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Missed Nutritionist Nancy Guberti? Here’s Her DDP Radio Recap!

Nancy Guberti

Nancy Guberti
If you missed nutritionist Nancy Guberti’s March 25th guest appearance on DDP Radio, check out the podcast and also take a look at the recap below for some useful nutrition tips. She visits the show quarterly, just in time for the change of each season.  So check her out when she returns to DDP Radio in June!

Nancy Guberti, M.S., C.N., is a metabolic and functional medicine specialist, certified nutritionist, Defeat Autism Now Practitioner, Gluten-Free Casein-Free (GFCF) diet counselor and healthy lifestyle coach based in the New York City area who works with clients around the globe, thanks to Skype. Beginning May 4, she will begin her “9 Step to a Healthy Lifestyle” online program. It’s a great way to ease into a healthier way of eating and being, with support along the way. Visit www.nancyguberti.com for more information, or see the final paragraph below.

 

 

Highlights from the March 25 DDP Radio:

 

Superfoods Are Fantastic, But Not Crucial to Good Nutrition

There’s no question that superfoods such as Acai and Goji Berries are nutritionally dense and good for us to eat and drink, but they’re also expensive! Goji powder can retail for upwards of $30 for an 8-ounce bag, making it not one of the most practical options if money is in fact an object.

Instead, load up on nutrients, vitamins and fiber with low-glycemic treats like berries. If they’re in season where you live, perfect! Otherwise, buy bags of frozen, no-sugar-added berries to eat as a fruitcup snack (delicious with sliced bananas and grapes) or in a smoothie.

Another great low-glycemic, nutritionally dense snack idea: make your own trail mix out of nuts or seeds, dried unsweetened coconut, raisins, figs, and dried cranberries.

Spirulina tablets are a great way to get some of the energy-boosting properties of superfoods in a very affordable way. Nancy recommends Now brand Spirulina tablets, which cost about $11 for a bottle of 180.

 

Can We Talk Fiber?

Nancy also spent a lot of time talking about the importance of fiber. Ideally, it should come from complex carbohydrates such as vegetables, fruits, quinoa, chia seeds, ground flax seeds, and brown rice.

While most Americans don’t even begin to approach getting the recommended 25-30 grams per day (largely because of the preponderance of sugar and simple white carbs flooding the food chain), Nancy says it’s important to start slowly with 5-10 fiber grams per day and gradually add more with each passing week. Adding too much too soon can result in stomach cramping, constipation and other uncomfortable situations. Achieving these goals is beneficial to your overall health, and fiber helps you feel fuller longer. Remember not to overdo it because high levels (of fiber) can also interfere with absorption of some minerals, such as iron, and some antioxidants, such as beta-carotene. It’s rare, though, for people in this country to be getting too much fiber.

 

Tips for getting more fiber without unpleasant side effects:

Space out portions. Spreading out your fiber intake throughout the day will allow you to avoid some of the gastrointestinal discomforts that a large amount of fiber may present.

Try to include fiber-rich foods in every meal and snack, but don’t feel like you have to overdo it.

Increase slowly. A new commitment to healthy eating could make you want to achieve those daily fiber goals quickly, but when it comes to ingesting fiber, it’s a good idea to take your time. You want to give your gut the chance to get used to the new amounts of fiber you’re eating. This will decrease some of the digestive side effects you see with a sudden increase.

Plan to take about two weeks to reach your goal, and pay attention to discomfort along the way. If you do experience any discomfort, it may be a sign that you shouldn’t add any more fiber just yet.

Hydrate. Fluid and fiber go hand in hand: The more fiber you eat, the more fluid you need.

Fiber is a type of carbohydrate that the body can’t digest. Though most carbohydrates are broken down into sugar molecules, fiber cannot be broken down into sugar molecules, and instead it passes through the body undigested. Fiber helps regulate the body’s use of sugars, helping to keep hunger and blood sugar in check.

 

 Fiber comes in two varieties, both beneficial to health:

Soluble fiber, which dissolves in water, can help lower glucose levels as well as help lower blood cholesterol. Foods with soluble fiber include oatmeal, nuts, beans, lentils, apples and blueberries.

