Archive for Garden

April 26th, 2012

10 Easy Ways to Make Green Foods Part of Your Everyday Diet – and Love Them!

Eating living (raw) foods and having supreme health is a sure-fire way of raising your vibration, so I’m all for it! But I know it ain’t always easy to find ideas for healthy eating that are interesting – and that taste good.

Now, every week, I receive an inspirational ezine from the UK”s Karen Knowler, who’s known as The Raw Food Coach. In last week’s edition of her ezine, Karen featured a superb article that reveals just how easy it is to add more life-giving leafy greens to your everyday eating. I asked Karen if I could share this article with you, because I just know you’re going to find it so helpful.

So, you don’t have any more excuses for not including more greens in what you eat. Go forth and be healthy!

Here’s the article (and be sure to sign up for Karen’s fabulous ezine!):

‘It’s rare that you come across someone who LOVES eating green foods, but that doesn’t have to be the case for any of us. Not only can green foods be delicious, they can make us feel fantastic, helping to cleanse and rebuild even the most jaded of bodies and spirits.

When I first got into raw foods I admit I was one of those raw fooders who relied heavily on fresh juicy fruits, dried fruits and nuts, and most days I’d eat a salad, but it wasn’t what I’d now call a ‘decent’ salad. And that’s because I’ve since learned that it’s nowhere near enough to have some green on your plate and think that’s sufficient, because it’s not! We need dark greens, ideally wild greens, and plenty of them. A plate of iceberg lettuce simply won’t make the grade.

So in this article I’m sharing with you 10 different ideas to get greens into your daily diet and love them, because not only is it possible, it’s vital!

1: The Green Smoothie
Through various mediums I’ve shared what I consider to be the easiest/most yummy green smoothie recipe – Mango & Spinach, so hopefully you’re up to speed with what they are? (Brief explanation: A large amount of leafy green vegetables blended with some great-tasting ripe fruit of your choice to a soup or smoothie consistency.) So how do we incorporate them into our diet? Good times of the day for drinking a green smoothie are: first thing for breakfast (start as you mean to go on – if you start your day with this you’ll feel set up for the day ahead and plenty full enough until lunch time); as a brunch if you get hungry between breakfast and lunch time; as a liquid lunch if you are pressed for time; as a pre-dinner course, perfect served as a drink or even a soup; as a supper if you’re not hungry enough to eat a ‘proper’ dinner, or if you’ve come in late from work or a night out and don’t want to eat before bed.

2: Variety is the Spice of Life
We are all guilty of falling into ruts with our eating habits, eating the same things over and over again, but it’s important in all diets to eat a wide variety of foods for pleasure and nutrition. So too is it important to choose a wide variety of greens from the vast range of green leafy vegetables (and herbs) and not just finding one and sticking with it. Here’s a starter list of green leafies that you can use as a checklist. Whichever ones you haven’t eaten for a while (or ever!) make it your personal project to hunt them down and try them out – starting this week!

Beet greens * Chicory * Chard * Endive * Kale, flat green * Kale, curly * Lamb’s lettuce * Lettuce, Batavia * Lettuce, Cos * Lettuce, flat * Lettuce, iceberg * Mizuna * Rocket (arugula) * Spinach * Turnip greens * Basil * Chervil * Chickweed * Chive * Comfrey leaves * Coriander * Dandelion * Dillweed * Garlic mustard * Lovage * Mallow * Marjoram * Mint * Nettle * Oregano * Parsley * Peppermint * Purslane * Raspberry leaf * Rosemary * Sage * Salad burnet * Shepherd’s purse * Sorrel * Spearmint * Watercress * Wild celery * Wild garlic * Yarrow

3: Green Soups
Green Soups are similar to green smoothies but are thicker, and obviously are looked on as meals rather than drinks. There are some great green soup recipes around. One of my personal favourites is Green Ginger Soup which goes like this… Simply take the following ingredients and blend in your food processor, blender or Vita-Mix until smooth: 1 cup diced tomatoes, ½ cup water, 2 cups spinach, ½ avocado, ½-inch fresh ginger, juice of ½ lemon, 1Tbsp olive oil. Serves 1. It’s truly delicious.

4: Take a Walk on the Wild Side
It’s rarely mentioned but I need to here – it’s vital for all of us to eat wild greens. These greens are (for the most part) as natural and potent as you’re going to get because they’re (typically) untouched by man and have not been treated in any way. So arm yourself with a guide book such as Food for Free and a carrier bag (and gloves if you’re going to pick nettles) and take yourself off for a walk to your nearest wood, farm or leafy park and see what you can find. Of course the great thing about this route is that the food is free, abundant and it’s going to be fresh, fresh, fresh! AND you really feel the difference when you eat wild foods – they’re electric! Great in juices, smoothies, various savoury recipes and of course any salads too.

