Yoga for Low Back Pain
- At September 28, 2017
- By Katherine
- In Articles, News
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“At least 80% of adults experience low back pain at some point in their lifetime… In a large survey, more than a quarter of adults experienced low back pain in the past 3 months,” according to the National Institutes of Health’s National Institute of Neurological Disorders and Stroke (NINDS).
“Recent studies in people with chronic low back pain suggest that a carefully adapted set of yoga poses may help reduce pain and improve function (the ability to walk and move). Studies also suggest that practicing yoga (as well as other forms of regular exercise) might have other health benefits such as reducing heart rate and blood pressure, and may also help relieve anxiety and depression,” according to a NCCIH article.
Yoga, meaning “unity” in Sanskrit, “unites a mind and body practice,” according to a National Institutes of Health National Center for Complementary and Integrated Health (NCCIH)
Yoga is believed to have originated in the 5th or 6th centuries BCE in India. But it didn’t become popular in the west until the 20th Century. Just twenty years ago, if you practiced yoga, you may have been skeptically regarded as a “hippie” or “a little too new age.” But today, there seems to be a yoga studio on every corner. In fact, it’s become so mainstream, that my physical therapist recommended yoga to me for healing from my particular knee and back surgeries of last year (I’ve been a practicioner for at least ten years), though I adapt poses to my individual needs, per her instructions (and which you should do per your doctor’s instructions).
I recommend yoga or any other mindfulness meditation practices for my clients when changing their lifestyle habits. It is a simple yet powerful tool that can help you transform your health and your life. The mindfulness you can experience with yoga (or other forms of meditation) can help you become more focused and clear, for concentration to be more sustained. It can help you handle emotional situations more effectively by improving decision making and reducing impulsivity, as I relate in my article, “Mindfulness in Eating and Living,” and I describe in my book, “Diet Simple.”
A Natural Remedy for Coughing
- At September 26, 2017
- By Katherine
- In News, Recipes
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I don’t know about you, but I’ve noticed a lot of sniffles and coughing going on this season (and unfortunately, that includes me!). Whether it’s from an allergy, a cold, an upper respiratory tract infection, post nasal drip, or gastroesophageal reflux disease (GERD), there’s an age-old remedy for coughing that has been recently proven by science to be effective. The ingredient is easily available, and is often a staple in your own kitchen.
What is it? Honey. “An 8,000 year old cave painting in Spain depicts honey harvesting, and we know it’s been used for food, medicine, and more by cultures all over the world since,” according to Ullman’s Encyclopedia of Industrial Chemistry.
“Coughing is a protective reflex action triggered by irritation or obstruction of the airwaves,” according to this study in Pediatric Reports. “There is a high prevalance in children and it impacts a child’s ability to sleep, play and eat. It is the largest single cause of primary care doctor visits.”
Honey was found to be more effective than dextromethorphan, found in common over-the-counter cough medicines, according to this study reported in Archives of Pediatric Adolescent Medicine. In fact, these results found the medicine was no better than the placebo.
In another study, coughing was reduced and sleep was improved in 2-year-olds with upper respiratory tract infections when they were given 2 teaspoons of honey before bedtime. In the study, honey was as effective as dextromethorphan, according to the Mayo Clinic.
A similar conclusion was found in a review of studies published in Cochrane Database Systematic Reviews, when children aged 1 to 18 were tested.
The World Health Organization identifies honey as a potential treatment for cough.
Honey is an especially good potential remedy for children, as it could be a natural way to avoid overuse of drugs like antibiotics (but check with your doctor first!).
