AWeber - FOHAC News Cold Crunch #293

Published: Sun, 03/15/15

Fair Oaks Health News
 


Welcome
 
 
 
                                                          March 15, 2015
 
 
Cold Crunch
                  

 Hi ,
 
I love chips.  I love the crunchy, salty, wonderfulness of it all.  The evolution of all the flavors and styles has been amazing.  I am dating myself when I remember the only choices were straight and wavy cut potato chips.  Barbecue flavor was an amazing discovery back then.  Now entire isles in the grocery store are dedicated to all the styles and flavors of chips, and a second isle in the health food area for just “health food” chips. 
 
The problem is that chips are anything but healthy.  They are pure simple carbohydrates fried in vegetable oil.  Both components are a bad choice.  But when you bake or fry carbs in polyunsaturated oil you form all sorts of toxic cancer-forming chemicals.  It does not matter if you are using organic potatoes or blue corn or whatever other groovy ingredients, when you fry them in vegetable oil, they become poisonous.  The most noxious of these chemicals is acrylamide and typical brands of chips contain over 500 times the safe levels of cancer- causing agents as defined by California’s Prop 65 warning regulations.
Even more concerning is that any time you heat up a polyunsaturated oil it oxidizes; what we used to call turning rancid back in the day.  Back then we could tell when something had gone rancid because it smelled really bad.  But these days they treat the rancid oil with chemicals to neutralize the bad smell, but not the toxic effects on the body.  Chip manufacturers use thousands of gallons of oil to fry the chips in, and then keep reusing it over and over until only a few hundred gallons are left that looks like sewage sludge before they discard it.  The chips soak up all the rest. 
 
What are we to do?  I still love chips… and dip!  Dip is a whole separate story.  I remember the very first dip I ever tasted – the original Lipton’s onion soup in cream cheese dip.  MSG never tasted so good – at least until the first ranch dressing was invented.
But now I view MSG and cream cheese from a different perspective.  Unfortunately I became aware that the MSG is neurotoxic – it actually causes brain cells to explode.  And the cream cheese is just one more trigger for my gluten/casein intolerance.  Bummer, ignorance is bliss…until it sneaks up and bites you on the behind.
 
So what am I really after when I grab for the chips?  A big part is the crunch.  Mix the crunch with some creamy cheesy delight and you almost have the essence of the chip experience.  There is a small part that is the salty – savory combo with the crunch as well.  Yes, that is the chip experience.  I am leaving out the mindless grabbing of handful after handful out of a humongous bag of convenient chip resource.
 
How can we recreate the chip experience without all the toxic oils, cancer causing chemicals, and weight causing carbs?
First lets tackle the crunch factor.  Several root vegetables in their raw state do a very good job of imitating the crunchiness of chips.  For the light and delicate crunch of the potato chip there is the Jicama.  If you are after a little more tooth to your bite, kind of like kettle cooked chips, I like one of the big Japanese radishes that are half green and half white.  Daikon can also be used if you like a little more of a flavor bite.  
When you are after the heavier crunch of a tortilla chip, I suggest using a rutabaga.  Turnips are ok but a little soft to give a really good crunch, and carrots are a little tough and chewy to mimic a good chip. Lastly, if you like your chips with a slightly sweet taste, a good crisp apple or Asian pear will substitute for a nice crispy chip.
Now for the dip…fortunately for us there is now commercially prepared cashew cheese in a variety of flavors from Cultured Kitchen available in health food stores – at least here in Sacramento.  Cashew cheese is really nice because it imitates the creamy texture and cheesy taste of many dips.  If this product is not available in your area, you can make your own.
2 cups raw cashews – soaked for a few hours if possible
¼ to ½ cup filtered water (depending on the consistency you want)
½ cup nutritional yeast (this gives it the cheesy taste)
2 Tbs. Fresh lemon juice
2 Tbs. Vinegar – different flavors of vinegar produce different cheeses
2 Tbs. Coconut Aminos, or Braggs Aminos, or Fish Sauce
1 Tsp. sea salt
 
Add all these ingredients to a food processor or blender and blend until a smooth paste is formed.  At this point you might add extra flavor ingredients to really create interest.  This is the basic recipe, to which you would then add such things as cloves of garlic, basil, cilantro, dill, avocado, chilies, pepper, clams, shrimp, etc…
Another alternative for a great dip is hummus.  This is also readily available in grocery stores, with the widest variety I have found being at Trader Joe's.  Hummus is also easily made at home with canned chick peas, lemon juice, tahini, garlic, salt, and olive oil.  This is the same basic story – into the blender and blend until smooth – 
 
1 can chickpeas (Garbanzo beans)
¼ cup tahini (ground sesame seeds)
¼ cup lemon juice
2 Tbs. Olive oil
1 to 2 cloves of garlic
½ to 1 tsp. sea salt
a little water if needed to get the consistency you want
 
Again, this is a basic recipe to which you add various spices to suite your palate, such as cumin, red pepper, clove, etc…
And the last classic chip dip that is ever so healthy is good old guacamole.  How can you go wrong with fresh avocado, lemon juice, salt, and fresh tomato?  
 
Cut your root vegetables in advance so they can be nicely chilled in the fridge and ready to use when the need for crunch hits you.  The healthy dips keep nicely in the fridge. Also so you can always have chips and dip on the spur of the moment with the same convenience as the bagged toxic bits of heaven currently sold at the supermarket. 
 
So the next time the urge to crunch hits you, go for the cold crunch and supercharge the health of your snacking.
 
