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Foods That Are Good For Your Teeth

Posted by Dr. Richard Walicki on December 29, 2011

In a previous article, Foods That Are Bad For Your Teeth, I reviewed three broad categories of foods that can be detrimental to your dental health.  These were sugars and sweeteners, low fat foods, and foods that contain white, especially bleached, flour.

With this article I would like to spend some time talking about an area that I feel receives entirely too little attention – whether by patients, or dentists, for that matter.  Possibly, this comes about for the simple reason that by the time many patients arrive at the dentist they are looking for resolution of a specific problem.  In this sense, the market has conditioned both patients and doctors into focusing upon the end-game.

This has its place and fills a need.   Patients who are in pain do not generally want to hear about what they should be eating – they want to handle their pain.   Yet, knowing what foods can repair teeth may be a key element in establishing their future long-term dental stability.

In today’s economic climate, health care has undergone many challenges and the consumer has been faced with high medical and dental costs.  Consequently, health care is not infrequently reserved for the handling of emergencies.  This is actually counter-productive, as emergency dental care is also expensive.  Couple this with efforts by the patient to reduce costs, and the “treatment” may be a decision to remove the offending tooth.  Later, when the patient starts to regret his choice and seeks tooth replacements, he may find that replacement costs are many times more than had they handled the problem once discovered.

Economics can also influence the quality of the food we consume.  In an effort to save money many consumers will also select lowest cost items.  These are typically quite profitable for the producer but are usually highly processed and very unprofitable for your health.

So what do you need to know?

Let’s start with this simple concept:  If what you eat comes out of a box, a jar, a can, or a plastic wrapper, it has been processed.

Your diet is the single most important thing that you can control to create or maintain a healthy mouth.  When you eat too many processed foods – especially those that contain sugars and bleached flour – you create effects that may not be immediately noticed by you.  For example, the level of blood sugar can become elevated and with it a person can experience elevated cortisol.  Cortisol is a hormone produced by your adrenal gland and is responsible for raising blood sugar.   It also affects the flow of parotin (a salivary gland hormone) and, in so doing, can lead to cavities.  Cortisol also counteracts insulin which regulates carbohydrate and fat metabolism in the body, and it slows down bone formation.

The inability to metabolize fats, in turn, can keep you from benefiting from the healthy foods that can help you to repair your teeth.

So, you see, it is a little like the children’s song “The foot bone’s connected to the ankle bone.  And the ankle bone’s connected the leg bone.”  The bottom line: what we do – or don’t do – can have unseen and unwanted effects when it comes to our diet and teeth.

Maintaining healthy hormones is very important to your dental health as well as to your general health.  The relationship between demineralization and remineralization is balanced when hormones are healthy.  When unbalanced, calcium and phosphorus can be pulled out of the blood and create deficiencies in our bones as well as the teeth.  It can also create a condition wherein your body becomes excessively acidic. An acid environment is more receptive to the growth of bacteria and fungi.   If there is one take-home message that you take out of this article it should be that real food – namely unprocessed food, as nature intended that it be consumed – will not only support your general health, but will also support your teeth.

What foods, then, are good for your teeth?

  1.  Proteins:  Eat proteins in order to regulate blood sugar.  As mentioned above, blood sugar fluctuations are one of the key reasons that we lose minerals.  High quality proteins such as grass fed, or wild game are best.  While I realize that this may pose a problem for vegetarians, it doesn’t alter the fact that the most productive stores of minerals, protein, and fats are derived from meats.  Vegetarians must rely on eggs and cheese for their protein.
  2. Foods with phosphorus:  Possibly more important than calcium for your teeth, phosphorus can be obtained from milk and cheese.  Raw, unpasteurized milk is best.   Unless, strictly vegan, vegetarians should have no trouble getting their phosphorus from these sources.  Other good sources of phosphorus include organ meats of both land animals and those from the sea.  Muscle meats (most common meats consumed, i.e., not from organs such as liver or kidney, for example) are also a good source, as are beans and nuts.  Organ meats have more phosphorus than muscle meats.  Although present in some grains, the quantities can be insufficient or difficult to absorb, and this may not be the best choice for your teeth.
  3. Trace minerals are important:  In addition to phosphorus, the following deficiencies can also lead to problems with tooth decay – iron, copper, magnesium and manganese.  Foods with iron include shellfish and organ meats.  Copper is found in liver and mollusks.  Smaller amounts exist in mushrooms.  Magnesium can be found in fish, nuts, and spinach.  Manganese, also important in the regulation of blood sugar, occurs in liver, kidneys (organ meats), mussels, nuts, and pineapple, to name a few sources.  Other trace minerals may also play a role, but are too numerous to mention here.
  4. Healthy fats: These are a great source of energy, but are also important to help maintain hormonal function and balance.  Among the healthy fats are olive oil, butter, beef, chicken, pork and duck fat.  Avocado and coconut oil are also healthy fats, especially if from organic sources.  Vegetable fats do not generally contain the vitamins that help to re-build our teeth.
  5. Fat soluble vitamins D and A: Simply put, without adequate stores of these two vitamins, we can’t get the calcium and phosphorus into our bones or teeth.  People with tooth decay are typically lacking these two vitamins.  Seafood is an excellent source of Vitamin D.  If you don’t have easy access to seafood, or if you don’t like it, lard, or pork fat, will help. Suet, or beef fat appears to be more effective, however.  Another excellent (and relatively simple) way to get Vitamin D is with daily exposure to sunlight.  Consuming fermented cod liver oil is still another easy way to get Vitamin D into your diet.

Eating healthy is the single-most effective action you can take to protect your teeth – and your overall health.  It is also one thing that you can control.  Take the time to learn which foods can provide you with proteins, phosphorus, healthy fats, vitamins D and A, as well as trace minerals, and you will be well on your way to healthier teeth and gums!

