As the holidays begin to wind down towards the massive explosion that will be the New Year, diets and sobriety will have long been forgotten in the quest for revelry and celebration.
What better way to start preparing for the year to come with several simple methods you can integrate into your daily consumption that will eventually become habits by the time your throw out your old calendars for the new.
Here are 7 tips to help you make a healthy transition into next year’s eats:
While nothing beats a good strong cup of joe to help banish hangover cobwebs from the night before, your next best option is to learn how to brew the perfect cleansing beverage that’s an ideal morning after cure – tea.
Too much turkey, steak, fried greasy food, and other artery-clogging eats can wreck havoc with your health. Learn how to make this savory seafood stew called Cioppino (pronounciation: “chee-o-pee-no”).
Nourishing and nutritious, this rich stew is filling, and will impress your guests with your culinary genius. This dish serves 8:
Put the tomatoes into a deep, large bowl (or a pot, that works too). Using your hands, crush the tomatoes until no obvious large pieces remain. You’re not going for a puree or anything, just crushed tomatoes.
Heat the olive oil in a large, heavy bottomed pot over medium-high heat. Add the onion, fennel, and garlic and season with salt and pepper. Cook until the vegetables are softened and starting to brown, 8-10 minutes. Add the fennel seeds and bay leaves, and stir to combine. Cook this another minute or so, to just toast the fennel seeds.
Add the white wine, the crushed tomatoes and season with salt and pepper. Cook this 10-15 minutes to concentrate the tomato juices, stirring occasionally.
Add 4 cups of vegetable or fish stock (you could even use water, if you wanted) and bring to a simmer. Reduce the heat to medium-low and simmer away until this soup tastes so good you can’t stand it anymore, 45-60 minutes, seasoning with salt and pepper as needed.
Once this is all good, increase the heat to medium and add the mussels. Cook them until they just start to open, about 5 minutes. Add the shrimp and the cod and cook another 4 minutes or so, until the mussels are completely opened and the shrimp and cod are cooked through.
Remove from heat and serve right from the pot with crusty bread for dipping. Tarragon, parsley leaves, or fennel fronds on the side are nice to sprinkle over, too.
After the holidays, you’ll probably have a glut of leftovers to turn into several tiny meals, so start by breaking them down and freezing them for when you get back to work. Not only will you save more money during your first foray into the new year, your fresh start into better health can begin with your basic brown bagged lunch:
Take your pick.
Love pancakes for breakfast but you’re pressed for time? Celebrated chef Jamie Oliver has come up with a novel way to have your favorite first meal of the day via a blender: his special blueberry pancake smoothie. Drop in fresh or frozen blueberries, a banana, milk, an egg, and whole wheat flour…then blend and voila! A blueberry pancake you can drink.
If you’re already a health nut and cook every single thing you eat in olive oil, you had better know its ideal temperature point at which it starts becoming carcinogenic instead of healthy. Once you reach 375 degrees Farenheit, your olive oil ceases to be useful and will end up smoking you out of your kitchen.
Like a pumpkin bean dip:
Just dump all these ingredients in your food processor and blend away:
Filling:
Topping:
Vegan Caramel Sauce:
Instructions:
Preheat oven to 350 degrees. Toss together all FILLING ingredients, then fill a 10″ round baking dish (I used my Lodge Cast Iron) or baking dish of choice. Mix together TOPPING ingredients, then sprinkle evenly over top of filling. Bake for 30 – 45 minutes, or until topping is golden brown.
Meanwhile, mix together coconut milk and coconut sugar in a medium saucepan. Bring to boil, then reduce heat to simmer and simmer, stirring occasionally, until mixture is thick, syrupy and deep brown, about 30 minutes. Remove from heat and add the coconut oil and vanilla; stir vigorously to incorporate oil; set aside.
Drizzle the caramel atop the crisp and serve. Serves 10 – 12. The crisp can be stored in the fridge for 3 – 4 days, and the caramel can be stored in a tightly sealed container in the fridge for 4 – 5 days.
Turn a random assortment of meats and vegetables lying around in your fridge into a healthy meal any time of the day with these easy-to-understand graphs:
Here’s to better health in the coming year!
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