Simple Bread Pudding Recipe

Recipes, Uncategorized

Ok friends, I’m on a “what to do with your leftover food that’s about to go bad” kick! This week I’m tackling that stale bread that’s been sitting in the kitchen with no place to go. Enter: delicious bread pudding. Here’s a recipe I frankensteined together from a few classics (links below). This recipe is simple, quick and delicious. Enjoy!

INGREDIENTS: 

1/2 loaf stale bread (Italian, challah, brioche, etc)

2 cups milk (I use whole milk, but you can use any variation)

1/4 cup (1/2 stick) butter, softened

4 beaten eggs

1 cup granulated sugar

1 cup packed brown sugar (light or dark)

1 teaspoon pure vanilla extract

1 cup chopped pecans (optional)

Ingredients for the sauce (optional):

1/2 cup granulated sugar

1/2 cup brown sugar

1/2 cup (1 stick) butter, melted

1 egg beaten

2 teaspoons vanilla extract

1/4 cup brandy

bread pudding in the making

Let the pouring begin!

DIRECTIONS:

  1. Preheat oven to 350 degrees.
  2. Grease a 9-inch pan.
  3. Cut the bread into cubes and disperse evenly in the baking pan.
  4. MIX together the granulated sugar, 1/2 cup brown sugar, eggs and milk in a bowl. Add vanilla.  Pour over your cubed bread and let it sit for 10 minutes.
  5. In another bowl, MIX the remaining 1/2 cup brown sugar, butter and pecans (it should look like a crumble).
  6. Sprinkle the brown sugar mixture over the top and bake for 35-45 minutes, or until the custard is set (it should still be a little wobbly, but the edges should be brown).
  7. Remove from the oven.

Directions for the sauce:

  1. MIX together the granulated sugar, brown sugar, butter, egg and vanilla in a saucepan over medium heat. Stir together until sugar is melted. Add the brandy and stir well.
  2. Pour over the bread pudding.
  3. Eat it like no one is watching.
bread pudding 3

Dude, it’s delicious.

This recipe is the love child of  Paula Deen & NY Times Cooking Section

Healthy Banana Bread Recipe

Recipes, Uncategorized

Need something to do with those bananas that have pretty much gone bad? Well, look no further! This quick, easy and healthy recipe is your answer. I was skeptical at first because banana bread is hard to master, but I promise this one is worth it. Enjoy!

 

Prep time:  10 minutes / Cook time:  55 minutes / Total time:  1 hour 5 minutes

INGREDIENTS:

⅓ cup melted coconut oil or extra-virgin olive oil

½ cup honey or maple syrup

2 eggs

1 cup mashed bananas (about 2½ medium or 2 large bananas)

¼ cup milk of choice or water

1 teaspoon baking soda

1 teaspoon vanilla extract

½ teaspoon salt

½ teaspoon ground cinnamon, plus more to swirl on top

1¾ cups whole wheat flour or coconut flour

Optional: ½ cup mix-ins like chopped walnuts or pecans, chocolate chips, raisins, chopped dried fruit, fresh banana slices, Nutella, etc. Go crazy!

INSTRUCTIONS:

  1. Preheat oven to 325 degrees (165 degrees Celsius) and grease a 9×5-inch baking pan.
  2. Melt your OIL (either coconut or EVOO)
  3. MIX: In a large bowl, whisk together the oil and honey.
  4. Add the eggs and beat well, then whisk in the mashed bananas and milk.
  5. Add the baking soda, vanilla, salt and cinnamon, and whisk to blend.
  6. Add the flour (it might be lumpy and that’s ok!)
  7. Add any of your optional mix-ins.
  8. Pour the batter into your greased pan.
  9. BAKE: for 55 to 60 minutes, or until a knife inserted into the center comes out clean. Due to differing oven temperatures, times will vary. Mine was done in 45 minutes.
  10. Let the bread cool in the baking pan for 10 minutes. Then eat up!
banana bread 1.jpg

Yummy yummy in your tummy

 

Gluten Free, No Bake Cheesecake Recipe

Recipes

Long time no see, my friends! As a welcome back, I’m sharing this super duper easy gluten free, no bake cheesecake that I Frankenstein’d together. Since so many people are gluten free these days, I figured it was time to make the sweet stuff accessible to everyone so I don’t feel like a cow consuming all of it by myself we can all enjoy the sweet life together! Hope you like it:

