Showing posts with label THRIVE DIET. Show all posts
Showing posts with label THRIVE DIET. Show all posts
Thursday, June 24, 2010
Sweet Potato Chips
One of the recipes that I've made several times now and everyone loves, is the recipe for Sweet Potato Chips. It is a modified version of The Thrive Diet's Garlic Oregano Yam Oven Fries. These chips were gone so fast today, that I didn't even get a photo. Basically, they are VERY simple. Preheat your oven to 300 degrees. You take a sweet potato and slice it VERY thin (chip size) after peeling. Rub coconut oil on the bottom of your baking sheet, then place the thin slices on the sheet. Bake for thirty minutes then continue to check the chips until they are as crisp as you like them. My batch today was finished in 40 minutes. If you want to spice them up then you can add the ingredients in the Thrive Diet which include basil, oregano, garlic, and pumpkin seeds. Honestly, I love them just the way they are... crisp, sweet, and delicious.
Sunday, June 20, 2010
Spicy Sun-Dried Tomato Marinara Sauce and Chili Kidney Bean Pizza
This recipe has great flavor ( from Brazier's Thrive diet) which is entitled “Chili Kidney Bean Pizza”; always keep in mind that Brazier says his pizzas are in shape only, not necessarily standard-type pizza. I will definitely make it again! When I do make this again, I will put it in a casserole pan and not on a pizza pan. The reason is that the flavor is fabulous (I'm sure it is the Marinara Sauce), but the brown rice is not sturdy enough for a standard-type crust and it was impossible for me to cut the pizza in the normal way and hand out slices. It broke apart. The only other option would be to have an extra large pizza serving utensil. We all agreed that the taste was excellent but the pizza pan did not work. Next time, casserole dish and the recipe will be a complete success. Here is the recipe:
Soak the sun-dried tomatoes in the water for 20 minutes.
Chili Kidney Bean Pizza
1 ½ cups cooked brown rice
1 ½ cups kidney beans (I used white)
¼ cup coconut oil
1 TBS chili powder
1 tsp chili flakes
sea salt to taste (I used 1/8 of a tsp)
Using a food processor, blend up all crust ingredients and press into a pan (casserole dish preferred)
Spicy Sun-Dried Tomato Marinara Sauce (EXCELLENT!)
1 cup sun-dried tomatoes
1 clove fresh garlic
1 cup chopped fresh tomatoes
1 cup water
½ cup grated cucumber
3 TBS hemp oil
1 TBS balsamic vinegar
1 tsp oregano
1 tsp rosemary
¼ tsp thyme
Sea salt to taste (1/8 tsp)
Soak the sun-dried tomatoes in the water for 20 minutes.
In a food processor, process all ingredients until smooth.
Top pizza with sauce or you can use it for any other recipe that asks for Marinara Sauce.
Cook at 300 degrees for 45 minutes. Brazier says that by cooking at 300 degrees or less, you retain all of the original nutrients from your food. He also states that through his research, he believes you should either eat your food raw or never cook it higher than 300 degrees.
Wednesday, June 16, 2010
Thrive's Almond Flaxseed Burgers
Tonight, I made Thrive's Almond Flaxseed Burgers.
The photo to the left is the burgers after being cooked at 300 degrees for 35 minutes. The option was to eat them raw or cook them at a low temperature. For me, eating raw garlic bothers my stomach so I preferred to cook the burgers. I thought they were very good raw, except for the overwhelming garlic taste. When I make them again, I'll leave out the garlic and eat them raw. I did enjoy them cooked and they reminded me of the crust on the Sun-dried Tomato Pizza that I made last night. I read on another blog that a couple made the burgers and commented on how good they were but said they were VERY filling. The recipe was to make two burgers; I made the ingredients into three burgers to decrease the size per serving.
Here is the recipe:
Almond Flaxseed Burgers
2 cloves garlic (I used one)
1 cup raw almonds
1/2 cup ground flaxseed (I ground the whole flaxseed in a coffee grinder.)
2 TBS balsamic vinegar
2 TBS coconut oil
Sea salt to taste (I added 1/8 of a tsp)
Here is the photo of the burgers prior to cooking:
Brazier suggests topping with Black Bean Salsa and putting them in hamburger buns. I ate them without any toppings since this was my first experience at this recipe.