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Known as the Doctor of Dental Wellness, Dr. Richard Walicki is a graduate of the Temple University School of Dentistry. Dr. Walicki is a general dentist with a focus on wellness and has maintained an active private practice in Philadelphia for over twenty years.  His mission is to help people attain practical solutions for their dental health problems through education, prevention and nutrition. Dr. Walicki is a contributor to the LiberationWellnessBlog and a supporter of real food. Additional articles of related interest can be located on his website.  A free newsletter and bonus report are also available.

Posted in blood sugar, Cheese, coconut oil, cod liver oil, Dr. Richard Walicki, farm fresh, grass fed beef, gums, health, lard, Nutrition, oral health, pasteurization, ProBiotics, processed food, raw milk, real food, sugar, Vitamin D | Tagged: | 1 Comment »

‘Well Fed’ Is A Well Done Cookbook For People Following A Paleo, Primal Or Low-Carb Lifestyle

Posted by Jimmy Moore on December 13, 2011

When we look back on the year 2011, it will remembered by those of us who closely follow nutrition and health as the year of the Paleo cookbooks. Here is just a small sampling of the most amazing and best recipe books that have released this year highlighting the virtues of healthy low-carb, Paleo-friendly dishes for you to nourish the bodies of your health-conscious family:

- The Paleo Diet Cookbook by Dr. Loren Cordain
- Paleo Comfort Foods by Charles and Julie Mayfield
- Make It Paleo by Bill Staley and Hayley Mason
- Primal Blueprint Quick and Easy Meals by Mark Sisson

It’s an impressive assortment of books that absolutely must be on the bookshelf of anyone and everyone who makes this way of eating their preferred plan of choice. And the good news is there are MANY more to come in 2012 and beyond as people start becoming more and more familiar with the benefits of going grain-free, sugar-free, legume-free, and dairy-free to attain optimal health. Whether you are new to the Paleo, primal, ancestral or low-carb lifestyle or if you’re a long-time seasoned veteran at it, we all need help sometimes sprucing up our diet and keeping it from becoming the drab, boring and undesirable lifestyle that it is stereotyped as being.

That’s why I’m happy to share with you one more truly amazing cookbook gem that released in 2011 that I’m sure will become a go-to resource in health-focused kitchens across the United States and around the world. It’s called Well Fed: Paleo Recipes for People Who Love to Eat by Melissa Joulwan from “The Clothes Make The Girl” blog (NOTE: There’s also an e-book version of the book and special sneak peek of the book available at Melissa’s web site).

For those of you who are unfamiliar with Melissa’s blog and story about how she came to the Paleo diet, I highly encourage you to check out her blog and learn more about the woman behind this book. Of course, she divulges much of her life’s story at the beginning of Well Fed which will give you an appreciation for who she is now and why a cookbook was a logical choice for her to write. The “Dina-Chow” that’s sprinkled throughout this book is simply awesome and there’s no other way to describe it. The photos of the food accompanying each recipe is the actual finished recipe right before it was devoured by the Joulwan clan. Your mouth can’t help but become a waterfall in anticipation of what is sure to be some of the most interesting food you’ve ever eaten. Where else can you get Paleo low-carb versions of a wide variety of ethnic-based foods like “Chocolate Chili,” “BBQ Fork Fried Rice” (made without rice), “Shepherd’s Pie,” and so much more in these 174 pages of absolute decadence? Flipping through the pages of this book, I honestly wanted to try EVERY SINGLE RECIPE–it’s THAT good!

I could appreciate that Melissa made a convenient one-page called “The ‘No’ List” on page 3 followed immediately by another quickie one-page called “The ‘Yes’ List.” I HIGHLY encourage you newbies to this way of eating to photocopy these pages and post them on your refrigerator door, kitchen cabinets, bathroom mirrors…wherever you’ll look at them on a daily basis! Absorb what is shared on these pages and you will quickly become smarter on nutrition than about 99% of the population, including most doctors, dietitians and those who pretend to know what the heck they’re talking about regarding nutritional health on television (*cough* Dr. Oz *cough*). These really are the bare knuckles basics to Paleo eating spelled out more succinctly than anything else I’ve ever seen. And that’s saying a lot because I’ve seen it all. The bottom line: just eat real food! This is a MAJOR theme of what it actually means to be “well fed.”

While this book will likely be placed in the “diet” or “health” section of bookstores or on places like Amazon, Melissa is quick to point out that she considers this book as neither. It could more accurately be called an “inspirational” book that will tickle your taste buds with recipes that will as she puts it “make you want to smash in your face with joy.” Now that’s an image I won’t soon forget! It’s part and parcel of the magic that Melissa Joulwan brings to the table as an ever-enthusiastic and unapologetic defender of her simple philosophy of “Just Eat” and everything else will fall into place and take care of itself.

Since much of the book includes recipes that you won’t likely see anywhere else, I recommend that you pay close attention to the “About The Recipes” where you can get a lesson on the most common ingredients and cooking tools/methods you’ll be using and how they work to produce these recipes. You’ll save yourself a lot of headaches later if you heed this advice from someone who’s been there, done that already. And Melissa also reminds you that the presentation of the food is an important element in being Well Fed as well. You’ll rarely eat out in a restaurant again if you apply what she teaches on page 13.

The nitty gritty of how to make this book work well for you is on page 16 when she describes “The Weekly Cookup” that includes shopping lists, meal planning, and how to construct a meal that will knock the socks off of the people you are serving (yes, even your kids will think you’re a culinary rock star after eating these meals!). Making sure you have the right amount and kind of foods on hand at all times that you can grab and start cooking with is the key. Then it’s just a matter of opening up “Your Paleo Pantry” and pulling out your choice of some of the most remarkable spices and seasonings that will awaken the foods you are about to consume. Melissa also tells you what “Essential Kitchen Tools” to use to be the best darn cook in your neighborhood. Sound impossible? I guess you gotta get Well Fed to find out!