Honey Cough Syrup
1-1/2 Tablespoons Zest of 2 Lemons
1/4 Cup Peeled, Sliced Ginger or 1/2 teaspoon of Ground Ginger
1 Cup Water
1 Cup Honey
1/2 Cup Lemon Juice
In a small saucepan combine lemon zest, sliced ginger ad 1 cup of water. Bring mixture to a boil and simmer for 5 minutes. Then strain into a heat-proof measuring cup. Rinse the saucep and and pour in 1 cup of honey. On low heat, warm the honey but don’t allow it to boil. Add the strained lemon ginger water and the lemon juice. Stir the mixture until it combines to form a thick syrup. Pour into a clean jar with a lid. This can be refrigerated for up to 2 months.
* Recipe by the National Honey Board
The Perfect Labor Day Recipe: Katherine’s Salsa Fresca with Watermelon
- At September 01, 2017
- By Katherine
- In News, Recipes
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Katherine’s Spicy Salsa Fresca with Watermelon from “Diet Simple Farm to Table Recipes: 50 New Reasons to Cook in Seasons!”
Katherine’s Spicy Fresh Salsa with Watermelon
www.KatherineTallmadge.com
excerpted from “Diet Simple Farm to Table Recipes: 50 New Reasons to Cook in Season!” ($4.95)
Nothing could be a more perfect Labor Day recipe. Featuring the best fruit of the season! It contains all the flavors: sweet, savory, spicy, and salty. I usually use vine-ripe tomatoes for my fresh salsa, excerpted from my book, Diet Simple. But watermelon is a surprising and exotically delicious substitute for all the tomatoes, or just half of them – as in this version. Serve this salsa with grilled salmon, chicken or beef… even tortilla chips… whatever you may traditionally use salsa with.
22 servings
Ingredients:
1 lb vine-ripe, fresh tomatoes, coarsely chopped (start with about 1-1/2 lbs)
1 lb chopped watermelon, seeds removed
1 large candy onion, peeled and chopped (about ½ pound)
3 – 4 jalapeno peppers (1 – 2 ounces), to taste
¼ cup chopped fresh cilantro
½ tsp salt, or to taste
freshly ground pepper, to taste
3 – 4 Tbsp fresh lime juice (1 – 2 limes), optional, or vinegar if you wish for the salsa to last longer in your refrigerator
Add the onion to the tomatoes and watermelon. Finely chop 2 of the jalapeno peppers to start with. Taste. If you desire more heat, add 1 – 2 more jalapenos. Mix in the cilantro. Add the salt and pepper, depending on your taste. Mix in the lime juice, if you wish.
How to Pick the Best Cantaloupe and Delight Your Friends!
- At August 27, 2017
- By Katherine
- In Articles, News
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I’m not exaggerating! I think I’ve become the most popular person in the area and I credit it to a new variety of cantaloupe called Flavorburst. I buy them at the Dupont Circle Farmers Market on Sundays from Spring Valley Orchard and Farm in West Virginia. Perfectly sweet, juicy, and velvety in texture. Because of their thin skin, they pack more meat than a huge cantaloupe, and are only $2.00 each. I’ve shared them with neighbors, friends, colleagues, clients, and community organizations.
In fact, I get so many orders for them, I had to buy 20 last week (no one wants to get up early enough on a Sunday morning!). There are still 6 left on my windowsill from a week ago because I’ve perfected how to choose enough to last almost two weeks: ripe, medium ripe and unripe. This is how: An unripe Flavorburst Cantaloupe has a small, green circle at the top. Keep these on your windowsill or kitchen counter until their ripe.
A ripe cantaloupe, on the other hand, develops a larger, yellower circle, with tiny cracks, and smells cantaloupe-y. Slice it, serve and share it immediately, or place it in an airtight baggie in the refrigerator for a couple of days.
True Food: A Truly Delicious Experience for Healthy Foodies
- At August 22, 2017
- By Katherine
- In Articles, News
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I encourage my clients to explore new and delicous ways of enjoying food. In fact, in my weight loss or lifestyle transformation programs, all favorite food is included. Why? Because “taste” will always be the primary reason we humans are willing to eat something. Good tasting food kept us alive during evolution. Anything that tasted bad might have killed us! We still have that instinct today.
