to do dairy treats anymore, even if it is just once a month.  If Chad and the girls choose to have dairy outside of the house, that is their choice.  But, I just cant do it.  Especially after recently watching this news about the relationship between acne and dairy.  I WILL be the mean mom who doesn't let my children have dairy if it might prevent the heartache I experienced growing up with acne.  There are thousands of reasons I do not like dairy, but I guess my tipping point was listening to the Harvard Nurses' Study associating skim milk with acne.

Thus, I bought these silicone freeze pop holders.  They are the same shape as gogurts, are fun colors, and the girls did get excited about them when I opened the package.  Today, I got an email from Dr. Fuhrman with his recipe for berry yogurt.  I decided to try this in the pop holders.  We will know tomorrow if they are a success.  Using Dr. Fuhrmans recipe as a guide I put the following in my Vitamix:
1 cup of frozen blueberries
1 cup of raspberries
1 cup of unsweetened, organic soy milk
2 TB ground flax seet
3 pitted dates

I poured them in the pop holders, and put them in the freezer.  Keep your fingers crossed for me that the girls will like them tomorrow afternoon!

BTW - you can change up this recipe with different fruit, different plant based milks, or add in a little cocoa powder!


Wednesday, May 9, 2012

Unprocessed Treats for Kids

A friend told me about a blog 100 Days of Real Food, and although it is not all vegan / gluten free, it did make me think more about processed food.  I limit processed food as much as I can, I do not eat much, really any.  But, when it comes to the girls lunches and snacks, I often relent.  I buy "healthy" processed food, but it is processed none the less.  I was determined to make healthy snacks that would replace some of the boxed products in the girls snack drawer.  These three recipes are all healthy, whole foods, no added oil, salt or sugar!

First up - Fast Cookies for School Lunches - p 186 in the Forks Over Knives companion book.  What could be better FAST is in the title and cocoa is one of the ingredients.  I made mine a little different than the recipe.  This is what I did:
1/3 cup maple syrup
1/3 cup unsweetened soy milk
3 TBS almond butter (unsweet)
1/2 tsp vanilla
1 1/2 cups GF oats

Put maple syrup, plant milk, cocoa into saucepan, bring to boil, then simmer for 3 minutes.  Add the nut butter and stir until melted.  Remove from the heat, add the vanilla and oats.  Stir well then make into small cookies.  Done!  That is it!  I thought they were delicious.  Sierra enjoyed them, and Ryder ate them when there was no other option for dessert.  (But she did eat them!)
 
And, nothing excites my girls more than telling them they can have a cookie for snack.



I really thought I nailed this next snack.  I mean, I was thinking the girls would jump up and down when they tasted this.  No such luck - I was the only one who ate it, and yes, I ate the entire bowl.  Fortunately, not in one sitting. But, your children might like it!

This is a low-fat version of a nut butter, I believe the original recipe is in the Happy Herbivore cookbook.  I saw it mentioned on a couple of blogs.

1 can white beans (I used northern white beans) - drained
1/4 cup of your favorite unsweetened nut butter - I used almond
2 TB maple syrup
1/4 tsp cinnamon

Put all ingredients in your high powered blender and voila!

I dipped apples and veggies in it, I also put a tablespoon of it in my hot oatmeal.  So good.  One morning I spread it on a whole wheat tortilla with sliced strawberries, rolled it up and sliced it for the girls.  Nope, they still did not like it.  Apparently right now they did not like tortillas.  What?

Anyways, try it, I hope your children LOVE it as much as I DO!



 

Yes, I was on a roll, determined to find something they liked.  This one was the winner.  I found the recipe in Whole Living magazine in the April 2012 issue.  This is what I did:


 1 1/2 cup dried apricots
1/2 cup raw almonds
2 TB unsweetened shredded coconut
1 TB maple syrup
1 TB cocoa powder

Pulse apricots, almonds, coconut in food processor until finely ground.  Line a 9x5 inch loaf pan with parchment, leaving an inch overhang on all sides.  Transfer mixture to pan and press firmly to form a rectangle.

In saucepan, combine cocoa and maple syrup.  Stir until melted into a chocolate sauce.  Using a spoon, drizzle sauce on top.  Transfer to refrigerator for at least 15 minutes, until firm.  Remove, using parchment paper and cut into rectangles or square bars.  I stored these in the refrigerator in individual baggies so they were ready for the girls lunchboxes.

The girls loved these.  Finally...


The afternoon taste test:  

The muffin is a vegan banana muffin from Dekalb Farmers Market, I can not eat it because of the wheat, but the girls enjoyed it.