I’m always curious about how the recipes in cookbooks like this one are displayed. But Melissa made it a lot more fun than I’ve ever seen before. She gives you the title of the recipe, adds a cutesy yet descriptive subtitle (i.e. for the “Olive Oil Mayo” recipe, she included the subtitle “You’ll Never Consider Store-Bought Again”), tells you the serving size, how long it takes to prepare and cook the recipe, a brief commentary on the recipe itself, the ingredients to use, the directions, an empty “Notes” section for you to add your own variations to the cookbook for your personal use, a “How You Could Do That” section for suggested variations, as well as “Tasty Ideas” about what you could make to complement this particular recipe. It’s this kind of practical, real-world advice that sets this cookbook apart from the ones I’ve seen a million times before.

If you wanna know what being Well Fed is really all about, then all you gotta do is gaze your eyes at the photo used on the back cover:

‘Nuff said! Isn’t it time you became Well Fed?

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Jimmy Moore is the popular blogger, podcaster and author of Livin’ La Vida Low-Carb who lost 180 pounds on the Atkins diet in 2004 and quickly established himself as a highly influential layperson in the field of health and nutrition. His wildly successful Livin’ La Vida Low-Carb Blog has been educating, encouraging and inspiring readers since 2005 and his accompanying iTunes podcast The Livin’ La Vida Low-Carb Show with Jimmy Moore is one of the most listened to health broadcasts online today featuring hundreds of enchanting interviews with the leading voices in the world of diet and healthy living! Jimmy’s latest book compiling all the knowledge he has learned along his journey is called 21 Life Lessons From Livin’ La Vida Low-Carb: How The Health Low-Carb Lifestyle Changed Everything I Thought I Knew. He lives in Spartanburg, SC with his beautiful wife Christine and their three cats!

Posted in jimmy moore, livin lavida lo-carb, Paleo, real food, recipes | Leave a Comment »

Jimmy Moore’s Book Review: ‘Make It Paleo’ by Bill Staley And Haley Mason

Posted by Jimmy Moore on October 19, 2011

When I think about the subject of cooking, I have many fond memories of learning this artful craft beginning at the age of six when my mother first started letting me “help” her make things like meatloaf, au gratin potatoes, and chocolate cake. Say what you want about having kids in the kitchen, but there’s a certain sense of nostalgia that is attached to the idea of cooking up recipes from a great big cookbook under the loving guidance of a parent. I have so many fond memories of cooking with my mom that I will never forget for the rest of my life.

I recall we had a thick three-ring binder cookbook with a red checkerboard and spoon on the cover (I think it was from Betty Crocker or something) that we’d constantly throw in little index cards and handwritten notes of new recipes that we enjoyed making and eating. That cookbook was our go-to resource for making the food that our family would enjoy. Of course, that was back in the days of my childhood when I didn’t really care about the quality of the food and nutrition contained in my diet. It was all about whipping up dishes that were palatable and made us feel good with no regard to the impact it was going to have on our health.

But that was then and this is now.

Today I am actively pursuing a more low-carbohydrate Paleo-styled dietary plan to help assist me in managing my weight and vastly improve my health. Because I used to make poor dietary choices early in my life that led me to weighing in at over 400 pounds in my early thirties, I am now saddled with the responsibility of making better choices in my diet for the sake of my future health. As I approach turning 40 later this year, it is critical that I continue to implement everything I have learned about healthy living, including doing things like eschewing grains, skipping the omega-6 heavy vegetable oils, significantly reducing sugar intake, stamping out the insulin-raising starches, and, of course, removing the highly-processed refined carbohydrates that passes for most of the “food” (in actuality, it’s not even close to being real FOOD!) Americans purchase and consume.

It’s high time people start to get serious about a very serious issue. Obesity, diabetes, Celiac disease, food allergies, heart disease, cancer…the health crisis we are currently experiencing is completely preventable if people would just learn how to eat and enjoy real food cooking again. Unfortunately, though, we’ve forgotten how to do that and now our health is suffering the consequences. People are in desperate need of help to know how to cook again–which is why I’m so happy that Bill Staley and Hayley Mason have released their amazing cookbook that is now my grown-up go-to resource entitled Make it Paleo: Over 200 Grain Free Recipes For Any Occasion.

This Paleo power couple is the perfect love story of two immensely passionate individuals dedicated to the subject of health and fitness. They have taught one another about what a healthy Paleo diet is all about and built a bond of friendship that turned into a romantic relationship centered around cooking meals together in the kitchen. And it is here where these two amazing people make the magic happen. Bill and Hayley are hardcore devotees to the basic tenets of Paleo/primal/low-carb living–meats, veggies, low-sugar fruits, nuts, seeds, and healthy fats. When you get to enjoy such succulent and satisfying food choices contained in those categories, you really don’t miss everything else!

They are quick to note that Paleo living isn’t about perfection or following a set of strict rules and guidelines. Instead, it’s about knowing what foods are right for you and consciously (and willingly!) making those choices about what you allow to go inside your body. Make It Paleo arms you with incredibly practical ways to know what the good food choices are and how to go about purchasing them. Clear instructions on what to look for when buying your food helps take the guesswork out of it. They even offer up a seasonal guide for produce so you know when crops are available according to when they are grown and harvested. Sadly, many Americans have grown far too accustomed to seeing strawberries available in grocery stores year-round and most people don’t even know they are primarily a crop available in the Spring.

One of the most exciting sections at the beginning of the book before the recipes is on the subject of “Oils and Fats.” There’s a lot of confusion about what “healthy fats” are because of the fat-phobia that still exists in our culture brought on by years of public indoctrination efforts by the USDA and their Dietary Guidelines, the American Heart Association, and other nutrition-related organizations pushing the high-carb (especially grains), low-fat message. And yet we now know more about the importance of consuming fat for the sake of living optimally healthy than ever before! Real food fat sources like coconut oil, ghee, palm oil, grass-fed butter, avocado oil, macadamia nut oil and even lard are all incredibly healthy fats to consume and you’ll get plenty of them in the recipes shared in Make It Paleo.