Insoluble fiber, which does not dissolve in water, can help food move through your digestive system, promoting regularity and helping prevent constipation. Foods with insoluble fibers include brown rice, legumes, carrots, cucumbers and tomatoes.

Higher fiber intake has also been linked to a lower risk of metabolic syndrome, a combination of factors that increases the risk of developing heart disease and diabetes. These factors include high blood pressure, high insulin levels, excess weight (especially around the abdomen), high levels of triglycerides, and low levels of HDL (good) cholesterol. Several studies suggest that higher intake of fiber may offer protective benefits from this syndrome.

 

  1. Split Peas Fiber: 16.3 grams per cup, cooked.
  2. Lentils Fiber: 15.6 grams per cup, cooked.
  3. Black Beans Fiber: 15 grams per cup, cooked.
  4. Lima Beans Fiber: 13.2 grams per cup, cooked.
  5. Artichokes Fiber: 10.3 grams per medium vegetable, cooked.
  6. Peas Fiber: 8.8 grams per cup, cooked.
  7. Broccoli Fiber: 5.1 grams per cup, boiled.
  8. Brussels Sprouts Fiber: 4.1 grams per cup, boiled.
  9. Raspberries Fiber: 8 grams per cup, raw.
  10. Blackberries Fiber: 7.6 grams per cup, raw.
  11. Avocados Fiber: 6.7 grams per half, raw.
  12. Pears Fiber: 5.5 grams per medium fruit, raw.
  13. Oatmeal Fiber: 4 grams per cup, cooked.
  14. Chia Seeds Fiber: 5.5 grams per tablespoon

 

 

Homemade Bone Broth

Homemade bone broth is as “staple” as it gets if you want to eat healthier. It’s also a really cost effective way to improve your diet, as you can make use of leftover carcass bones that would otherwise be thrown away.

Bone broth helps “heal and seal” your gut, which is so important for optimal health and disease prevention, and it’s also excellent for speeding up your recovery time when you’re feeling under the weather.

It contains plenty of healthy fat, along with important nutrients like calcium, magnesium, phosphorus, silicon, sulfur, and trace minerals, as well as the broken down material from cartilage and tendons, including chondroitin sulphates and glucosamine.

One important caveat when making broth, whether you’re using chicken or beef, is to make sure they’re from organically-raised, pastured or grass-fed animals.

 

Ingredients for homemade chicken broth

1 whole free-range chicken or 2 to 3 pounds of bony chicken parts, such as necks, backs, breastbones, and wings

Gizzards from one chicken (optional)

4 quarts cold filtered water

1 to 2 tablespoons Apple Cider vinegar

1 large onion, coarsely chopped

2 carrots, peeled and coarsely chopped

3 celery stalks, coarsely chopped

1 bunch parsley

 

 

 

Alternative faster/easier option:

Whole Foods organic rotisserie cooked chicken (since it’s already cooked the bones provide for bone marrow broth)

Use a crock-pot and add ACV (apple cider vinegar), celery, onion, and/or garlic, parsley.

Add purified water and cook on low for 24 hours.

 

 Take Charge of Your Health:

Nine Steps to a Healthy Lifestyle

YOU need to become your best health advocate.

Learn by exploring the bigger picture of healthy living today.

Your health is worth it because you are worth it.

With the Nine Steps to a Healthy Lifestyle course and supporting documents, you can be empowered in an enriched understanding of how to eat in a healthy manner, focus on factors involving sleep, stress, toxins, hydration, exercise, mindset, buyer beware and not falling for conventional marketing traps. while positively promoting your well being.

