The Hemp Connection:
vegans

  • Vegan? Here's a bucket list to keep you inspired!

    Vegan? Here's a bucket list to keep you inspired!

    One of my litmus tests for how healthy a vegan's diet truly is, is to listen to how they describe what they eat. If they focus on telling me what they DON'T eat, and have a limited list of what they DO eat, I start to consider that what we're describing is an eating disorder, not a vegan eater.

    Here's a challenge to encourage you to be more vegan and less disordered. It comes from the blog http://www.lunchboxbunch.com/., and it's a list of 100 vegan foods. I've been instructed to italicize foods I'd never try, and bold face foods I have eaten. And to encourage you to share the challenge on your own blogs.

    I'm a pretty adventurous eater so there are no italics. I did better than I thought I would, actually, since I am not 100% vegan myself. I now have some great items to add to my own list!

    Have fun!
    1. Molasses

    2. Cactus/Nopales
    3. Scrambled Tofu
    4. Grilled Portobella Caps
    5. Fresh Ground Horseradish
    6. Sweet Potato Biscuits
    7. Arepa
    8. Vegan Cole Slaw
    9. Ginger Carrot Soup
    10. Fiddlehead Ferns
    11. Roasted Elephant Garlic
    12. Umeboshi
    13. Almond Butter Toast
    14. Aloe Vera
    15. H and H Bagel NYC
    16. Slow Roasted Butternut Squash
    17. White truffle
    18. Fruit wine made from something other than grapes
    19. Freshly ground wasabi
    20. Coconut Milk Ice Cream (not store bought)
    21. Heirloom tomatoes
    22. Orchard-fresh pressed apple cider
    23. Organic California Mango (in season Sept-Oct only)
    24. Quinoa
    25. Papaya Smoothie
    26. Raw Scotch Bonnet (habanero) pepper (just a bite!…hot!
    27. Goji Berry Tea
    28. Fennel
    29. Vegan Chocolate Chip Cookie
    30. Radishes and Vegan Buttery Spread
    31. Starfruit
    32. Oven fresh Sourdough bread
    33. Sangria made with premium fruit and juices
    34. Sauerkraut
    35. Acai Smoothie
    36. Blue Foot Mushrooms
    37. Vegan Cupcake from Babycakes nyc
    38. Sweet Potatoes and Tempeh combo
    39. Falafel
    40. Spelt Crust Pizza
    41. Salt and Pepper Oyster Mushrooms
    42. Jicama Slaw
    43. Pumpkin Edamame Ginger Dumplings
    44. Hemp Milk
    45. Rose Champagne
    46. Fuyu
    47. Raw Avocado-Coconut Soup
    48. Tofu Pesto Sandwich
    49. Apple-Lemon-Ginger-Cayenne fresh-pressed juice…with Extra Ginger
    50. Grilled Seitan
    51. Prickly pear
    52. Fresh Pressed Almond Milk
    53. Concord Grapes off the vine
    54. Ramps
    55. Coconut Water fresh from a young coconut
    56. Organic Arugula
    57. Vidalia Onion
    58. Sampler of organic produce from Diamond Organics
    59. Honeycrisp Apple
    60. Poi
    61. Vegan Campfire-toasted Smores
    62. Grape seed Oil
    63. Farm fresh-picked Peach
    64. Freshly-made pita bread with freshly-made hummus
    65. Chestnut Snack Packs
    66. Fresh Guava
    67. Mint Chocolate Chip Oatmeal Cookies
    68. Raw Mallomar from One Lucky Duck, NYC
    69. Fried plantains
    70. Mache
    71. Golden Beets
    72. Barrel-Fresh Pickles
    73. Liquid Smoke
    74. Meyer Lemon
    75. Veggie Paella
    76. Vegan Lasagna (raw optional)
    77. Kombucha
    78. Homemade Soy Milk
    79. Lapsang souchong
    80. Lychee Bellini
    81. Tempeh Bacon
    82. Sprouted Grain Bread
    83. Lemon Pepper Tempeh
    84. Vanilla Bean
    85. Watercress
    86. Carrot you pulled out of the ground yourself
    87. Vegan In-Season Fruit Pie
    88. Flowers
    89. Corn Chowder
    90. High Quality Vegan Raw Chocolate
    91. Yellow fuzz-free Kiwi
    92. White Flesh Grapefruit
    93. harissa
    94. Coconut Oil
    95. Jackfruit
    96. Homemade Risotto
    97. Spirulina
    98. Seedless 'Pixie' Tangerine
    99. Gourmet Sorbet, not store bought
    100. Fresh Plucked English Peas

  • Is being vegetarian hurting your fertility?