5: Green Juices
Green juices are of course another great way to get the greens in. The difference between smoothies and juices is fibre – juices have no fibre, whereas smoothies have ALL of the fibre, however, if you find smoothies too bulky or you just don’t like them, then juicing is a great alternative. The secret of a good green juice is to work with 1–3 strong green leaves such as kale, spinach, watercress, parley, wheatgrass etc, then add cucumber and/or celery for more liquid and extra vitamins and minerals, and if you feel your juice needs sweetening, add a little apple, pear, carrot, red bell pepper, lemon or lime. There’s nothing like a green juice for lifting your energy and mind, especially first thing in the morning. Don’t forget, to juice greens you need a juicer that is capable of handling them, such as a Green Star – most centrifugals won’t be able to handle them.

6: Herbs
Herbs are nature’s medicine and also one of the chef’s best allies. Herbs are so delicious and so fresh tasting that I encourage you to eat fresh herbs at least once per day. Add them to your smoothies, juices, to your salads and your savoury recipes. Line your window sills with them, they look stunning! Fresh herbs really do make all the difference.

7: Wheatgrass
Wheatgrass is the mother of all greens, really. There are many ways you can take wheatgrass, but obviously freshly juiced is best. For more information about wheatgrass, including the many ways to take it and its benefits, click here.

8: The Kale & Avocado Salad!
I’ve published this recipe a number of times but for those who missed it, you can watch me demo it in person right here. This salad is something that I rave about constantly. Everyone who tries it seems to adore it AND then goes on to incorporate it into their everyday life, not just now and again but daily! Why? Because it’s quick, easy and delicious and very versatile AND it enables you to happily eat tons of dark leafy greens! This is what you do:

Finely chop as much kale as you think you can eat plus a little more (it shrinks). Make the pieces fairly small, say 1–2cm square, and set aside in a bowl. Then pour on some olive oil (flax oil is good too, as are others) and sprinkle on a little good quality salt such as Celtic sea salt or Himalayan Crystal Salt, or Herbamare. Next, massage the oil and salt into the leaves until the kale becomes ‘wilted’ and glistens. At this point the kale suddenly appears extremely appetizing and you can start to see the potential! Next add half to one avocado and massage that in to the leaves as well. Now you have coated kale. Next, give a good squeeze of lemon juice and mix it all in by hand. Taste test. Add more lemon if you want/need to. Finally, add in your favourite ingredients. For me this means sundried tomatoes, fresh tomatoes, occasionally spring onions (scallions), and sometimes I’ll sprinkle on some garlic or onion powder, or even curry powder! Whatever takes your fancy. And sometimes I dress it with a cup of macadamias blended with ½ cup water and onion powder added. When you have all your ingredients well mixed in, sample a little and add anything that you think might be missing (highly unlikely!) and then sit down, exhale and enjoy!

9: The Superfood Smoothie
Superfood smoothies are never going to be as good as real live fresh green smoothies, but when your fridge is bare then turn to your cupboards and pull out your Nature’s Living Superfood (Vita Mineral Greens in USA) or other favourite green superfood powder and whip up a smoothie with it and other chosen ingredients.

10: Your Own Special Way
Each of us develops favourite ways of doing things over time. Periodically, for example, I will take E3 Live or wheatgrass juice, and then ‘let go of it’ when my body no longer asks for it. Similarly, green superfoods work the same way, as do herbs and all manner of other raw foods in my dietary vocabulary. Follow your own way with greens, whatever that way is, adding more into your daily regime can only be a very good thing!’

© 2012 Karen Knowler

Karen Knowler, The Raw Food Coach publishes “Successfully Raw” – a free weekly ezine for raw food lovers everywhere. If you’re ready to look good, feel great and create a raw life you love get your FREE tips, tools and recipes now at The Raw Food Coach.

 

 

 

February 11th, 2012

Gratitude Friday – 10 February 2011

Hellooo! Yep, another week at RRR Central. It’s been a whirlwind of a week, and I have a few ‘gratitudes’ I’d love to share with you. Be sure to share yours, too, in the comments below.

  • My girls settling well into their new classes in this bright, shiny new school year.
  • Having a fabulous chat with a dear friend over the phone.
  • Having a lovely friend over to my house for a special lunch.
  • Spending a couple of hours at a coffee shop, chatting animatedly with yet another friend who had returned from a few months overseas (SO MUCH to talk about).
  • Receiving the first in a yearly subscription to Mindfood magazine, a Christmas gift from another friend!

Certainly a very sociable week, with lovely connections with dear friends. I really feel so fortunate.

Have a wonderful week, and be sure to share the ‘things’ that you’re grateful for, in the comments below.

