Saturday, September 29, 2012

Pumpkin Pie Muffins with Fresh Ginger


I was in a baking mood today and made this recipe: Pumpkin Pie Muffins  which are really good and just happen to be made with almond flour so they are gluten free/paleo/dairy free and very low in carbs (just from the honey)! I also made maple pumpkin custard but I haven't tasted that yet to tell you if it's good. And some granola. And then some homemade sauerkraut! I do think I'm on a roll. I told you I love autumn. 

*****************************************************************
Update:  Do not try the custard-- either I used the wrong grade syrup or maybe the recipe just isn't good, but the custard was bland and just too pumpkin and nothing else! If someone wanted to get creative and add nutmeg or allspice (basically spices in pumpkin pie), and maybe honey, then it might taste a lot better.  

Friday, September 28, 2012

hello autumn


This was the last pretty bloom on our hydrangea bush from the summer. I am ready for fall though-- the mums are starting to bloom and again we enter into the holiday months!  I think there's something comforting about the regular progression of seasons because it's a constant in life, especially when everything else can be in a state of constant change. I'm not quite ready to think about Christmas but you know that's right around the corner when October hits (yes, the stores won't let us forget it!). I always say I'm going to get a jump on it this year-- making my Christmas cards early and starting my shopping. But half the fun is doing it during the season so I think I have a bit more time.

Right now it's all about soccer, high school football games, homework, riding in the jumping ring for the last weeks until the weather is too cold, raking the leaves in the yard, planning where to be during each holiday, celebrating my birthday (this is the year I start counting backwards!), pulling out yarns again to do a little snuggly stitching in the evenings, and making fires in the firepit and in the fireplace. Mmmmm... I absolutely love autumn!
********************************************************************
p.s. I forgot to add that my lovely husband cut this flower off and put it in a vase for me on the table! ;)

Wednesday, September 26, 2012

♥ Nantucket 2012 ♥

It took us 20 years to go back to the island that is one of my favorite places in the world! Nantucket, Massachusetts is off the coast of Cape Cod and you have to either take the ferry or a plane onto it. The ferry ride is a comfortable hour and they run regularly every day. This place is the definition of "quaint" and though it's gotten much busier, it still holds the same charm as it always did.

View from the Widow's Walk on our B&B
Seven Sea Street Inn


We stayed at the same Inn that we stayed at on our honeymoon. Matthew Parker is still the innkeeper and we caught up on the news since we'd been there. We met lots of interesting people including a Shakespeare professor and a young entrepreneur from NYC. That is what makes Bed & Breakfast Inns a little more fun-- you always eat breakfast with the other guests. This is where I started my love of granola and yogurt, and also Vanilla Hazelnut coffee!




On Sunday morning we went sailing on the Endeavor. It was overcast that morning and so the wind made the water choppy-- that was fun, except after a night of overindulgence, in the best restaurant we ever ate at-- Oran Mor (If you go, ask for the tasting menu-- the food is made fresh every day and sourced from the local organic farm on the island!)... we were glad the sail was only an hour and a half!

the famous Brant Point -  throw a penny!






On Saturday we walked around town, searching for an artist we had met the first time we were there-- Paul Arsenault who is a plein air artist. We ended up finding his brother who gave us a private showing of Paul's paintings at a storage place at the airport and we came home with two original oil paintings! We also went to a Farmer's Market but it had more crafts than anything. I got the coolest necklace which you can see here!


 Sunday afternoon we rented a Jeep and drove out to Great Point on the sand...





You probably can't see this very well, but as we were driving by the water, the seals were swimming right off shore and they'd bob up out and look at us as we passed. That was so much fun!



I was really sorry that I didn't get any photos of Main St. or the cottages of Nantucket. (MUST go back!)  If you ever go, use this little post as inspiration for what to do and please ask me for a lot more! There are plenty of good restaurants and fun things to do. And Murray's Toggery is one of those on the shopping list! (Nantucket Reds!)

empowering you to have good health!