    Is being vegetarian hurting your fertility?

    So you've been told you need to clean up your nutrition act, and you've stopped eating the Fritos. You've decided to stop being the reason the stock price of your local fast food restaurant has weathered the Wall Street willies. Your salad dressing shelf in your refrigerator is now half of what's in your refrigerator.

    Still no luck.

    Hey, isn't eating better supposed to be the answer?

    Depends on how you define eating better.

    I'm noticing with my inCYST classes that a disproportionate percentage of women coming for information have adopted vegetarian practices. And I'm beginning to wonder if it isn't part of the problem.

    No, the problem isn't that you're vegetarian. It's how you're defining vegetarian, and it's how you go about being one that matters. Here are my simple rules for being the healthiest (potentially fertile) vegetarian you can be.

    1. Define your vegetarianism by what you DO eat.

    Most people I know who become vegetarian after eating meat, define that practice in terms of what they DON'T eat. They DON'T do red meat. They DON'T do dairy. They DON'T do fish. DON'T, DON'T, DON'T.

    Therein lies the problem.

    A most important rule of nutrition is, when you eliminate an entire category of food, for whatever reason, be it meat or wheat, you are also eliminating crucial nutrients that this category contains.

    My definition of vegetarian is someone who meets all of their complete nutritional needs without using animal products.

    Do you know what fertility-related nutrients you're likely short on if all you've done is cut out meat? If not, read on!

    2. Zap yourself with zinc!

    Zinc is needed for oodles of reactions that keep your body running, from your brain to your ovaries. Are you eating whole grains? Beans? Pumpkin and sunflower seeds? Nuts? Oops…go get your shopping list, right now, and put them down!

    3. Forgetting folate can be fatal

    You likely know about this nutrient since there has been so much publicity about its role in pregnancy. Put spinach on your sandwich instead of lettuce…make sure your morning cereal is fortified…eat more beans and split peas…and become savvy with sunflower seeds!

    4. Cultivate a copper attitude

    It's not as famous as folate, but it still is important to remember. Outside of red meat, its vegan sources are rather random: molasses, green olives, cocoa, nuts, avocadoes, black pepper, sunflower seeds…hopefully at least one of these sounds tasty!

    5. Try to remember tryptophan

    Tryptophan is a building block for serotonin, one of the major neurotransmitters regulating the brain's hormone center. For vegetarians, there are still a lot of options even if you're not using dairy products or eating turkey. Does your pantry have…cocoa, mangoes, sesame seeds, pumpkin seeds, oats, dates, chickpeas, peanuts, bananas, and sunflower seeds? It needs to.

    6. Allow for algae

    If you're vegan, chances are you're not getting enough DHA and EPA, the omega-3 fatty acids primarily found in fish. Become friendly with an ingredient known as Life's DHA, a marine algae source of DHA (unfortunately not EPA), that is being added to vegan-friendly foods. The link I'm providing gets you to the most recent list of foods containing this ingredient that you may want to become proficient at finding.

    7. Not all vegan products are created equally healthy. Be sure if you've gone vegan, that you are aware of oils that can interfere with healthy balance. These oils are all vegan, but tend to be pro-inflammatory: safflower, sunflower, soybean, corn, cottonseed, sesame. (Remember my"S and C" rule from previous posts. If you're eating absolutely no meat at all, but you're eating a salad doused with soybean oil-based dressing…that could be a problem. Become familiar with brands that are made with olive or canola oils, or learn to make vinaigrettes. (Canola is the"C" oil exception, by the way.

    8. Be happy without hydrogenated.

    Hydrogenated = trans fat. Enough said.

    9. Forget the fructose…high fructose corn syrup, that is.

    It's been connected to insulin resistance in more than one study. And despite what marketers would really like you to believe, more than one nutrition expert does not endorse its use.