Helpful tips about how to enhance your Paleo cooking experience are sprinkled throughout this book. Bill and Hayley let you in on all of their inside secrets about making incredible-looking dishes like the gorgeous foods you see throughout this thick, nutrient-dense 450-page book. Especially helpful to me was on page 37 where they identify the best herbs and spices for seasoning various pieces of meat which includes a few surprises, too (coffee and cinnamon go well with beef? I didn’t know that.). Equally useful was the list of “Other Key Ingredients” that are off the beaten path of the general category of Paleo-friendly real food ingredients that help enhance your cooking experience, including coconut milk, bone broth, coconut flour, vinegar, and more! And despite the fact this diet is about primal living, we still live in modern times and can take advantage of the technological advances in cooking devices that make, as they say, “cooking a bit more civilized.”

Before they dive into sharing their boatload of recipes for Breakfast, Appetizers, Entrées, Salads, Soups, Sauces & Dressings, Side Dishes, and Treats & Cheats, they provide some much-needed “Basic Cooking Tips” advice that is worth the price of admission for this book alone. Many people tend to be intimidated by the thought of cooking, but Bill and Hayley try to lighten the load on you by reminding you what it’s really all about. That quickly becomes evident once you dive into the mouthwatering recipes themselves.

The formatting for the recipes in Make It Paleo is so user-friendly that I can’t imagine how they could have improved upon it. On the left-hand page is the name of the recipe, a quick commentary from the authors about it, the ingredients list, prep and cooking times, serving size, the “Process” on how to make the dish, and “Notes” at the bottom of the page revealing insider information about things to look for when making this recipe. On the right-hand page is a full-page color photo of the finished dish that will have your mouth watering before you even begin! I definitely appreciated the use of whisks on a scale of 1-3 difficulty for each of the recipes. If it only has one whisk, then that signifies it’s an easy recipe. But 2 1/2 or 3 whisks means it might require a little more work and finesse to pull it off. Giving you that insight before you dive into making the recipes in this book shows you that Bill and Hayley are conscious that not all at-home cooks are gourmet chefs capable of pulling off culinary miracles. And that’s completely okay.

Remember that chocolate cake I told you about earlier that I used to make with my mom growing up? Well, the one on page 370 looks absolutely divine and I’ll definitely be making it to celebrate my 40th birthday in December. My wife Christine wants the recipe on the very next page for carrot cake which she would eat everyday if I made it for her! Although some of the dessert recipes call for maple syrup (which could easily be substituted with the sweetener of your choice if you’re eating low-carb), the authors do describe the dishes in this section as “Treats and Cheats” for a reason. Even still, the beauty of Make It Paleo is that is allows you to take virtually any meal or occasion you can think of and, well, “make it Paleo.” The very back of the book even gives you a sample list of “Menus for Special Occasions” sorted out for events like birthdays, Easter, Sunday Brunch, Thanksgiving, Valentine’s, watching sports, and more!

All in all, Make It Paleo is one of the most well-rounded health-related cookbooks I have seen in nearly eight years of becoming conscious about my diet. The experience in the kitchen that Bill Staley and Hayley Mason share is invaluable as you seek to spruce up your own eating plan. For those people who think a Paleo/primal/low-carb eating program is drab and boring, I challenge you to read this book and maintain that same opinion. It ain’t gonna happen because you’ll be drooling too much over the foods you make. This is a resource I enthusiastically endorse and recommend to my friends, family, readers, and podcast listeners looking to find recipes that will nourish their bodies on their chosen nutritional plan.

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Jimmy Moore is the popular blogger, podcaster and author of Livin’ La Vida Low-Carb who lost 180 pounds on the Atkins diet in 2004 and quickly established himself as a highly influential layperson in the field of health and nutrition. His wildly successful Livin’ La Vida Low-Carb Blog has been educating, encouraging and inspiring readers since 2005 and his accompanying iTunes podcast The Livin’ La Vida Low-Carb Show with Jimmy Moore is one of the most listened to health broadcasts online today featuring hundreds of enchanting interviews with the leading voices in the world of diet and healthy living! Jimmy’s latest book compiling all the knowledge he has learned along his journey is called 21 Life Lessons From Livin’ La Vida Low-Carb: How The Health Low-Carb Lifestyle Changed Everything I Thought I Knew. He lives in Spartanburg, SC with his beautiful wife Christine and their three cats!

Posted in jimmy moore, livin lavida lo-carb, Local Foods, Nutrition, Paleo, real food, real foods, saturated fat, wellness | Leave a Comment »

Jimmy Moore’s Nostalgic Low-Carb Paleo Pumpkin Cheesecake Recipe

Posted by Jimmy Moore on October 5, 2011

Fall is here and where I live it is virtually impossible to avoid seeing pumpkins, pumpkins everywhere. Vendors selling big orange and even white carving pumpkins (which you NEVER eat) along the side of the road all over the Upstate of South Carolina to local farmer’s markets offering the baking pumpkins (like the one pictured to the left) are abundant. It’s funny how nostalgic something as simple as a pumpkin can be for people reminding them of Halloween and various childhood memories. But it’s the thought of a pumpkin pie that gets my senses reminiscing of Thanksgivings and Christmases from yesteryear (reminding me of my brother Kevin, too). I noticed this when I started making a low-carb Paleo dessert at the behest of my lovely bride Christine.

In the middle of the day, she comes into my office and said matter-of-factly, “I want a pumpkin cheesecake!” I told her I’ve never cooked with pumpkin before nor have I made a cheesecake with it. But, as adventurous as I like to be in the kitchen, I ran out and got all the ingredients I thought I needed and started working on it. My first test looking at this little baking pumpkin was how in the world to cut it up. This little sucker wasn’t easy to slice and dice and there had to be at least a million seeds in it (reminded me more of a squash than anything). But after making that pumpkin look like the victim in a slasher film and trying desperately over a half hour NOT to cut myself (next time I’m gonna roast it in the oven first to soften it up), I succeeded in getting all the edible parts of that pumpkin into a bowl. Now what? Here’s the recipe I came up with.

