WELCOME BACK TO THE NEIGHBORHOOD GARDEN BLOG!!


The Neighborhood Garden wants YOU to be inspired and empowered to embrace a healthy lifestyle


Four fabulous reasons this blog will be a valuable and FUN resource to help you enjoy your food and life to the fullest!

1. Food is more than something that makes us skinny or fat. Food has medicinal properties that can prevent and even reverse disease very powerfully as well as maintain a healthy weight and healthy body and optimize energy levels.

-Follow our blog for exciting and interesting research findings on what these foods are doing for our bodies.


2. Eating healthfully does not have to be a chore, painful or boring. Discovering new foods and flavors is fun, and anyone can learn to cook delicious healthy meals.

-Whether you are single or are working parents with six kids, we can help! Check out our THINK INSIDE THE BAG posts for easy, healthful recipes.


3. Local or 100% Organic Produce is the safest and healthiest food we can put in our bodies.

-Boy, do we have tips for you to help you enjoy and be grateful for the produce we receive each week. We hope you will use this blog as a springboard towards a healthy, vigorous life. Visit our blog often for meal planning and storage tips using the organic produce you receive in each week's bag.


4. You are part of The Neighborhood Garden community as well as a global community!

-Here's where we get to talk about what we're passionate about, but we also encourage you to visit often to learn and share your stories, comments and ideas. We hope to have a resources page to share information about sustainability in action and spotlight some folks that are doing amazing things. We want you to feel good about what you are buying and putting in your body. The reasons are bountiful and we can’t wait to share!


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This Week's Organic Produce!

Monday, March 17th

Full/Half Bags

Bananas

Granny Smith Apples

Valencia Oranges

Bosc Pears

Kiwi

Spring Mix (Upgrade Red Leaf $1)

Snow Peas

Russet Potatoes

Baby Peeled Carrots

Red Onion

Roma Tomatoes

(Add JalapeƱo Peppers $2)

Jumbo Fruit Bag

(Will include the Full list plus the following. Must purchase full/half bag)

1lb Strawberries

Kent Mangoes

Avocadoes

Jumbo Veggie Bag

(Will include the Full list plus the following. Must purchase full/half bag)

Yellow Squash

12oz Green Beans

Red Peppers

Herb Bag

.066oz Cilantro

.066oz Rosemary

.75lb Limes

*list subject to change due to availability

**approximate counts, depends on total weight

Wednesday, May 21, 2014

Summertime and the Living is Healthy

Hello everyone!

We are excited about the long summer days just ahead and have some great things cooking! Summer is a great time to rest and recalibrate your life.  If you're like us, you're starting to fill your calendars with events that are family focused.  As you weigh your options for your families this summer, why not make an investment in your health that will pay you back for a lifetime? 

We all have goals for our families' health, but reaching those goals can be difficult with all the contradicting information and marketing hype that bombards us daily.  The Complete Health Improvement Program, or CHIP, puts all the pieces of the puzzle together to empower participants to shed unwanted pounds, and establish healthy lifestyles that are sustainable.  This is not about dieting, or the latest incredible gimmick.  CHIP brings participants through an educational cruise through the science and proof of what's healthy and what isn't.  

If this sounds interesting to you, come out for some healthy food, facts and fellowship at one of our free information sessions.  We will be in Modular #6 at Harvest Community School on Sunday May 25th and June 1st at 2pm.

In addition, we will be offering a free advanced cardiac and metabolic blood analysis the morning of June 1st from 8am to noon.  Email to reserve a spot at jenniferdenise1121@gmail.com

Here's to your heath!

Dr. William and Jennifer Nields



Sunday, April 27, 2014

Free Health Screening with blood analysis and genetic testing Sunday May 4th

We are excited to announce that this Sunday May 4th from 8 am to 12 noon we will be doing free health screenings and advanced blood analysis including several genetic tests!  This is a great opportunity to speak with Dr. Nields about HEALTHY ways you can lose unwanted pounds, improve your energy, and protect yourself against chronic diseases like diabetes, heart disease and cancer.

Stop by anytime between 8am and Noon!  Be sure to fast at least 8 hours and bring your insurance card if you would like blood analysis.