    10. Be pro-protein

    This is the most obvious one…know your complementary proteins and be sure your diet includes them. One caveat…soy may be hard on your thyroid function and is not a good choice if you have a family history of breast cancer. Be sure you are reading labels, as soy is a filler in many, many foods.

    I like to look for patterns that make nutrition recommendations easy to recommend. In this post, it didn't work out that way. A lot of these foods are random. If I'm not giving you ideas that seem easy to work into your food plan…think of consulting with one of our experts! That's what we excel at, and that's what we're waiting to help you with.

    After all, you became vegan to be healthy, let's work together to do it correctly.

  • Good news for vegetarians

    Good news for vegetarians

    A significant percentage of the women I counsel, whether their issues are officially related to PCOS or not, are vegetarian. They get in trouble with their vegan lifestyle because it eliminates the essential nutrients DHA and EPA.

    Not any more!

    Marine algae is an up and comer in the omega-3 world. It's been increasingly incorporated into foods, which I've written about before. Now, the people who developed this ingredient are reporting that this algal DHA is as effective as salmon in increasing the body's DHA levels.

    You can either take it as a supplement, or you can find it in popular foods. The best place to go in order to get the list of foods you can use is the Martek website. I'm also including the"Life's DHA" logo here, because it's on the packaging for these products for easy identification.

    No more excuses, all you vegans! You can make choices that help you to be healthier while honoring your culinary code of ethics.: )


    Arterburn LM, Oken HA, Bailey Hall E, Hamersley J, Kuratko CN, Hoffman JP.
    Algal-oil capsules and cooked salmon: nutritionally equivalent sources of docosahexaenoic Acid. J Am Diet Assoc. 2008 Jul;108(7):1204-9.

  • Enjoy a delicious vegan meal while you learn vegan basics at Phoenix' Sapna Cafe

    Enjoy a delicious vegan meal while you learn vegan basics at Phoenix' Sapna Cafe

    We're launching a new program, and Phoenix residents are the first to be able to try it---

    Eat It! Well! (TM) is designed to teach you how to eat your chosen food philosophy in a way that includes essential nutrients and promotes optimal health. Our philosophy at inCYST is not to steer everyone into the same way of eating, but rather to help you to identify what works best for you…then show you how to do it.

    Because such a high percentage of our clients seem to have some sort of history of imbalanced vegan eating in their past, we wanted to start with a vegan event.

    And because Sapna Cafe has such tasty, healthy food, they were the natural partner with which to launch our concept.

    Here is the event information.
    Location Sapna Cafe
    1301 NW Grand Avenue
    Phoenix, AZ

    Have you recently become vegetarian? Not sure how to do it?

    Have you tried being vegetarian and become bored?

    Or do you just love eating vegetarian so much that you can't get enough of it?

    We have a special evening store at Sapna Cafe…for all of you!

    Come enjoy a special vegan meal prepared by Chef Ana Borrajo:

    Quinoa — Brown Rice Chili
    Seasonal Dinner Salad (so seasonal, in fact, we can't even tell you what it will contain until we've been to market that week!)
    Spanish Baked Apples

    BYOB**

    (While the topic of this class is not gluten-free eating, the dinner is entirely gluten-free.)

    Registered dietitian and health expert Monika Woolsey, MS, RD, will be providing information about how to eat healthy as a vegan:
    --basic principles of vegan eating
    --the top 5 mistakes vegans make in the diets and easy ways to avoid them
    --where to find the best vegan in Phoenix (that is, if you can't get yourself to Sapna!)

    In addition to this hearty and delicious meal and informative class, participants will receive a special $5"Sapna Cash" certificate that can be redeemed for a future vegan cooking class, with Ana, in the Sapna kitchen.

    **You can bring your own alchoholic beverage. Please check back with us for some wine pairings you can pick up at the Phoenix Downtown Public Market on your way to dinner.

    Cost for this event: $30 per person includes dinner and presentation. Tips for the restaurant staff are optional but encouraged.

    You can register at this link:
    http://yhst-34497545168533.stores.yahoo.net/eat-it-well---vegetarian-eating-class-at-sapna-cafe.html

    For more information contact Monika Woolsey, 623.486.0737