healthy cooking

Healthier Holiday Cookie

Snow is on the ground and lights are on the trees. I just love this time of year especially now that I share it with two little ones at home. I love to invite kids in the kitchen to cook. Baking is one of the easiest ways to get them involved as they are usually excited to be the official taste testers of your finished products.

Making cookies with kids is healthy, fun and rewarding.

With it being holiday season and the over abundance of sweet treats I am always on the lookout for healthier options. This is a cookie I created 2 years ago in need of a cookie that my son could eat with everyone else and not have to have a “special cookie”. This healthier holiday cookie is a true winner being gluten free, dairy free and refined sugar free. It is a treat that tastes amazing and everyone can enjoy it together. I am honored to have one of my favorite healthier holiday cookie recipes recently featured in Kiwi Magazine . 

Healthier Holiday Cookie Recipe Featured in Kiwi Magazine

The best part about this recipe is you can make many flavors from the one base recipe. I personally love the Almond, Cherry Chocolate (pictured at the top of the photo), Orange Chocolate Almond Apricot (pictured in the middle, add a little orange zest to make this flavor pop) and Cinnamon Pecan Raisin on the bottom of the photo. Feel free to make your own family favorite flavor.

Cooking with kids can be great but also a little messy. Get success secrets on how to make cooking with kids easy here.

What are some of your favorite holiday treats and family traditions?

Read the whole Winter Kiwi Issue here!

Cauliflower Pizza Crusts

Healthier Pizza it’s Gluten Free Too!

Yes! A healthier pizza and a way to get your kids to love eating more vegetables is a reality. I am super excited about this next gluten free cooking class coming up on May 20th at Mingle. I have had many requests for a class like this so I am sure the event will sell out. You can reserve your seat here. There is lots of talk about gluten free foods these days and some say it is just the next fad diet. Maybe it is and it too will pass but I know for me choosing to go gluten free has radically changed my family’s lifestyle for the better. I only share what I know and what I believe to be beneficial in supporting happy healthier families. I am passionate about cooking and eating real foods and this is just an extension of that. There are plenty of “all natural” “gluten free” “organic” junk foods out there disguised to be healthy options for you. It is really hard sometimes to know what foods are actually good for you.

Cauliflower Pizza Crusts
Cauliflower Crust Pizza

 

I was tossed into the gluten free world just over a year ago due to a sensitivity my son had. At first I struggled because I still wanted cookies, bread and pizza, don’t we all love them? There is a reason these are called “comfort foods” I was tired of feeling deprived. I knew there had to be simple solutions to gluten free cooking. I took to researching and testing to only find, like I do with many recipes, items that took too long, were too complicated and often not producing good results. I needed tasty, easy and quick to keep up with the demands of life as a busy working mom. I have tested and tried so many recipes and now I get to enjoy healthier versions of things like pizza with a super easy cauliflower crust. Gluten free cooking may not be for everyone but choosing healthier real food alternatives to processed foods can benefit anyone.

 

Changing our lifestyle to eliminate gluten and almost all refined sugars has created these results for my family; my son’s eczema has completely cleared naturally. We all sleep better at night, and fall asleep quickly. I have more energy and am 25 pound lighter than my pre pregnancy weight. Yes mommas, all the baby weight and 25 lbs. extra all gone from just changing how we eat.

Gluten Free and Refined Sugar Free Christmas Cookies
Gluten Free and Refined Sugar Free Christmas Cookies

The recipes I am sharing in this gluten free cooking class are some of my favorites. I also don’t believe in making separate meals for anyone in the house. We all eat the same food regardless of age, taste, need or preference. I also learned to never share that a recipe is gluten free with others as it tends to create this pre conceived idea that is must taste bad. When in reality good ingredients prepared simply almost always create amazing results. At Christmas time I made a platter of cookies that was all gluten and refined sugar free. I set them on the table right next to all the others and everyone enjoyed them just as they would any other cookie or brownie. They only learned of the difference when they commented on how good they were and asked about them did they find out that my double chocolate brownies were made out of black beans. When you use real ingredients you can have treats and not feel bad about eating them.

 

This gluten free cooking class shares that idea that real food creates real good results that anyone can enjoy. No need to purchase a variety of strange flours, starches or gums just real rood for real people. Join me and learn how easy it can be. Register today!

Do you or your family struggle with food sensitivities? What helps you continue to eat well?

cooking smart, benefits of cooking, healthy families, healthy food, healthy cooking

How Cooking Makes You Smarter

cooking smart, benefits of cooking, healthy families, healthy food, healthy cooking

With the discovery of fire humans first learned how to cook. Cooking is what sets us apart from other animals. The argument can be made that cooking and cooking alone is what played the developmental role in creating our advanced species, turning us from naked apes to modern humans. Humans are so much smarter because we can cook!

Cooking breaks down fibers making nutrients more readily available, so our digestive systems required less energy to get the calories we need to live and function well. Research suggests that this increase in readily available and easily digestible calories lead to our increased brain size. We no longer had to spends hours chewing raw foods just to survive we now had more than we need to provide energy to live and extra time to do other things leading to more advanced human development over centuries. This is still true even today when we have become so “smart” that we now have machines that make food for us so we have even more time to do other things.

machines that make food for us

But my questions to you is: Have we gotten too smart and advanced in allowing so much of our food to be prepared by machines? Outsourcing the act of cooking to companies so much are we actually starting to go the other way. By not cooking are we a becoming less smart and connected?

When we cook we are using a variety of cognitive skills at the same time to create a meal. Even before we touch the ingredients a meal idea is formed and organized. To plan a meal takes anticipation, strategic ability, advance planning, and problem solving. The actual physical “work” of chopping, mixing and kneading uses hand-eye coordination, develops motion control. As meal time nears jugging the cooking times and preparing several items at ones takes concentration, visual, spatial awareness and memory skills as we multitask ensuring all the pieces come together just as we had planned hopefully. If not you are back to problem solving and improvising “Plan B” for dinner.

Making and sharing a meal is also a way to stimulate social skills and language development in young children. The activity of dining together actually helps us stay mentally fit. Several research studies show that sharing a meal together is good for the overall health and wellbeing of the entire family. Cooking not only helps our brains stay fit but also keeps us happier because we are connecting and creating community together while sharing a meal.

Dr. Kelly McGonigal, a health psychologist at Stanford, explains a study related to how food choices influence mood. She writes:

“Now, most of us think that eating out is a treat, and that indulgent meals are a special reward. But this study found that women were significantly happier and less stressed after eating at home, and after eating healthier meals.”

She concludes,

“The home is a privileged environment that nurtures healthy eating and in which healthier food choices trigger more positive emotions.”

I believe fully that food is needed for us to live and cooking is an essential life skill we all need to lead happy, healthy, quality lives but through food we can also learn about math, science, art, history and culture. Through cooking we allow for so much more than just filling our stomachs. Cooking helps us stay smart, happy and leave a legacy.

For more ideas on how to incorporate these elements in your everyday meals contact me today for a free phone session and find out how to enhance your strengths and create more value in your family meals.

Did you miss an earlier post?

Here are the earlier New Year, New You Topics:
Why New Year’s Resolutions Fail
Lose Weight by Eating More
Cut Your Grocery Bill Without Cutting Coupons