Saturday, March 31, 2012
Sweet & Sour Chicken (scd)
Ah, the Asians, they have a real knack for making delicious friend chicken smothered in sweet sauces. So when I saw this original non-paleo recipe I knew I had to adapt it and make it ok for the paleo and specific carbohydrate diet. Since the things I subbed were relatively close to the actual recipe, I think it has a very similar taste. After making these, I couldn't stop eating them, this is seriously one of my most favorite recipes of all time. I hope you like:
Chicken:
3-4 boneless chicken breasts
salt & pepper, to taste
2/3 cup of coconut flour
2 egg whites
1/4 cup coconut oil
(Or use this chicken nugget recipe as a base)
Sweet and Sour Sauce:
3/4 cup honey
4 tbs scd ketchup
1/2 cup vinegar
1 tsp garlic powder
Preheat oven to 325 degrees. Cut chicken into cubes.
Mix the salt and pepper in with the coconut flour.
Dip the chicken pieces in the egg and then lightly coat in the coconut flour
Heat your 1/4 cup oil in a large skillet and cook your chicken until browned but not cooked through.
Place the chicken in a 9x13 greased baking dish. Mix all of your sweet and sour sauce ingredients in a bowl and then pour evenly over the chicken. Bake for 30 minutes and during the baking process you will need to turn the chicken every 10 minutes.
Friday, March 30, 2012
Chicken Nuggets (scd, paleo)
Is it just me, or do these little chicken nuggets look like some from a certain restaurant that happens to be called Chick-fil-a? That fact alone should be enough to motivate anyone to make these. Plus it's really easy. Here we go:
Ingredients:
coconut oil, for frying
3 or 4 boneless, skinless chicken breasts
2 egg whites
1/4 cup coconut flour
1 tsp white pepper
1 tsp garlic powder
Directions:
Take the chicken breasts and cut off all the nasties, then cut into bite size chunks.
Take the 2 egg whites and put in bowl.
Use about 1/4 cup coconut flour, mix in a dash of white pepper, and garlic powder
Dip the chicken pieces into the egg, then into the coconut flour. Only lightly "bread" them, you don't need much, just enough to make them look ghostly.
Have a frying pan bottom covered in coconut oil.
Place the chicken pieces into the hot oil. Fry on each side for about 4 minutes, or until golden brown and cooked through.
Yumm....
Thursday, March 29, 2012
Ketchup
After sifting through various SCD-ketchup recipes I found that most take hours to boil down tomato juice or just whole tomatoes into paste. Elaine Gottschall said that canned tomato paste from the store is illegal. However I stumbled upon this recipe from My Cranky Gut, I decided to try it. I believe that the food list in BTVC is somewhat outdated. Foods that are available now are vastly different than what was on the shelves 40 years ago. I will concur that most of them are worse now for us, but there has been a large movement toward whole and organic foods, and new "real" foods have been discovered since (i.e. Stevia) so some changes have been made for the better. So while shopping for homemade ketchup ingredients at the grocer, I carefully read all of the ingredients on the label, and even took the time to call the manufacture of the tomato paste I selected. Unfortunately, they did not have any organic tomato paste, but here is sort of how the phone call went to Contadina:
"Hi I have a question about one of your products."
"Sure, go ahead."
"I bought a can of the tomato paste, however, I have several food allergies. The only ingredient listed on the can is 'tomatoes'. Are there any other ingredients in this at all, whatsoever?"
"The tomato paste, correct?"
"Yes."
"Yes, that is right, the only ingredient is tomatoes. They're just pure tomatoes, boiled down, and boiled down again, until it comes out into that paste."
"Thank you."
They were actually one of the friendliest companies I have yet to actually give a call or write an email to. And when I looked at, smelled, and finally tasted the product I tend to believe they are telling the truth. When I eat something illegal I can tell right away, as I start feeling terrible within minutes. But I ate this hours ago and I feel completely fine, more than that, my taste buds are happy.