We will be at Harvest Community School, Modular #6 (Behind New Covenant Ministries)
2360 St Johns Bluff Rd S #1, Jacksonville, FL 32246

Wednesday, April 23, 2014

Breath easy, fruits and vegetables can prevent and improve asthma!

The Doctor's Office

Reactive Airway Disease, or Asthma, occurs when airways in the lungs become inflamed and narrowed, making it more difficult to move air (breath).  It is largely an allergic response when the body's immune system gets out of balance. The severity of asthma can vary from an occasional nuisance to a lethal condition.  Asthma is the most common chronic condition afflicting kids and it is increasing rapidly in the United States.

Recently researchers from England published a study of 1.2 million children from around the world in which they noted a huge variation in asthma rates in different places: as much as 20 to 60 fold differences!   As expected, they found that air pollution was associated with higher rates of asthma, but surprisingly the strongest association with asthma rates was the diet.  Fruit and vegetable intake was protective against asthma, while diets high in fat, sodium and sugar were associated with increased rates of asthma.

This isn't the first time diet has been found to play a major role in asthma, a small study found that removing eggs and dairy from asthmatic children's diet improved lung function measurably after eight weeks.   Another study found that adults with the lowest intake of vitamin C from plants had a 7 fold increased risk of asthma.  The lowest intake of saturated fat provided a 10 fold protection from asthma. Researchers from Australia also found saturated fat increases airway inflammation and makes bronchodilator medications less effective.  They ranked 46 foods on a scale ranging from inflammatory on one end to anti-inflammatory on the other. Pro-inflammation foods were high in saturated fat, sugar and preservatives. Anti-inflammatory foods were fruits, vegetables, and foods high in fiber.  The higher the inflammation index, the higher the chance of asthma.  70% of the asthmatics in the study were found in the highest consumers of pro-inflammatory foods.

It is important to understand that "associations" of variables with disease does not prove cause or cure of disease.  For example researchers from the woman's health study found that patients who had the most vitamin E in their blood from diet had half the rate of asthma as those with the least amount of vitamin E.  But the vitamin E had to come from food.  People with high levels of vitamin E in their blood from supplements weren't protected.  So at first we might jump to the conclusion that vitamin E supplements might be a good treatment for asthma, but we see that is not the case. The most likely reason is that high vitamin E levels are a marker for overall healthy diet, so it likely is a combination of many phytonutrients found in food that are acting together to protect whole food plant eaters from asthma, not just high levels of vitamin E.  This is supported by other observations made by researchers including men who eat apples were found to have superior lung function, and kids with the highest fruit, salad, vegetable intakes had better pulmonary function testing.

Despite all of this exciting research on asthma, no one had yet tried to treat it with diet, until now.  Practitioners in Sweden were making claims that they could treat asthma with a vegan diet, so a group of skeptical physicians at a major teaching institution took a small group of severe asthmatics and subjected them to a vegan diet for a year.   35 asthmatics started, but only 24 patients were able to stick to the vegan diet.  Of these 24 patients, 71% ere improved at 4 months and 92% were improved at 1 year as measured by their ratings of their life as well as pulmonary function tests and blood markers of inflammation.  Four patients were able to completely stop taking medications and the number of medications dropped from an average of 4.5 per patient to 1.2 per patient.  Granted, there was no placebo arm of the study, but neither were there any negative side effects.  Patients did however lose weight, improve their cholesterol and blood pressure.  

One class of phytonutrients that is responsible for better asthma outcomes is the polyphenols. These phytonutrients bind allergens so our immune system doesn't react to them. They also act in a secondary way by inhibiting activation of the allergic response if the immune system does recognize the allergen.
Another way plant food is thought to protect against asthma is through it's effects on the intestinal flora. (see the previous blog Primer on Prebiotics, Probiotics, and Produce).   Intestinal flora is thought to be important in developing and priming our immune systems in childhood. It has been observed that lactobacillus is less likely to be found in kids with allergies and asthma, and probiotics containing lactobacillus may help with childhood asthma.  However we couldn't be sure it was the plant strong diet that led to better intestinal flora and less asthma as these children were also more likely to have been born vaginally, more likely to have been breastfed and less likely to have been exposed to antibiotics.  So which factor made these kids less likely to have asthma?  We are fortunate that researchers set out to answer just that question.  They hypothesized that less fruit and vegetable intake led to less anti-oxidant protection in the lungs leaving a person more susceptible to toxic inhaled substances.  This makes sense because our lungs and airways are coated with a thin fluid layer that is our first line of defense. This layer contains a range of anti-oxidants.  We can actually measure a person's oxidative stress level through the breath exhaled, and oxidative stress does decrease with higher intake of fruit and vegetables.  Oxidative stress further decreases by decreasing animal foods.  This is consistent with the observation that child asthmatics have lower levels of phyotnutrients and antioxidants in their blood.