Take care,
 
David     
    
 
    ---------------------------------------------------------
Re: Ellen
We brought Ellen home Thursday afternoon.  We had a bit of a scare the day before she left when her temperature shot up to 102 degrees and her speech became incoherent.  Lab work did not find an infection so they don't know why the fever happened.  But she was fine Thursday and is now getting to face the challenge of being at home without the protection of nurses and staff available to cover your every need.  She will be starting with therapists coming to the house initially for the next phase of her recovery.  She asked me to thank everyone for all the prayers and lovely cards and flowers.  It has been overwhelming how many people have expressed their concern and care for her.
    ---------------------------------------------------------
 
 
         Colloidal  
           Silver
 
The flu and cold season is upon us and the best remedy I know is a couple ounces of colloidal silver every hour till it dissipates.  Usually for me that is about four hours.  We have new 8 ounce bottles of colloidal silver in the office for only $8 - a tiny fraction of the price elsewhere.  Plus refills are only $4.  Or if you have a  large crew to care for we have a limited number of one gallon containers for only $30.
  Pick some up today.
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
H
 
On the Wire
Vitamin K2 proven for heart health

Vitamin K2 has been largely ignored by the health community, yet it is vital for proper blood clotting and for the formation of bone strength.  Now a new study solidly establishes that K2 is also important for the health of your arteries.  A three year study has shown that K2 improves the elasticity of the arteries.

Vitamin K2

 
_____________________________________________    
 
"Life expectancy would grow by leaps and bounds if green vegetables smelled as good as bacon."

- Doug Larson     
              __________________________________
 
Curcumin found to improve cholesterol levels
 
The nutrient curcumin found in turmeric has been found to slash LDL cholesterol and triglyceride levels in patients with metabolic syndrome while raising their good HDL cholesterol levels.  This fits well with my belief that high cholesterol levels are really just a sign of systemic inflammation, as curcumin primarily fights inflammation on a cellular level.  The levels of curcumin in the study were fairly high - about equal to using 2 of my anti-inflammatory chocolate bars per day or 20 capsules of turmeric powder. 

Curcumin
 


"I don't need the fillers, additives, excessive amounts of sugars, fats, salts and other measures taken to taint the natural goodness of real food."

-Mark Hyman 

            _______________________________
 
Ultrasound to remove Alzheimer’s

A new hope for Alzheimer's has been found that does not use any drugs or have any side effects that they know of - Ultrasound.  Researchers have discovered that using a scanning ultrasound on rats brains stimulates the brain to clean out the protein tangles that cause Alzheimer's.  Their next step is to make a bigger ultrasound to try on sheep brains
, and then finally on human brains in about 2 years.

Ultrasound

 
 
 
"I live by the philosophy that beauty starts from within, and I make a conscious effort to fill my body with nutrients through the food I eat."

- Miranda Kerr   
 
________________________________________________
 
Our address is  9725 Fair Oaks Blvd.
 
Finding the new location is very easy.  Coming from highway 50 up Sunrise Blvd, you turn left and go up a block.  We are on the right hand side - the building just past the Subway Sandwich shop.  If you are coming down Sunrise from the Mall area then just turn right on Fair Oaks Blvd and up a block on the right.
 
If you are coming from the Roseville area you could come down Sunrise Blvd, but that is a long trek.  It is probably shorter time wise to come down Auburn Blvd - San Juan Ave like you have been for the Sunset office, but instead of turning left at Sunset, keep going straight 3 more lights to Fair Oaks Blvd and turn left.  Go down 2 lights to New York Ave, go through the intersection, and immediately turn into the turn lane once the center divider ends.  We are on the left.
 
   
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visit http://www.fairoakshealth.com"

 
 
 
 
 
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About Dr. DeLapp
 
Dr. DeLapp has been a philosopher, non-force Chiropractor, medical intuitive, and health innovator for over 30 years.  He began experimenting with  medical intuition in 1972 while studying physics at UC Davis.  In addition to physics he designed and completed an individual major in the philosophy and psychology of education.  Shortly after he choose to pursue a career in the only truly health oriented profession available at that time, Chiropractic.  He graduated with honors in 1981 with his doctorate and opened a private practice. 
Since that time he has continued his research into the effects of consciousness and learning on health. 
He developed the Biomagnetic Retraining system for correcting movement abnormalities. 
Since 1991 he has focused on developing a powerful system for uncovering and assisting the mind-body connection in health and personal growth.  The in-depth coaching, guided by the subconscious direction from the body, is called Heartflow and the simpler mind-body retraining for health and unfoldment he has named Gracework.  Both are available at Fair Oaks Health.
 

Fair Oaks Healing
& Arts Center
Staff


 


Dr David DeLapp DC
Chiropractor

Ellen Flowers FGM
Spiritual Life Coach
Energetic Nutritionist
Health Care Coordinator

Susan Richardson
Office Manager
Front Desk


 

Sherry Herrera
Front Desk Person
 
 

 
 
Susan McDonald
 
Somatic Therapies
 
 
Catherine Cummings
 
 
Jin Shin Jitsu
 
 
Lorena Morales
 
 
Massage Practitioner
 
 
 
 
 
 
 Is there a sweet that is not poisonous?  Yes!


 Dr Dave Supersweet Drops and 2X Sugar Substitute
 
New Products
 
Coconut Milk
 
 
 
Avocado Oil
 




  
 
     

 

 


 

Fair Oaks Holistic Health
9725 Fair Oaks Blvd. Suite A, Fair Oaks, CA 95628, USA
916-966-4714