This is a photo taken by the French scientists who recently released the studies they did proving that Genetically Modified Organisms (GMO) in our food causes cancerous tumors. It's disgusting but I think it needs to be seen so that you'll definitely not want to eat them! Here's the link to the Non-GMO Shopping Guide. And if you think the government is going to stop this soon, well, President Obama appointed eight top positions in his cabinet to people with associations to Monsanto and under his presidency, these things have been allowed to be grown and sold: Monsanto GMO alfalfa, Monsanto GMO sugar beets (all our sugar products), Monsanto GMO Bt soybean, Coming soon: Monsanto's GMO sweet corn, Syngenta GMO corn for ethanol, Syngenta GMO stacked corn, Pioneer GMO soybean, Syngenta GMO Bt cotton, Bayer GMO cotton, ATryn, an anti-clotting agent from the milk of transgenic goats, A GMO papaya strain, and perhaps, soon, genetically engineered salmon and apples.
Learn more: http://www.naturalnews.com/037310_Barack_Obama_Monsanto_lobbyist.html#ixzz27aZCrUZT


I never believe in sitting back and letting others decide my fate and the fate of my family so I want to provide Joette Calabrese's pdf called "Don't Get Cancer! 51 Ways to Protect Your Family; A Homeopathic, Nutritional and Common Sense Perspective". You don't have to become a homeopath to use homeopathy to treat your family, and Joette actually has a program for "mothers and others" who just need enough information to use homeopathy for those they love so that they can stop using drugs. You can get that info here! Please make at least one change today to eliminate GMO's from your cupboard. I just did and will continue to.

Tuesday, September 25, 2012

Guess where?


I just got back from a quick weekend away and couldn't have had a better time! I also satisfied my inner prep.  Speaking of which, I've been following Muffy's blog and if you have any interest in the preppy lifestyle of the New England states, plus some gorgeous black & white photography done by her father, then you can read her blog here!


Thursday, September 20, 2012

GMO's are extremely dangerous!


Watch the movie for free here:  http://geneticroulettemovie.com/

There is plenty of medical fact to prove that Genetically Modified Food is dangerous to us and to the earth. We have so many more diseases and sky-rocketing illnesses because of it. This is FACT.

The FDA is not interested in stopping it. There are no laws in place to label food that contains GMO's. What can we do?

Tell everyone you know NOT to buy food with GMO's! Buying organic is the only way I know to avoid it. Let's speak with our dollars. No government party is standing up against it. Stop eating out all the time because you don't know what's going into your body. There is plenty of food in our world-- twice as much as we need-- we don't need GMO food.

If you don't stop eating it, you will pay for it one way or another. Watch the movie, then you'll understand how drastically important this is.

NON-GMO Shopping Guide

Tuesday, September 18, 2012

for the love of leeks and heaven on earth


Our CSA just started harvesting their leeks again and I think it is my favorite thing that we receive! They smell so good and I know they are good for us. I am anxious to make potato leek soup again (I posted the recipe last year here) and I also like to use them like onions with meat or other vegetables, or even in rice dishes. So, if you look at your grocer's or farmers markets, then you might be able to pick some up now yourself.

We've had some gorgeous weather lately-- low 70's, sunny and a little breezy. I've been walking Ellie every day... until today. Today it's rainy, windy, thunderstorming, flooding, AND there is a tornado watch! I spent all day running from place to place trying to get my errands done and I was poured on no less than four times! I look like a drenched mouse. My mom is coming in on Thursday so I have a lot to get ready before she gets here-- food shopping being the agenda today so I just had to buckle down and go out in it. (So much for my cleanly mopped floors!)

This week I also read (in two days) a book that was just recently published by my friend Mary McCafferty: Born Again... in Medjugorje.  She and her family are members of our church and Mary was one of the first people I met before I became Catholic and was attending Daily Mass. She is one of those people who is always smiling and her love for people and her faith is always evident. So I was really excited to hear that she published this story of her first trip to Medjugorje, the place where The Blessed Virgin Mary is said to have appeared to six young people starting in June, 1981 and still does today. She even got to stay at one of their homes. I couldn't put the book down-- it was if I was experiencing that week with her! She writes honestly about her past-- her childhood and how she went from a typical teenager to a woman who has seen miracles-- and came to believe and tremendously grow in her faith. Experiences like this are not necessary to believe in God, but there are miracles happening today, as we sit here reading blog posts on our computer... messages being sent from heaven telling us that God is right there, sitting beside you and Mary is continually praying for peace in our world for us. I have to say that parts of this book brought tears to my eyes. Mary writes from a place of pure innocence and wonder. There is no pretentiousness or piousness. She works with the teens in our church and I know those that have heard her stories have been deeply moved. This little book is well worth the read and is so short, you can finish it in a weekend. I have to say that my faith increased so much from hearing her story and that's why I'm sharing this with you. Mary wrote this for her seven children (!) so that they'd have it (Nathaniel is in class with her second to youngest daughter).  It is available on amazon to order if you'd like to read it too!  If you'd like to know more about Medjugorje, there is a website that tells more about it, lists some of the pilgrimages, and even has the most recent message (from Sept. 2!) posted. There have been so many miraculous things that happen to people during our lifetime, and not just in the Catholic Church but to many people all over the world. I used to doubt but there have just been too many to ignore or to try to explain away. As I study homeopathy I realize that science has only a very, very small understanding of how the world works and what happens in it and in heaven. There is no denying that human understanding has a very far way to travel and I cannot deny that Christ is here among us. I just have to remember to open my heart to letting Him in.  Don't be afraid to let God love you!  ♰