INGREDIENTS:

For the Crust: 

2 cups almond meal

4 TBSP butter

2 TBSP brown sugar

For the Filling:

2 8oz. packages cream cheese

1 14oz. can sweetened condensed milk

1/4 cup lemon juice

1 tsp. vanilla extract

DIRECTIONS: 

For the crust:

1. In a bowl, combine the almond meal, butter and brown sugar. Stir well until combined.

2. Press the crumb mixture into a 9-inch dish. Don’t forget to press up along the sides, too.

3. Place in the fridge while you make the filling.

For the filling: 

1. With an electric mixer, beat the cream cheese until smooth. Slowly fold in the sweetened condensed milk, followed by the lemon juice and vanilla. Beat everything until smooth.

2. Pour the filling into the crust. Refrigerate until firm, about 2 1/2 to 3 hours.

3. Because this is a basic cheesecake, you can add toppings of your choice. I am Argentinean, so my go-to is dulce de leche. I drizzled this one with a little dulce de leche and pecans. I also made a basic one (featured in the image above).

Dulce De Leche + Pecans

Dulce De Leche + Pecans

3 Natural Remedies for Sagging Skin

beauty, Wellness

Ladieeeees (and gents)! There is something to be said for people who age with grace and steer clear of the surgical methods of preserving youth. But, lets be real. Nobody likes looking in the mirror and seeing their beautiful skin migrate south for the winter (and by winter, I mean forever). So, I set out on a mission to find natural solutions to this very real problem. Here are 3 natural ways to help fight off the saggies:

1. LEMON. Lemons are rich in vitamin c, which helps boost collagen production in the body. What does that mean? It helps restore elasticity to your skin. Lemons are also astringent so they tighten your skin and reduce wrinkles.

How to: Juice a whole lemon and rub it on your face and neck. Leave it in for 5-10 minutes and then rinse your face with warm water. Follow up with your favorite moisturizer.

2. EGG WHITE MASK. This trick has been around for-everrrr. My grandma used to do it all the time. I’m Argentinean and everyone in my family still does it here in America and in Argentina. Egg whites also stimulate the production of collagen and are a natural astringent.

How to: Whisk one to two egg whites until foamy. Apply to your face and neck. Leave on for 20 minutes then rinse off with cool water (the cool water will close your pores).

3. CUCUMBER. Cucumbers are a natural skin toner!

How to: Juice a cucumber. Apply the juice to your face and leave it on until it dries. Then, rinse with cool water et voila.

Six Secrets From the Greek Island Where People Forget to Die

Uncategorized

Hi friends! While surfing the Huffington Post I came across this article that is absolutely worth reading. It addresses many things that we, especially in America, don’t value but should. We are so busy being ruthlessly busy, stressed, overworked and under appreciated that we often forget to take pause. Or even enjoy the activities we are so busy doing. My point is this: We have forgotten how to be in the moment. We’re always planning/thinking/living months, even years ahead and it’s getting us nowhere. Take a quick read. Happy living!

Secrets From The Island Where People Forget to Die

By Laine Bergeson

On the Greek island of Ikaria, people forget to die.

For the most part, they also forget to get sick — the island’s many nonagenarians experience relatively little cancer, cardiovascular disease or dementia.

This small island in the north Aegean Sea has been the subject of much study by researchers across the world. Every outsider wonders: What is the secret to a long and healthy life?

In her new cookbook Ikaria: Lessons on Food, Life, and Longevity from the Greek Island Where People Forget to Die, ancestral Ikarian and part-time resident of the island, Diane Kochilas, offers an insider’s perspective on why this far-flung Greek community lives so long and so well.

An award-winning author of more than 18 books on Greek cuisine, Kochilas offered Next Avenue her six top longevity secrets from this remote corner of the world, as well as a recipe from her book — Spicy Black-Eyed Peas and Greens with Smoked Herring — that is unique to the island.

From her home in Greece, Kochilas emailed us these six secrets to a long life:

1. Eat locally, seasonally and sparingly. The octagenarians, nonagenarians and centenarians I spoke with on Ikaria all described the eating habits of their early years — years of dire poverty, dearth and isolation — not so much in terms of what they ate but of how little they ate, because there simply wasn’t that much food.