In any case, I don't blame you if you chose to still avoid tomato paste from a can, but this is my adaptation of a quick and easy homemade ketchup recipe:
1 small can tomato paste
2 Tbps. white vinegar
1 tsp garlic powder
1/4 cup honey
Mix well and refrigerate. It's really that simple.
Wednesday, March 28, 2012
Photography Session & Drinking on SCD
Despite the fact that I have been blogging for a number of months now, I have yet to show any of my readers who I am. This is a perfect opportunity since my lovely sister-in-law and her husband were so kind as to take some photographs of my husband and I.
The setting: Fox Theater
The time: Winter
The occasion: My boss has too much money/free tickets
The reason: To party. Why else?
Sunday, March 25, 2012
Simple Crock-Pot Brisket (scd)
Cuts of meat with funny names make me avoid them, simply because I assume that their fancy name means they need to be prepared a fancy way. And thus was such with brisket. I really only knew any reference to it from The Big Bang Theory, in which one of the characters is Jewish and often refers to briskets. Come to find out, they taste pretty good and with this recipe are simple to make.
I try to keep my grocery bills as low as possible, which is hard to to on SCD. So I buy meats from the grocery store when they are on "Manager's Special" which basically means they are expiring the next day and it's a Hail Mary mark down to save the life of the meat. Which I do not mind at all, I can usually get really nice cuts for half price and I just stick them in my freezer until I figure out what to cook with them. This time I attempted to tackle this brisket. I looked all over the Internet, even giving some thought to making it into corned beef, but curing my own meat seemed like too big of a task. I really should be nicknamed the "lazy cook" because most of the time I don't even want to lift a knife. Too many other things to worry about. Anyways, so I found this recipe from Martha Stewart. Here is what I did:
Take:
1 Brisket (frozen or fresh)
Place in the slow cooker.
2 Cups chicken broth (or drippings from a baked chicken and 1 cup water)
Pour over brisket.
Cut 1/2 onion into chunks, or if you are feeling up to it, into slices
Throw on top of brisket
Peel 4 or 5 cloves of garlic
Throw onto brisket.
Sprinkle some black pepper over it all and put on low heat in the Crock-Pot for all day.
Perfect meal for when you are in a hurry, when you have to work all day, when your husband likes to eat red meat, when brisket is on sale...and the list goes on.
It turned out really tender and with some salt, tasted good. Yay, something easy and tasty on SCD, and I believe no matter what stage/phase you are in, you should be able to make this.
Sunday, March 18, 2012
Buttery Walnut Frozen Coconut Ice Milk (scd)
I don't know about where you live, but here in the midwest the temps are averaging about 20 degrees hotter than normal. That means the ice cream shops are opening early and summer is around the corner!
So many of my recipes turn out with the intent for one thing and end up another. So it is with this one. I wanted to make SCD ice cream, but since I do not have an ice cream maker, and contrary to what a few sites have said, this ended up more as an ice milk. No complaints though, I literally made this one night and finished it less than 24 hours later. It was good.
Thursday, March 15, 2012
Artificial Sweeteners = Disease
Yesterday at work someone offered me a piece of chewing gum. A nice gesture, but I of course turned it down. "But why?" I don't eat artificial sweeteners that is why. Even pre-SCD I never was a big fan of them. Logically I thought anything with zero-calories, zero-fat, and zero-any nutritional value that is desirable to eat just seemed like a huge oxymoron. Things like that don't exist in nature. It simply can't be good for you. But recently the correlation between artificial sweeteners and disease is becoming much clearer. I wasn't alive in the '80s but apparently prior to this decade aspartame was illegal and now fake sweeteners, including aspartame, are in they are in 25% of all foods. It's sad that money/politics (to me they are synonymous) can make a poison legally into literally candy. I found this article to be interesting, and you may also: Artificial Sweetener Disease
Sunday, March 11, 2012
Progress on SCD: Year 1
SO I made it through one whole year on the Specific Carbohydrate Diet. Yay! I am writing this post about a month premature, but it's close enough. And I will be moving soon so I do not know how often I will be able to write in the near future.