Thursday, September 13, 2012

Doctor diagnoses Obamacare in one long sentence



Dr. Barbara Bellar, a "motor-scooter-riding animal lover, Army veteran, and Republican attorney who is taking on a massive challenge of the Chicago political machine for a Senate seat to combat fiscal insanity in Barack Obama's home state, which isn't an easy job as you might imagine, so she made this hilarious homemade video that captures the colossal stupidity of ObamaCare in one (very) long sentence." (Andrew Malcolm)

Hopefully she wins!

Wednesday, September 12, 2012

How to fight wrinkles

I've wanted to post these photos ever since my stepfather sent this email last Thanksgiving. It was comparing two celebrity women who are both age 51: 


This is Gillian McKeith who is a vegetarian health guru.


This is Nigella Lawson who is a well-known tv chef who loves butter and good meats.

Dr. Laura had a posting on her blog by a beauty expert on how to treat and avoid wrinkles. Besides some topical creams, he suggested eating healthy fruits and vegetables. Of course these are wonderful for your skin! In order to absorb the vitamins from these, he missed out on the most important foods that keep your skin soft, your hair healthy and shiny, and your nails strong: good healthy fats!  These of course are: olive oil, coconut oil, organic butter, raw milk, grass-fed free range beef, pasture-raised chicken and their eggs (with the yolks!!), fermented cod-liver oil, organ meats and fresh water fish.  Nigella eats most all of these (I'm not sure about the raw milk, but I'd guess she'd be for it.)  And the side-benefit is a feeling of well-being and satiation, plus great taste!

So, who do you want to look like?

Saturday, September 8, 2012

2012's bounty


This is what we had plenty of from our two little four-squares this year: cherry tomatoes!  Nothing else seemed to do too well. It was a very hot, dry summer with bursts of thunderstorms. So either things were lacking in water or they were drenched to the point of bursting!  But these little tomatoes kept producing prolifically. They are really good in a feta, cucumber and tomato salad. 

Thursday, September 6, 2012

Caroline and Wales

Caroline asked me for these photos, so while I was scanning them, I thought I'd share them here too, because they're just so darn cute! This was her first riding competition at Linden Hall. She rode Wales, a Welsh pony owned by her trainers Jerry and Phyllis Frankhouser. No matter what horse she rides now, she says nothing will ever compare to riding Wales (she also brought home some first and second place ribbons that day!). I think she's only 7 1/2 years old here. Ah, memory lane...







Wednesday, September 5, 2012

Vegetarian lifestyle does not prevent heart disease

It was sad yesterday when we heard of the death of Michael Clarke Duncan who played such an outstanding role in "The Green Mile".  At only 54 years old he should have lived a much longer life. Dr. Kaayla Daniel wrote a very important article about why becoming Vegetarian or Vegan does not protect your heart from heart disease. Doctors were saying that supplements of the B vitamins were sufficient in making up the diet deficit of animal meats, but they missed one of the most important minerals-- sulfur.  I wrote about sulfur last year and hopefully mainstream medicine will start to take notice of these studies... before we lose more wonderful people! Here's her article:

