Tag Archive: Healthy

Paleo Mug Cakes

You’re going to want to bookmark this one; trust me.

I never understood the appeal of mug cakes before recently. It seemed to me that if you wanted something chocolate and delicious you should put in the time and effort to bake some almond flour brownies and the extra hour would be well worth it. It also didn’t help that most mug cake recipes aren’t gluten-free, or—if they are—come out with a weird starchy taste to them.

But now I’ve seen the light and have come around to mug cakes, partly because the oven I use was 3 floors below where I lived at the time I made this and partly because the recipe is so damn good. When I was trying the recipe, I also wanted something that was sort of healthy. This is healthy enough even to be eaten for breakfast, which I’ve done on a few too many occasions.

The original recipe is only 4 ingredients, but you can add in things like chocolate chips, walnuts, candied ginger, vanilla extract, and anything else to shake things up.

Paleo Mug Cake

Prep time: 5 minutes

Cook time: 3 minutes

Ingredients(Makes 1 cake):

  • 1 small ripe banana
  • 1 1/2 Tablespoons almond butter(or any nut butter)
  • 1 egg
  • 2 heaping Tablespoons cocoa powder
  • 2 teaspoons sweetener(optional)
  • Chocolate chips, walnuts, dried fruit, or other mix-ins(optional)

Method:

  1. With a fork, mash the banana into a smooth puree.
  2. Mix the almond butter, egg, cocoa powder, and extra sweetener if using into the banana puree until it forms an even batter.
  3. Fold in any mix-ins into the batter that you’d like. Otherwise, our the batter into a mug or other microwave safe container. Be sure to only fill the container up to 2/3rds the way because it will expand in the microwave.
  4. Microwave on high for 2 and 1/2 minutes until the center is set. Carefully remove the mug from the microwave and enjoy hot, cold, or at room temperature.

I don’t add sweetener to mine and it still tastes delicious. I’ve only ever made it with almond butter but I’m sure peanut butter would be a nice alteration. The banana flavor is definitely prevalent, especially once it cools, but that only reminds me of a chocolate covered banana which I love. The best things about these cakes are that they don’t have any sort of flour flavor to them and are rich and fudgy like a brownie. The worst thing about this recipe is once you make it you’ll never stop.

Green Vegetable Quinoa

Green-Vegetable-Quinoa

My diet has definitely been changing with the season. As far as vegetables go, I want very little to do with them. That’s strange for me since over the Summer I can never get enough produce. But now it’s carbs, carbs, carbs and the only vegetables I do want are potatoes and squash—not much of a variety.

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This dish is an exception. And it has about every green vegetable in my refrigerator in it, so it must be healthy, right? The kale is a good source of vitamins, the peas high in plant-based protein, and the avocado a source of healthy fat. More importantly it’s the only green thing that appeals to me anymore(although a bowl of mint chocolate chip ice cream wouldn’t be bad either).

Green Vegetable Quinoa

Prep time: 5 minutes

Cook time: 0 minutes

Ingredients(For 2 servings):

  • 1 cup cooked quinoa, cooled
  • 1 medium ripe avocado
  • 1/2 cup cooked peas, fresh or frozen
  • 1 cup chopped kale, steamed
  • Salt to taste

Green-Vegetable-Quinoa-with-avocadoes

Method:

  1. Remove the skin and the pit from the avocado and mash it into a smooth puree.
  2. Combine all of the ingredients together in a bowl and fold until completely mixed. The avocado should act as a binder and as it mixes it will hold together more.
  3. Serve at room temperature. Store in a refrigerator for no more than a day as the avocado will brown over time.

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I make this with frozen and thawed kale and frozen peas. Not only is it cheaper than buying the fresh ingredients, their nutrients are locked in and they’re available all through Winter, so you can bet I’ll be having this again.

7 Things I Learned From The 2011 Healthy Living Summit

1. There’s a Recipe For Good Recipes

The first talk I went to was by Stepfanie Romine about writing a better recipe. A lot of what she said I heard when I attended Techmunch Boston last month, but hearing it again really drove the importance of recipe writing into me. I won’t recap the whole talk; Heather and Courtney already posted great summaries of it. My big takeaway was the importance of prep and cook time in recipes, which I’ll be including in all of mine from now on.