We've all heard the story of the turtle and the hare. Timeless principal that slow and steady wins the race. There really is not much in life that this cannot be applied to, finding a balance in everything and pursuing goals at a steady pace is really vital to keeping motivation up and being able to maintain sustainability.
This is true if you have been on any diet at any point in your life. Perhaps you had a meat-free phase in your life, maybe you have tried to gain weight, maybe you wanted to see how long you could go without drinking soda. These situations have much more in common than one would think. They all involve willpower and the ability to force oneself to do something that is contrary to what we have been taught, what we have become accustomed to.
Now, if you are not familiar with the Specific Carbohydrate Diet then you do not know just how many things you refrain from eating. There are many: All grains including wheat, barley, oats, and so on, any lactose- so milk, soft cheeses, partially fermented yogurts, creams, etc. Sugar from sugar cane, agave, so on, and anything processed, artificial, or pretty much if you cannot pronounce the ingredient or do not know its origins, it is off limits. Most people say, well what do you eat? Which is a much shorter list. But my point here is that extreme self denial is the key to sticking to SCD. Some may argue and say, 'well you can make anything with nut flours and yogurt that you could previously have, like SCD donuts or ice cream' and those people are kind of right. But if you think that the cupcakes that I make with almond flour and yogurt taste anything like Krispy Kreme down the street you are out of your mind. And we do a good job telling ourselves that it's close enough, because that is what you have to do to keep from making a mistake and ruining all the progress you have worked so hard to earn. That is why I say the first few months on SCD are the absolute hardest. To cut yourself off completely from the things that you grew up eating, enjoying, and socializing with, completely just in one day and to go to only whole, homemade foods, is hard mentally and emotionally. There are many studies that show how closely food relates to our emotions and the way we feel; think about it- when you are attending a happy occasion like a wedding, baby shower, or the like what is there? Food, cake. What about at a funeral, the exact opposite? Well, in that situation "comfort foods" are brought to the grieving family. When you hang out with friends what do you always do? Share a meal, go out to eat and drink. When you are trying to meet new people or rekindle old relationships, what is the first thing usually extended? "Can i buy you dinner, or would you like to come over for dinner?" We don't really associate so many things with food, but in the American culture, and frankly, across the whole world food is how we bond with other people, food makes us happy. Being on SCD is more than just telling yourself, no i'm no longer going to eat this or that, it's almost like you have to break up with food. That relationship that you've had with food since the first day you were born is now being broken into little pieces and you have to throw most of that much worked on puzzle away.
If you are contemplating SCD I do not want this to come across in a negative way, just realize that hard work is going to have to be put forth and your entire life is going to change. Personally, the hardest part was not being able to really eat with other people. I've mentioned before that my husband and I would do date night every week just going out to eat was a treat for us, that no longer can happen. Any time there is an even like a graduation, or party of some sort I either stay home, awkwardly bring my own food, or go for a very short amount of time and leave super early because it's always timed around meal-time and I can't eat just any food. I could not have people over for the first few months on SCD because I was only eating about 5 foods- meat, cooked carrots, grape juice, cooked broccoli, and eggs, and I knew I couldn't cook for other people with that blandness, nor could I make something for just them or order pizza because I did not want that temptation in my house nor did I want to have to explain over and over again why I am not eating like you. In addition, when SCD is first started its obviously because you are having symptoms, so you are still in pain, struggling to have any energy, and to get through the day as normally as possible.
When I first started SCD I did so in phases, adding only one new food every three days, and of course it was cooked, skinless, and seedless. I thought that by about the third or fourth month I could incorporate raw foods- WRONG. I tried over and over again, eating raw apples, salads, and veggie sticks. I kept getting sicker and sicker. I knew the diet was helping but it wasn't enough and I was getting more impatient as each day went by. So about 6 months in or so I found a natural doctor who gave me some whole food supplements and put me on the Page diet which is very similar to SCD. I follow a combination of the two diets together, and when there is a food in discrepancy between the two I chose the stricter course.