PS I’m also grateful for the intoxicatingly fragrant David Austin roses that adorn my desk this week (see the photo), from my children’s first-birthday rose bushes.

Categories : Flowers, Garden, Gratitude
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February 3rd, 2012

An Abundant Garden

My parents-in-law are pretty amazing gardeners. Everything they grow seems to flourish.

On our recent stay with them in my old hometown in Queensland, I got to see how ‘my lime tree’ was doing – when my husband and I moved down to Victoria about 15 years ago, I left my potted lime tree with my parents-in-law to look after. They planted it in the ground, and it now produces so many limes that they end up giving away bags full to friends.

Although lime season was nearly over, they’d left one ripe lime on the tree for me to pick. That’s it in the photo above. Isn’t it a beauty? I enjoyed the juice from that in my morning glasses of water.

I also admire how resourceful and thrifty my in-laws are in the garden. My father-in-law created the below lettuce planter out of an old upturned refrigerator, painting it green and adding bits of flexible plastic across the top to serve as holders for protective mesh (for when those snails and birds come a-hunting!). Clever, huh?

Behind the lettuce planter are tomato, beetroot and butter bean plants. As usual, they end up with huge gluts of vegies, and give many of those away, too! And of course, they use home-made compost as fertiliser.

One of their neighbours recently found an unopened packet of Yates tomato seeds in his old garden shed, and the date on the packet was from 1940! He decided to try planting the seeds, and they germinated, creating masses of tomatoes with a slightly different flavour to those you buy in the stores these days.

While we were there, my father-in-law planted eight seeds from one of those heirloom tomatoes, and they all germinated. They’ve since given us some seeds, so we’re going to try them in our garden next summer. I can’t wait.

I just love how abundant nature is – and how we can have bucketloads of fresh, organic fruits and vegies for only a few dollars when we take the time to grow them ourselves.

If I’ve inspired you to get growing in your garden, you might like my fantastic (if I do say so) organic gardening-recipe book called I’m Hungry, Let’s Grow It!. It’s a kid’s book, but, really, it’s great how-to guide for beginner adults, too. With two recipes for each of the 14 featured fruits, vegetables and herbs.

I’m now putting thought into what winter vegies we’ll grow this year – more kale and spinach, no doubt, for all those vitamin- and mineral-packed green smoothies!

I wonder what my father-in-law is planning on growing…

Categories : Garden, Health, Raw food
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November 17th, 2011

The English rose…

The English rose greets the summer garden with a profusion of colour and perfume and our doors and windows are thrown open to allow the season’s intoxicating atmosphere to envelop us and our homes.

Sydney A Sykes

I love this quote! It may not quite be summer here, but our roses are in full bloom. We gave our twin daughters ’1st-birthday roses’ a few years ago, and we’ve enjoyed their beautiful blooms ever since. Above is a photo of our daughter Evangeline’s rose, which is the David Austin ‘Evelyn’ rose. So gorgeous (you should smell it!).

Arabella has the David Austin ‘Mary Rose’ as her special plant – I’ll post a pic of that soon…

I hope you enjoy this splash of rosy-ness, and that you can almost imagine ‘the season’s intoxicating atmosphere’ in your home! I’ve certainly been enjoying these beautiful flowers. Ah, ain’t life grand?

Categories : Beautiful home, Garden
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October 24th, 2011

Lilac Dreams

Sunday was an amazing spring day here in Ballarat – mid-20s, and glorious sunshine.

I went with my girls to the Botanical Gardens (they took me on a tour, pretending that I hadn’t ever been there before), and we came across the most beautiful lilac tree in full bloom.

I just had to share some of its beauty with you (see the pic above). I buried my nose into its masses of flowers, inhaling the sumptuous, heady aroma. Can you just imagine?

Mmmm. Are you stopping to smell the roses/lilacs/other fragrant flowers today? If not, just let yourself dream about it, and be carried away…

Categories : Garden, Gratitude, Luxury
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September 5th, 2011

Spring has Sprung!

I just wanted to share this beautiful picture with you.

My husband Darren took this photo at Ballarat’s Botanical Gardens yesterday. My daughters wanted to snap a shot of this cute little bee, and Darren managed to capture him, even though the little critter kept hiding!

The gardens are looking simply gorgeous at the moment.

Can you tell that I just LOVE spring?!

Enjoy the photo, and have a wonderful day, won’t you?

Much love to you…

Categories : Flowers, Garden, Gratitude
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July 27th, 2011

Spotting Beauty

I spotted this beautiful, dew-laced spider’s web the other morning, and grabbed my camera!

Isn’t it just gorgeous? There were a few other similar webs around – the spiders must have been pretty busy through the night.