JIMMY MOORE’S LOW-CARB PALEO PUMPKIN CHEESECAKE

The Crust
4 ounces macadamia nuts
4 ounces cashews
4 ounces almonds
1 Tbs fresh local honey (or stevia for lower carb counts)
1 tsp nutmeg
1 tsp cinnamon
3 large pastured eggs
4 Tbs butter, melted
Coconut oil (enough to grease your pan)

Preheat oven to 375 degrees. Take a paper towel and dip it in your coconut oil. Liberally grease the bottom of your 9X9 inch dish or pan (mine is a glass dish baking pan). Pulse blend the macadamias, cashews, and almonds 4 ounces at a time and dump into a mixing bowl when you create crumbs (keep in mind you can use all of one nut if you’d like). Repeat until all of the nuts are chopped up into your “flour” mix. Add honey (or you can substitute some stevia if you don’t want to add the carbs to your recipe), nutmeg, cinnamon and eggs to the macadamia nuts and whip vigorously with a fork until well-blended. Do a taste check of the batter to make sure it has the appropriate sweetness for you. You’ll taste a subtle nutmeg/cinnamon flavor to complement what we’ll be adding to the top of this crust. Empty batter into 9X13 glass baking dish and gently press down with a spoon until it is evenly distributed along the bottom of the pan. Place pan into preheated oven and bake for 8 minutes (you’ll start to smell it after five minutes of cooking). Allow crust to completely cool quickly in the freezer (about 10 minutes). NOTE: It will not necessarily be thoroughly cooked because you don’t want the crust to burn or become dry while baking the cheesecake.

The Pumpkin Cheesecake Filling
1 baking pumpkin, boiled
4 Tbs butter
2 Tbs fresh local honey
4 packets of stevia (or liquid stevia equivalent)
1 Tbs cinnamon
1 Tbs nutmeg
24 ounces cream cheese, room temperature
5 large pastured eggs
1/2 cup sour cream
Sea salt

Turn the oven down to 325 degrees. Flying by the seat of my pants since I’d never worked with pumpkin before, I threw the raw bits and pieces I had chopped up into a pot of water set on medium high with some sea salt. After about 8-10 minutes of boiling, I dumped the pumpkin into a colander to sift the excess water out. Taking a fork, I mashed down on the pumpkin pulp to get as much of the liquid drained as possible. Meanwhile, I turned the heat down to medium low on the stovetop and put the butter in the pot. Dump the fully-drained cooked pumpkin on top of that and begin stirring this mixture together. Add in the honey, stevia, cinnamon and nutmeg to blend ingredients thoroughly. Turn the burner off and continue stirring until well blended.

Take the pumpkin mixture and put it into a large mixing bowl. Add cream cheese and eggs. Using a hand mixer, begin whipping the cheesecake together starting on low to prevent too much splatter (and it will splatter!). This should become moderately thick but not spoonable thick. That’s how it’s supposed to look. Add the sour cream and sea salt, stir by hand with a spoon and pull your crust out of the freezer. Pour the cheesecake mixture on top of the crust spreading it evenly across the 9X13 pan. Bake for 45-60 minutes or until lightly golden brown. Place in freezer for one hour before slicing into cheesecake. For best results, refrigerate overnight for the cheesecake to set completely.

After tasting this on-the-fly creation, Christine said this is the best thing I’ve ever made her! And I’ve made a lot of tasty dishes over the years. Try this recipe out for a bit of nostalgia while sticking to your low-carb Paleo lifestyle! I’ll be making it for some upcoming holiday gatherings. So good!

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Jimmy Moore is the popular blogger, podcaster and author of Livin’ La Vida Low-Carb who lost 180 pounds on the Atkins diet in 2004 and quickly established himself as a highly influential layperson in the field of health and nutrition. His wildly successful Livin’ La Vida Low-Carb Blog has been educating, encouraging and inspiring readers since 2005 and his accompanying iTunes podcast The Livin’ La Vida Low-Carb Show with Jimmy Moore is one of the most listened to health broadcasts online today featuring hundreds of enchanting interviews with the leading voices in the world of diet and healthy living! Jimmy’s latest book compiling all the knowledge he has learned along his journey is called 21 Life Lessons From Livin’ La Vida Low-Carb: How The Health Low-Carb Lifestyle Changed Everything I Thought I Knew. He lives in Spartanburg, SC with his beautiful wife Christine and their three cats!

Posted in jimmy moore, livin lavida lo-carb, real food, recipes | 1 Comment »

8 Reasons Raw Foodies Are Dangerous Extremists (Satire)

Posted by Dr. Richard Walicki on October 4, 2011

I enjoy a good piece of satire.  Here is one I think many LiberationWellness Blog readers may appreciate:

by
Eric Blair
Activist Post

This week, the United States government, working closely with local authorities, heroically raided and arrested raw-food terror kingpin James Stewart in Venice, California. Stewart, who runs the private healthfood cartel, Rawesome Foods, “posed a major threat to the establishment,” claimed an unnamed but armed, undercover double-agent involved in the arrest.

After two SWAT-style stings in one year, Stewart now faces several felony charges including: conspiracy to sell milk to minors; conspiracy to operate a private club without paying protection money to the authorities; conspiracy to educate the masses; and conspiracy to make people healthy and independent.

The authorities warn that the news of Stewart’s arrest and pending environmental tribunal may awaken his cult of followers, called foodies. These extremists typically come from the political left, once believing that boisterous regulations were actually for the public’s safety. They are generally a peace-loving group, but with their bright smiles, chiseled bodies and fully-functional minds, they may prove to be a formidable threat in the war of ideas against the establishment. These foodies, hopped up on natural vitamins, minerals and antioxidants, no longer believe the FDA or the government is there to protect them. For our safety, such nonconformity must not be tolerated.

The establishment must do everything it can to make an example of Stewart and his accomplices before the contagion of natural health awareness spreads to critical mass. Food choice is a privilege that must be fully enforced with more firearms and badges in order to maintain the corporate-government monopoly over food. Anyone who demands food freedom should be considered a threat — not just to themselves, but to society as a whole. And like animals backed into a corner, foodies who lose their rights should be considered dangerous extremists and monitored like al-Qaeda.