These observations are interesting, but what really matters is will changing the children's diet help their asthma? Researchers set out to answer this question first by depriving asthmatic children of fruits and vegetables to examine the effect on their asthma.  When fruits and vegetables were removed from their diet, symptoms became much worse in a matter of days.  Interestingly, the restrictive diet used in the study was 1 serving of fruit and 2 servings of vegetables a day, which is what the average american diet consists of!  50% of the US population today consumes 3 or less servings of fruits and vegetables daily.  Researchers then sought to evaluate the treatment effect of fruits and vegetables for asthma.  They compared the 3 serving/day group to a group who ate 7 servings of fruit and vegetables a day and observed the number of asthmatic exacerbations was reduced by half over the next three months in the group that ate more fruit and vegetables.  And the side effects of the treatment?  Less cancer, less heart disease, longer more productive lives!

Thursday, April 10, 2014

Think Inside of the Bag! Lentil Shepherds Pie

2 lbs red potatoes diced
1 medium onion
1 stalk of celery
1 large carrot
1 tsp curry powder
1 lb jar of low sodium pasta sauce
3 1/2 cups cooked brown lentils
1 cup of frozen peas and corn
1 TBSP almond butter
1/2 cup rice milk (or soy milk)

1. Preheat oven to 350. Place potatoes in a large saucepan and cover with hot water. Bring to a boil, then reduce heat and simmer until tender.

2. Saute onion, celery, and carrot in a few tsp of water until tender. (add more water if it becomes too dry)

3. Add curry powder and sautƩ for 1 minute.

4. Add pasta sauce, lentils, and peas and corn and bring to a boil. Reduce heat and simmer for 5 minutes.

5. Drain potatoes and add almond butter and rice milk. Mash until smooth.

6. Spoon lentil mixture into one large oven-proof dish. Top with mashed potatoes.

7. Bake for 40 minutes.

Serve with a fresh salad like the Strawberry Spinach Salad.

I always double this recipe! My kids love it and always go back for more.
Cut your risk of dying prematurely by 42%!

The Doctor's Office

Have you ever wondered just how important it is to eat fruits and vegetables?  Is it really worth the extra money?  Will we live longer, or will it just SEEM like we're living longer eating vegetables?  Research recently published in the Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health reminds us again that fruits and vegetables are the most cost-effective way to protect your health and longevity.

When budgets get tight, often one of the first places people look for savings is the grocery bill.  But cutting back on purchasing fresh fruit and vegetables is penny-wise and pound foolish.  What little savings you gain from buying less produce will be dwarfed by medical expenses and lost work, which is why governments around the world are spending money to promote fruits and vegetables.

There have been many studies published showing health benefits of higher consumption of fruits and vegetables, but never has a study associated eating fruit and vegetables with an improved risk of dying.  Recently British researchers published the results of their analysis of the impact of the amount of fruits and vegetables consumed and the risk of dying at any given age (Journal of Epidemiology and Community Health).  Although they expected to see benefits, they were shocked to discover how much protection eating fruits and vegetables offer.  Over 65,200 study participants reported the foods they were eating over thirteen years, from 2001 to 2013.  Researchers analyzed this data and found that there is a dose response to fruits and vegetables that is quite remarkable in preventing mortality.  In other words, the more a person ate, the more protected he or she was from dying.  People eating 1-3 servings a day enjoyed a 14% reduction in the risk of dying at any given age.  Eating 3-4 servings yielded a 29% reduction in death, while 5-7 servings of fruits and vegetables daily improved your chance of surviving by 36%.  The people eating  seven or more portions had an astonishing 42% reduction in mortality.  What this means is that as the study progressed, those that ate fruits and vegetables lived on, but those who skimped passed on.

