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Tag Archives: vegan recipes
How to Make a Watermelon Mojito
Today is Day 3; the last day of this watermelon fast is finally here! Last night I got creative and concocted a watermelon mojito. This morning I continued to be inspired and whipped up an equally refreshing blend of watermelon, lemon juice, with a hint of cilantro. I feel like this fast is turning me into a watermelon bartender! Feeling good today, glad to be coming down of the fast tomorrow because I have an acting gig and need to keep my energy up on set. As promised here’s the recipe for the mojito. I’m going to try the watermelon soup from my last post tomorrow and see if it’s any good, will report back. Beginning tomorrow, my infatuation with all things watermelon is going to end for a little while. – XoXo Raw Girl
Watermelon Mojito
4-5 cups chopped watermelon
1/2 lime juiced (use the whole thing if you want it tangier)
2 – 3 sprigs of fresh mint
1 teaspoon grated ginger
Blend & enjoy!
[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ZN3paRwPpQs]
How Many Ways Can You Eat a Watermelon?
It’s Day 2 of the Watermelon Fast. W-Day number one has come and gone, and I have nothing on my mind but watermelon so I figured I might as well blog about it. If you are on the Watermelon fast journey now or if you plan to attempt it later, you may ask yourself: how many ways can you eat a watermelon? I decided to research some recipe combinations that may add just a little bit of variety to the watermelon fast. Two have cucumber or cucumber juice incorporated, so that may be cheating. Might save the watermelon soup for Thursday when I am coming down off the fast. I plan to spice it up tonight and make a smoothie with watermelon, lime, and mint! Bring on Day 3, I’m ready. Are you with me? -XoXo Raw Girl
- Watermelon Slushy -watermelon, ice cubes, lime juice. Blend!
- Watermelon Soup – 3 cups watermelon, 1/2 lime juiced, 1/4 cup cilantro, 1 small cucumber diced. Blend!
- Watermelon Smoothie – watermelon, fresh mint, lemon juice, ginger. Blend!
- Watermelon Juice – watermelon, cucumber, lime. Juice!
The Ultimate Beauty Salad
Last week I had a great time hanging out with a good friend, and she was game to try one of my salads. I warned her it would be one of the best salads she’d ever had. We got together a bunch of stellar ingredients, and while making it I realized that the salad was packed full of veggies that offer the amazing beauty minerals that I have been writing about recently. Below is a list of the ingredients in the salad and the nutrients they offer to optimize your beauty. Besides being good for you this salad was lip-smacking good! Have fun experimenting and make your own version using some of the foods rich in beauty minerals listed in previous posts. – XoXo Raw Girl
The Ultimate Beauty Salad
To prepare, wash all veggies thoroughly. Wash mixed greens and arugula and toss together in a large salad bowl. Chop up green and yellow squash, red bell peppers, and olives. Add toppings to greens, pour on olive oil, add in sea salt and curry, and squeeze the wedge of lemon. Massage the veggies with your hands for a few minutes. Add in a couple teaspoons of nutritional yeast and toss together. Use a veggie grater to finely grate beets on top, sprinkle in some pumpkin seeds, and add in fennel leaves for decoration. Enjoy!
Ingredients:
- Mixed Greens – Vitamin A
- Arugula – Sulfur
- Red Bell Peppers – Silicon
- Avocado – Sulfur
- Fennel – Vitamin A, C, sulfur
- Pumpkin Seeds – Sulfur
- Beets – Vitamin A, Calcium, Phosphorous
- Green & Yellow Zucchini – Vitamin A
- Olives (black and green) – Sulfur
- Wedge of Lemon (squeeze juice)
- Olive Oil (extra virgin, 2-3 capfuls) – antioxidants
- Yellow Curry (1 teaspoon) – antioxidants
- Celtic Sea Salt ( a couple pinches)
- Nutritional Yeast (3-4 teaspoons) B-complex Vitamins, Calcium, Potassium, Phosphorous etc.
The copyright of this recipe is owned by Esosa Edosomwan AKA Raw Girl AKA Chef Eazy E. Permission to republish this recipe in any format must be granted by the author in writing.