Register at:

http://nancyguberti.com/nine-steps-healthy-u-2015/

Happy Birthday Diamond Dallas Page

How appropriate that Easter Sunday this year also happens to be the birthday of Diamond Dallas Page. Today’s holiday is all about remembering the resurrection and Diamond Dallas Page, (or DDP as he’s known to his friends) has made a cottage industry out of resurrecting people. And I mean almost literally reviving them from the dead. Arthur Boorman may not have been lying lifeless in a tomb, swaddled in a burial shroud when he sought help from DDP 15 years ago, but he was living a fraction of his life at best. Sluggish, injured, and obese, Arthur dragged himself around on canes for many a  year until DDP, a few of his well-timed pep talks, and his DDPYOGA workout DVDs brought Boorman not just back to life, but to a higher and more vital level of functioning than he ever thought possible.  And then there was the case of Jake The Snake Roberts, wrestling legend and DDP mentor who had fallen into addiction and poor health.  When DDP busted through Roberts’ door, ready to exact his signature brand of intervention that would make Dr. Drew quiver, Roberts was living a life of isolation and obscurity and basically waiting out his days until the end. All you have to do is read about the buzz at this year’s Slamdance Film Festival to read about the down and out wrestler’s fate. But here’s a hint, the word ‘Resurrection‘ is in the title.

 

And then there’s my story.  I wasn’t an injured veteran or a battered former pro wrestler, but my body and my psyche had endured its share of battering from a combination of dieting and revenge-eating. It’s a cycle that led me to a weight of 345 pounds in January 5, 2009.  Which is also the date I learned of DDP’s existence. And since it predated traditional forms of social media, I forged a trail that led to his MySpace page and begged him to help me.  I suspect he got queries like that all the time because his response was to basically start the DVD workouts and get to work.  To my surprise, I did. And it was coupled with Life REALLY intervening on my behalf: I had to testify in a Manhattan courtroom trial, which had me so keyed up, I barely had an appetite. This gave my body the much-needed interruption from binge-eating that it needed and after a month, I discovered I was 20 pounds down. To say I was elated was an understatement.  For the first time in decades, or perhaps EVER, I felt there was hope. The 20 evicted pounds gave me the rocket fuel I needed to modify my eating habits (not diet) and the next month saw an additional 10-pound weight decrease. When he heard through the Team DDPYOGA grapevine that I’d been really working at it, he contacted me and said he wanted to work with me.  And so began an 18-month mentorship that included me keeping a food diary and sending it to him daily, brief, but weekly phone calls during which challenges were discussed and questions asked. There were also increasingly regular reports from my end on all the amazing things I was now able to do (wear a spa robe instead of toting my size 4X robe from home, grab my feet in the ‘Human Cannonball’ position, wear denim for the first time in more than 20 years, and take an airplane ride without the necessity of a seat belt extension.

2009.Black

They were all amazing victories for obvious reasons, and they were SO much sweeter because they were SHARED.  By a friend, mentor, big-brother-I-never-had, and a ferocious drill sergeant who wanted me to be the best I can be.  And guess what? It happened.  Never underestimate the power of support.  It can result in miracles.

Happy Birthday D-Man. Every single day, the work you did with me continues to pay off.  You gave me a gift that has no price. And I’m forever Grateful.

 

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Retreat.13.1-1

Liquid Power Lunch – Chia ‘Milk’

Move over almond milk, there’s a new kid on the block and this one’s even more formidably nutritious! Unsweetened almond milk will remain an irreplaceable component of my morning lattes and bowls of gluten-free cereal. But there’s nothing quite as nutrient-dense as the chia seed, and I recently discovered a way to ingest significant amounts of them…enjoyably.

It all started with my recent bid to add more fiber to my daily diet. And since I’m not exactly mad about vegetables (though I do force them down) what better way to load up on it?  Depending on what labels you’re reading, chia seeds have between 3 and 5 grams of fiber per tablespoon.  Eating three tablespoons a day has me well on my way to getting the recommended 25 grams of fiber per day (38 for men). There are many ways to enjoy the humble chia seed: in baking, smoothies, yogurt, or on cereal. My theory is, like the teeny-tiny flax seed, the chia needs to be ground or burst open prior to eating or they’ll pass right through you, un-utilized.

Some of you may be familiar with the practice of soaking chia seeds in water till they thicken, and then drinking the gelatinous, seeded water.  I did that for many years; here’s what I do now: When the seeds become plump and the water nice and thick, I blitz them in the Vitamix or blender for about a minute. The seeds are pulverized, which results in a thick and creamy drink.

