Improving Institutional Cooking

I had the opportunity to visit a cutting edge rehab facility in Metrowest this week, and was very impressed with their level of organization, cleanliness, and technology for rehabbing patients.

Unfortunately, like most others, their menu leaves much to be desired. They were proud of their prime rib, and the fact that they do not serve fried food. There is more to eating well than showing you have a budget, and the fallacy that fried foods are unhealthful is really getting on my nerves.

Top 10 ideas for institutional kitchens, to improve health, happiness and longevity of their clients:

  1. Serve boiled or pressure-cooked brown rice every day, cooked with sea salt or kombu. This improves digestion, cognition, and has more protein than you think. It’s easy to make it different every time with so many varieties and additives. But it needs to be chewed well. Supplement with boiled millet, barley, quinoa, oats and buckwheat, as well as whole grain noodles, and sourdough bread.
  2. Eliminate all ground beef and hot dogs, as well as any meats with nitrates, nitrites, MSG, artificial colors and flavors, etc.
  3. Introduce fried vegetables (deep-fried also), especially onions, zucchini, sweet potato, carrot, mushrooms, and lotus root. They are delicious, relaxing, and helpful for joints in healing. Rather than adding salt or using ketchup, dip in long-brewed soy sauce, or mustard. Limit portions, and have a real (sea salt) pickle afterwards.
  4. Serve blanched and pressed salads with broccoli, cauliflower, chinese cabbage, carrots, scallions, cucumber, radish, etc. Blanching means boiling for under thirty seconds, then spreading out to cool fast. This activates nutrients and improves digestion and adsorption. Pressed salads can be done by hand or with a heavy weight, with or without sea salt. Same benefits.
  5. Reduce barbecued, broiled and baked animal foods such as beef, pork, poultry, fish or cheese, especially in the Summer. These meals add great stress and dry out the body, and the enormous energy of these meals is unnecessary for hospital patients, and can cause violence in a prison setting.
  6. Do not serve any diet products, as the sugar replacements cause obesity, toxicity and cancer. If soda is desired, make your own or buy natural syrup. Use less soft drinks including fruit juices, and reduce coffee and tea. Main beverages should be twig tea, green tea and water.
  7. Eliminate or greatly reduce milk, ice cream, cheese and other dairy products, as they cause osteoporosis, cancer, obesity, infections, allergies and skin problems.
  8. Cook fruit in the winter, and reduce spinach, eggplant, tomatoes, potatoes and peppers in the winter, making sure to cook them well. These “nightshades” cause acidosis in the body, leading to osteoporosis, arthritis and other diseases.
  9. Replace table salt with sea salt, use agave nectar and rice syrup instead of sugar and corn syrup, and refrain from salting food after cooking.
  10. Use more sea vegetables, fermented foods such as miso and tempeh, shiitake mushrooms, legumes, nuts and seeds.

In general, eating more fresh, organic, plant-based foods that are well cooked (more raw in summer), and de-emphasising fat, salt, sugar and chemicals, will lead to faster and more complete healing, and more happiness, for patients, inmates and staff.

I believe this can be done without an increase in food costs over the long term.

My Morning Health Routine

When you wake up, are you ON right away?

Life can be more enjoyable, and your health stronger, if you spend :15 to :30 each morning in your body.

This can be meditation, yoga, stretching, affirmations, a walk, or a natural foods breakfast, or, all of the above!

Please view my video to see part of my morning routine…

Ate Dairy? Make Miso Soup Quick For No Sniffles and No Flu

Most of us cannot resist cheese. There are a million reasons not to eat it, but let’s not go there right now.

If you ate cheese (or some other dairy product), you are going to test your body’s immune system, as there are millions of harmful bacteria in there that all want to live.

What I love about Macrobiotics is, nobody judges you for being free and eating widely. But, there are ways to deal with it, such as…

1. Umeboshi Plums for ice cream, milk chocolate, etc.

2. Grated daikon radish for meat

and the best-tasting of all, Miso Soup, which is better than antibiotics, for what ails you.

People say it takes too long to make soup, but, miso soup takes less than five minutes, and it’s good for a couple of days. You can also have it for breakfast, lunch or dinner.