Meat was rare, for some as rare as two to three times a year on the big holidays. For others who may have had animals (mainly chickens), they could afford to slaughter a few times a month. Fish was accessible if one fished; gardens were carved into terraces along Ikaria’s steep slopes and watered sparingly.

The 100-year-olds ate what they found in nature, from snails to mushrooms to wild greens, as well as what their gardens provided. There was and is still virtually no processed food on the island, except in some restaurants.

2. Live deliberately and don’t rush. The pace with which people move on Ikaria (including my own family!) never ceases to amaze me: slow, deliberate, unhurried, but with enough time to observe and live in every moment.

It’s the pace that means when you go to buy a jar of honey from our friend and beekeeper, Yiorgos, for example, you sit down across from his desk first, gab a bit, joke a bit, flirt a bit, then about 20 minutes into the exchange he gets up and lumbers over to his honey cans. He’s 84. And when he says there is no need to rush, you listen.

It’s the pace that enables people to feel their bodies from the inside, as one does in meditation exercises, and to know if something might be ailing. I had an older aunt who could feel her body in that way and when I started to meditate, I understood her in a different light. It takes tremendous presence and a sense of the now to be able to achieve that kind of sensitivity.

The penchant for taking things slowly has to do with Ikarians’ sense of time, or lack thereof. Resistance, or rather dismissal of the clock as ruler of life, is legendary. If you are not from here it’s hard to explain that mentality, the mentality of “it’s OK to be late, or “it’s OK to leave some wiggle room and maybe not show up at all.” I understand it instinctively. Sometimes it’s very frustrating, but I think the deeper sense of not living by the clock is living by the creed that “man plans, God laughs.”

3. Enjoy sleep. We sleep so much when we are on Ikaria. It’s a godsend. I don’t know if it’s the atmosphere or the clean air, but I can sleep there totally soundly for 10 hours, even with daylight pouring into the room. Ikarians nap. All older Greeks nap.

Sleeping in the afternoon enables you to have two lives in one day, especially in the summer, which is when I experience Ikaria most: the one that starts in the morning, around 9 a.m., and goes through about 7 p.m., and then starts up again at around 11 p.m. and goes through, well, whenever. Usually around 3 a.m. for us old folks!

4. Let things go. The Greeks say, “Don’t hold the bad in.” There is so much truth and wisdom in that. Ikaria is a place where people tend to be easygoing, forgiving and unstressed. It’s also a place where the local culture allows for a very liberal interpretation of what it means to be uninhibited. The panygyria, local feasts of wine and dancing that are usually in celebration of a saint’s name day, are the place to witness how we let loose and enjoy it. Dancing has a lot to do with it. So does the strength of the local wine.

5. Turn to herbs for most of the minor things that ail you and let your body heal itself. The folk pharmacopoeia is vast on the island, and I’ve only touched the tip of the iceberg in the book.

6. Walk. Plain and simple. Exercise for priming body and mind alike. Every old person I know on Ikaria still walks a lot.

Raw Almond Joy Bars (Paleo, Vegan)

Recipes

Sometimes you feel like a nut. Sometimes you don’t. Almond Joy’s got nuts. Mounds don’t. But, who cares about Mounds because Almond Joys are where its at. Truth: I would weight 9million pounds if I satisfied my craving for Almond Joys every time I had one. Plus, I believe that what we eat strongly affects our energy, our mood and our health. So, I’m in a standoff with myself. Can I make a delicious treat and eat it too? The answer is: YES! Enter, this super recipe. Mind. Blown. It’s everything we love about sweet treats, but, more importantly, every ingredient nourishes your body. Enjoy!