ChiaMilk

 

Sometimes I drink it as is, for a filling snack with the benefit of hydration. The chia seeds, when in this state, have a slight nutty flavor. If I want to up the nutrition for a pre- or post-workout boost, I’ll use coconut water instead of filtered water.

And for those occasions (which I admit are regular) when I’m craving something sweet, I resort to this little ace in the pocket: A chia seed version of chocolate milk…you know, like the kind we grew up drinking.  Made with whole milk and those clever canisters of powder. They were ingeniously designed to fulfill a quickie chocolate craving, but were loaded with SUGAR.  I suspect their invention and subsequent relentless advertising campaign had much more to do with bolstering dairy sales because a nice cold glass of oh-so-good-for-you milk was always the suggested foundation. Despite such inferior building blocks, I absolutely loved this concoction, and rejoiced whenever I was allowed to have a glass of it.

Since being converted to clean eating, I usually get my childhood chocolate drink fix via almond milk and a scoop of protein powder, but Chocolate Chia Milk, with its infusion of fiber and Omega 3’s is my new and very adult after-school-snack. It fulfills the dual purpose of providing a whopping 15 grams of fiber plus it makes the chocolate lover in me happy.  The addition of delicious protein powder is a natural extension and leaves me feeling stable and unstoppable…not as if I’ve had a vein plunged with a giant syringe of fructose.

Chocolate Chia Milk is superb as a quickie breakfast, dessert, or mid-afternoon pick-me-up.  Bottoms up!

 

Don't you just love constructive uses for chocolate?

Don’t you just love constructive uses for chocolate?

 

Ingredients:

3 tablespoons of chia seeds (white or black)

20 ounces of purified water

1 scoop of chocolate vegan protein powder (such as Orgain or Sun Warrior)

 

 

Instructions:

Pour chia seeds into a glass bottle with a fitted lid or a plastic, reusable protein drink container large enough to accommodate about 22 ounces of liquid. The drink calls for 20 ounces of water, but you’ll need extra room for mixing and shaking the seeds. Add purified water to the container and immediately close lid tightly and shake for at least a minute. Chia seeds clump together when wet so it’s important to not let them sit, even for several seconds. Eventually, the seeds will remain separated. Set bottle aside for a few hours or overnight to let the seeds plumpen.

 

Pour chia seed water into a blender or Vitamix and add a scoop of protein powder. Blitz for about 30 seconds or until frothy and seeds look pulverized. Even when thoroughly blended, the seeds will tend to separate out a bit from the water, making it necessary to swirl this delicious chocolate drink every now and again. No biggie though. It’s the most enjoyable way to get half my fiber that I know of.

 

 

Clean Shamrock Shake

Rumor has it that my beloved Shamrock Shakes from childhood have in excess of 70 grams of sugar per serving! I nearly fainted when I read that. And then there’s the dairy and I’m going to guess it’s not milk from grass-fed cows that’s being used. Yuck. The kid in me will always hop up and down with anticipation when she knows a milkshake is coming. Now the adult in me joins in the jumping because she knows she’s getting nourishment as well.

I’ve long been loving clean versions of chocolate and vanilla ‘milkshakes’ made with protein powder, superfoods, and my beloved unsweetened almond milk. With St. Patrick’s Day upon us, now’s the perfect time to enjoy a smooth, minty shake – with no pesky hangover. So raise a glass with me – you don’t have to wait till the 18th to go green and celebrate your health!

 

 

Clean Shamrock Shake

 

 

Serves 1

 

 

1-2 scoops Orgain Organic Protein Powder, Vanilla

1 large handful of spinach or kale

1/2 to 1 avocado (depending on how thick you like it)

12 ounces of unsweetened almond milk

1/8 teaspoon of peppermint extract

Variation: if you’re a fan of chocolate-mint, add two tablespoons raw cacao powder

 

The building blocks of a healthy shake

The building blocks of a healthy shake

 

Blend all ingredients in a Vitamix or blender at high speed for at least a minute. Serve immediately. It kills the sugar cravings and nourishes the body with greens and clean protein – what a win-win!

 

It IS easy being green!

It IS easy being green!