[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=B4oAW9oBY00]
For more on beauty minerals, check out these past posts:
The Art of Raw Snacking : Spicy Kale Chips
Hey Gang: A quick side note before I delve into my raw snack. I’m on my third week of physical therapy. My back is still a bit wonky. I thought it was getting better, and then last week had a major relapse. It’s been tough to stay in my raw girl blogging mode, although I am still eating raw of course, and the heat around here has pushed me to eat even closer to 100% raw. So bear with me and forgive me for my absence. Hoping that very soon I will be back to normal. – XoXo Raw Girl
People ask me all the time how I survive on raw foods and what snacks I keep around to keep me going. I’m not too much of a snacker, but I have developed and ongoing arsenal of small meals to grab on-the-go if necessary. Especially for road trips when all that there is to find in convenience stores is fast processed foods of various kinds. To avoid having a raw foodie breakdown and eating something you regret, only to suffer the consequences later, it’s definitely best to have something on hand to stop your tummy from growling. The key to snacking in my opinion is to treat it like a meal and be cognizant if what you are eating needs more time to digest. I do snack on dehydrated nuts from time to time, but you have to remember that depending on what meal you are planning to eat next, your body may need sufficient time to digest the first “snack.” For example: I wouldn’t snack on a bunch of nuts and then eat a huge bowl of fruit afterward. That, my friends is a recipe for gas/indigestion. In that case I would probably eat the fruit first, wait awhile and then eat the nuts. Keeping it simple and eating foods that combine well keep you gas-free and still fill you up. If you are already in tune with your body, it’s good to snack on things that you crave. I find that very often I am craving a particular dried fruit or veggie and it is because my body really needed that at the moment.
My new ultimate favorite crave is SPICY KALE CHIPS. I really can’t get enough. Not only are they crunchy and slightly cheesy, thanks to the nutritional flakes, they also provide the double duty of helping me ward off mosquitoes by providing a healthy serving of Vitamin B1.
I’ve read a bunch of recipes for kale chips, some that profess to be crunchier than others depending on whether or not the kale is coated with a batter prior to dehydrating. I haven’t tried the recipe that professes to produce the crunchiest kale chips ever, but I have modified my own version of the regular kale chip that is crunchy enough for me, and slightly spicy.
Ingredients: 2 bunches of kale, organic olive oil, two teaspoons red pepper,teaspoon sea salt
Making kale chips is super easy. First you wash the kale thoroughly and get rid of stems (the stems aren’t fun to chew on when dehydrated). I always use a Veggie Wash to remove unwanted dirt/bacteria/pesticides. Then coat the kale with 2-3 capfuls of organic olive oil and add spices. Add sea salt and red pepper, and 1 capful or two of organic apple cider vinegar. Massage the veggies til everything is worked in.
Once that’s done, I take heaping tablespoons of nutritional flakes and mix into kale. Do this with a spoon because if you use your hands, you’ll get more flakes on your hands than on the kale, which you don’t want. The nutritional flakes give the kale an awesome almost cheesy flavor once dehydrated. Then you pop the kale into the dehydrator for at least 6-8 hours or until crispy enough for you. I usually prepare the kale and let it dehydrate over night. It’s also good to do at least two bunches at a time, or you’ll be left wishing you made more! Remember that it shrinks considerably when you dehydrate it.
Zucchini “Chips”: I just chop up raw zucchini maybe add a little seasoning and eat with hummus. In this photo I added in some sun dried tomatoes, which were made by dehydrating tomato slices.
VEGGIE LOVE: Papaya
If you missed it, check the archives for Papaya Breeze for another cool way to incorporate papaya into a light meal! If you are like me—I used to hate eating papaya plain, try adding a squeeze of lemon/lime and a little bit of sea salt, it is really yummy. – XoXo Raw Girl
Hey gang! This week we are going to get the low down on the lovely papaya, a bright Caribbean fruit with the soft texture of a melon and a complex sweet flavor. Papaya has a smooth butter-like consistency, with a sweet flavor and a light musky aftertaste. Great in salads and smoothies, papaya is an excellent refreshing summer fruit.
Why is it good for you? Papaya is an excellent source of vitamin C, folate and potassium. It’s also a good source of dietary fiber, vitamin E, vitamin A and vitamin K. The combination of these vitamins provides protection against heart disease due to antioxidants, promotes digestive health, has anti-inflammatory effects aiding asthma and osteoarthritis, and offers supreme immune support. Papaya can also help prevent cancer, most notably colon and lung cancers. Basically, there’s no reason not to eat papaya!
Papaya can be treated like melon: either cutting in half scooping out the seeds and eating with a spoon, or peeling first and then chopping for recipes. The skin is pretty thin, so you can peel it with a vegetable peeler. Once you cut inside, you’ll be greeted with a ton of little black seeds. These are edible, but very peppery and bitter. Feel free to discard, or get creative with a peppery salad dressing. The flesh is soft, so treat gently when chopping and dicing. The recipe this week is an absolute delight! I served it on the side of some raw tacos on a beautiful spring day and it looked so decadent and colorful. It’s a must try for the season.
