Peanut Ginger Coconut Spread Recipe

Peanut Ginger Coconut Spread Recipe

Peanut Ginger Coconut Spread
Peanut Ginger Coconut Spread Recipe

Sometimes you want something a little bit more or a little bit different than peanut butter on your apple. Here’s a spread that is sweet and gingery and delicious – Peanut Ginger Coconut Spread. Use it on fruit, with raw or blanched vegetables, or spread it on your sprouted grain bread in the morning.

Peanut Ginger Coconut Spread Recipe

Sometimes you want something a little bit more or a little bit different than peanut butter on your apple. Here’s a spread that is sweet and gingery and delicious. Use it on fruit, with raw or blanched vegetables, or spread it on your sprouted grain bread in the morning.
Course Appetizer, Breakfast, Snack

Equipment

  • 1 Medium Mixing Bowl

Ingredients

  • 1/2 cup good quality organic peanut butter - smooth or chunky, your choice
  • 6 or 7 ounces Plain Greek yogurt - I used 2%
  • 1 Tbsp honey
  • 1 tsp vanilla
  • 2 Tbsp fresh ginger diced
  • 1 tsp turmeric
  • 1/4 cup grated coconut unsweetened

Instructions

  • Blend all ingredients together in a bowl. Spread on things. Eat.

Notes

Store covered in the fridge for up to a week.

Looking for more easy healthy recipes?  I have a whole selection for you!

Peanut Ginger Coconut Spread

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Sweet & Spicy Nuts Recipe

Sweet & Spicy Nuts Recipe


As the cooling breeze of fall blows through, it’s time to spice things up. Not only do spices add a lovely kick of flavor to fall and winter fare, but spices are filled with phytonutrients; health-enhancing compounds that give us the immune boost we need through the transition to colder months. Adding a little sweet, a little heat and a bit of spice to nuts does a body good energetically this season as well. May this sweet & spicy nuts recipe warm you inside and out. I use these nuts to top warm wilted salads, on soups, or over warm fruit for a nutrient-dense treat.  It would also be delicious on top of my Vegan Maple Custard recipe.

This morning I did my seasonal overhaul of cooking ingredients – putting away the cooling flavors of summer and bringing spices and heating ingredients an easier reach from the stove. I went to the grocery to gather spices – cayenne, cinnamon, mace, allspice, nutmeg – the flavors of fall. It’s one way I honor the wheel of the year, ever turning.

Sweet & Spicy Nuts Recipe

Ingredients spiced-nuts-ingrednets

  • 2 cups raw nuts and/or seeds – I used pepitas (pumpkin seeds), almonds, cashews and a few Brazil nuts
  • 1 1/2 Tbsp grass-fed organic unsalted butter or ghee
  • 2 Tbsp brown sugar
  • 1 tsp cinnamon, ground
  • 1/2 tsp cayenne pepper, ground
  • 1/2 tsp nutmeg, ground
  • 1 tsp freshly ground black pepper
  • 1 tsp salt

Directions

In a small bowl, stir together the sugar and spices. Place nuts and butter in a skillet over moderate heat, stirring for about 2 minutes until butter is melted and covers the nuts. Add the spice mixture (beware those of you who know two heat settings – high or off – this can burn quickly – I know of what I speak!). Sauté on medium heat until the sugar caramelizes – 5-8 minutes. Transfer nuts to a plate or sheet of foil to cool. Store in an airtight container and use on salads, soups or cooked fruit (like a baked apple) for dessert.

This is, of course, a recipe you can adapt to include your favorite warming spices. Please share your variations, and enjoy the season!

Looking for more recipes?  Head over to my collection of Easy Healthy Recipes.

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How to Use Herbal Preparations Safely

How to Use Herbal Preparations Safely

How to Use Herbal Preparations Safely by Annie B Kay
This month in the newsletter I wrote about putting summer’s bounty by for colder months, and I also wrote a brief piece on how to use herbal preparations safely. Herbs, herbal tinctures, flower essences and other botanicals can be wonderful allies for healing, but like any medicinal substance, different preparations are of varying quality and composition and can cause unexpected side effects. Here are a few thoughts, and suggestions for staying safe as you explore.

The Wise Herbalist: please be safe

After last month’s newsletter on making flower essences, I had a thoughtful exchange with a reader concerned about the toxicity of buttercup. Flower essences don’t contain any of the plant matter (they operate like homeopathy), so not to worry. But, since I have been writing more about the use of herbs and interest is certainly growing, I thought I’d give you a little overview of herbal preparations and how they operate so as to keep you nice & safe as you venture into this newly revived mode of healing.

You can think of herbal healing as ranging from gross physical (food, pharmaceuticals and infusions like teas operate on this level) to more subtle mind-body like tinctures, where plant matter is placed in alcohol for a number of weeks, and plant oils, where plant matter is placed into an oil for a number of weeks and the oil then carries some plant matter. Then there are those that operate on the subtle energetic level (homeopathic preparations and flower essences, for example).