So, if a “diet” or “healthy” dish you’re eating isn’t delicious, or it’s something with which you’re getting bored, you won’t stick with your healthy lifestyle. Eating food that you love is the only sustainable way to live.
This brings me to my client, Noah Arber’s, story, as she told it to me …
“Katherine! I had an incredible dining experience at True Food Kitchen in downtown Bethesda, Maryland – and many other locations – that I think your other clients might want to know about. I believe this restaurant is unique, from the food they serve, to the modern and trendy decor. They not only serve delicious and appealing food, but every item on their menu is made using colorful, fresh, and healthy ingredients. It was so enjoyable, I went back the next day. Not only was there a delicious variety to choose from, but I felt good after my meal, knowing I had put fresh, non-fatty or processed ingredients into my body. Even after trying their fruity sangria and their flourless chocolate cake, I was still down half a pound the next morning!
The first time there, my friend and I started our meal with the “Torched Avocado,” with cucumber noodles, mushrooms, snap peas, radishes, sesame, and turmeric ponzu. Next was the “Shiitake Lettuce Cups,” with tofu, jicama, sambal, thai basil, and cachew. These dishes were beautifully presented and bursting with flavors I had never tasted before – not to mention I was eating fresh, healthy ingredients.
For our entrees, we enjoyed “The Ancient Grains Bowl” with miso glazed sweet potato, turmeric, charred onion, snow peas, grilled portobello, avocado and hemp seeds. The following day, we tried the “Spaghetti Squash Casserole,” with caramerlized onion and fresh mozzarella, and the “T.L.T. Sandwich,” on multigrain toast with smoked tempeh, butter lettuce, tomato, avocado, and vegan mayonnaise. Our side was “Roasted Sweet Potato and Kale Salad.”
Needless to say, I enjoyed all the foods I tried. They were some of the most delectable dishes I’ve experienced in the D.C. food scene. I ordered their True Food cookbook, so I can make the recipes at home. I would definitely recommend you tell your friends, family, and especially your clients about it. It was truly a healthy, and most importantly, a deliciously indulgent experience. Who says you can’t eat healthfully and enjoy yourself too?”
Afternoon Delight! Swedish Waffles, Vanilla Bean Yogurt and Fresh Summertime Peaches
- At August 11, 2017
- By Katherine
- In News, Recipes
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When I was growing up, my Swedish mother would make crepes for dinner when my father was away traveling. She’d indulge us (and herself) with some of her simple and delicious treats, one of which was crepes, topped with butter, confectioners’ powdered sugar, whipping cream, and lingonberries (a berry similar to a cranberry but sweeter and smaller). Actually, it was more like a dessert for dinner! Those were the days…
Today, I use this recipe using skim or 1% milk, and the crepe-thin, crispy, eggy waffles are topped with vanilla bean greek yogurt and fresh fruit – whatever’s in season. This spring, it was local Farmers Market strawberries. This time of year, sweet and juicy peaches. Yummy!
I’ve been treating my friends to waffle parties recently. Sometimes they’re a treat for breakfast, sometimes lunch, and sometimes dessert, topped with gelato… They’re loving it! So am I…
Katherine’s Summertime Peach Crisp with Roasted Nuts, Dried Fruit & Ginger
- At August 10, 2017
- By Katherine
- In News, Recipes
0
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Katherine’s Summertime Peach Crisp with Roasted Nuts, Dried Fruit & Ginger (Photo by Alison Eaves, Washingtonian Magazine)
Katherine’s Summer Peach Crisp with Roasted Nuts, Dried Fruit & Ginger
By Katherine Tallmadge, M.A., R.D.