Death of a PETA Spokesperson
by Dr. Kaayla Daniel


In the movie Forks over Knives, T. Colin Campbell, PhD, and Caldwell Esselsytn, MD, promote the myth that low-fat, plant-based diets confer protection from heart disease. Dr. Esselstyn even flat out guarantees that vegans will never have a heart attack.  Ever.
Sadly, plenty of vegans suffer or have died from heart disease, as well as cancer, diabetes and other serious health problems.  My dear friend Peter Berg  — gifted artist, animal activist and committed vegan — died of a sudden death heart attack at age 42.  Peter believed his kind diet would not only honor the animals he loved so much but grant him good health and longevity.
The death of my friend Peter will surely be dismissed as “anecdotal evidence” but nearly all the MDs, NDs, CCNs and other health practitioners I know attest to finding plenty of heart disease among vegan patients and clients.
And this week we learned the sad news of the death of Green Mile actor and PETA spokesman Michael Clarke Duncan, whom PETA said was “enjoying the best health of his life” after adopting a diet high in fruits, vegetables, beans, peanuts, and tofu. Bill Clinton, though certainly thinner since going vegan, is looking poorly and the National Enquirer and similar tabloids all refer to him as “dying,” which, of course, may or may not be true.
We also see cardiovascular problems among meat eaters on the Standard American Diet (SAD) diet,  of course.   I believe Dr Esselstyn may well be telling the truth when he says his patients show better health markers after adopting a vegan diet.  But the likely reason is not that his patients have eliminated animal products from their diets but because they’ve also thrown out their supersized servings of junk foods full of the sugar, starchy carbs and trans-fats that have been well proven to cause heart disease.
What then is the relationship of meat to heart disease?   If meat and other animal products full of saturated fat and cholesterol don’t cause it then what effect might meat have?   Numerous writers at the Weston A. Price Foundation’s website (www.westonaprice.org) have shown science acquitting meat of all charges that it causes heart disease.    Many of our members have concluded from this that meat either has no effect on heart disease  or that its positive effect comes about from displacing disease-promoting junk foods high in sugar and starchy carbs.
But can meat and animal products actually protect us from heart disease?   A naughty proposition to be sure, given the preponderance of the low-fat, low cholesterol myth.   But the answer is yes, because of meat’s protective effect on homocysteine levels.
Homocysteine first came on the radar in 1969 when Kilmer  S. McCully, MD, published the article “Vascular pathology of homocysteinemia: implications for the pathogenesis of arteriosclerosis” in the American Journal of Pathology (56, 111-128).   Over the past four decades,  homocysteine has not only been studied by Dr. McCully — known as “The Father of the Homocysteine Theory of Heart Disease” — but by many other researchers.
Homocysteinemia is an acquired metabolic abnormality, and Dr. McCully initially proposed it could be prevented easily and inexpensively by taking three B vitamins — B6, B12 and folate.   Unfortunately, that solution proved simplistic.   Although the data were clear that B6, B12 and folate were an important part of  any prevention protocol, some people tested with high homocysteine anyway.    The latest research suggests that sulfur deficiency — increasingly common in the modern world and especially common among vegetarians — might be an even more important risk factor.
Last year I reported on a study by Dr. McCully and Yves Ingenbleek MD that ran in the August 26, 2011 issue of the journal Nutrition.   Its title “Vegetarianism produces subclinical malnutrition, hyperhomocysteinemia and atherogenesis” sounded a strong warning about heart disease risk, and the article itself detailed why subjects on mostly vegan diets can develop morbidity and mortality from cardiovascular disease unrelated to vitamin B status and Framingham criteria.
The fact that the subjects developed high homocysteine “unrelated to vitamin B status” matters. Vegans, after all, have long believed they can reduce their homocysteine risk by taking supplemental B12.   B6 and folate levels can be adequate in non-junk food vegan diets that emphasize grains and vegetables though the ability to convert B6 to the active form of pyridoxal-5-phosphate –  found readymade primarily in animal products — may be compromised,   While taking this trio of B vitamins as a heart disease “insurance policy” remains important, the Nutrition article suggested high-quality protein — animal protein — rich in the sulfur containing amino acids methionine and cysteine is also needed.   Plant-based proteins will not suffice.
An article published late last year by Dr. Ingenbleek entitled “The Oxidative Stress of Hyperhomocysteinemia Results from Reduced Bioavailability of Sulfur-Containing Reductants” expands upon the issues raised in the Nutrition article.     You can read it in The Open Clinical Chemistry Journal (2011, 4, 34-44) http://www.benthamscience.com/open/tocchemj/articles/V004/34TOCCHEMJ.pdf
It is important to note here that high homocysteine seems to be a major cause of CVD  unrelated to classical Framingham criteria,which are high cholesterol, dyslipidemia, sedentary lifestyle, diabetes and smoking.   In other words, vegans are at risk for heart disease whether or not they achieve goals of low total and LDL cholesterol thought by Dr Esselstyn, T. Colin Campbell, PhD, Neal Barnard MD. and other proponents of veganism to be protective against heart disease.   It is also clear that maintaining  healthy habits such as getting enough exercise and not smoking may not be protective enough.

