Friday 22 November 2013

Sesame Mucho (Sesame Bars)

In my quest to make healthy energy bars, I had a few breakthroughs in the last couple of weeks. Today, I will give you a quick recipe for sesame bars - really good for trips and for fast energy before, during and after workouts. Because they contain a lot of sesame and sesame is very high in calcium, these energy bars also give you a serious calcium boost. If you eat half of the bars (7) in one day, you have around a quarter of your RDA.

You need:
- 1/4 cup of sesame
- 1 cup of cashews
- 1 1/2 cups of dates

You do:
Grind the sesame into powder in a seed or coffee grinder. Mix all the ingredients in a powerful food processor until you have a firm dough of a somewhat coarse nature. Due to variations in the degree of moistness in the dates, you need to play around with the ingredients a bit. The dough should be so firm that it stays in a shape that you give it. Knead it and form it into a flat brick and then cut off the bars with a big sharp knife. Put them on a tray and in the oven for around 20 min at 200C. After baking, you need to let them cool down for about another 20 min before you eat them or put them in a box. Enjoy.

Thursday 14 November 2013

Basic Orange Smoothie (or "What's wrong with juice?")

One of the HiFi "rules" is to not drink pressed juice. This principle is often met with surprise. "What's wrong with juice?", I am often asked. Well, think about it in the following way:

How healthy a specific food is for you, is relative to what else you eat. If you consume mostly white wheat bread, pasta, meat, coffee, beer, and orange juice, then the juice is clearly the healthiest thing in your diet and stopping to drink juice would be a silly thing for you to do. In particular if juice is the only way you consume fruit. However, if you are a sugar-free, gluten-free vegan, who eats tons of fruit and vegetables and doesn't consume any psychoactive substances then juice might well be the most unhealthy thing in your diet.


The thing with juice and fresh whole fruit is not that juice is bad, but that eating fresh whole fruit is just so much BETTER. Why? Because pressing juice results in an end product that has lost not only most of its fiber, but many other good ingredients.

Let's take a glass of (raw) orange juice (250g). It has a caloric value of 112 and a calcium content of 27g and 0.5g of dietary fiber.

In comparison: 1 cup of orange (sections, 180g, from about 2 oranges) has a caloric value of 85 with 4g of dietary fiber and 72mg of calcium. If you calculate the nutritional value of the fruit with the same caloric value as a glass of juice, you get:  5.3g of fiber and 94mg of calcium, so that's more than 3 times as much calcium and more than 10 times as much fiber for the same caloric value. This holds for almost any other nutrient as well.

However, there is another factor to take into account. Orange juice is so much easier to consume: while people can easily drink a glass of orange juice a day, sadly, not many people are willing to eat 3 oranges a day. But there is an easy solution to that "problem": make an orange smoothie - you don't lose any nutritional value and you still have a refreshing drink. Just throw 3 oranges in the blender and add as much water as you want. Enjoy!

Michael

P.S. Also check out NutritionFacts' latest video on the topic.


Monday 11 November 2013

Carocolate - Carob Bars

Chocolate cravings? In need for some comfort food or some handy sweets on your road trip or something to give your kids for Christmas?
Try carocolate (carob bars). It's yummy, and according to some of my usual testers, it's the best thing I have ever created. It's vegan (of course) and very healthy 100% HiFi food, meaning it doesn't contain any added sugar, flours, or pressed oils and is high in fiber. It's also high in calcium, which is no surprise, since carob, dates, and nuts are all high in calcium. It's also very easy to take with you on trips, or cycling workouts, that's why you can use it as energy bars.

Since it doesn't need cooking or baking, it's done in about 5 min.

You need:
- 2 cups of dried dates
- 1 1/2 cups of nuts (almonds, hazelnuts or cashews)
- 1/2 cup of carob powder
- 1 vanilla bean
- pinch of cinnamon

You do:
If you want the aroma of roasted nuts in your bars, start by roasting the nuts for a couple of minutes in a oil-free pan or in the oven. Process all the ingredients in a food processor (or with a hand-blender) into a sticky coarse dough. The finer the dough, the finer the final product. Shape the dough into bars, by pressing it down and cutting it with a knife. That's it. Enjoy!

Michael