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2. All Your Information Is Already On The Internet

Another one of my favorite sessions was about blogger safety presented by Monica. It was a good reality check on the dangers of social media and oversharing. I learned the internet makes it practically impossible for any of us to remain private with sites like spokeo.com that creates a real security problem for bloggers. I’m not too worried though because I got a yellow belt in Tae Kwon Do in 2nd grade and I have broken board to prove it. Stalk at your own risk.

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Photo from Anne

3. Doughballs Are Delicious

Doughballs have been floating around food blogs since November, and I’m ashamed to say I hadn’t tried them since this past weekend. I’m not a big fan of cookies to begin with and gluten-free cookies often come out flat and with a bad texture. Katie completely proved me wrong with her gluten-free and vegan doughballs. I can’t think of a better cookie I’ve ever had. I’ve already bookmarked her recipe and plan to make it soon. Which brings me to…

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Photo from Brittany

4. Bloggers Are The Best Bakers

After lunch there was a flurry of desserts floating around, and all of them were baked by bloggers. There were sugar cookies from Courtney, granola bars and macaroons from Diana, cake pops from Paige, doughballs from Katie, and sunflower balls from Shana. I only got to taste the doughballs but all of them got rave reviews. Where else but at a blogging conference could people accept baked goods from total strangers and not even think twice?

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Photos from Anne and Monica

5. Healthy Living Bloggers Are Some Of The Most Fun People Out There

I wouldn’t really call myself a healthy living blogger. If anything, I’m a food blogger. But I read just as many healthy living blogs as I do food blogs and feel a much stronger connection with healthy living bloggers than food bloggers. It was great seeing people again(or meeting face to face for the first time) whose blogs and twitter feeds I follow religiously as well as befriending people who I didn’t know at all but quickly connected with.

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Photo from Meghann

6. I Love Running, But Not At 5am

Another reason that I went to Philly besides the conference is because I’m running the Philadelphia marathon in 3 months. The group run was an excellent chance to get a feel for Philly’s climate and terrain. I ended having a great 16-mile training run, part of the time running with other bloggers training for races. The one stinger was the 4:45am wake-up call and feeling a little like a zombie that night and the next morning. My love for running has a time frame, and apparently that’s between 7am and 5pm.

7. The More Fun You’re Having, The Less Pictures You’ll Take

I probably took less than 20 photos this weekend in total, which is why all of these photos are borrowed from other bloggers. I didn’t think to take photos at the cocktail party, or dining at El Vez. I took hardly any photos of my day with Madeline and Boots, who are two of my favorite people ever, because it was too much fun just to be with them(also because they put me to work making dinner while they watched Project Runway(just kidding, I volunteered)). If you want to read all about that, you’ll have to check out Madeline’s post.

Were you there this weekend? If so, what was your favorite takeaway?

Healthy Chinese Broccoli

Healthy-Chinese-Broccoli

My favorite Chinese take-out to order has always been broccoli: Beef and broccoli, mushroom and broccoli, bean curd and broccoli. They just know how to do something to broccoli that makes it taste good. No doubt it’s full of sodium and sugar, which is part of why I wanted to make this myself. The other reason is, well, who doesn’t want to have delicious take-out food at half the cost whenever they feel like it?

Whether or not this is “healthy” you can debate. It has added sugar and a modest amount of sodium. Corn starch isn’t too “clean” an ingredient either. But I think making it for yourself, using ingredients you can see and touch, and being aware of what’s in your food is a pretty darn healthy way to live.