Check out my video on YouTube…

Presence For My Wife’s Birthday

Today my Dear Carol turns 39 again. I am committed to serving her today, which includes putting in hours to increase my earnings, as well as making her domestic life easier and being a great listener. Special plans include a canoe ride on Dudley Pond and Japanese food for dinner.

Tomorrow she goes back to being my videographer!

Enjoy the day!

 

Top 10 List: Why Be Vegan (aka Plant-Based; Baby Steps Okay)

  • 10. Reduced Body Odor
  • 9. Lower Carbon Footprint
  • 8. Less Animal Suffering
  • 7. Cleaner Air, Water, Soil
  • 6. Better Karma
  • 5. Effortless Weight Loss
  • 4. Detoxify From Pesticides, Antibiotics, etc.
  • 3. Be More Peaceful
  • 2. Save Money

1. Be Popular Like These People…

The Nose Trick: First of Many Videos Posted On YouTube

I have about 40 ideas for short videos with Ideas For Natural Living, the first one is now done. Thanks to Ari for jumping on camera, and to Carol for filming. Enjoy!

Try The Nose Trick, when you wake up, if you are congested, feel a cold coming on, or had dairy foods or meat or sugar yesterday and want to make sure you stay healthy. Takes about two minutes, and it gets easier each time you do it.

David L. Kagan, M.B.A.
America’s Health Coach

Healing With David

 

 

 

Buy Health Yourself Book, Ideas For Healthy Living Placemat

For 30 years I’ve studied natural health, and I finally put out my first book. In it, I share some of my life experience, and give advice to anyone how they can become healthier in just 28 days.

The journey to better health is unique for all of us, because we’ve had unique diets, lifestyles, and traumas, and our goals are individual. I guarantee you will learn valuable tips from this book, or I will buy it back from you.

I also offer a kitchen placemat with diet and lifestyle tips and many resources. When you buy these products, you support my work to improve the lives of people and animals on this planet. Thank You!

Purchase Info

David L. Kagan, M.B.A.
America’s Health Coach

Healing With David

Breakfast of Champions (of Health, Peace and Longevity)

Like you, I enjoyed some fun foods over the weekend, including chocolate, fruit, and bread. But Monday morning, and the start of a new month, helps motivate me to do better for my body.

Today’s breakfast was hot cereal with oat groats, carrots and onion, cooked with sea salt, and sautéed kale stems and leaves, radish and scallions, with sesame oil and shoyu. Very beautiful, satisfying, and health-building.

At 10am I will enjoy a cup of hot Sweet Vegetable Tea, then lunch of brown rice, steamed pole beans, leftover white beans, and a pickle.

When I feel good, it’s easier for me to do good.

Healing Is Fun

Summer is fun. We’ve gone to the beach, seen shows, eaten seafood, swam at a friend’s pool, been to the Cape, gone to camp, taken moonlit strolls and more, and the summer is only half over!

But there is also stress, from losses, to worrying about money, to dealing with responsibilities having to do with kids, owning a house, two cars, etc. Oh yeah, and birthdays!  All of these, even the fun, takes a toll on our body.

I get symptoms from time to time, (eg. my right ear), which are eased when I renew my commitment to eat a more balanced diet, and get some (holistic) treatment. While adhering to a stricter diet and going to healers is time-consuming, it actually solves the problem, vs. tests/drugs/surgeries.

I consider natural healing one of the miracles of life, and I enjoy learning about it and experiencing it. If you are in need of healing, I urge you to look into macrobiotics, or take baby steps that you know will start the healing process. If I can support you, I’m happy to.

David L. Kagan, M.B.A., America’s Health Coach

Healing With David

Things Sometimes Happen For a Reason

The other day, I had a door close for a work opportunity, possibly temporarily. I felt a moment of disappointment, as I had built up meaning associated with moving through that door. But I also knew there had to be a good reason.

Yesterday, it was revealed to me. I picked up a new client, who I otherwise would not have been open to, and it’s someone who can help me get to the next level in my practice. All well that ends well.

Today I will spend some time reorganizing and planning for this new direction, and I anticipate great things.

What are you up to this week?