excerpted from “Diet Simple Farm to Table Recipes: 50 New Reasons to Cook in Season!” ($4.95)
Serves 12
Filling:
½ Cup Pure Maple Syrup
½ Cup Raisins, Dried Cranberries, or a mix of both
2 Tablespoons Fresh Squeezed Lemon Juice
1 teaspoon Minced Candied or Crystalized Ginger, to taste
2 Tablespoons All-Purpose Flour
3 pounds Seasonal, Ripe Peaches, peeled and thinly sliced
Topping:
1-1/2 Cups Old Fashioned Rolled Oats
½ Cup Chopped Walnuts, Pecans, Hazelnuts, any favorite Nut – or a mixture**
½ Cup Brown Sugar
1/3 Cup Whole Wheat Flour*
½ teaspoon Ground Cinnamon
1/3 Cup Walnut Oil, any Nut Oil,** or Canola Oil
Preheat oven to 350 degrees F.
Prepare filling: In a large bowl, mix the maple syrup, dried fruit, lemon juice, ginger, and flour. Add the peaches and mix well. Pour into a 9-by-13-inch baking dish.
Prepare Topping: Mix the oats, nuts, brown sugar, whole wheat flour, and cinnamon. Add the oil and mix until the topping is moist. Pour over the filling in the baking dish.
Bake for 45 to 50 minutes or until the apples are tender and the crumble is golden brown. Let stand for 10 minutes until serving
300 calories per serving.
“Katherine’s Summer Peach Crisp with Nuts, Dried Fruits, and Ginger” is adapted from a recipe in “Eating Well” Magazine.
*A whole grain – whole oats and whole wheat flour – has three parts: bran, germ and endosperm. The bran and germ contain fiber, Vitamin E, B vitamins (thiamin, niacin, riboflavin and pantothenic acid) minerals (calcium, magnesium, potassium, phosphorous, sodium, selenium and iron), protein, essential oils, antioxidants and phytochemicals (plant substances that may protect health). The endosperm contains mostly starch with a little protein and very few nutrients. When a grain is refined, turning whole wheat flour into white flour or brown rice into white rice, only the nutrient-poor endosperm is left. The heart-healthy, cancer-fighting riches found in the bran and germ are lost. Learn more about whole grains…
**Nuts – Every time a new study comes out about nuts – any nut – it’s positive news. Nut eaters around the world have fewer heart attacks, and we know that most of the protective nutrients are in the oil of the nut. While you already know each nut has a different look and flavor, each nut also has its own unique nutritional characteristics. For instance, almonds are the highest in protein and Vitamin E, and the lowest in artery-clogging saturated fat. Walnuts are the only nut with omega-3-fatty acids. Pecans have the highest antioxidant content. Pistachios contain lutein, a compound which may significantly improve eye health. ALL nuts are good for you. My favorite: Italian Hazelnuts!
Sweet Summertime Melon Chunks with Crumbled Feta and Fresh Mint
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Sweet Summertime Melon Chunks with Crumbled Feta and Fresh Mint (from “Diet Simple Farm to Table Recipes”)
Excerpted from “Diet Simple Farm to Table Recipes: 50 New Reasons to Cook in Season!“
It’s melon season and a vast number of varieties are now available, and will be for quite a while. These days melons come in an amazing array of colors, shapes, textures, and flavors. Use a combination of any melons for this very simple, yet elegant recipe. This is an unusual combination of flavors and textures, and a delight on the palate. Use any kind of melon that happens to be in season.
Serves 8
2 pounds melon chunks (about 1 small cantaloupe or seedless watermelon)
½ pound Feta Cheese or other similar cheese
8 small mint leaves, Chiffonade (Basil will also work)
Combine ingredients in a large bowl and serve!
I’m In Tomato Heaven Recipe! Greek Salad with Heirloom Tomatoes
I’m in tomato heaven! Tomatoes are my favorite vegetable (maybe because they’re actually a fruit!). It all started with my Grandmother. She would plant dozens – or it seemed like dozens to a child – of tomato plants every year in her huge vegetable garden. We’d pick them ripe from the vine, and eat them while still warm from the summer sun. I’ll never forget how soft, juicy, and red throughout they were. I feel so lucky that today, we have our Farmers Markets growing these kinds of spectacular specimens… of all shapes, sizes, colors, textures, and flavors!
