Friday, December 30, 2011

Sliders made with Green Finished Beef

At my niece's wedding this fall we were introduced to a beautiful rendition of sliders, sans buns. These mini burger bites were the cutest little burgers I had ever seen. And, how thoughtful, as the menu offered many naturally gluten-free foods, which meant our daughter could partake in almost everything but the cake! (Although the bride had also been thoughtful enough to have wonderful chocolates and truffles aside just for our daughter in lieu of cake).

So here is the easy recipe just for you!

For the patties:

1 lb. Green Finished ground beef (from Beyond Organic's ranch)

1/2 small onion, minced

salt and pepper

*Mix ingredients and shape approx. 2 Tbsp. of the meat mixture into a patty, and do the same with remaining meat. Fry patties in medium hot, heavy bottomed (or iron) fry pan with real, organic, salted butter. Fry until each side is browned nicely and middle is barely pink. Set aside when finished.
My daughter loves to help me cook!
Try to keep them the same size so they will all cook at the same temperature
Cooked patties resting and waiting to be dressed up for the occasion!

Condiment toppers:

2-3 small dill pickles, sliced

3-4 grape tomatoes, sliced

your choice of cheese (I used Beyond Organic's raw milk cheddar cheese) cut into small pieces

sturdy lettuce (romaine is my choice) torn into small pieces

*Stack one of each condiment on top of each other and spear with a toothpick, until you have enough for each patty. Then place speared condiments on top, then spear the toothpick through each patty.





And here they are, cute as buttons! A tasty, fun way to get your CLA's (Conjugated Linoleic Acid), vitamins, minerals, and Omega 3 fatty acids!

A wonderful appetizer or snack for beef connoisseurs of any age!


Where's the beef you say? Well, here it is: Green Finished Ground Beef and don't forget the Organic, Green Fed, Raw Cheddar Cheese:

Thursday, December 29, 2011

Deconstructed Taco Salad with Green Finished Ground Beef

I love all the many flavors!


I love Mexican-ish food. I promise I will have more than just Mexican-ish recipes on here eventually. It just so happens I am in a hankering-for-Mexican-ish-foods mood lately.

Here is my go-to, simple family favorite. You will need the following:

1 lb. healthy ground beef (Green finished, organic, ground beef available here delivered to your door)
1 small onion, minced
1-2 garlic cloves, minced
3 Tbsp. your favorite chili spices mix (I buy mine in bulk at local health food stores)
1 Tbsp. fine sea salt
1/4 cup water
1 cup shredded healthy cheddar and/or jack cheese (Organic, raw cheeses delivered to your door)
2 cups shredded romaine lettuce
1 tomato, chopped
1/2 green pepper, chopped
1 small can of sliced, natural black olives (like these ones)
1 small can of diced green chilies
Sliced, pickled jalapenos
1 cup of sour cream
Avocado mash (1-2 smashed, ripe avocados with salt and pepper to taste)
1 bag of organic corn tortilla chips
Your favorite salsa! (Here's one of my favorite recipes for SALSA)
Green Finished, organic ground beef

Brown the beef on medium high heat with your favorite healthy oil or butter. Once browned, move meat over to one side of pan, add a wee bit more oil/butter, saute the onion for about 2 min. Add the garlic and saute for 1 min. Add the spices, salt and water, mix back in with the meat, and simmer on LOW until ready to put together salad.

The colors of Mexico's flag!
Build your own salad with remaining ingredients and enjoy! Ole!

What is YOUR favorite Mexican-ish dish?

"Green Finished" Beef (what is it exactly?)

Healthy, happy cows, "outstanding" in their field



"Green Finished" Beef is a trademark name from Beyond Organic, a company who believes that we are what the animals ate (if you eat meat or dairy products). Green Finished means that the cow was born, raised, and finished entirely on legumes, pasture grasses, and/or alfalfa (when it's winter) with absolutely no grain in the diet (corn, etc.) Beyond Organic owns its own several thousand acre ranch in southern Missouri where its special A2 type cattle grazes on organic pastures, just as happy cows should. These cows are never administered antibiotics or hormones. They are treated and cared for with compassion and handled according to biblical standards and kosher ideals.  The ground meat has a clean, delicious flavor and is very tender. Beyond Organic is a brand new company and only offers its Green Finished Beef in the forms of ground beef and all beef hot dogs right now.

Tuesday, December 27, 2011

Where does your beef come from?

Gorgeous Beef!

Marinating in: Organic Tamari (wheat-free soy sauce), garlic powder, sea salt and pepper
A few days before Christmas I found myself in denial. Denial that it was a few days before Christmas. Typically I plan things ahead of time (although I have noticed that with my "older" age, comes more of a "go with the flow" agenda).  Now that I do not micro manage myself as much, I need to accept the fact that I reap what I sow.