Healthy Chinese Broccoli

Ingredients(Makes 4 servings):

  • 4 cups raw broccoli
  • 2 Tablespoons sesame oil
  • 4 garlic cloves, minced
  • 1 yellow onion, julienned
  • 3 Tablespoons sugar
  • 2 Tablespoons rice vinegar
  • 2 Tablespoons soy sauce
  • 2 Tablespoon water
  • 1 Tablespoon corn starch or tapioca starch

Healthy-Chinese-Broccoli-Dish

Method:

  1. In a large pan, heat the sesame oil over a burner set to medium heat.
  2. Sauté the garlic in the sesame oil until lightly browned.
  3. In a small cup, mix the sugar, rice vinegar, and soy sauce until the sugar has mostly dissolved.
  4. Add the broccoli, onion, and sugar mixture into the pan and cover with a lid until the broccoli has steam cooked and turned bright green.
  5. While continuing to cook, remove the lid and mix together the contents of the pan until everything is covered in sauce.
  6. Dissolve the starch into 2 tablespoons of water and pour it into the pan to mix with the sauce.
  7. Cook until all the excess water has evaporated and the broccoli is covered in sauce. Plate and serve hot. 

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Healthy Frozen S’mores Parfaits

There’s been a recent explosion of s’mores desserts on food blogs lately. Besides making me think “You’re killing me, Smalls,” it’s also made me jealous and hungry for some s’mores(and if you don’t get the quote go out to Blockbuster or Red Box or however people get movies these days and rent The Sandlot). And so I made them my way, with chocolate banana soft serve, original Fluff, and a touch of gluten-free graham cracker crumbs.

These have just the right ratio of chocolate to marshmallow to graham cracker. It’s cool, creamy, and sweet; being from Massachusetts, I wouldn’t recommend anything other than marshmallow Fluff, but you could always use marshmallows or—gasp—an imitation marshmallow crème. Add a scoop of peanut butter, too, for something extra special.

Healthy Frozen S’mores Parfaits

Prep time: 10 minutes

Cook time: 0 minutes

Ingredients(Makes 2 servings):

  • 2 large frozen bananas
  • 3 Tablespoons cocoa powder
  • 2 Tablespoons Fluff OR 1/4 cup miniature marshmallows
  • 2 graham crackers

Method:
  1. Throw the frozen bananas into a food processor and turn it on. Blend until creamy.
  2. Add in the cocoa powder and pulse until it’s mixed in.
  3. Scoop the chocolate-banana mixture into the glasses. 
  4. Finish with a tablespoon of Fluff or marshmallows and graham crackers. Serve immediately.

Technically the recipe is for 2 parfaits but every time I’ve made this I’ve eaten the whole batch by myself. I’m not sure if it’s because I’m extra hungry or this is just extra good—I assume both. It’s (mostly) healthy anyway so dig right in.

Copycat: Goji And Chocolate Chip Oaties

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Have you entered this giveaway yet? If you haven’t, you should.

But even if you don’t win, here’s a recipe to make you feel like a winner. These are my favorite cookies to make. They’re easy, delicious, and use normal, healthy ingredients you can feel good about eating any day. And because it’s so adjustable, I knew I could make it feel more like a Goji Gourmet cookie.

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For the copycat, I used signature ingredients from the Goji Gourmet line including goji berries, chocolate chips, oatmeal, and almonds in the form of almond butter. You can certainly adjust the mix-ins in the batter, though chocolate chips never disappoint.

Goji And Chocolate Chip Oaties(adapted from this recipe)

Ingredients(Makes 24 cookies):

  • 2 cups oatmeal, divided

  • 3/4 cup almond butter

  • 1/2 cup brown sugar

  • 1/4 cup maple syrup

  • 1/4 cup water Omitted because my batter was wet enough

  • 1 (large)banana, mashed

  • 1 teaspoon cinnamon

  • 1/2 teaspoon salt

  • 3/4 teaspoon baking soda

  • 1/4 cup chocolate chips(let’s just say I used more)

  • 1/4 cup goji berries

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Take 1 cup of oatmeal and process it in a food processor until it’s been turned into a flour. Add all of the dry ingredients into a bowl and mix. Then add the rest of the ingredients and mix until the batter has come together. Chill the dough for 10-20 minutes.

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Preheat an oven to 325 degrees. When the dough is cold, break off chunks and roll them into 1-inch dough balls. Place the balls on lined baking trays and bake for 25-30 minutes until they’re firm to the touch.

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I hesitate to call any dessert “healthy”, but with whole grains, dried fruit, and healthy fats from the nut butter, these certainly won’t break any New Years resolutions.

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