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Blog

This blog started as a way for me to share my recipes + culinary adventures, tips for vibrant health + happiness, thoughts on the latest developments in nutritional medicine + the low down on the Sydney wholefoods scene and beyond...

2 home-made supercharged drinks: Watermelon Gelatin Drink & Sauerkraut Spritzer

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My brain ticks over thinking of more ways to get bone broth and sauerkraut juice into my kids. Bone broths and lacto-fermenrted foods and beverages are particularly beneficial for infants and children, athletes, pregnant and nursing mothers, or anyone who has a compromised immune or digestive system. Traditional societies the world over consumed these foods on a regular if not daily basis but they seem to have fallen by the wayside in our modern, convenience-oriented, diets. I've written previously about the numerous health benefits of bone broths here and how to incorporate them into your diet (including smoothies!) here . I've also written about the numerous benefits of probiotic-rich lacto-fermented foods here and here.

So now I share 2 simple, delicious and refreshing drink recipes incorporating these nutrient-rich ingredients. My kids and friends have been thoroughly enjoying these drinks over these warm months to cool down (completely ignorant of the nutrient-dense/ probiotic-rich ingredients they are consuming!). If its a struggle to get your kids consuming bone broth or sauerkraut, these ideas might be just the ticket for getting these nourishing foods into them. They might sound strange, but trust me- they are delicious!

Watermelon Gelatin Drink

The addition of cold gelatinous beef broth to a drink gives it a more sweet caramel-like flavour with a moussey texture. Who would have thought? No one will even know that it contains beef broth!

Ingredients:

  • 700ml of seedless watermelon juice (blend the flesh AND the juice. If your watermelon has seeds you will need to remove them first)

  • 300ml of cold gelatinous beef broth (fat removed from the surface - store in freezer and use to fry meat)

  • Wedges of lime, lemon or lemonades (the latter is a fruit that is a hybrid cross of lemons and oranges) (optional)

  • Ice cubes (preferably form filtered water) (optional)

  • Stick of celery or fennel (optional)

Directions:

Combine watermelon and beef stock in a large jug and blend with hand help blender. Pour into glasses. Add other ingredients if desired and enjoy! Makes 4 glasses.

This drink can be consumed daily assuming you do not have any adverse reactions to fruit sugars. While my family and I consume bone broths daily (in morning smoothies and as part of the evening meal), I prefer to limit fruit intake due to the fructose content of fruit (fruit sugar is still sugar!). If I was offering this to my children I would not offer them any other fruit for that day as the volume of watermelon is more than enough. I sometimes offer a bottle of this drink to my children for afternoon tea (with a chunk of raw cheese). This is also a great non-alcoholic option for guests.

Note that everything other than the beef broth and watermelon is optional and added mostly for aesthetics which often entices children. I am amazed at how much more volume my children will drink if I simply throw in some icecubes, a fennel stick, a lemon wedge and a straw (I know appreciate why those little drink umbrellas were invented!). If your children will drink straight watermelon and beef broth without the extra “bells and whistles” then that’s an easier option!

Instead of watermelon, experiment with other seasonal fruit (eg mango, pineapple). Be sure to blend the flesh AND the juice of the fruit so you are eating wholefoods (the way nature intended) – consuming fruit juice alone without the flesh will result in a huge fructose hit (followed by insulin release) resulting in undesirable fluctuations in blood sugar and fat gain. The protein in the beef gelatin will aid in slowing down the release of the fruit sugars.

Sauerkraut Spritzer

This drink was invented as a means of using up surplus juice after making sauerkraut. Using it as a vinegar substitute in salad dressing is one option. Here's another:

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Ingredients:

  • Sauerkraut juice (strained off from making sauerkraut) (allow 1/2 cup juice per person)

  • Wedges of lime, lemon or lemonades (the latter is a fruit that is a hybrid cross of lemons and oranges) (optional)

  • Ice cubes (preferably form filtered water) (optional)

  • Stick of celery or fennel (optional)

  • Sparkling mineral water (1/4 cup per person) (optional)

Directions:

Combine ingredients in a glass and enjoy!

The natural active yeasts in the sauerkraut juice produced from the fermentation process give the juice a naturally fizzy/effervescent taste. This drink can be consumed daily assuming you do not have any adverse reactions to lacto-fermented foods. This is also a great non-alcoholic option for guests.

Note that everything other than the sauerkraut juice is optional and added mostly for aesthetics. My children love all the extra "trimmings". I add  sparkling mineral water only if having guests over and usually wouldn't offer it to children.

Instead of or in addition to mineral water you could add watermelon juice or some other seasonal fruit (eg mango, pineapple). Be sure to blend the flesh AND the juice of the fruit for the reasons I outlined above in the Watermelon Jelly Drink.

If you try these drinks out I'd love to hear how you and your family enjoy them.

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As an aside, and to remind me of nature's divinity- I found this perfectly heart-shaped delicate leaf in Centennial Park last week when frolicking in the grass with my kids. "That's what Mother Nature's dress is made out of" my 5 year old daughter said when she saw it. And her comment reminded us of our own divinity...