So just how much produce is 7 servings?  A serving is defined as a half a cup, or about the size of your fist.   So it is not impractical to eat this much, it just takes a little planning, effort and for many of us changing our habits.

Eat more, Live more!

When you consider that the majority of medical expense is paid out at the end of life, and is spent on the chronic diseases that fruits and vegetables protect against, the cost of produce seems insignificant.   Nevertheless, very few people think of these things while purchasing food.  Americans eat pitiful few vegetables yet spend on average about $7,000 a year on medical costs per person!  This study, and many others demonstrate that prioritizing our spending to include more produce can and will pay off not just economically but more importantly with good health.  Hopefully this will make it a little easier to loosen your grip on that cash when it comes to buying produce!

We as consumers are casting votes with our dollars spent, but I want to emphasize another way we as citizens can impact the cost of produce.  Our tax dollars are used to subsidize large mono crops like corn and wheat.  The problem with this is that these staples are used largely to feed animals or to be processed into junk food.  While huge industrial agricultural, pesticide, and food manufacturing companies yield profits from these subsidies, Americans opting for the cheaper (subsidized) food yield disease and death as we see above!  It seems rational that we should be subsidizing the smaller organic farmers producing these health protecting fruits and vegetables, yet the politics and economics of food make it ever increasingly difficult for them to survive.  Let your representatives know how important this issue is to you and your families!  Look for opportunities to educate your friends and family.
 

Wednesday, April 2, 2014

An eye opener!

The Doctor's Office

Vision is easy to take for granted when normal, but if you ask anyone losing their eyesight, you're likely to here that they'd pay a high price to regain or preserve their ability to see.  Fortunately for us, our produce bags offer a great bargain for protection from leading causes of blindness like macular degeneration and glaucoma.

Our eyes are amazing creations that transmit and focus light from the environment through the center of the eyeball and onto the retina at the back of our eyes.  The retina has specialized nerve cells that respond to the light and transmit information through the ocular nerve to the brain where we can interpret our environment.

It is a miraculous process really.  The lens focuses the light on the retina at the back of the inside of the eyeball.  The retina is a thin, delicate layer of nerve cells that are exposed to a significant amount of focused light.  This light can cause damage to our cells as you likely have experienced with a sunburn.  When this happens to the retina it causes macular degeneration, a leading cause of blindness.  Fortunately, our delicate retinal nerve cells are protected by the retinal pigmented epithelium (RPE), which acts like sunblock for the retina.  The pigment in the RPE is enhanced by nutrients like zeaxanthin and lutein which we get from the greens like the spinach in our produce bags!  These nutrients naturally accumulate in the RPE and protect against the damaging effects of the solar radiation, preserving our eyesight.  

Greens are also effective against glaucoma, another leading cause of blindness. It is not completely understood what causes glaucoma, or loss of the optic nerve that carries information from our retina to the brain.  It has been observed, however that eating at least 1 serving of greens/week will decrease your risk of glaucoma by 69%.  If one serving/week can do that imagine what daily greens will do!

We also know that anthocyanins, the dark blue and black pigments found in berries and purple vegetables, protect against vision loss once the disease process has started. Black currants have been shown in trials to stop the progression of glaucoma, presumably by increasing the blood flow to the optic nerve.  The Chinese seem to have observed this phenomenon because a common Chinese medicine prescription for blindness in the elderly is 50-100 goji berries daily.

Hopefully this information has convinced you of just how valuable those produce bags are to you and your families!


Wednesday, March 26, 2014

Color Me Healthy!

The Doctor's Office

One of the first things you may notice about this week's produce bag is the variety of beautiful colors present.  We humans are naturally drawn to bright colorful foods and there is good reason: these colors actually signify health promoting properties. Phytochemicals are compounds produced by fruits, vegetables, beans and grains that give these plants their colors, smells, and tastes.  These same phytochemicals provide our bodies with a host of benefits including protection from disease and aging.