Ingredients:
1 large papaya
1/2 large cucumber
juice from 1 lime
¼ cup chopped mint
¼ cup chopped cilantro
salt to taste
Peel outer skin of papaya. Slice lengthwise and scoop out seeds. Carefully dice into small pieces. Peel and chop the cucumber. Add remaining ingredients. Serve chilled.
Glad to share the love,
Kenzie, signing in for Raw Girl
How to Make a Romaine Refresher Juice
Hey party people: I got a new juicer! So I am having fun creating some new juice concoctions. This Romaine Refresher juice, I made up on the fly because there happened to be a lot of romaine lettuce in my fridge. It is as refreshing as the title leads on—and is a lovely light juice to drink, especially as the weather gets warmer. Although we never think too much about getting nutrients from the lettuce in our salads, Romaine lettuce is the most nutrient-dense of all the lettuce varieties and is an excellent source of vitamins A, B1, B2, and C, folic acid, manganese and chromium. Hope you get down with some romaine in your green juice soon! – XoXo Raw Girl
[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=a9RnFOZJrjU]
Ingredients:
1 head of Romaine Lettuce, 1 whole lemon, 7-8 stalks of celery, 1/3 ginger root
How to Make 3 Mushroom Ginger Miso Soup
So at some point about two weeks ago, it went from feeling like summer to being freezing again, and I had a particular penchant for soup. But not just any soup…I wanted Miso soup which has the added benefit of promoting good bacteria in your body because miso is fermented! So heres my recipe for a fabulous 3 Mushroom Miso. When making the video I forgot the essential ingredient that makes this miso lip smacking—GINGER. Make sure to add in diced ginger root in step one when you add mushrooms to boiling water. It is so easy and quick to prepare its insane. It takes me about 5 minutes if my mushrooms are prepped. Hopefully, we won’t have many more days of yo-yo-ing weather, but if we do and your feeling a jones for something warm and light, try this recipe! – X0X0 Raw Girl
[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GwJaJQTdz98]
Ingredients:
2 tablespoons Shiro Miso (or any kind you like: barley miso is yummy), 1 1/2 to 2 shredded carrots, 2 cups mushrooms ( i used Shitake, oyster, and baby bella mushrooms), 4-5 sheets organic Nori, 1 bunchful of Scallions chopped, 1/4-1/2 GINGER ROOT diced
VEGGIE LOVE: Asian Pear
I recently got down with an asian pear on a film set. It was introduced to me by another actress, a good friend of mine, as we were waiting around to shoot. We found one in a street market in Queens. I loved it, hope you’ll give Kenzie’s fabulous recipe a try it looks so yummy I could eat it off the page! -XoXo Raw Girl
I hope everyone is enjoying the beginning of spring and is starting to get excited about all the seasonal fruits and veggies that are just around the corner. I know I am. Today I want to talk about Asian Pear: a fruit with a bit of an identity crisis, but all is forgiven by its sweet and crisp taste.
When first biting in, you may think you are actually eating an apple. It is crunchier than a pear and many have the roundness of an apple; but Asian Pears tend to be a bit juicier than your traditional apple and have more of a pear-ish color. They have a really fresh and satisfying taste—truly delicious. There are many types of Asian Pears, but most come from Japan. Here in the U.S., ours are come from Washington, Oregon, and California. You can find them in Asian Markets almost year round, major health stores (like Whole Foods) during summer months, and if you’re in the Northwest maybe a local farmers market.
So how are they good for you? Asian pear is loaded with Vitamin C—an antioxidant that protects cells against damage, helps wounds to heal, fights infections, promotes healthy bones, teeth, gums and blood vessels, and aids in the absorption of iron. The fruit also has a good amount of Vitamin K, which can increase bone mass, promotes good blood flow, and protects against liver and prostate cancer. Asian Pear is also loaded with other vitamins and minerals in small amounts, including Vitamin E, B Vitamins, Potassium, Magnesium, and some protein.
So how about some pie?
Raw Asian Pear Pie
Crust: 2 cups almonds, 1 cup pitted dates, 2 Tbs maple syup, 1 teaspoon salt; Filling: 3-4 chopped asian pears, 1 orange pitted and seeded, 2 Tbs maple syrup, ¼ cup water, raisins or other dried fruit, 1 Tbs cinnamon
For crust, blend the almonds to make flour. Take out 3 Tbs of flour then add dates and syrup until dough is formed. Pour the 3 Tbs of almond flour into the bottom of your pie dish; this prevents the crust from sticking. Start molding the piecrust into the pan evenly.