I personally liked them. I just would not call them a burger; just burger shaped. :-)
The photo to the left is the burgers after being cooked at 300 degrees for 35 minutes. The option was to eat them raw or cook them at a low temperature. For me, eating raw garlic bothers my stomach so I preferred to cook the burgers. I thought they were very good raw, except for the overwhelming garlic taste. When I make them again, I'll leave out the garlic and eat them raw. I did enjoy them cooked and they reminded me of the crust on the Sun-dried Tomato Pizza that I made last night. I read on another blog that a couple made the burgers and commented on how good they were but said they were VERY filling. The recipe was to make two burgers; I made the ingredients into three burgers to decrease the size per serving.
Here is the recipe:
Almond Flaxseed Burgers
2 cloves garlic (I used one)
1 cup raw almonds
1/2 cup ground flaxseed (I ground the whole flaxseed in a coffee grinder.)
2 TBS balsamic vinegar
2 TBS coconut oil
Sea salt to taste (I added 1/8 of a tsp)
Here is the photo of the burgers prior to cooking:
Brazier suggests topping with Black Bean Salsa and putting them in hamburger buns. I ate them without any toppings since this was my first experience at this recipe.
I personally liked them. I just would not call them a burger; just burger shaped. :-)
Labels:
Brendan Brazier,
burgers,
THRIVE DIET,
vegan,
vegan recipe
Tuesday, June 15, 2010
Dinner: Thrive Diet Style
Tonight, we made a few new items from the Thrive Diet. The first item was Sweet Potato Oven Fries, using the recipe from the book entitled: Garlic Oregano Yam Oven Fries. I wanted to try these fries without the added spices first, using only the coconut oil. All of Brendan Brazier's recipes are either raw or cooked at 300 degrees or less. For that reason, if you are cooking, you must allow extended time for cooking as lower temperatures take a bit longer than you may be used to. Our variation was to shred the sweet potatoes then spread a little coconut oil into the bottom of the baking pan. Oven was preheated to 300 degrees. We sprinkled the shredded sweet potatoes into the pan and cooked them for 35 minutes. They were delicious.
The reason I decided to make the oven fries was because I first wanted to make the Sweet Potato Sesame Pizza for dinner. It was also cooked at the same time in the 300 degree oven. The pizza has a crust which you make in the food processor.
Crust:
1 cup of ground sesame seeds
1 cup of grated sweet potato
1/2 cup chickpea flour
1/4 cup coconut or hemp oil
1 TBS garlic
1 tsp dried basil
and sea salt to taste
Topping:
The topping was excellent. It was his Spicy Sun-Dried Tomato Marinara Sauce. 1 cup sun-dried tomatoes
1 clove garlic
1 cup chopped tomatoes
1 cup water
1/2 cup grated cucumber
(I added 1/2 cup nutritional yeast for the cream-textured sauce)
3 TBS hemp oil
1 tsp balsamic vinegar
1 tsp oregano
1/4 tsp thyme
Sea salt to taste
Soak the sun-dried tomatoes in the water for 20 minutes. Retain the water. In the food processor press all of the ingredients, including the sun-dried tomatoes water, until desired consistency is reached. Simmer for ten minutes. Add to top of pizza crust.
(In my photo of the pizza, you will see that I did not blend the toppings. I thought it was great!)
Brazier explains that the term "pizza" is a loose one but it looks similar. I thought it was very good. I forgot the sea salt but will remember it next time. I made half the recipe and I cut it into four quarters.
The reason I decided to make the oven fries was because I first wanted to make the Sweet Potato Sesame Pizza for dinner. It was also cooked at the same time in the 300 degree oven. The pizza has a crust which you make in the food processor.
Crust:
1 cup of ground sesame seeds
1 cup of grated sweet potato
1/2 cup chickpea flour
1/4 cup coconut or hemp oil
1 TBS garlic
1 tsp dried basil
and sea salt to taste
Topping:
The topping was excellent. It was his Spicy Sun-Dried Tomato Marinara Sauce. 1 cup sun-dried tomatoes
1 clove garlic
1 cup chopped tomatoes
1 cup water
1/2 cup grated cucumber
(I added 1/2 cup nutritional yeast for the cream-textured sauce)
3 TBS hemp oil
1 tsp balsamic vinegar
1 tsp oregano
1/4 tsp thyme
Sea salt to taste
Soak the sun-dried tomatoes in the water for 20 minutes. Retain the water. In the food processor press all of the ingredients, including the sun-dried tomatoes water, until desired consistency is reached. Simmer for ten minutes. Add to top of pizza crust.
(In my photo of the pizza, you will see that I did not blend the toppings. I thought it was great!)
Brazier explains that the term "pizza" is a loose one but it looks similar. I thought it was very good. I forgot the sea salt but will remember it next time. I made half the recipe and I cut it into four quarters.
Labels:
Brendan Brazier,
pizza,
THRIVE DIET,
vegan,
vegan recipe
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