For preparations that work on the physical level, it’s important that you stick with things that are edible and medicinal. So, in the case of buttercup, you don’t want to make an infusion tea with it nor eat it, because it is not edible – it contains compounds that can be toxic. Same with tinctures – stick with medicinal and culinary herbs for these. Flower essences don’t contain actual plant matter – they are energetic preparations – you can make an essence out of any plant and you won’t have a toxicity reaction to it unless you have a reaction to the carrier (often brandy, but you can also use vinegar).
Now, let’s talk about essential oils. These are wonderful but very condensed and strong extractions of the oils of plants. I have an essential oil diffuser in my office with a stress ease mixture and it works like a charm. Essential oils can damage your skin if you apply them directly and many people are sensitive. They can also react with your skin when exposed to the sun – I’ve had an instance of this and it wasn’t pretty!
I’ve been giving herb walks at Kripalu and interest in wild edibles and herbs is really growing. If you have an interest in wild edibles, take your time and stick to things like dandelion, plantain and garlic mustard that are common and safe, then slowly and safely expand your knowledge from there. Like anything, there are things to be aware of, but if you approach nature with respect and curiosity (and a few of the many good references), it will be a wonderful exploration.
Enjoy the season in fun and deliciousness,
Annie
Annie B. Kay MS, RDN, E-RYT500
How to Use Herbal Preparations Safely by Annie B Kay Pinterest

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Cantaloupe Walnut and Cilantro with Lime Recipe

Cantaloupe Walnut and Cilantro with Lime Recipe

Here is a simple recipe for a healthy summer breakfast. A quick and balanced breakfast for one.
My excellently smart and organized VA Kate Tilton likes simple recipes. She’d prefer three ingredients, but Kate, this one’s for you and I hope you like it. Four ingredients, ten minutes (with plenty of cut-up cantaloupe to spare), a lovely balance of protein, healthful fat and fruit fiber, and the acid from the lime enhances the absorption of the antioxidants (like vitamin C) to boot.
When choosing a ripe cantaloupe (aka musk) melon at the grocery, find one that smells fresh and oh so slightly gives to the firm touch – you can smell and touch at the stem-end. If the stem area is mushy it may be over-ripe. The outside should be a rosy dusky tan, and a bit of green may mean best if you let it ripen on the counter a couple days before using (which is how I use musk and honeydew melons – let them rest for a bit). If the skin has indentations in it, you are fine until you see dark moldy spots which eventually reach into the meat, then you’ve let it hang around too long or chosen an older specimen than you intended. Fresh cantaloupe will keep in the fridge for 3 or 4 days once you slice it. Cantaloupe is a great source of vitamins A and C. More on recent studies and details of cantaloupe nutrition.

Cantaloupe Walnut and Cilantro with Lime Recipe

Ingredients

  • 1 cup ripe cantaloupe, sliced and cut into pieces
  • 1/2 cup raw walnuts
  • 1/4 cup fresh cilantro
  • Juice of 1/2 lime

Directions

Place the cut cantaloupe in a serving bowl, add the nuts and cilantro and give a toss with your clean hands or a spoon. Squeeze fresh lime juice over, toss and eat.
The flower topping this breakfast is actually a cilantro flower from my garden. Just the gifts of the garden available at the moment!
Enjoy the day, enjoy the season.

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Summer Black Bean Salsa Recipe

Summer Black Bean Salsa Recipe

Summer Black Bean Salsa Recipe by Annie B Kay - anniebkay.com
Summertime!
While we may be having a little taste of what I call winter-summer (it has been freaking freezing this week…I remember we had a summer-winter in the Shire last year), I trust that warm weather is on the way. This is one of my favorite recipes – light, tasty, spicy and perfect for the season. I serve it as a side or main dish, with my current passion – sprouted corn tortillas warmed with a bit of cheese between, quesadilla style.

Summer Black Bean Salsa Recipe

Ingredients

  • 1 can (16 oz) black beans (I used Eden brand)
  • 1 cup frozen corn
  • Juice of 2 limes
  • Two or three slices of red onion, chopped, makes about 1/4 cup
  • 1/4 red pepper, chopped
  • 1/2 cup fresh cilantro
  • 1/2 tsp tobasco sauce
  • 1/3 cup cold-pressed EVOO
  • Plenty of salt and pepper (to taste)

Directions

Could not be easier. Toss and enjoy (this is a recipe that while delicious, can be better the second day due to marinating).
Enjoy!
Salsa Recipe by Annie B Kay Pinterest

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Minted Snow Pea Recipe

Minted Snow Pea Recipe

Minted Snow Pea Recipe by Annie B Kay - anniebkay.com
Food fresh from the garden doesn’t need much help to taste great and nourish you deeply. Our fresh peas often don’t make it into the kitchen because we snack away right in the garden. Here’s a simple recipe for snow peas with mint.

Minted Snow Pea Recipe

Ingredients

  • Snow peas or fresh spring peas – about 2 cups, cleaned
  • Fresh mint, cleaned and chopped
  • High-quality olive oil (like CA organic cold-pressed)
  • Squeeze of fresh lemon
  • Salt and pepper to taste.

2Directions

  1. Grow peas! Or, locate fresh snow or sweet peas at a farmer’s market or grocery.  They are an easy grow, and I love that they are best planted just as soon as the earth is thawed enough to work. So, either pick your own or you can get them at a farmer’s market or grocery (…growing your own is cheaper though more time-intensive, but the benefits are manyfold).
  2. Place a medium skillet over medium-high heat, add olive oil and peas, sauté 2-3 minutes.
  3. Add chopped mint & a squeeze of fresh lemon. Saute another minute.
  4. Dress with salt and pepper and enjoy.

Tip: the key is not to overcook the peas…literally sauté for just a minute or two to keep that lovely sweetness and crispness. Enjoy!

Minted Snow Pea Recipe by Annie B Kay

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