“Without the corporate-state food monopoly, we would all starve,” warned Michael Taylor, former Monsanto executive and current head of the FDA food safety division. He added, “Therefore, these foodies are a direct threat to national and international security, and their freedom must be smoked out. You’re either with us or against us.”

Furthermore, so-called natural health experts challenging the State’s health recommendations should be taken to re-education camps, or have their assets seized for intent to commit crimes against humanity. Likewise, normal citizens growing food for neighborly trade should face felony charges of “intent to sell.” The loss of food freedom is a small price to pay for the safety and rule by the genetically modified majority.

Here are eight reasons why raw foods should be illegal, and foodies should peacefully give up their rights:

1. Big Brother knows best: Citizens aren’t smart enough to make proper health choices. That’s why they gave their rights and authority over to the State in the first place. The FDA protects them from their neighbor’s eggs that come from chickens that eat bugs and worms, not the genetically-approved feed. Gross!

2. Amish farmers have pitchforks: Given the sordid history of peasants fighting their masters with pitchforks, Amish farmers should be considered armed and dangerous if a food revolution takes root.

3. Health Effects: Raw milk, like many other raw foods, is a “superfood,” loaded with vital antioxidants. Healthy food makes strong independent humans who are difficult to control.

4. Economic Threat: The sick-care industry is about 20% of the U.S. economy. Big Ag and Big Pharma are utterly dependent on keeping the public away from healthy foods. Supporting underground organic food cartels is a risk to economic recovery.

5. BGH and GMO: Bovine Growth Hormone and GMO-fed milk creates more patients for Big Pharma than grass-fed raw milk. Dairy farmers that use BGH and subsidized GM feed maximize profits the American way. Natural dairy farmers hate technology and advancement.

6. Contagion: If more people are allowed to discover the benefits of raw milk, they may get addicted to other natural health foods and remedies not offered by central controllers. As such, raw milk should be treated as a gateway food.

7. Black Markets: Some food cooperatives operate as private clubs, or through barter systems. In other words, they operate outside of the reach of the corporate government. This is a shadowy world where illegal currencies are traded and tax revenues are difficult to extort for the public good.

8. Regulators: The staff of the FDA and CDC are people too. They need to pay mortgages and put processed food on the table. They wouldn’t have such a generous budget without taking away the rights of small farmers and foodies. Naturally, this angers foodies and may cause them to revolt.

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Known as the Doctor of Dental Wellness, Dr. Richard Walicki is a graduate of the Temple University School of Dentistry. Dr. Walicki is a general dentist with a focus on wellness and has maintained an active private practice in Philadelphia for over twenty years.  His mission is to help people attain practical solutions for their dental health problems through education, prevention and nutrition. Dr. Walicki is a contributor to the LiberationWellnessBlog and a supporter of real food. Additional articles of related interest can be located on his website.  A free newsletter and bonus report are also available.

Posted in big pharma, Dr. Richard Walicki, farm fresh, FDA, Food freedom, fresh and local, gmo, government, liberation wellness, Politics, processed food, raw milk, real food, real foods, Uncategorized, Vitamin D | Leave a Comment »

Jimmy Moore’s Adventures In ‘Odd Bits’: Cow Tongue

Posted by Jimmy Moore on September 3, 2011

It’s been almost two weeks since my wife Christine and I went full-fledged low-carb Paleo with our nutrition and I can’t say anything bad about the experience so far. Surely I’d have some cravings. Nope. But what about finding good quality food to consume? No problem between my local farm, farmer’s market and the Internet. In fact, take a gander at all the delicious and nutritious food we are consuming now!

I’ve been cooking a couple of times daily since this started and have rekindled my long lost love for experimenting with food again. It’s been a revival of my low-carb lifestyle of sorts that has been sorely needed for a long while. Christine is certainly loving all the fresh, homemade Paleo food (and doesn’t mind cleaning up the dirty dishes I pile up in the sink) and is thrilled to be walking this journey at this time.

However, if you watched that video of me showing you what is in my refrigerator, then you may have noticed a rather strange food I mentioned was lurking in there. Did you catch it? No? WATCH IT AGAIN HERE–FAST FORWARD TO THE 1:39 MARK.

Yes, you heard me right. I’ve got beef tongue. As in the tongue from a cow. It’s not just any cow, mind you–grass-fed all the way baby! But I know the first thought so many of you are having right now if you’ve never consumed tongue in your diet is “EWWWWW, gross!” Believe me, I got a lot of that from my Facebook friends. Take a look at what some of them had to say about this:

“I cannot get over that’s it is a tongue. I’m sure it’s delicious, but I have a serious mental block that prevents me from eating tongue. lol”

“Can’t get over the mental hurdle. I’d feel like I was french kissing my food :P

“I just can’t get by the thought and would gag….lol”

“I’m for organ meats per se, I’ll eat pate like a princess, but I’m not going to look at a huge beef tongue.”

“I think I am going to pass on that dinner invitation. I remember being served tongue in grade school. I did not get to go to recess on those days cause I did not clean my plate.”

Funny? Yes! In fact, I probably would have been cracking the same kind of jokes not that long ago if I had read about one of my friends on Facebook talking about cooking up a tongue…that is, until I started being more adventurous with my food thanks to the influence over the years of The Weston A. Price Foundation and my newfound Paleo diet. The fact is the tongue of a cow is nothing more than another muscle in the body. And we already eat much of the other muscle on a cow–so why not the tongue?

Coincidentally, as I was beginning to become gung ho about trying beef tongue for the first time in nearly four decades of life, I heard from my friend Jennifer McLagan, a James Beard Award-winning author of Fat: An Appreciation Of A Misunderstood Ingredient, With Recipes which was named the “Cookbook of the Year” by the Beard Foundation in 2009 (I even had the privilege of interviewing Jennifer on my podcast in December 2008 about this awesome book). Well, she’s back in 2011 with a brand spankin’ new book that deals with–what else?–all the “odd bits” of meat that aren’t usually consumed but can be a critical part of the animals we consume. The book is called Odd Bits: How to Cook the Rest of the Animal and I look forward to interviewing Jennifer about this later this year.

