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Raw Family Newsletter, September 2005

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*Raw Family Newsletter, September 2005***

 

In this issue:

*1. Raw Family's Super Quick summer delicacy: Chips and Guacamole Recipe*

 

2. Introducing our new step-by-step recipe book, *Igor's Live Flat Bread*

 

3. Are There Enough Greens in Our Stores? By Victoria Boutenko**

 

4. New book *Green For Life* is coming on October 1st

 

5. The Fresh Festival-2005 in UK

 

----

 

*Zucchini Chips*

 

4 medium zucchinis

 

� cup lemon juice

 

� teaspoon salt (optional)

 

� teaspoon cumin

 

� teaspoon ground cayenne pepper

 

� bunch cilantro (finely chopped)

 

Thinly slice the zucchinis by hand or by grater. Place in a large bowl and

add the remaining ingredients. Mix well.

 

Lay out the zucchini pieces in a single layer on dehydrator sheets.

Dehydrate until crisp.

 

Enjoy chips by themselves or with guacamole.

 

*Bell-pepper Guacamole *

 

Blend the following ingredients in a food processor:

 

3 large RIPE avocados

 

1 ripe colored bell-pepper

 

1 medium tomato

 

� cup lemon juice

 

1 spicy pepper

 

� teaspoon sea salt (optional)

 

Place the contents of the food processor into a large bowl.

 

Chop the following ingredients:

 

� bunch green onion

 

1 bunch parsley

 

Mix the chopped ingredients into the mixture already in the bowl.

 

Serves 6

 

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* *

 

Our new recipe book is out:

*IGOR'S LIVE FLAT BREAD - $15.00 US*

 

I heard some people saying that Igor's crackers were to live for.

 

They definitely helped my family to stick to the raw food diet.

 

Reading this book is exactly like watching over Igor's shoulder.

 

Dozens of colored pictures reveal all the details of Igor's refined cracker

making process.

* *

 

*Other books of this series:* *Raw Jams and Jam Pies – $15.00 US * *Live

Kim-Chee and Cultured Veggies - $15.00 US* *How to Eat Uncommon Fruit -

$15.00 US*

 

These books are step-by-step recipes that are very helpful.

 

People who bought them say they are better than videos.

 

Available now at www.rawfamily.com <http://www.rawfamily.com/>

 

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*�2005** Copyrighted material! Please reference this source when sharing

this information! ***

 

* *By Victoria Boutenko

 

* Are There Enough Greens in Our Stores?***

 

Millions of years of co-existence on the same planet has resulted in plants,

people, and animals developing a strong symbiotic connection. Plants do not

mind if people and animals eat their fruits because such practice benefits

the plant by spreading its seeds and thus promoting future generations. In

fact plants are " interested " in someone eating their fruit, but only when it

is ripe. The ultimate goal of all plants is the continuation of their

species and providing adequate living conditions for them. That is why most

of the fruit in the world has a round shape, so that it could roll away and

start a new life. For the very same reason plants have learned to make their

fruit colorful, palatable, fragrant, and nutritious to ensure that its

consumers not only eat one fruit but continue to return for more. This

strategy works very well and all fruit gets eaten. Have you ever noticed how

thoroughly birds clean cherry trees or how squirrels keep working on an oak

tree until there are no more acorns left? What happens next? The " eaters "

digest their food and have bowel movements far away from the mother plant

and the seeds are covered with nice " organic fertilizer. " The seeds get a

perfect start. Inside the fruit, the seeds are wisely protected from being

digested with hardy shells and inhibitors. Note that the plant keeps its

fruit extremely un-tasteful, colorless, and without attractive fragrance all

the way until the seeds are ripe, so that nobody wastes them before the

seeds have matured.

 

The following example illustrates how much the continuation of their species

means to plants. In a recent study in Russia, biologists discovered that

" When a tree is foreseeing its death, the tree gathers its entire energy and

deposits this energy into producing seeds for the very last time. For

example, an oak tree broken by the storm or a cedar tree with its bark

removed from its trunk, in a farewell effort before they die forever, give

their record crops of acorns or

nuts. " [1]<http://mail.google.com/mail/? & ik=fc0a94e705 & view=cv & search=inbox & th=10\

6484a6c2a95f9c & lvp=20 & cvp=0 & qt= & qt= & zx=i8g9virje1mu#106484a6c2a95f9c__ftn1>

 

In contrast with the previous example, when a plant is genetically altered,

it does not produce seeds on purpose. Such a plant makes itself infertile to

prevent future unhealthy generations. Seedless watermelons are usually

odorless and tasteless, because an upset plant has no motivation to make its

fruits sweet, fragrant, or attractive in any other way. I am sure that it is

not healthy to eat seedless plants, because their entire chemistry,

electromagnetic charge, and who knows what else has been altered. In my own

life, I prefer to pay double for an organic seeded watermelon or tomato.