Tuesday, September 4, 2012

First Day of School


The kids started their first day at the High School this morning! (Ellie decided she needed to get into the photo too!) I can't believe they're both there but it is nice to have them at the same school again. I hope that they are able to find all of their classrooms today. They were nervous but excited. This was a long summer break-- almost 3 full months!-- so I think they've already forgotten how to get up early and be scheduled all day long. This photo was taken at 7:05 am-- early enough! We got lots of rain storms overnight from Hurricane Isaac traveling up north and then over across the Susquehanna Valley, so it was pretty dark this morning which made it that much harder to rise early. I hope you have a great day!

Sunday, September 2, 2012

looking forward to autumn


Do you remember this cross-stitch I was working on last spring? Well, I had cleaned up the family room for company and put this away, and then promptly forgot to finish it! I found it the other day and just in time for fall. I always think of stitching or knitting in the cooler months (because in the hotter months I'm always like an immovable mass of hotness that can't be bothered with little things like this!).  Anyways... I have to remind you that autumn is my favorite season so I'm very happy right now! I'm not happy about the kids starting school on Tuesday because I miss them a lot but I do love hearing about all the things they are learning and I know they miss seeing their friends every day. And I also tend to be a little better at scheduling my own time (in between the 7:30 am to 2:30 pm time slot!).

I got that book Appearance and Circumstance by Grant Bentley yesterday in the mail. I quickly scanned through it and when I got to the description of a person who is an "orange", I realized that it was me. I still need to compare all the features but some of the listed diseases I have already had and the way I approach things in life.  And when I looked it up again on his website, I saw that "orange" is the warrior. Hmmm. So maybe all these postings I write about health and sometimes politics is my need to "defend and protect". Sounds more like law than medicine but I feel like homeopathy is more helpful. But it could explain how I let myself get dragged into too many political discussions and I get very discouraged when I can't get my point across. On a more positive note, I am very loyal. And so I guess I just may be orange. And the remedy that Joette prescribed for me (I'm a patient of  Joette Calabrese which is a real honor!), is under the column of "orange" remedies.... that is encouraging!

So, I'm ready to settle into autumn crafts, and thinking about the holidays coming. I'm also going to try to reign back some of my passion about helping everybody be healthy! I have been called a "momma bear" before, because I do tend to mother everyone. I'll just focus on mothering these two cubs at home since I only have four more years before they take off (which just might be to The Ohio State University, as they are both talking about it pretty seriously right now!). Have a great weekend (and GO BUCKS!)

Saturday, September 1, 2012

Will homeopathy be coming to a hospital near you?


News Source: 
The Union Leader (Manchester, NH)
News Date: 
August 15, 2012
Author
Nancy Welsh

Led by Dr. Matthew Hand, a pediatric nephrologist, New Hampshire’s Hospital for Children, Manchester, has created an innovative program in pediatric integrative medicine.
Coming to Manchester and changing the way things are done is a gradual process, and for Hand, that means changing entrenched opinions and redoing traditional ways of delivering care.
“Your administration has to believe in it. They are the ones who are pushing this as hard as anybody," he said.
“So I have to give them a huge amount of credit. From the top on down, from the board and the CEO and the vice presidents, they're the ones coming to me saying, 'Matt, we need to do this.' This is so forward-thinking, they deserve massive amounts of credit. Once you have that, then you are working on pulling in all of the systems that you have in place and getting people to understand it, and that's where I come in.’...
Hand said, surprisingly, lots of studies are available to back up many treatments considered to be alternative, especially from Europe, where many of these options are more readily accepted and available.
"We look at everything from conventional medicine to nutrition to exercise to whole systems such as traditional Chinese medicine, something called Ayurvedic medicine which comes from India, homeopathy which comes from Europe,’ he said.