Jennifer has a section in her book on animal tongues beginning on page 49 where she acknowledges how some people get grossed out by the thought of eating a tongue. She recalled having “ox tongue” at Christmas each year that was potted tongue meat with jelly which she admitted was “not my favorite part of Christmas dinner.” She later grew to appreciate tongue more without the jelly and on a sandwich with sharp mustard instead. Jennifer says it’s time for people to give tongue a second chance to be explored. She encourages making sandwiches, salads, or just about anything that goes with tender, melts-in-your-mouth meat. My new friends from the Ancestral Health Symposium last month named Bill Staley and Hayley Mason (authors of an upcoming new cookbook in October 2011 I’ll be sharing more about soon called Make It Paleo: Over 200 Grain Free Recipes For Any Occasion) have an awesome Beef Tongue Taco Bites recipe. The sky truly is the limit!

Other than the novelty of eating a tongue, are there any nutritional benefits to consuming tongue? Absolutely! A 3-ounce serving has 19g fat and 16g protein with zero carbs. The protein in the cow tongue specifically helps to produce vital hormones and enzymes for your body as well as build lean muscle. Cow tongue is also and excellent source of Vitamin B-12 and other B vitamins. Zinc is another valuable mineral provided by the cow tongue which is merely a bonus on top of all the delicious meat you get to enjoy. So what was my first experience with cooking and preparing a cow tongue like? I took lots of pictures so you can relive it with me.

I can’t say I wasn’t a little creeped out by what I placed on my cutting board. My local farmer who I purchased the tongue from actually had TWO tongues processed and wrapped for me (at an affordable cost of around $11) and they were frozen solid. That required me to refrigerate them so I could get one of them defrosted to cook. When they were frozen together, everything was hard as a rock. But pulling out one of the tongues after being thawed was a bit surreal. Here’s what it looked like:

OMG, this a TONGUE! After getting over the heebie jeebies of that coarse tongue and blob of what would ostensibly be the meat I’d be consuming, it wasn’t so bad. But here’s a close-up of the tongue itself where you can see the prickliness of it:

I put the tongue in my crock pot, filled it up with water to submerge the tongue, and added in some Celtic salt, fresh garlic cloves and other spices. The broth this created by the next morning after letting it cook on low overnight (about 8-9 hours) actually looked pretty good:

Pulling the tongue out of the broth and placing it in a bowl, it really wasn’t much to look at. What is that alien creature in my kitchen:

Taking a sharp knife out of my drawer, I carefully started slitting down the middle of the tongue which peeled away surprisingly easily to reveal some luscious and tender meat that had been cooking in my crock pot overnight:

Using a fork, I was able to get most of the meat gathered and put into a container for me to use in a recipe. Here’s the good stuff:

I was tempted to try to follow some recipe, but instead I took on the continued adventure of seeing what I could come up with. I mixed in some cumin, garlic, peppercorns, Celtic salt and other spices as well as some macadamia nut oil to the meat to see how it would taste. Because that combination brought a lot of heat to the dish, I attempted to temper that by adding in some fresh blueberries and country-scrambled eggs:

The meal was delicious and satisfying! All in all, my first experience with cow tongue was pretty good. Christine still hasn’t taken the plunge to eat it yet. She’s got the whole mental block that some of my Facebook friends above expressed. I wonder if I just served it to her and she didn’t know it was a tongue if she’d eat it like she would a pot roast. No doubt about it because the taste and texture is virtually identical. Oh well, if she doesn’t have any, that just means more for me. And I’ve got another beef tongue waiting to be cooked. Maybe this next one I’ll pop in the Sous Vide Supreme. We shall see.

How about you? Have you eaten a cow’s tongue before? Why or why not? If you haven’t, then what is holding you back? If you have, what were your impressions of it. I’d love to hear what you think! Share your thoughts in the comments section below. This is but the first of my adventures in “odd bits” that I’ll be blogging about. I’m not sure what I’ll take on next, but you can be certain I’ll blog about it when I do.

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Jimmy Moore is the popular blogger, podcaster and author of Livin’ La Vida Low-Carb who lost 180 pounds on the Atkins diet in 2004 and quickly established himself as a highly influential layperson in the field of health and nutrition. His wildly successful Livin’ La Vida Low-Carb Blog has been educating, encouraging and inspiring readers since 2005 and his accompanying iTunes podcast The Livin’ La Vida Low-Carb Show with Jimmy Moore is one of the most listened to health broadcasts online today featuring hundreds of enchanting interviews with the leading voices in the world of diet and healthy living! Jimmy’s latest book compiling all the knowledge he has learned along his journey is called 21 Life Lessons From Livin’ La Vida Low-Carb: How The Health Low-Carb Lifestyle Changed Everything I Thought I Knew. He lives in Spartanburg, SC with his beautiful wife Christine and their three cats!

Posted in farm fresh, fresh and local, grass fed beef, health, jimmy moore, livin lavida lo-carb, Nutrition, Paleo, real food, real foods, red meat, saturated fat, wapf, Weston A. Price Foundation | Leave a Comment »

BBQ Pork Chops

Posted by Beck Anderson, RYT 200 on August 16, 2011


I bought a half of a free-range pig in June and enthusiastically set about making pork chops that first night, since we had at least 12 packages to get through. I was so excited about being a good hunter-gatherer wife (hunting for good meat and gathering it at Otto’s Meat Processing in Luxemburg, WI) and my happy spirits took a nose dive when my husband didn’t even like the pork chops I made!

Thankfully, this story has a happy ending: I’ve since used this recipe and my hubbles loves the pork chops, he even sent me a text from work raving over the leftovers. So try this recipe and let me know what your happy ending is!
Read the rest of this entry »

Posted in Local Foods, real food, recipes | Leave a Comment »

Government Raid of Rawesome (Take 2)

Posted by Beck Anderson, RYT 200 on August 3, 2011


Real video shot from the Rawesome raid in 2010.