Heirloom tomatoes are old varieties of tomatoes which have been passed down through generations. They are tastier, but more delicate, because they’re bred to be picked and eaten right away – they’re not bred to travel (as many of the tomatoes in the grocery store may be). Heirloom varieties have natural resistance to pests, disease and are better able to tolerate local conditions without too much extra energy, pesticides or water. Locally, organically produced food saves water, energy and encourages a region’s unique varieties of fruits and vegetables.
Greek Salad with Heirloom Tomatoes
excerpted from “Diet Simple Farm to Table Recipes: 50 New Reasons to Cook in Season!” by ME (only $4.95)
Serves 8
Ingredients:
Vinaigrette:
2 Tablespoons Freshly Harvested Extra Virgin Olive Oil
2 Tablespoons Freshly Squeezed Lemon Juice (1 Lemon)
1 Tablespoon Chopped Fresh Oregano or Basil (or 1 tsp dried)
1 Clove Garlic, Minced (optional)
Salt and Pepper to Taste (Salt is not necessary with the cheese and olives)
Vegetables:
2 cucumbers, peeled, seeded and sliced into a half-moon shape
1 onion, peeled and chopped coarsely
1 medium yellow, purple or green bell pepper, cored, seeded, chopped into large bite-size pieces
1 cup pitted Kalamata or other Greek Olives
4 Heirloom Tomatoes, quartered, and cut into large, bite-size pieces (or any vine-ripe tomatoes)
4 ounces Feta or Goat Cheese, broken into small bits
Instructions:
Combine the vinaigrette ingredients in a large salad bowl and whisk until blended. Add the cucumbers, onion, pepper, and olives and toss into vinaigrette. Let sit for twenty minutes to marinate. Add the heirloom tomatoes and cheese when ready to serve.
Tomatoes are one of the “superfoods.” Men who consumed 10 or more servings of tomato products a week had a 35% decrease in risk of prostate cancer relative to those who consumed 1.5 servings or fewer per week. This is largely attributed to “lycopene” in the tomatoes, which is also in other red fruits such as watermelon, pink grapefruit and guava. Men with lycopene levels in the top 20% had a 46% decrease in risk of heart attack compared to those in the bottom 20%. Lycopene is a potent scavenger of gene-damaging free radicals. But don’t expect to get it from a supplement. You must eat the tomato as you need the whole food to receive the benefits! But because lycopene is fat-soluble, you must eat the tomato with an oil of some kind for it to be available to your body.
Lycopene (Red fruits such as tomatoes, watermelon, guava): Many studies have shown that lycopene-rich foods reduce the risk of prostate cancer, but the mechanism behind that reduction was not well understood until now. A recent study found that lycopene has a substantial protective effect against prostate cancer by interfering with the genes that would allow the prostate cancer cells to grow and survive. The American Institute for Cancer Research recommends that men take advantage of lycopene’s cancer-preventing effects and fill their diets with foods such as tomatoes, watermelon and guava.
Summer Peach and Fresh Kale Salad with Toasted Almonds and a Balsamic Vinaigrette
- At July 19, 2017
- By Katherine
- In News, Recipes
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One reason I look forward to peach season is being able to make this recipe. This year, the peaches are abundant, sweet, juicy, and dense. Take advantage and find ways to include them in your recipes and meals, even if it’s just biting into a whole one and letting the juice roll down your arms. This salad is always a hit, perhaps because we’re naturally drawn to its variety of flavors, textures, colors, and shapes. Variety is the most significant reason we choose something to eat!
Salad With Summer Peaches, Fresh Kale, Toasted Almonds and a Balsamic Vinaigrette
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