NO-BAKE ALMOND JOY BARS (VEGAN, PALEO)
Serves: 15
INGREDIENTS
Crust:
  • 1 cup almond meal
  • 2 tablespoons maple syrup
  • 1 tablespoon melted coconut oil (I use this)
  • ¼ teaspoon pure almond extract
  • Pinch of salt
Coconut Filling:
  • 1 cup shredded unsweetened coconut
  • 3 tablespoons pure maple syrup (I use this)
  • 2 tablespoons coconut oil
  • 1 tablespoon water
Chocolate Topping:
  • ¼ cup cocoa powder
  • ¼ cup melted coconut oil
  • 2 tablespoons maple syrup (at room temperature)
INSTRUCTIONS
  1. Line a standard loaf pan with parchment paper and set it aside. To prepare the crust, combine the almond meal, maple syrup, coconut oil, almond extract, and salt in a medium bowl. Stir well until a sticky dough is formed. Press it evenly into the bottom of the lined loaf pan, and set aside.
  2. To prepare the coconut filling, combine all of the filling ingredients in the mixing bowl and stir well. Spread the coconut mixture over the crust, then use a spatula to smooth the top. Set aside.
  3. To prepare the chocolate topping, combine all of the ingredients in the mixing bowl and use a whisk to create a silky smooth chocolate sauce. Pour the chocolate sauce over the top of the coconut layer and smooth the top with a spatula. Place the pan in the freezer for one to two hours (or until firm).
  4. Pull on the parchment paper to remove the solid bar from the pan, then slice into bars and serve directly from the freezer. These bars will soften fairly quickly if left at room temperature, so them chilled until you are ready to stuff your face serve your guests.
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Recipe Cred: The Detoxinista 

Sea Salt: A Secret Weapon in Beauty

Wellness

Salt, Salt. Magical Sea Salt. It’s so good for you, friends! (read more about the benefits of sea salt here). But, did you know that it’s a secret weapon in your beauty routine, too? It helps balance and improve skin hydration, strengthens your skin and it aids in cell-to-cell communication which slows down the aging process. Here are 6 ways that sea salt can help a beautifying sister (or brother) out:

1. Balancing Mask: Salt and honey have anti-inflammatory properties that sooth skin and help calm breakouts and irritation.

Do it: Mix two teaspoons sea salt (preferably finely ground. I use Real Salt) and four teaspoons raw honey (I use GloryBee Raw Montana Honey). This will create a spreadable paste. Apply evenly to clean, dry skin (avoiding eyes). Leave on for 10-15 minutes. Before rinsing, soak a washcloth in warm water and wring out. Lay the warm washcloth on your face for 30 seconds. Use your fingers to gently exfoliate in a circular motion while rinsing off the mask.

2. Oil-Sapping Facial Toner: Salt deeply cleanses your pores, balances oil production and removes bacteria that causes breakouts and acne.

Do it: Mix one teaspoon sea salt with four ounces warm water in a small spray bottle. Mist on clean, dry skin (avoiding eyes). Make sure the salt has dissolved in the water before using. You can do this once or twice daily.

3. Quick & Immediate Anti-Dandruff Scalp Treatment: Salt helps loosen and remove existing flakes while stimulating circulation. Salt also helps absorb excess oil and moisture to prevent fungal growth (ew, I know).

Do it: Part your hair a few times and sprinkle one to two teaspoons of salt on your scalp. Using wet fingers, massage your scalp gently and thoroughly for 10-15 minutes ideally (I know, I know. Who has time to massage their own scalp for that long. So, do it for however long works for you.) Then, wash and condition your hair as you usually would.

4. Teeth Whitener: Salt & baking soda are abrasives that help remove stains and brighten teeth. Salt also contains fluoride, which is an added benefit for your teeth and gums.

Do it: Mix one teaspoon salt and two teaspoons baking soda. Dip a damp toothbrush in the mixture and brush teeth normally.

5. Exfoliating Body Scrub: Salt is a gentle and natural exfoliate that sloughs off dead skin. It also contains minerals that soften skin and restore hydration.

Do it: Mix a quarter-cup salt and half cup olive oil (or softened coconut oil) into a thick paste. Apply in the shower with a washcloth, loofah or your hands, gently scrubbing your skin in a circular motion.

6. Relaxing Salt Bath: Salt baths have been used for centuries to cleanse and detox your skin. Salt’s mineral content helps restore the protective barrier in the skin that helps hold in hydration. PLUS, the magnesium in sea salt (and Epsom Salt) reduces water retention (bye bye, bloating). Read more about the benefits of salt baths here.

Do it: Add one-third cup salt to a tub filled with warm water. Swish and dissolve the salt. Soak for 15-20 minutes. Optional: Add a few drops of your favorite essential oil.

Happy Salting!

DIY Exfoliating Lip Facial

Wellness

Oh the weather outside is frightful(ly dry), but this DIY lip facial will make your lips delightful. Help yourself out and make your puckers kissably smooth with this at-home version of Bliss Spa’s Fabulips Treatment.