 

Do plants " want " us to eat their trunk and roots? Nope. Without roots,

plants would instantly die. That is why the roots are hidden in the ground.

The sweetness in roots is meant for specific beneficial microorganisms in

the soil that are fed off of tiny rootlets. The trunk is also vital for the

life of the plant and is purposely covered with hard and bitter bark. And

what about the greens? Here, plants demonstrate their perfect ability to

develop symbiosis with different creatures. Plants " allow " humans and

animals to eat ALL of their fruits, but only PART of their leaves, because

plants need to have leaves for their own use - which is manufacturing

chlorophyll. However, plants depend on moving creatures for many different

reasons, like pollination, fertilizing the soil, and hanging around to help

eat the ripe fruit. For this reason, plants accumulate a lot of highly

nutritious elements in their leaves, but mix these nourishing ingredients

with either bitterness or very small amounts of alkaloids (poisons). *That

is how animals are forced to rotate their menu* and that is why all wild

animals are browsers. They eat a small amount of one thing, then move on to

many other plants during the course of the day. The body is capable of

easily detoxifying small amounts of a great many things, but it is much more

difficult for the human system to get rid of a large amount of one type of

poison. This is why it is crucial for us to learn to rotate the greens in

our diet. Chimpanzees also rotate the green plants they eat. They go through

approximately 117 different plants in one

year.[2]<http://mail.google.com/mail/? & ik=fc0a94e705 & view=cv & search=inbox & th=106\

484a6c2a95f9c & lvp=20 & cvp=0 & qt= & qt= & zx=i8g9virje1mu#106484a6c2a95f9c__ftn2>We

humans need to learn to alternate our variety of greens as much as

possible instead of eating only iceberg lettuce, spinach and romaine.

Unfortunately, I was able to locate only about 40 types of various greens,

including edible weeds that are available in my state of Oregon. I hope that

our farmers will learn to grow a larger variety of green leafy vegetables to

increase our green sources. The greens available in grocery stores were

mostly bred from the dandelion and mustard families. Despite their names and

appearances, cultivated greens have similar nutritional content. To meet our

nutritional needs, it is essential that we learn to include greens from a

number of totally different plant families into our daily diets.

 

After several months of drinking green smoothies I got very tired of using

kale and spinach. It was at that time that I first embraced weeds. I

appreciate that weeds presented me with a practically unlimited variety of

greens. This summer I discovered heavenly scrumptious and nutritious " new "

foods such as: pumpkin leaves, grape leaves, chicory greens, young and

tender borage leaves and flowers, tightly curled fists of young ferns,

clover leaves and flowers, plantain, sorrel, and even lemon grass. Next year

I plan to fill my garden a large variety of weeds.

 

The following is a list of greens that my family has been rotating in our

diet during the last year.

 

* ***

*

*

 

*Greens:***

 

*Arugula*

 

Asparagus

 

Beet greens (tops)

Bok choy

Broccoli

 

Carrot tops

Celery

 

Chard

Collard greens

Endive

 

Escarole

Fresee

 

*Grape leaves*

 

Kale (3 types)

Mitsuna

 

Mustard greens

Pumpkin leaves

 

Radicchio

Radish tops

Rhubarb

 

Romaine lettuce green and red leaf (no Iceberg or light colored leaf)

Spinach

*Weeds:***

 

Borage leaves and flowers* ***

 

Chicory greens and flowers **

 

Chickweed

 

Clover

 

Dandelion (greens and flowers)

 

Fiddlehead ferns

 

Lambsquarters

 

Malva

 

Miner's lettuce

 

Plantain

 

Purslane

 

Sorrel

 

Stinging nettles

 

*Herbs:***

 

*Aloe Vera** *

 

*Baby dill ***

 

Basil

Cilantro

Fennel

 

Mint

Parsley (2 types)

Peppermint leaves

*Spearmint *

 

*Sprouts:***

 

Alfalfa

 

Broccoli

 

Clover

 

Fenugreek

Radish

 

Sunflower

 

Wild edibles often contain more vitamins and minerals than commercially

marketed plants. Weeds have not been " spoiled " with farmers' care in

contrast to the " good " plants of the garden. In order to survive in spite of

constant weeding, pulling, and spraying, weeds had to develop strong

survival properties. For example, in order to stay alive without being

watered, most weeds have developed unbelievably long roots. Alfalfa's roots

grow up to 20 feet long reaching for the most fertile layers of the soil. As

a result, all wild plants possess more nutrients than commercially grown

plants. I feel so silly now when I remember how I used to always pull out

the " nasty " lambsquarters from my garden to let my " precious " iceberg

lettuce grow.

