Recetas y notas sobre ingredientes y métodos culinarios en varias culturas con énfasis en las cocinas mexicana, mediterránea, y la cocina hindú
Nube
aceite de oliva
acelga
Africa
aguacate
ajo
albahaca
Alemania
Almacigo
America
apio
árabe
Argentina
arugula
Asia
avena
basura
berenjena
bioguía
brocoli
cacahuate
café
calcio
caldo
Camarones
canela
caribe
cebolla
chile
China
clima
Colombia
comenius
composta
conejo
contaminación
cursos
ensalada
España
espinaca
esqueje
Europa
Fitoterapia
flan
Francia
frijol
garbanzo
germinación
harina
Hidroponía
Hierba aromática
hongos
huerta
India
invernadero
Italia
jengibre
Lasagne
lechuga
lenteja
limón
macetas
maíz
Marruecos
mayonesa
México
naranja
Nicaragua
papa
papaya
pasta
Permacultura
Perú
pimiento
piña
plagas
plátano
Portugal
puerco
pulpo
quinua
romero
Rusia
salsa
Spaghetti
tomate
toni
tortilla
Transgénicos
trigo
Turquía
United States
Venezuela
Veracruz
Vietnam
vino
wikipedia
yuca
zanahoria
άμυλο
αυγά
βούτυρο
Γαῖα
γάλα
δημητριακό
ζύμη
ιστορία
καρκίνος
κιτρικό
κρέας
λαχανικά
λεμόνι
όσπρια
πατάτες
πουλερικά
σιτηρά
τεχνική
τζίντζερ
τυρί
υγεία
φακή
φασόλια
φρούτο
ψάρι
ψωμί
한국
日本
豆腐
Sunday, November 10, 2013
a waffle that changed my life
Dust off your waffle iron!
For pennies you get a million dollars worth of nutrition and health.
Excerpt: I love waffles, but I don't like how I feel after eating them. Then I ate a waffle that changed my life! [For the whole article, click here.]
While visiting friends in Hawaii they treated my husband and I to homemade Belgian-style waffles. They were light, fluffy and really tasty. "They're made from soybean and rolled oats," Carrie explained, smiling.
Carrie handed me a tattered copy of "Oats, Peas, Beans and Barley Cookbook." As I flipped through the pages, timed rolled back to the mid 1970s when I made a lot of dishes with lentils, rice, soy and beans. "That's hippie food!" my Mom used to say.
Today, we know better. These aren't just food for hippies because the more plant-based foods we consume, the better.
Back in Alaska, I bought a used copy of the cookbook for $2.00. The waffle recipes in the book call for simple ingredients like pinto beans, garbanzo beans or soybeans, rolled oats, lentils, millet, rice, cashews and buckwheat. No eggs, milk or baking powder. Wheat-free, too.
For pennies you get a million dollars worth of nutrition and health. "One soy-oat waffle has protein equal in quantity and quality to that in a serving of steak," says author Edyth Young Cottrel.
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
No comments:
Post a Comment