Food Choices for Healthy People and a Healthy Planet

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Do you know what’s even better than resolutions? Tools to make the resolutions come true. It’s a cliché that we all have “lose weight” on our list of New Year’s resolutions, so I approach this topic with some trepidation, especially since I spent 25 years as a therapist helping people overcome eating disorders. Resolutions have a way of backfiring. So in that spirit, I offer ideas for good food that you will want to eat.

America’s Test Kitchen does as its name implies – tests many variations on a theme before putting its stamp of approval on a given recipe. (Rather like Consumer Reports, in that sense). In addition to its dictionary-sized main cookbook, ATK offers a companion volume of “light” versions.

I also love The 30-Day Vegan Challenge, by Colleen Patrick-Goudreau. Everything in this cookbook that I’ve tried is a winner, such as this one:

Roasted Red Pepper and Walnut Spread
Put through a blender or food processor all the following:
2-3 whole roasted red peppers (fresh or from a jar)
2/3 cup bread crumbs
1 cup walnuts
4 large whole garlic clovers
½ tsp salt
1 tbsp lemon juice
2 tsp agave nectar
1 tsp ground cumin
¼ tsp red pepper flakes

This is luscious on bread, crackers, or raw veggies.

Where to buy. If you’ve never been to Berkeley Bowl or Monterey Market (also in Berkeley), do yourself a favor and spend an hour there. The glorious smorgasbord of nature’s bounty is displayed in full color. Diablo Foods in Lafayette is another goldmine of delicious produce.




Mainstream American culture embraces meat as healthful and even natural. Well, we’ve learned that industrially produced meat is not safe for us or the planet, but can’t we still believe that meat eating is natural?

Not according to Melanie Joy, Ph.D., who received her doctorate in psychology for researching the beliefs that we engage in when we tuck into a steak or a drumstick. Turns out that a concerted campaign keeps us ignorant of what goes on in factory farms and slaughterhouses. Recently, several states almost passed laws making it a crime to take pictures at such places. Undercover videos have revealed ghastly conditions and practices there. Not so secret any more! And big meatpackers tried to keep us in ignorance.

Enter Melanie Joy. She focuses on us, the consumers, and what makes us vulnerable to the ad campaigns (happy cows in green pastures…. not!) and cultural habits (barbecuing in the summer) that keep the meat industry going.

Full disclosure: I was one of Melanie’s dissertation advisors, so I’ve seen the research and her analysis in all its detail.  Since graduating, Melanie has continued her work and published a really cool book, “Why We Love Dogs, Eat Pigs, and Wear Cows.” Contrary to what you might think, it’s not a shock-filled expose but a very gentle, kind guide to awakening to our thinking habits. What we do after that is up to us.

Melanie Joy will be speaking next Tuesday, August 23, at 6.30 pm at the Unitarian Universalist Center at 1187 Franklin St (at Geary Blvd) in San Francisco. Personally, I can’t wait!

A great contribution




Eating lower on the food chain is recommended by health experts and by sustainability
experts — that is, eating less meat, fish, and dairy. We can all do this easily by having one
meatless day a week, by choosing chicken instead of beef, and stretching a little fish a
long way.
But what about giving up meat, fish, and dairy altogether? Vegans make this decision,
and also give up eggs and honey. So what do they eat – is it boring? Are they healthy?
Having researched this a bit, I can tell you that food made of animals is probably less
healthy, when you take into account pesticides, hormones, and cholesterol – not to
mention unsanitary slaughtering plants. We’ve all heard of food safety issues! So vegans
are probably exposing themselves to fewer health problems, as long as they choose a
variety of foods (which we should all do, anyway).
Back to the question, “Is vegan boring?” Not if you go by a wonderful cookbook called
Vegan world fusion cuisine, Mark Reinfeld, Bo Rinaldi and their colleagues at a
restaurant in Hawaii. I’ve tried quite a few of these and found them astonishingly tasty,
varied, and healthful.

Here in the Bay Area, we have a caterer who will offer vegan food on a regular schedule or for special events. Vegan Local Love Catering http://localloveservices.com/

Check out these menus from the website:


1. 3 grain Lentil burger with roasted Rosemary potatoes served with chipotle ketchup and “Mayo”.
2. Veggie Enchiladas with Black beans and seasonal veggies in a house-made enchilada sauce served with Spanish Rice.
3. Greek Moussaka: Layers of Eggplant, Zucchini, Tempeh, tomato, and onion baked in a creamy potato béchamel sauce.
4. Mushroom, and Carrot Sunchoke Risotto topped with crispy dried onion rings with a side salad.
5. Baked BBQ tofu in a tangy Barbecue sauce served with Quinoa pilaf and roasted Brussels Sprouts.
6. Tofu Roulade Stuffed with a Mushroom and Spinach Duxelle served with “Caesar” Salad.

*Story also found on Examiner.com




"The New Good Life" John Robbins

This is a friendly, compassionate, and deeply heartfelt guide on how to live. Bringing together research and personal experience of key themes – money, food, home, time, kids – John Robbins maps out a set of values that can lead our country to a better life, even in a time when security seems far away.

“Better life” to me means healthier and happier, woven together with care for other people, animals, and our earth. In his life and in this book, John Robbins shows how it can be done. Every step he advises, he has taken himself.

I appreciate that he devoted a large segment of the book to “healing your relationship with money.” So many people have little idea where their money actually goes, while others (both rich and poor) are lost in the illusion that “more money” is the answer to their problems. His lessons about making peace with money are wise indeed.

Many of the findings in this book have been reported elsewhere, but by bringing them together in an integrated way, Robbins paints a positive and possible picture of how to live. This is a book about today, neither a romanticized idyll of an easier past nor a prediction of a technologically-driven salvation in the future. It asks you to think hard about whether to have children, and how to guide them in an advertisement-crazed culture. Balancing alarming facts with inspiring ideas and examples of people who have made wise life choices, Robbins made this a deeply readable book.

Buy this book. Buy extra copies and give them to people you love, especially young people starting out in life. For additional information check out John Robbins website: http://www.johnrobbins.info




In case you didn’t know, we are also connected to several other websites. Recently I started writing for the Examiner.com . Feel free to search for me in the search bar to locate article I have written.

I am also on Twitter and Facebook! Please feel free to connect with us!

There is also our original webpage where you can learn more about “The Earth-Friendly Food Chain” and purchase it.  www.earthfriendlyfoodchain.com




Joe Laur at Greenopolis has some ideas you can use to make your farmers’ market trip even more responsible and rewarding. Check out these 10 Tips to Shop Smart at Farmer’s Market by clicking on the picture or link.