Phytochemicals are grouped in families, many of which you may be familiar with.  Examples of these families include carotenoids like beta-carotene and lutein and polyphenols like anthocyanins.  You don't have to be able to pronounce these names, or even know what they are to reap their benefits.  It is enough to know that they are responsible for the beautiful colors in our fruits and vegetables and by selecting a wide variety of color for your diet you will protect your health.  A diet rich in these phytochemicals (think colors) provides your body with many different health benefits including prevention of cancer, diabetes, heart disease, and aging.  You will be able to protect your eyesight, skin, brain and sexual function simply by eating a (naturally)colorful diet! (No, skittles do not count!)

The proof is in the science.  The interactions of these phytochemicals in our bodies is immensely complex and difficult to study.  Nevertheless scientists are dedicating large amounts of time and money to understand how these important chemicals work to maintain health and prevent and reverse disease.  There are countless studies showing beneficial effects of individual nutrients on cells grown in petri dishes and on health markers in the ultimate test tube, our bodies.  But to demonstrate an impact on disease is more difficult, especially when evaluating only one chemical at a time.  This is why studies on single isolated nutrients or food items have often been disappointing in human trials despite promising preliminary evidence for the next cure for cancer or heart disease.  It is most likely that the protection we get from our diet is based on multiple factors and food choices interacting together over periods of time.  We should get away from the mindset that we need to add one superfood or juice in massive quantities and embrace a varied diet rich in color and therefore rich in phytonutrients.  By eating the rainbow we will provide our bodies with many potentially healthful chemical compounds and our bodies will take what they need to maintain and restore our health.  It's really simple and that's the beauty of it.  Eat your fruits and vegetables.


THIS WEEK'S ORGANIC PRODUCE - MARCH 31

MONDAY, MARCH 31
  • Pick Up & Delivery Monday, MARCH 31
  • We all have different favorites.  See something you don't like?  2 substitutions are allowed with Full and Half Bags. Substitutions not allowed on Upgrades
  •  Upgrades and Extras are only available with the purchase of a Full or Half bag of produce
  •  We have Eggs,  Bacon, Chicken Breast, Ground Turkey and White Oaks Grass Fed Beef this week
This Week's Organic Produce!

Full/Half Bags
Avocados
Granny Smith Apples
Bosc Pears
Kiwi
Valencia Oranges
Spring Mix
1 lb. Carrots
Cucumber
Sweet Potatoes
Green Onion
Roma Tomatoes

Jumbo Fruit Bag
(Will include the Full list plus the following. Must purchase full/half bag) 
1 lb Strawberries
Kent Mango
Bananas

Jumbo Veggie Bag
(Will include the Full list plus the following. Must purchase full/half bag) 
Yellow Squash
Eggplant
Red Pepper

*list subject to change due to availability
**approximate counts, depends on total weight

Friday, March 21, 2014

THINK INSIDE THE BAG! KALE TWO WAYS

KALE - RAW AND COOKED
Yay! Kale is in the jumbo veggie bag next week... my eyes light up and my mouth waters when I see we can order it. Here are two simple, yet different ways to enjoy this healthy vegetable. One raw and one cooked. Both are nutritious and delicious.

LEMONY KALE SALAD 
Think tabbouleh without the grain. No exact measurements here, but you can handle it!

bunch of kale, chopped
bunch of green onion, chopped
handful of both mint and parsley
half handful of chopped dill
toss with fresh lemon juice (lots so it's drippy juicy) olive oil and sea salt. 

SAUTEED KALE WITH ONIONS,  GARLIC & BALSAMIC

1 head kale, chopped
1 small onion (any color), chopped
1 clove garlic, minced
1 tsp. coconut oil (or whatever oil you prefer)
a good dousing of quality balsamic vinegar


Saute onions and garlic in coconut oil until cripsy

Add kale and cook until wilted
Deglaze the pan with a generous sprinkling of balsamic
Cook, covered, for five to ten minutes
A primer on prebiotics, probiotics and produce

The Doctor's Office

Our bodies contain an estimated 10 times as many microorganisms as human cells. These microorganisms make up a "microbiome" which is unique to each individual.  For a great overview of this concept check out this entertaining video: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=5DTrENdWvvM

There is a lot of interest in probiotics these days and for good reason.  Probiotics are bacteria or yeast that are thought to be beneficial to our health and are most commonly used to counteract the depletion of good bacteria caused by antibiotic use.  Many capsules and yogurt products are marketed to us, but do they actually provide a benefit?  While little has been proven as to the benefits of probiotics, a lot has been learned thanks to an explosion of research on the human microbiome, the collection of bacteria, fungi, and viruses that live on us or in us.