I still find myself thinking that I am not getting any better, that this is taking way too long. But then I remind myself- it took me years to get this sick, it will take just as long, if not longer, to get better.
But then lately I have been feeling a bit more "rebellious" against the standards. I am nowhere near eating something illegal, nothing like that, but I will add two new foods into my diet on the same night, the risk being if I feel sick I will not know which one is the food I should stay away from- but what can I say, I'm throwing caution to the wind. I also have been sneaking in raw fruits here and there, even eating fruits with seeds. It's wonderful. I have not felt any terrible consequences from this, so every couple of days I may have 1/2 of a raw grapefruit, or 3 or 4 raw dates. It's heavenly. The fact that I can do this though is encouraging enough to keep me going on the diet. As stated above I tried this 6 months ago and it made me even more sick- now my body can handle it.
Although I expected to be in a totally different place one year from my start, I cannot say I am entirely disappointed. I cannot specifically remember the last time I had a stomach pain from Crohn's- maybe a month or so? I can't say that I've called off work recently from Crohn's pain, or that I have had to spend all day in the "sick chair" at home because of how I feel. It makes me smile to be able to say that. Compared to a year ago I felt sick everyday, to go back to those terrible pains, I don't know how I did it. So as I continue on SCD I hope to be, in one year from now, that much better than I am today. So in the end of this analogy I like to think that I am the turtle on the dirt road to health, and Crohn's disease is an ugly rabies rabbit being beaten on the sidelines.
Wednesday, March 7, 2012
Caramel Covered Cinnamon Buns (scd)
So as I was baking these delectable buns my non-SCD compliant husband walks into the kitchen and says, "Where am I, Cinnabon?" That made me smile, because even if he didn't like the way they tasted (which he ended up loving them) the smell was enticing, and cooking is about more than just taste. It's about presentation on the plate, smelling the aromas, feeling the textures, hearing the sizzles, and much more. If you agree with this philosophy or not, you should try this recipe, because it's pretty good.
This is the source recipe. As you will be able to see from the pictures, my dough was more like a thick cake batter and so the "rolling" part did not go exactly as planned, but I made it work- just means by little buns weren't perfect spirals but more like oblong logs and tear-drops. I also changed the amount of butter and honey in the caramel topping layer to half. I am sure if you double butter and honey in any recipe it makes it better, but I try to watch my sweets, so even with halving the gooeyness I thought it was wonderful.
Topping
1/2 Cup butter
1/2 Cup honey
1/2 Cup walnuts or whatever nuts you please
Dough
1/4 Cup melted butter
1/4 Cup honey
4 eggs
1/2 tsp vinegar
1 tsp baking soda
1/4 tsp salt
3 Cups almond flour
Spice Mix
3/4 C almond meal, or almond flour if you don't have meal
1/6 cup of cinnamon
Some nutmeg
Boil the butter and honey in a sauce pan on medium heat for about 8 minutes or until the caramel starts to get thick and bubbles for a few minutes.
Pour this caramel into a greased pan or baking dish.
Sprinkle on nuts, and set to the side.
Mix together the dry ingredients, then add the wet, leaving the vinegar for last.
Place this dough ball in between two plastic wrap pieces or two pieces of parchment paper. If you use plastic wrap, it's probably a good idea to coat with some sort of flour to keep the dough from sticking and make it easier to roll. (I skipped this part and perhaps that's mine wasn't as pretty as expected.) Use your hands or a rolling pin to flatten the dough out into a rectangular shape.
Then mix the spices with the almond meal and scatter this mixture across the flattened dough. Then carefully pick up the top end of your parchment paper or plastic wrap and ever so carefully lift toward you and let the dough roll onto itself lengthwise. Once that is complete to the best of your ability, cut into 1/2 inch slices and place on top of the caramel nut coated pan.