What You’ll Need:

SCRUB: Mix 1tsp brown sugar & 1tsp olive oil

MASK: Mix 1tsp yogurt & 1/2tsp honey

TREAT: Coconut oil

How to:

1. SCRUB. To smooth, rub the lip scrub with your finger in a circular motion for 30 seconds. Remove with a warm cloth.

2. MASK. Spread on the soothing lip mask. Leave on for five minutes then remove with a cloth.

3. TREAT. Lock and load the moisture with a little coconut oil or Vaseline Lip Therapy Creme

Paleo Stuffed Peppers

Healthy Meals, Recipes
This was an ol’ staple growing up. My mom used rice & ground beef, but I’m using cauliflower and ground turkey, instead. Heads up, this is not a quick meal (I will post lots of those), but it is delicious.
Ingredients:

3 Large Bell Peppers

4 Cups Raw Cauliflower
1LB. Ground Turkey
Olive Oil
4 Cloves of Garlic
1 Onion
Mushrooms (as many as you want. I personally love them, so I use a lot)
1/2 Can Tomato Paste OR Already Seasoned Pasta Sauce
Salt
Crushed Red Pepper (or seasoning of your choice)
Here we go!
Step 1: Make Cauliflower “Rice”
Place the 4 cups of raw cauliflower in a food processor until it reaches a rice like consistency.
Step 2: Sauté the Veggies
In a sauce pan, sauté the garlic, onions, mushroom & cauliflower rice in olive oil until the cauliflower is soft (approximately 4-5 minutes). Then, set aside while you cook the turkey.
Step 3: Sauté & Cook the Turkey
Add olive oil & 1/4 onion to a skillet and fully cook the ground turkey.
Step 4: Mix!
Mix in the cauliflower/onion/garlic/mushroom sauté to the turkey and season with the salt & red pepper.
images
Step 5: Stuff the Peppers
Cut off the tops of the peppers and gut them. Then fill each pepper to the brim with the cauliflower/turkey sauté.
IMG_3380
IMG_3381
Step 5: Cook!
Fill a medium sauce pan 1/3 of the way up with your pasta sauce (I use tomato paste and add garlic, 1/2 onion and a touch of red wine. You can even go crazy and add bacon). Place the stuffed peppers in the saucepan so they are upright. Cover and cook for 45 minutes to 1 hour on medium heat. Note: Make sure the peppers don’t get too soft. If they do, that means they are ready to eat so remove & cool right away. Drizzle the top of the peppers with a little parmesan cheese.
Step 6: EAT
images-1

Cauliflower Crust Pizza!

Healthy Meals, Recipes

Calling all pizza lovers and well…health lovers, too! This recipe for cauliflower crust pizza will not only quench your pizza craving, but it’ll do it guilt freeeeee. It’s one of my favorite things to eat:

Cauliflower Crust Pizza Recipe:

IMG_3166

Ingredients: 

4 cups raw cauliflower

1 egg, beaten

1/3 cup soft goat cheese (chèvre)

Pinch of salt

Here we go!

Preheat oven to 400F. 

Step 1: Begin making the cauliflower “rice”. 

Place the 4 cups raw cauliflower in a food processor until it reaches a rice like consistency.

Step 2: Cook & strain the rice. 

Fill a pot with one inch of water and bring to a boil. Add the “rice” and cover it. Let it cook for 4-5 minutes. Then, drain into a fine mesh drainer. *Secret trick: Once you’ve drained the rice, transfer it to a clean dishtowel (or cheese cloth). Wrap the steamed rice in the dish towel/cheese cloth and squeeze out all the excess water.

Step 3: Make the dough

IMG_3173

In a large bowl, mix the cauliflower, beaten egg, cheese and salt (or other spices) until super together. The texture won’t be what you are expecting, but don’t worry, it’ll work. Next, press the dough onto a non stick baking sheet (or line a baking sheet with parchment paper). It’ll look something like this:

IMG_3174

Step 4: Bake

Bake for 35-40 minutes at 400F

Step 5: Load up on toppings! 

We made 2 pizzas:

1.  Caramelized onions, brussel sprouts, brie & prosciutto  IMG_3182

2. Caramelized onions, garlic, mushrooms & asiago cheese

IMG_2853

Step 6: ENJOYYYYY (sans guilt)!

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Recipe cred: http://detoxinista.com