The largest reservoir of these microorganisms is in our gut, specifically the colon which is estimated to contain over 100 trillion microbes.  These microbes metabolize, detoxify and activate crucial components of our diet and therefore are very important to many aspects of our health.  Scientists have started to make connections between our colonic microbes and our immune function, allergies, asthma, anxiety and obesity.  This may seem far fetched, but it is more believable when we understand that the gut houses an estimated 70% of the immune system and as many nerves as the spinal cord!  While at first glance this seems bizarre, it stands to reason when we consider that the gut is the biggest interface we have with the outside environment, even more so than our skin!

So what does this have to do with the produce bag this week?   As it turns out, the diet we eat can drastically affect our microbiome, and the effects occur rapidly.  Researchers demonstrated drastic changes in subjects' microbiome in as little as 4 days when consuming either a vegetarian diet or an entirely animal product diet.   In this short time, bacterial composition in the colon seemed to be completely altered.  This gives us great hope that we can improve our own microbiome, and hopefully our health with the diet we eat.  Probiotic tablets may have a role, but they can be expensive and cumbersome.  Therefore a dietary pattern that promotes health is obviously very attractive.

While probiotic tablets and food contain active bacteria or yeast that we want to colonize our gut (set up shop), they must survive the stomach acid and passage to the colon where they must then attach to the lining of the gut.  This is a considerable challenge, but there are non-digestible or partially digestible food ingredients that stimulate the growth of healthy bacteria in the colon and these can be taken with the probiotic or by themselves to promote a healthier microbiome.  Inulin and fructo-oligosacharides are an important class of these "prebiotic" nutrients as they pass through the small intestine to the colon where they stimulate the growth of bifida bacteria and other beneficial micro-organisms.  This week's produce bag contains some great sources of these powerful prebiotics, such as bananas and kale.  Yet another reason you can take satisfaction from fueling your family with the very best foods available!

Tuesday, March 18, 2014

THIS WEEK'S ORGANIC PRODUCE - MARCH 24

MONDAY, MARCH 24
  • Pick Up & Delivery Monday, MARCH 24
  • We all have different favorites.  See something you don't like?  2 substitutions are allowed with Full and Half Bags. Substitutions not allowed on Upgrades
  •  Upgrades and Extras are only available with the purchase of a Full or Half bag of produce
  •  We have Eggs,  Bacon, Chicken Breast, Ground Turkey and White Oaks Grass Fed Beef this week
This Week's Organic Produce!

Full/Half Bags
Cameo Apples
Valencia Oranges
Bosc Pears
Kiwi
Lemons
Spring Mix
Baby Spinach
White Mushrooms
Zucchini
Celery
Roma Tomatoes

Jumbo Fruit Bag
(Will include the Full list plus the following. Must purchase full/half bag) 
1 lb Strawberries
4.4 oz Blueberries
Bananas

Jumbo Veggie Bag
(Will include the Full list plus the following. Must purchase full/half bag) 
1 lb Asparagus
Cucumbers
Kale

*list subject to change due to availability
**approximate counts, depends on total weight

Monday, March 17, 2014

WHO ARE ANDREW & EVERETT?

CHEESE PLEASE - UDDERLY THE BEST



I just got my bag home and as much as I adore the wonderful fresh fruit and veggies, all I wanted to do was to rip open the package of Andrew & Everett provolone cheese I had ordered this week.

Wow! Was I impressed with the flavor of this cheese! I feel much better knowing that the cheese we can order from Then Neighborhood Garden is not full of hormones and supports small farmers.