My girls and I were so excited when we saw this. We’re always exclaiming when we see breathtaking cloud formations, or brilliant rainbows, or unusual bark on a tree. Savouring the beauty given to us by Mother Nature is so important, and it just feels so good.

I was just saying this morning that I should keep my camera in the car, because I’d love to record more of the beauty we see as we go about our day. But then, I’d need to take one with me on every walk we undertake, too!

My girls wondered when the technology will come about that will allow us to ‘take a photo’ of a beautiful image in our heads, without even needing cameras. Can you imagine?

For now, I will just continue to appreciate each beautiful gift of nature ‘in the moment’, and if I happen to have my camera handy, then I can share the beauty with you, too.

I’m so grateful that I’m aware of seeing the world in this way.

I’d love for you to send me any photos of yours that capture beauty, or the things that you appreciate. Just email them to info@richradiantreal.com and I’ll pop them on the blog to share with the world…

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May 10th, 2011

The Vegie Patch

That’s my girl! Well, one of them. In the photo above, Arabella is proudly patting in a kale seedling (wearing my groovy new gardening gloves).

You may remember a recent blog post, where I mentioned that we would soon be planting out our winter vegie garden. Well, here it is!

So, what delights have we planted? There are herbs in the foreground, including continental parsley, thyme, oregano and coriander (I know it’s not really the season for coriander, but I’m giving it a go anyway), and further back we have kale, silverbeet, mignonette lettuces and pak choy. The silverbeet were looking a little flattened after my somewhat overzealous watering, but I think they’ll recover!

We had wanted to plant more, but we needed to leave room for the plants to grow.

I can’t wait for these plants to settle into their new home – we’ll soon add pea straw mulch to keep them all cosy during the cold weather, which has just descended on Ballarat. Soon we’ll be feasting on fresh, green vegies and herbs, and our bodies (and vibrations) will thank us for the effort we’ve put in.

Have you planted a few vegies, herbs or fruits in your garden? I’d love to hear what you’re growing…

Categories : Garden, Health
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April 29th, 2011

Growing Good Vibrations

It may not look like it, but this soil is ripe with potential.

This is our vegie patch – my husband prepared the soil a couple of weekends ago, so this weekend it should be ready to receive, and start nurturing, some little baby plants.

We’re going to plant a few winter vegetables, and some herbs. Just a few for now, but we’ll build up our ‘collection’ over time.

We will, of course, be using the gardening recommendations of my very own gardening-recipe book, called I’m Hungry, Let’s Grow It!. (It’s a book I wrote for families, showing them how to grow organic fruits and vegetables, and then how to make two recipes with each featured plant. It’s been written for Australian gardening conditions, but can be applied to anywhere in the world.)

There really is nothing better than nipping out to the garden to snip off some fresh  herbs to include with dinner, or to pull off green leaves to use in a salad or green smoothie. Definitely keeps up our ‘good vibrations’! Not only are you getting a shot of fresh air and soaking up all that beautiful outdoor energy, but you’re then consuming plants that contain vital life force. Remember this recent blog post, which featured a fantastic restaurant that had its own garden? Now you can do this for your very own ‘home restaurant’!

Growing your own can cost much less than buying produce from the shops, but I feel that the best part is the absolute freshness of the produce. No more slimy packets of half-used parsley sitting in the fridge when you have a parsley plant or two outside your back door! Do you have a few herbs or vegies in your garden at the moment? Let me know what you love to grow!

(If you don’t yet have anything growing, I do hope this blog has provided you with inspiration. If you feel overwhelmed, just start small. But definitely check out my book for even more tips, tools, knowledge and inspiration.)

Categories : Food, Garden, Health, Vibration
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April 12th, 2011

Fresh Food: From Garden to Plate

IFRAME Embed for Youtube

Do you grow your own food? Did you know that eating fresh, living food is a fantastic way to improve your health and therefore raise your vibration and attract ‘good stuff’?

Over at the fantastic Renegade Health Show, health crusader Kevin Gianni has found a fabulous restaurant that grows much of its own food in a garden right behind the restaurant (check out the video, above). Now that’s fresh, huh? No food miles. Love it.

Even if you don’t have a restaurant like this near you, why not consider your home garden as your own personal, organic, vibe-raising mecca – even if you only have room to grow herbs and a few salad greens? Honestly, there’s nothing better than tasting fresh food that’s just been picked. And knowing what amazing work it’s then doing in your body (and perhaps even for your soul).

I love that Kevin is showcasing inspirational places such as this forward-thinking restaurant. Go Kevin!

PS If you live in Australia and would like a clear, easy-to-use organic gardening and recipe book, check out my book called I’m Hungry, Let’s Grow It!. It’s a family guide, with growing instructions suitable for Australian conditions.

Categories : Food, Garden, Health, Raw food
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