Bake at 350 for about 20 minutes or until the dough no longer jigles when you softly shake the pan.
Best served warm. Enjoy. Yuummm....
Saturday, March 3, 2012
Trending Now: Cocoa Nibs
There's nothing like daytime television. On my days off I enjoy watching The Nate Berkus show, and occasionally I will catch the Dr. Oz show. The other day while watching Dr. Oz he spoke about cocoa nibs and how wonderful they are for us to eat as far as health benefits go. I immediately wrote this off as being the same thing as chocolate, and therefore something I can not eat because chocolate is not SCD legal. But then I went on the Internet and did some research. Turns out cocoa nibs are actually the beans (taken out of their husks and roasted) off of the Cocoa tree.
According to the Oxford Food & Nutrition Dictionary cocoa nibs are: "Seeds of the cocoa plant, Theobroma cacao, are left to ferment, which modifies the bitterness, and their colour darkens. They are then roasted and separated from the husks as two halves of the seed known as cocoa nibs. They contain about 50% fat, part of which is removed in the preparation of chocolate and cocoa for beverages."
I see no reason as to why I cannot eat these. I understand that chocolate always has sugar added, which explains why no matter how many stores I looked in I could never find a bar that was more than 70% cocoa. I know that carob is also not legal, but after doing some research on that I found that carob: contains a sweet edible pulp and seeds that yield a gum used as a stabilizer in food products. Perhaps because the seeds are associated with gum (which of all sorts is SCD illegal) carob itself was made to be entirely illegal. In any case, I still cannot reason as to why cocoa nibs would be counterproductive to eat. I actually ate about 3 of the nibs right after I ordered a bag and I had no ill-effects. This could have been a fluke since they are so tiny, but what if they are just fine and I am depriving myself of the chocolatey essence they carry? Such a battle. Personally, I am going to say they are fine to eat on the Specific Carbohydrate Diet, I will test them out myself. I know several other bloggers to eat chocolate and use it in their "SCD safe" recipes but I know that is wrong. Cocoa nibs on the other hand, I think I will accept the challenge. They are very bitter and taste like unsweetened dark chocolate, but I assume that if I bake them into a sweet treat it will be more of a chocolatey taste since the surrounding batter will be sweet. We shall see.
Thursday, March 1, 2012
Spicy Shrimp on a Bed of Spaghetti Squash
Seafood- the occasional relief from chicken and steak is always welcomed. This recipe turned out tasty and simple! It does have a spicy kick, so if you are not fond of heat in your palate reduce the cayenne pepper or just omit all together.
For the Shrimp:
3 fresh garlic cloves
2 Tablespoons of olive oil (or coconut oil).
1/4 teaspoon cayenne pepper
1/4 teaspoon black pepper
1/2 Tablespoon Italian Seasoning
1/2 teaspoon salt
1/2 pound shrimp (about 20 medium sized)
Saute garlic in oil over medium heat until garlic is translucent. Add seasonings to the oil and mix around the seasonings with a spatula and then add about 15-20 shrimp. I used pre-cooked, thawed shrimp, but you can use raw- -just cook until pink and they start to curl up. Be sure to coat the shrimps with the oil/seasonings, simmer until heated or cooked thoroughly.
For the Spaghetti Squash:
Halve one spaghetti squash and scrape out the seeds and surrounding icky stuff with a spoon and discard or separate the seeds and throw them in the baking dish surrounding the squash- they will get crispy and make a great snack. Place the squash open sides down in a baking pan. Depending on how large the squash, cook until fork tender, about 25 minutes on 425 degrees.
Use a fork and scrape the walls of the squash until all of the little strands of "pasta" come out. Add a bit o' butter, some white pepper, and salt.
To finish, take a bed of spaghetti squash, top with a few shrimp, and grate some fresh Parmesan or Reggiano cheese on top (scd optional, not really paleo technically). Enjoy!
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