Healthy Recipes

healthy recipes



grape cruet gift
gourmet honey gift
drizzle cruets
balsamic vinegar



Back at home in the kitchen


Classically trained chef, cookbook author and cooking school owner Jill Prescott has returned to Wisconsin to teach...

continue reading...

Added on: Aug 8, 2007 in Category: Cooks Discussion

Comment This Article   Refer it to Friend  

Cure Your Heartburn. All Natural Cure For Heartburn That Really Works. Click Here!

Average Visitor Rating: 0.00 (out of 5)
Number of ratings: 0 Votes
Visitor Rating

 Other News in the Cooks Discussion category
1. Tuna Recipes
  Thanks to canneries, tuna is by far America's favorite fish. However, a surprisingly large number of people have never tried fresh tuna. Prized for sushi, fresh tuna looks and grills...
Category:   Cooks Discussion


2. Lentil Recipes
  Although they may be cheap, lentils are very nutritious, filling, and more importantly, arguably the most flavorful of all the legumes. They are also an excellent protein substitution for meats....
Category:   Cooks Discussion


3. Mayonnaise Biscuits
  Recipe: Mayonnaise BiscuitsRecipe Description: Only three ingredients in this simple biscuit recipe.Related Recipes:Mayonnaise MuffinsFoodClassics.com Tools:Submit your favorite recipeSearch for a specific recipeBrowse recipes by categorySubscribe to our free recipe newsletterShop for cooking related books
Category:   Cooks Discussion


4. Throw a Last Minute Oscars Party
  Gee whiz, the Oscars show is this weekend! I'm used to it being in March, since I remember watching it after spring break in college. Well, if you...
Category:   Cooks Discussion


5. Ice cream, but better
  What can be better than a scoop of ice cream on a hot summer's day?

How about a scoop of gelato? And make that the...
Category:   Cooks Discussion




 Other News
Tried 'n' True: Lemon Cheesecake great when you don’t want to heat up the kitchen
This recipe comes from the Brick Methodist Church cookbook. You know all these types of cookbooks have great recipes. This comes from a former pastor’s wife, Alice Kemp. I never knew her or the Rev. Kemp, but all her recipes I have tried have been great.
Category:   Regional Cusine
Food Handler ServSafe Certification classes coming up

Category:   Regional Cusine
Before you eat up, read up
By Barbara Damrosch, published Thursday, December 6, 2007 in The Washington Post



Christmas shopping may require all the dollars, stamina and good humor you can muster, but it's nothing compared to food shopping. For that you need an advanced degree in educated consumerism. Just last week the mail brought me more lessons in food responsibility than I could possibly digest before lunchtime.

First to arrive was the Utne Reader with a report compiled by the Environmental Working Group that ranked fruits and vegetables by the amount of pesticide residue found on them by the U.S. Department of Agriculture and the Food and Drug Administration.

The "dirty dozen" we'd best avoid are, in order of risk: peaches, apples, sweet bell peppers, celery, nectarines, strawberries, cherries, lettuce, imported grapes, pears, spinach and potatoes. The safest six are onions, avocados, frozen corn, pineapples, mangoes and frozen peas.

The group's FoodNews Web site gives detailed data (96.6 percent of peach samples were tainted; one bell pepper sample had 11 pesticides on it).

The solution is simple: Buy organic. But here's the tougher question: Why do they allow residue at all? That would require a larger study.

Next came a poster from the Chefs Collaborative, urging us to buy from farms that sustain the environment -- those that give livestock free range; gather mushrooms only from stable populations; preserve native riparian (streamside) plants; guard soil, air and water against pollution; and "value and protect large predators like bears and mountain lions." Most of this is unknowable unless the farm is right down the road.

And now here's Ode magazine with the top 20 organic, sustainable products for 2008. Two of them I already have: a Sun Frost low-energy fridge, which I love, and Prince Charles's Duchy Originals Oaten Biscuits. But how do the 20 stack up against the Chefs Collaborative's admirably complex chart?

I happen to think Prince Charles, long a champion of organic farming, is one of the world's most underestimated public figures, and his biscuits are top drawer. But I can only assume he protects his riparian flora. Do the guys who grow Honest Tea value bears? Who knows?

The only lesson I ever seem to learn from all of this information boils down to a few words: Grow your own, cook your own and check out the farmer down the road. There are a few levels of complexity I could add to that, but you already have so much to read.

Article copyright of Barbara Damrosch. Reprinted with permission.
Photo credit: D'Arcy Norman
Category:   From the Garden