Clean Mozzarella In Carrozza

Who says Italians only eat pasta?  Their diet is actually brimming with all manner of grains and vegetables. But lets face it, pasta sells.  Actually though, there’s nothing quite as delicious as a sandwich whose roots can be traced back to Italy. The following is inspired by one of my most joyful culinary discoveries made on my first visit to Italy, circa the mid-80’s. Madonna was touring the country in fishnets and I was on my second 100-pound weight loss.

Quando sono solo sogno all' orizzonte e mancan le parole...

Quando sono solo sogno all’ orizzonte e mancan le parole…

 

Enough digressing. In the beautiful, medevil town of Siena, I discovered this simple but wonderful northern Italian favorite at a restaurant on those historic cobblestone streets.  It’s called Mozzarella In Carrozza and it is, in essence, a gooey, rich, delicious grilled cheese sandwich dipped in egg batter and dusted in flour.  My maiden bite almost brought me to tears. I’m a grilled cheese-lover from girlhood but this was something ELSE!

When I stopped eating cow dairy and gluten six years ago I assumed my Mozzarella In Carrozza days were long gone…until I met Chef Bill and he revealed that A) Mozzarella In Carrozza is one of his favorite dishes and B) he could easily make me a clean version with Manchego cheese (a hard sheep cheese with a flavor similar to cheddar) and gluten-free bread.  This is one instance when the sometimes cardboardy nature of gf bread can come in handy!

This, my friends, is most definitely a decadent treat.  And a perfect one for winter because it’s warm, rich and filling. The traditional method for making this sandwich is to simply egg-batter it, dust the bread in flour and then fry. It’s often served with a side of marinara sauce for dipping.  Personally, I love the taste of the oozing cheese so much I prefer it plain, or the Chef Bill method, which he says is inspired by a recipe in cookbook from the now-shuttered Alfredo’s in the Alley restaurant in Burlington.  If the anchovy-onion sauce doesn’t appeal to you, by all means, skip it and have your Mozzarella In Carrozza plain or the traditional way.  And if you’re cooking for more than two people, simply place the finished sandwiches, uncut, in a slightly warm oven until all are ready. Bon Appetit!

 

This is no ordinary sandwich

This is no ordinary sandwich

 

Mozzarella In Carrozza

 

For the sandwich:

2 slices of gluten-free white bread

1 egg, beaten and set in a shallow dish

Corn starch for dredging (about a half-cup)

salt and pepper, 1/4 teaspoon each

About two ounces of your favorite cheese, sliced and at room temperature

Butter or olive oil for frying

 

Corn starch is gluten-free and adds a crisp texture

Corn starch is gluten-free and adds a crisp texture

 

 

Egg Wash = Optimal Sensuality

Egg Wash = Optimal Sensuality

 

 

See What I Mean?

See What I Mean?

 

 

For the sauce:

1 small can of anchovies in oil, reserving oil

1 small shallot, finely chopped

1/8 to 1/4 cup Marsala wine

1/8th cup extra virgin olive oil

Fresh thyme or oregano, about a tablespoon (optional)

 

Instructions:

Heat butter or oil in a medium sized skilled over medium heat.

Place corn starch, salt and pepper in a shallow dish and sift till blended. Make a cheese sandwich with the bread and cheese. With tongs, place sandwich in the egg wash on each side until coated. Remove with tongs and dredge entire sandwich on both sides, making sure all sides and ends are coated. Using tongs, very carefully set sandwich in the hot pan and fry until golden on both sides.

While the sandwich is frying.  Heat the other 1/8th cup of olive oil on medium heat and saute the shallot until translucent. Add anchovies and reserved anchovy oil to pan, mashing and moving around with a wood spoon. Let sauce simmer gently for a minute, then turn the heat to medium-high. Anchovies will reduce. Deglaze pan with Marsala and stir in thoroughly. Turn heat down and let simmer for another minute. Put hot sandwich on plate and cover generously with sauce.  Sprinkle with fresh herbs. If preferred, sauce may served on the side.

 

Half-Eaten Mozz

I dove in but stopped in time to snap a photo.  Che Buon Tramezzino!

 

 

Couldn’t resist!