So, there I am standing in the middle of Whole Foods/paycheck, when I realize that we may not have that wonderful, standing prime rib roast that I like to make for Christmas dinners. As I approached the butcher counter and inquired, my hunch was right. I did not order mine ahead, so I get to choose from whatever is left over. They did have some choice rib roasts, beef that is "Step 1" according to Whole Food's meat "5-step Animal Welfare Rating" system.  Step 1 requires that "Animals live their lives with space to move around and stretch their legs." That's only one of the several things I look for in buying meat. Looking ahead to "Step 5", this is the stipulation to qualifying, "Animals get to live their whole lives with all the body parts they were born with." This just sounds horrific to me, although I had a slight chuckle (evil laugh) because this sounds like a no brainer that a cow would need all the body parts it was born with in order to be a productive end product. Obviously I am not a farmer, a rancher, or a butcher. I am a "Volvo-driving Soccer Mom" (warning, that link is rated PG-13) who tries REALLY hard to make sure my family eats well enough (to make up for all the years I "let" them eat McDonald's Happy Meals, ugh) and help them build a foundation of food knowledge. And, now that we are in the Beyond Organic business, I am learning more than I ever began to think about in terms of every thing that comes into play with where my meat truly comes from, how it's handled, and how nutritious it really is.

After the Whole Foods butcher explained to me that the marbling was better in the lower rated cuts of beef (because the animals are fed corn to fatten them up) and tried to sell me on it, I just wasn't going for it.  They were Step 1 rated, and although better than "Walmart meat", I was not about to pay the high price for Step 1.  Almost everything in life has a spectrum. There is the poor cow that lived a life in crowded feed lots, eating corn all day, never knowing what life was supposed to be like for a cow, standing in mucky urine and feces, possibly diseased, and requiring antibiotics and hormone injections to make him grow faster so he is ready for the slaughter house a whole year earlier than his free roaming, grass eating counterparts. Then there is the cow (or pig, turkey or chicken....) who gets to live life as it should, grazing on organic green pastures, so healthy there is no need for antibiotics, no need for hormones. Yes, they all have be slaughtered eventually, but it does make me feel a bit better to buy the cow who was treated humanely and slaughtered by biblical methods. Some say it is too expensive, but I always view it as, "Why would I PAY for the bottom of the barrel meat?" The burger meat at fast food places, the chicken nuggets that are more like tendons and muscle meat from chickens farmed in unsanitary conditions, the pig who was killed on the "death floor" by literally being squished to death......why would I eat this meat for FREE let alone pay for it?

Wednesday, December 14, 2011

Be Good to Your Gut!

Green Fed A2 type cows, grazing on thousands of organic pastures in southern Missouri produce this unique, extremely beneficial product, new to the market place. Can be delivered to your door!
Beyond Organic's GreenFed Raw Cheddar Cheese contains healthy probiotics
I have been told time and time again that my health starts with my digestive system. This makes a lot of sense to me since the average person has almost 30 feet of guts. Its the place where food enters and it's nutrients are supposed to be absorbed into the system. For those who suffer "IBS" symptoms (and let me preface by saying that I believe IBS is just a generalized dump-bucket term that some doctors choose to lean on), more than likely they will also have a "leaky gut" which is the lead culprit to the IBS symptoms. Leaky gut syndrome damage occurs to the lining of one's intestinal wall from repeated ingestion of foods containing gluten, certain medications, excessive alcohol, certain antibiotics, and other triggers. This damage leads to a permeability in the intestinal walls where toxins literally flow through the intestines into the blood stream rather than being moved along and voided. Having this condition causes many symptoms such as abdominal bloating, excessive gas and cramps, fatigue, food sensitivities, joint pain, skin rashes, and autoimmunity. 
Beyond Organic's dark organic chocolate contains toasted flax seed for Omega 3s, fiber, with probiotics and antioxidants. Who wants some chocolate?!


So, how to heal the gut from damage already done (or keep your gut running optimally and healthy)? PROBIOTICS! It is a simple way to help heal one's gut, keep things moving along, and put healthy flora (or healthy bugs/bacteria) back into the digestive system. Probiotics are a NECESSITY if one has ever been on antibiotics. Antibiotics kill ALL the bugs, good and bad. Probiotics must be taken after the last round of antibiotics have been taken in order to give the gut a chance to restore its normal flora. However, it is truly necessary to take probiotics at all times, and just up the intake after a round of antibiotics, sickness, or disease.


How probiotics benefit and help to heal the gut:


1. Boost your immunities and help fight against anything trying to "get" you
2. Increase bowel movement
3. Discourages overgrowth of "bad" bacteria
4. Reduces intestinal allergies
5. Helps alleviate "IBS", gluten intolerance symptoms
6. Produces nutrients in the lining of the gut 
7. Lessens occurrence of yeast

With our daughter suffering from gluten intolerance, our favorite way to get probiotics into our diet is by drinking Amasai, a living whole food. Here are the highlights of Amasai:
  • GreenFed - cattle intensely graze on organic grasses and greens - no grains
  • Cultured - with over 30 types of probiotics, making it an easy-to-digest, smoothie-like beverage
  • True Whole Milk - never skimmed, always teeming with protein, healthy fats and fat-soluble vitamins
For more information on how to have Amasai delivered to your door click here: organicformylife.com