 

The best way to learn which weeds are edible is to sign up for an herb walk

with an experienced guide in your local area. This way you can learn to

recognize particular edible plants by actually touching, smelling, and

tasting them so that you can gather your " wild produce " on your own. Also,

there are lots of articles and photos of edible weeds on the Internet. You

may also find many books that help identify edible plants in your area.

Please maintain caution when picking wild plants to avoid poisoning. There

are usually only a couple of poisonous plants in one region, make sure you

can identify them well.

 

For the sake of variety, I include several kinds of sprouts in my diet, but

never more than a handful and only one or two times a week. Approximately

from the third to the sixth day of their life, sprouts contain higher levels

of alkaloids, as a means of protection from animals nipping them off and

killing

them.[3]<http://mail.google.com/mail/? & ik=fc0a94e705 & view=cv & search=inbox & th=106\

484a6c2a95f9c & lvp=20 & cvp=0 & qt= & qt= & zx=i8g9virje1mu#106484a6c2a95f9c__ftn3>That

doesn't mean that sprouts are poisonous or dangerous, but only that we

cannot live on sprouts alone. Most sprouts are rich in B-vitamins and have a

hundred times more nutrients than a fully developed plant because sprouts

need more nutrition for their fast growing period.

 

Once in a while I read in the news or receive an e-mail about kale or

spinach or parsley or any other green having a toxic ingredient and

therefore being dangerous for human consumption. This is all true but not to

such a degree as to exclude any particular green from our diet. Let us learn

to increase the variety of greens in our diet and to constantly rotate them

for better nutritional results.

 

There are several other ways in which plants protect themselves from being

destroyed. Some plants have thorns instead of alkaloids and one type of

acacia tree in Africa is inhabited by colonies of very aggressive ants with

a painful sting.

 

Thorny plants, like cactuses and stinging nettles, do not contain any

alkaloids, which makes them a valuable addition to our diet. Of course, we

need to first figure out how to eat them. I have often successfully added

stinging nettles to my green smoothies by harvesting them while wearing

gloves.

 

It is September now, and there is an abundance of incredible wild greens

everywhere. I encourage you to take full advantage of them now keeping in

mind that we have another long kale-spinach winter ahead of us.

 

If you would like to learn more about rotating greens, you may read my

up-coming new book, *Green For Life*.

 

*�2005** **Copyrighted material! Please reference this source when sharing

this information!***

 

www.rawfamily.com <http://www.rawfamily.com/>

 

--\

-----------------

 

*NEW Book Green For Life** *is now available for pre-orders

 

by Victoria Boutenko

 

 

Victoria's long awaited new book about greens and green smoothies contains

exciting new information. The author approaches human nutrition from a new

angle, comparing the human diet with the diet of chimpanzees. This book is

written in a clear style, illustrated with anecdotes, diagrams and pictures.

The results of the Roseburg study conducted by Victoria and Dr Fieber,

reveal the unique healing potential of green smoothies.

 

*This book is scheduled to come out October 1st, 2005. ***

 

We recommend pre-ordering this book early to avoid waiting. Your orders will

be processed in the order they were received.

 

$14.95

 

-Pre-orders only-

 

www.rawfamily.com <http://www.rawfamily.com/>

 

 

--\

-----------------------

For those of you living in the UK or those of you who love traveling, there

will be an excellent Raw Food Festival not to be missed: The Fresh Festival

2005 <http://www.fresh-network.com/festival/index.htm>

 

World renown raw food teachers, nutritionists, and top raw gourmet chefs

will all be presenting at a gorgeous location

 

during the three days extravaganza: *Friday 28 October - Sunday 30 October

2005*

 

My family participated in The Fresh Festival-2004 and consider it to be one

of the best organized Raw Food events!

For more details go to: http://www.fresh-network.com/festival/index.htm

 

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