Some impressive information from Tim Jones, the founder of Andrew & Everett:
  • All milk sourced from small, self-sustaining family owned farms.
  • All cows are free range, grass fed, and treated humanely with care and respect.
  • No cows are injected with synthetic rBGH-BST growth hormones.
  • No cows are fed animal by-products.
  • No antibiotics are used for our dairy cows. If cows become ill and antibiotics are necessary, they are removed from the dairy herd.
  • All products are third-party certified Gluten Free.
  • No preservatives, binders or fillers are used in our cheeses.
  • All cheeses are made with non-animal rennet.
  • Certified Non-Clone Sourced
  • All product claims are stated clearly on our packaging so consumers can purchase with confidence.
Our mission is to bring to market the highest quality cheese possible free of any hormones, animal by products, fillers, or binders that support the small independent family run dairy farmers values.

To develop a better cheese I believe one needs to first find out what makes cheese inferior to begin with. What the common consumer doesn't realize is that most cheese is made from milk that has too much age on it to be able to be sold in a liquid form in a bottle. Many cheese makers buy this distressed milk at a large discount to make cheese with. The older the milk is the more it denigrates or breaks down. This requires the cheese manufacture to put additives into the cheese such as binders and fillers. Fillers such as milk protein concentrate or binders like casein help to firm up the cheese made from older denigrated milk

Another concern is the use of rBGH (Bovine Growth Hormone) and BST (Bovine Somatrotropin) in dairy cows. Most consumers don't realize that these two hormones (rBGH) & (BST) are outlawed for the use in milk production in every developed country except for the United States and Brazil. rBGH is a synthetic, genetically engineered version of a cows natural growth hormone, used to make the cow over produce milk by up to 35%. This causes great stress for the cow and can greatly decrease a cow's lifespan, this in turn requires a significant increase in the use of antibiotics for treatment of udder inflammation or mastitis. 

We have addressed all of these concerns in our ANDREW & EVERETT brand of cheese. All of the milk used in making our cheese comes from farms that produce milk solely for the production of cheese. Their milk is turned into cheese within hours of leaving the farm. The best tasting cheese is always made from the freshest milk. Making cheese this way eliminates the need for fillers and binders. None of the cows are ever given any rBGH or BST growth hormones. All of our dairy farmers are self-sustaining and it's just a core value not to practice the use of these hormones. The care and effort these farmers put into there farming is truly a family value. On most commercial dairy farms all of the cows are given numbers, our dairy farmers give their cows names!

All of our milk is hauled separately to the cheese plants. Under no circumstance do we ever commingle our milk with unknown sources of milk. All of the cheese plants must have separate milk silos to ensure our milk is kept apart from other milk. Our cheese is always a first run batch to further ensure no residue from other batches is mixed. All of our farmers and cheese makers sign an affidavit swearing to abide by our claims. 

Our packaging facility is brand new. We have the latest state of the art slicers and packing machines.


So, who are Andrew and Everett? Tim's children? Maybe they are cows? I guess it is not that important, but what is important, is that the cheese has flavor, is not filled with yucky stuff and comes from a manufacturer with integrity. 

To view 

Sunday, March 16, 2014

THINK INSIDE THE BAG! SNOW PEAS

SNOW PEAS STIR-FRIED WITH CELERY
Snow peas have been making repeated appearances in our weekly bags. They are so yummy to simply munch and crunch in raw form. Here is an easy peasy (haha) adapted recipe from Madhur Jaffrey's World Vegetarian cookbook. Items in bold are in this week or last week's bag

1 tablespoon peanut or canola oil
3 slices of fresh peeled ginger
1 green onion, cut crosswise into 1/4 inch-wide rings
2 3/4 cups celery stalks, cut crosswise at a very slight diagonal into 1/4 inch wide strips
1 1/2 cups de-stringed snow peas, cut crosswise at a very slight diagonal into 1/4 inch wide strips
1/2 teaspoon salt, or to taste
Freshly ground black pepper

Put the oil in a large frying pan and set over high heat
When hot, put in the ginger and green onion
Stir for 30 seconds
Now put in the celery and snow peas
Stir for about 3 minutes
Put in the salt and pepper to taste
Stir and mix for another 30 seconds
Turn off the heat
Remove the ginger slices before serving

Serves 3-4

Thursday, March 13, 2014

Variety is the spice of life!