Eat the real deal for Easter - raw cacao chocolate coconut balls

P1010757I'm dreading all the processed chocolate my kids are going to come home with this week from school as Easter looms around the corner. When did every significant calendar event become an obessesion with stuffing my kids school bags with junk food? Click here to read a terrific article on this very point currently doing the rounds of the blogosphere. So what's in commercial chocolate that is so nasty? I had a quick look at the ingredients of some popular brands of chocolate sold in DJs yesterday and this is what I saw......  sugar, soy lecithins and other emulsifiers, milk powders, barley malt extract, glucose syrup (made from wheat starch), preservative 220, flavour and colour 122. And don't kid yourself in thinking that the world famous brands like Lindt are immune from this litany of ingredients. The first (and hence dominant) ingredient in one certified organic brand is  rapadura whole cane sugar and the fourth ingredient was soy lecithin. And while rapadura is much less processed than white refined sugar, sugar is still sugar which is still sugar and if that is the main ingredient in what is going into my or my kids' mouths then I'm going to think twice about it. Many trendy organic brands sweeten with agave syrup, which I am not a fan of as it is 90% fructose and creates severe fluctuations in blood sugar levels with insulin spikes and crashes.

There is no chocolate that I know of on the market that ticks all of the boxes…which is why I started making my own years ago. I’m talking about REAL chocolate made from unprocessed raw cacao powder, raw cacao butter, coconut oil and sweetened slightly with whole medjool dates. I roll these into 20g balls and roll into desiccated coconut. No sugar or other sweeteners required. When the quality of the underlying ingredients are the real deal, then you don't need to add much, if any, sweeteners (natural or otherwise).

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The raw cacao powder I buy is long fermented and high in antioxidents. Raw cacao butter and coconut oil are high in healthy saturated fats and also slow down the release of fruit sugars contained in the dates.

So when my kids come home with armfuls of processed (or what I call "fake") chocolate, I tell my kids that life is too short to feel sick by processed foods and that if you want to eat chocolate be sure to eat the best quality chocolate available. And I swap every piece of junk food with one of my chocolate coconut balls or activated nut coconut balls (and make sure they don't eat them all in one hit!).

I pop chocolate coconut balls and activated nut coconut balls (the latter being chocolate free) into coloured plastic egg containers and hide them around the garden for an Easter egg hunt for the children and their friends on Easter Sunday.

If you want your kids, family and friends to enjoy real chocolate for Easter (or any other time of year!) without any of the nasties, pick up a bag of my hand-made chocolate coconut balls…..the real (raw) deal!

$15 for a packet of 6 balls.

Hunting and gathering at Kingsley's Meats

IMG_2454When I walked into Kingsley's Meats a couple of weeks for the first time, I was immediately struck by the stylish, warm and cosy interior, very befitting of the Rose Bay village shops which it is nestled into. Headed up by Joel (ex-Hudson's Meats) and the familiar faces of Mark and Troy (ex GRUB), I found the staff super friendly and helpful from the start.

Here you will find an abundance of grass fed and finished meats, pastured chickens and pork, all from various local farms. One wall is lined with various jars and condiments and the freezer is stocked with organ meats (brains, chicken livers, black pudding), bones for stock making, limited dairy, pies and Careme puff pastry.IMG_2482

But proceed with caution: Don't expect that ALL of the meats and products will be pasture fed and finished and free of grains and preservatives. If these factors matter to you (and they do to me) then the key is that you will have to ASK! There's a subset of products there that I wouldn't buy eg cocktail Frankfurt sausages, grain-fed wagyu, rice flour based sausages, pastry, pies and probably most if not all of the visually enticing condiments that grace the shelf. When I questioned Joel on why he stocks these less than super nutritious products he replied that he is servicing a market, and that many of his customers in the local vicinity expect and demand these types of products. Ok, so not everyone has the same standards of nutrition as I do.  I get and respect that. At the end of the day Joel is running a business and has to pay rent and cover other expenses. I appreciate that while I only make and sell products that I am proud of my family and I (and my customers) consuming, for others this may not be a commercial reality. What I DO admire about Kingsley's Meats is:

IMG_2455(a) the staffs' knowledge of their products and their complete honesty and transparency in their source and processing. For example, they will NOT hide the fact that some of the products contain preservatives or that the wagyu is grain-fed etc

(b) the staffs' willingness to tailor a product to meet the customer's standards (e.g. they will happily make grain-free sausages if you pre-order 5kg and divi up between friends) and they will happily order in less than popular (but nutrient-dense) meats on an ad hoc basis on request (eg lambs brains, chook feet for making gelatinous chicken broth etc).

From the couple of times I have been there I walked out with armfuls of very reasonably priced chicken feet, chicken livers, beef cutlets, eye fillet and black pudding (the black pudding- traditional pork blood sausages- was amazing sliced then pan fried in beef tallow .... tasted like a super flavoursome sausage! Left over pieces were thrown into kids school lunches which they devoured).

I commend Joel and his team for establishing this little gem where we can purchase pastured meats and (often hard to source) organ meats.IMG_2449

Contact details are: 22 Plumer Road, Rose Bay (ph 9363 4971). Closed Sundays.

IMG_2444Kingsleys Meats are in the process of setting up a wesbite but in the meantime you can Like them on Facebook here.

Have you been to Kingsley's Meats? What did you think of it?