For the filling, add the orange, maple syrup, cinnamon and water to Vitamix and blend. Then add the Asian Pears and pulse lightly—you don’t want to blend the apples, just chopped, rough, and solidified with the filling mixture. Pour mixture into crust. Top with raisins or dried fruit. You can let the pie sit in fridge overnight for really marinated apples. But if you can’t wait that long, it’s just as good!
This is a delicious take on “traditional” apple pie. You still have the crunch of apples, but with a great pear taste—and it’s 100% raw. This pie is also great for staying with the Veggie Love theme: share the love with a group of friends and feel fabulous with every bite.
Sharing the love with a mouthful of pie….Kenzie, Signing in for Raw Girl
How to Make Raw Blueberry Banana Pancakes
Hey raw vegan party people! So I had a blast dreaming up this raw pancake recipe. They are yummalicious and since making these I have come up with several other delectable variations that I promise to share (raw apple cinnamon pancakes are also delish). Back in the days when I was on the S.A.D.D. (standard American death-trap diet) I used to love pancakes and french toast, but now the thought of all that white flour and bread makes my stomach queasy. There were a bunch of raw pancake recipes I came across. Most consisted entirely of nuts. I decided to make a version that was less nut heavy and ground the oat seed or “oat groat” into a flour and added that into the recipe. In order to make these you need a dehydrator and a high-speed blender, and you are ready to go! The longest part is the dehydration, but its easy if you start the day before. It takes no time to blend the batter and you can just leave them in the dehydrator and go about your business. Trust me, It’s worth the wait ;). -XoXo Raw Girl
[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BthWV75RVGg]
Ingredients:
2 bananas, 2 cups almond flour (made from grinding raw almonds), 2 cups oat flour (grind oat groats into flour), 1/2 -3/4 of a small container of organic blueberries, 1/2 cup agave nectar, 1 tablespoon vanilla, 1/4 cup flaxseed meal, 1/2 cup water (or as needed)
First grind your almonds into almond flour, and grind your oat groats into oat flour. If you have less oats than nuts you can use a 3 cups to 1 cup ratio—3 cups almonds and one cup oat groats, feel free to play around with it. Put all ingredients except for flaxseed into blender and blend. Stop and use wooden spoon or spatula to mix in ingredients, then blend again until smooth. Pour batter into a bowl and mix in flaxseed meal to thicken batter. Set dehydrator for 115 degrees and portion out your pancakes onto teflex sheets after coating with a little bit of extra virgin olive oil. Dehydrate for 6 hours minimum then flip off of teflex sheet and let the other side dehydrate for another 4.5-6 hours. When done they should not be gooey, but firm and little flexible. Serve with fruit and grade B maple syrup if needed. They will already be sweet so you may eat them as is!
Makes around 8-9 medium size pancakes. Enjoy!
How to Make a Green Immune Booster Smoothie
This green smoothie was a concoction I threw together to help out a sick family member. I am very big on proper food combining and usually make sure not to mix citrus with other things, but in this case I made an exception. People who eat a lot of junk tend to have stomachs of steel anyhow, because the majority of people are used to eating all kinds of food in one sitting regardless of the fact that it may take a different set of enzymes to digest. Will go more in-depth on food combining sometime soon.
That said, I was pleasantly surprised that my stomach didn’t get queasy at all when I tested this smoothie. I added in orange juice for vitamin C, flaxseed and prunes to help elimination, bananas to slow digestion, and spirulina and alfalfa sprouts to boost immunity. Worked like a charm or at least made a difference because the next day my loved one was up and moving.
[youtube=http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=PDxbY3_wrXo]
Ingredients:
fresh squeezed organic orange (3 oranges)
4 preservative free dried prunes
3 Tablespoons of flaxseed
3 Tablespoons of spirulina
large handful of sprouts ( I think I used at least half the container)
2 ripe organic bananas
Remember when you are sick, it is not best to suppress your symptoms with a whole bunch of drugs that put a band aid on the condition but do not address the core problem. I rarely ever find myself ill, and going raw and medicine-free has taught me how to heal myself naturally and know what my body needs when I need it. Start listening more when you are sick instead of telling your body to quiet down by overloading yourself with tylenols, midols, cough syrup, etc. Rest is needed, and usually a departure from solid foods, and flushing out your colon solves a myriad of problems. At least you’ll know you got to the bottom of the real issue and will enjoy the fruits of long lasting health.
– XoXo Raw Girl