Monday, December 12, 2011

When being "Gluten-Free" isn't just an option

Gluten-free became a necessity at our home about 2 years ago. Our middle daughter, after years of suffering and misdiagnosis, was finally given the answer to her horrible stomach pains. The two specialized pediatricians, the family doctor, and countless in between, could not figure it out. The tests that were ordered, the procedures done, did not give them a clue. The biopsy taken from her intestines did not point to any obvious diseases, according to the doctor. Unfortunately, given that the intestines are (between the small and large intestine) almost 30 feet long, it's all together possible that a biopsy may not capture enough information in one procedure. In our case, nothing was suspect in the endoscope except for some white spots that the doctor dismissed as unknown food particles (huh?) which I have the photos of. These white spots look an awful lot like candida to my untrained eye.  The final point of feeling totally helpless was when the last specialist prescribed our daughter with a powerful anti-depressant (that was not approved for use in children-I did my research) whereby basically telling us that it was all in our daughter's head. Thanks, but no thanks.
Gluten Free Chocolate Cake with Mocha Whipped Cream Frosting.
Our most requested recipe. (I will share one of these days!)

So, I pondered and researched, and was at a total loss. Luckily for us, we were due to move a couple of months after that "diagnosis". My husband had switched gears from being a Navy pilot to a Coast Guard pilot. This new job brought us to the Tampa area. My first venture to the closest health food store, brought me into a discussion with it's owner, unbeknown to me at that time. I remember commenting to her that I had had to drive quite a distance and that I was a little discouraged at the small size of the store. Insert foot in mouth. I had asked her about other health food stores in the area, about naturopaths, etc.  I did not have high hopes of finding loads of naturopaths and like-minded thinkers when the owner of this store told me that I had just moved to the "land of the newlywed and the nearly dead". Hmmm, it is true, I guess there is a reason for the golf courses on every corner and slow driving out-of-state licensed drivers. God love them. I figured that meant that all those in between (like us) were in the minority and our holistic way of life would be hard to sustain. This same health food store owner went on to tell me that each month they hosted a "live blood cell analysis" clinic. I had never heard of this before. She explained that it was a simple procedure where a sterile needle would prick my finger tip (like a diabetic would do) and the drop of blood produced by this would be put onto a slide, under a microscope,  and examined immediately, in front of me. All shapes, dots, specks, squiggles, everything that showed up in my blood specimen would be explained to me. My first thought was, my daughter. I had nothing to lose. For $50 and a prick in the finger, what else could it hurt? I made the appointment and returned on the day scheduled, with my daughter. We got right to the point, the naturopath administering the whole thing was very matter of fact, yet witty and congenial. He put my daughter at total ease and never once asked us what her symptoms were. It was as if he would know the instant he saw her blood specimen. It was as though he read our minds. After briefly viewing my daughter's blood, he asked her, "Does your tummy hurt after you eat?" I almost did not believe it. He immediately went on to tell us that she was definitely GLUTEN INTOLERANT and needed to sustain a diet without gluten. He suggested a regime of gut healing foods, probiotics, and vitamins with minerals. At first it seems like a very harsh sentence. No more pizza, pasta, sandwiches, dinner rolls, crackers, noodle soup, etc. I am not going to sugar-coat this, it was difficult. But, so worth it. Our daughter was not diagnosed with Celiac disease. This is different than having a gluten intolerance. The original doctors had tested our daughter for Celiac, but a person with an intolerance will not usually be found so by testing for Celiac. Since entering this new world of gluten intolerance, I, of course, have researched this topic for HOURS. Unfortunately, I have found, time and time again, conflicting information. Some doctors, naturopaths, self-educated individuals, people living with either Celiac or gluten intolerance/sensitivity, will state that they are one in the same. Others will state that Celiac is an auto immune disease where as gluten intolerance is more of an annoyance. Meaning, a gluten intolerant person will exhibit symptoms such as gas, GI pain, diarrhea, etc. (Hmmm, sounds like "IBS", the scapegoat for all that cannot be figured out!) if eating gluten products, but otherwise can survive it's consequences without long term damage. From what I have researched, the Celiac person's immune system starts attacking normal tissue, such as the lining of the intestine (a.k.a. gut), in response to eating gluten. People with Celiac disease are at risk for malabsorption of food, which causes nutritional deficiencies such as iron deficiency anemia, osteopenia, and osteoporosis.  I have to argue with this next phrase though: "Persons with a wheat allergy or gluten-intolerance usually do not have severe intestinal damage, and therefore are not at risk for these nutritional deficiencies.  They also are not at increased risk of developing other autoimmune conditions." I think the jury is still out on that one.

Regardless, we know how to curb the pain and the not-so-nice results that are associated with having gluten intolerance and Celiac. They are pretty much treated the same way. The GREAT news is that I have discovered DELICIOUS ways to substitute for our favorite gluten goodies. Did you see my earlier post for the BEST EVER GLUTEN FREE BROWNIES (best ever brownies period!)? There's more too, just have a look under "Gluten Free" on my blog labels. Gluten free is not a bad way to be, for anyone. What's your favorite gluten free item? Cheers!