“A multi-agency SWAT-style armed raid was conducted this morning by helmet-wearing, gun-carrying enforcement agents from the LA County Sheriff’s Office, the FDA, the Dept. of Agriculture and the CDC (Centers for Disease Control).

Rawesome Foods, a private buying club offering wholesome, natural raw milk and raw cheese products (among other wholesome foods) is founded by James Stewart, a pioneer in bringing wholesome raw foods directly to consumers through a buying club. James was followed from his private residence by law enforcement, and when he entered his store, the raid was launched.”

Read More on Natural News.

Beck Anderson RYT 200 is a Certified Nutritionist and Registered Yoga teacher in the Menominee, Michigan and Green Bay, Wisconsin area. She leads yoga classes, one-on-one yoga, nutrition consultations and wellness coaching, along with helping end food cravings & more! Visit Wellness Hammock for more information. Twitter, FacebookContact Me.

Posted in raw milk, real food, real foods | Tagged: | 2 Comments »

A Summer Lunch

Posted by Maureen Diaz on July 27, 2011

Chilled Tomato-Basil with Cucumber Soup

With all the bounty coming in from the garden and orchard, I thought I would quickly share today’s lunch menu with you; perhaps it will prove inspiring.

First, a fresh tomato-basil with cucumber soup, raw, made in my Vita Mix (an indispensable tool). Everything from the garden, except the garlic (sadly, we haven’t managed to fit that in yet).

Sopprasetta Salami, aged cheddar.

Gingered Carrots and Sauerkraut with garlic & jalapeno.

Organic, un-cured sausage sautéed with butter, olive oil, onions, garlic, tomatoes & green pepper and topped with raw Monterey Jack farmstead cheese. Served over a bed of buttered brown rice spaghetti, for the men in the family (I pass on the grains for now).

And for dessert a smoothy (which, actually, was served first :P ): raw, whole milk yogurt made yesterday/overnight with our own fresh milk, just-picked blackberries from the orchard, a hint of vanilla & a touch of honey.

How difficult is that? Not at all, I assure you, and everyone seems quite satisfied :)

Now go ahead-toss a tasty, but simple, meal together for your family with farm-fresh foods and produce from your garden, patio, or local farmers’ market!

Maureen Diaz is a homeschooling mother of 9, a WAPF chapter leader, and a certified LW Nutritionist. She also has produced 3 cooking DVD’s including her latest, Liberation Wellness Home Cooking. Check out & order her DVD’s on her website, www.nourishingtraditionalcook.com 

Posted in Butter, Cheese, Family Wellness, farm fresh, Fermented Foods, fresh and local, LCHF, liberation diet, liberation wellness, Local Foods, Maureen Diaz, raw milk, real food, real foods, Uncategorized | Tagged: , , | 1 Comment »

Enjoying the Bounty of the Season

Posted by Maureen Diaz on July 25, 2011

Garden Produce

A portion of what a 5 minute foray into the garden yielded

You may have wondered where I have been lately. It isn’t that there has been nothing to write about, nor that I’ve no longer an interest in this blog. But rather, we have been busy as beavers around this place, working hard and enjoying the bounty of the season!

Our family has a lovely 10 acre parcel in a mountain valley of South Central Pennsylvania. And on that piece of ground we raise much of our family’s food, something which I think most families could actually do so long as they have at least 2 or 3 acres of dirt and a little determination :)

For years we have raised a family cow for fresh milk, yogurt, butter, cheese, kefir, and meat (the annual calf or two). This year our “Lady” blessed us with 2 calves-quite a delightful surprise! We will have plentiful beef in the coming years and for now have lots of good, rich milk, abundant manure for the garden and pastures, as well as enjoyment as we all work together in the care of these animals.

It doesn’t take a lot of land to raise chickens, and we have about 160 of them growing right now, some for eggs and most for meat. We started butchering 2 weeks ago and have already enjoyed our first delicious chicken dinner, with more in the freezer- mmm! There is nothing like a meal of roasted chicken stuffed with fresh herbs and homemade butter! We look forward to many such meals, accompanied by vegetables still warm from the sun and fruit from our orchard!

Years ago a variety of fruit trees were planted and an orchard formed. Were we to do it all over again, I believe it would have been lovely to simply incorporate these beautiful trees into the landscape. However as it is, we now have a beautiful, mature orchard which bears much fruit. The peaches are just on the brink of being ripe, and the blackberries will also be  coming in by the bushel: I feel some blackberry/peach smoothies coming on, made with our own creamy yogurt and a touch of local, raw honey. What could be better?!

While we still could do far more with the land we have, I am grateful for what we have accomplished and what it brings to the table: milk, meat, eggs, vegetables, fruit, and perhaps next year there will again be honey, lamb and pork. I want to encourage you to see what you can do where you are. Much of our salad greens & a few tomatoes were grown in a container on a porch, as are bountiful herbs. Chickens don’t take up much space at all, and are easy to raise (fun, too!). And all it takes is about 1-2 acres per large animal for meat and milk (for goats and sheep, even less), when managed properly. With today’s uncertain times and our government making it difficult at best to obtain good quality, nutrient-dense, and clean food, maybe it’s time we all think about what we can do to provide for our own?

Maureen Diaz is a homeschooling mother of 9, a WAPF chapter leader, and a certified LW Nutritionist. She also has produced 3 cooking DVD’s including her latest, Liberation Wellness Home Cooking. Check out & order her DVD’s on her website, www.nourishingtraditionalcook.com 

Togetherness makes this job fun!

When the day’s chores are done, it’s time to go fishin’!

An assortment of chickens growing in a portable pen

Posted in Family Wellness, farm fresh, Food freedom, Food Politics, Food Safety, fresh and local, grass fed beef, liberation wellness, Local Foods, Maureen Diaz, Nutrition, raw milk, real food, real foods, Total Wellness, vegetables, wellness | Tagged: , , , , | 2 Comments »

 
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