The Doctor's Office

Variety is the spice of life, and as it turns out, spice is good for life too!  Cilantro, aka coriander, and Rosemary provide great aroma and taste to many recipes, but they also provide our bodies with some amazing health protective benefits.  Specifically, rosemary was shown to decrease inflammation and protect our cells' DNA from damage.  Researchers gave patients rosemary (amounts similar to what you might eat in a meal) and an inflammatory insult (oxidized cholesterol like you'd get from fried chicken).  Blood was then examined and found to have less TNF-α and less DNA damage with the rosemary on board.

Tumor necrosis factor-alpha, or TNF-α, is an inflammatory protein secreted into the blood to fight off threats. That's the purpose of TNF-α, however when it gets out of balance it causes a lot of damage.  Excessive TNF-α is found in many disease states such as crohn's disease, septic shock, and most commonly, metabolic syndrome (a constellation of major cardiovascular risk factors).  It is amazing to think that adding something so tasty as rosemary could potentially improve these conditions.

In this study, the scientists also measured DNA damage in white blood cells and found it to be reduced in the patients who were given Rosemary.  Protecting DNA is generally accepted to be important to slow aging and prevent cancer.

Does that mean we should all go out and start consuming obscene quantities of these delicious plants?  I don't believe so.  Variety is the spice of life.  These plants should be a healthful addition to a diet rich in variety of many types of fruits and vegetables.  Not only is this an enjoyable way to live, but it provides the best opportunity to obtain the best nutrition.  This concept is explained in fascinating depth by T. Colin Campbell in his book "Whole".  Our bodies will take what they need from our food, so by supplying ourselves with a great variety of different foods, we have the best opportunity to achieve prime health!  Enjoy!

Wednesday, March 12, 2014

THIS WEEK'S ORGANIC PRODUCE - MARCH 17

MONDAY, MARCH 17
  • Pick Up & Delivery Monday, MARCH 17
  • We all have different favorites.  See something you don't like?  2 substitutions are allowed with Full and Half Bags. Substitutions not allowed on Upgrades
  •  Upgrades and Extras are only available with the purchase of a Full or Half bag of produce
  •  We have Bacon, Black Forest Ham and White Oaks Grass Fed Beef this week
  • Add Jalapeno peppers for $2
  • Herb bags are back! Cilantro, Rosemary, Limes 
This Week's Organic Produce!

Monday, March 10th

Full/Half Bags

Bananas

Granny Smith Apples

Valencia Oranges

Bosc Pears

Kiwi

Spring Mix (upgrade to Red Leaf Lettuce $1)

Snow Peas

Russet Potatoes

Baby Peeled Carrots

Red Onion

 Roma Tomatoes

Jumbo Fruit Bag

(Will include the Full list plus the following. Must purchase full/half bag)

1 lb Strawberries

Kent Mangoes

Avocados

Jumbo Veggie Bag

(Will include the Full list plus the following. Must purchase full/half bag)

Yellow Squash

12 oz Green Beans

Red Peppers

*list subject to change due to availability
**approximate counts, depends on total weight

Sunday, March 9, 2014

SAVE OUR STRAWBERRIES!

 FOUR DELICIOUS IDEAS FOR FREEZING STRAWBERRIES
 

The Neighborhood Organics provides us with easy access to organic strawberries. We are lucky because conventional strawberries contain a large amount of pesticides.  When the PDP (the USDA's Pesticide Data Program) releases its annual list of produce samples with residues that exceed tolerance levels, strawberries appear more often than any other fruit or vegetable.

According to prevention.com, a new report from the U.S. Department of Agriculture (USDA) found that a single sample of strawberries contained 13 different pesticides. Yick! Some organic growers joke that conventionally grown strawberries are so full of chemicals, you could grind them up and use them as a pesticide.

Ordering organic strawberries by the case or half case makes good sense and cents, but what if I don't use them all? Here are some tips to save our strawberries.
  
While nibbling on some fresh berries, think of which of these ideas for freezing the berries works for you.  Best not to dump them in a plastic bag so they become one big lump with freezer burn. 

Below are four different methods for freezing strawberries.


1. Whole Strawberries

Bags of whole, frozen strawberries are handy to have around for adding to smoothies or baking. This method of freezing on a tray or sheet ensures the berries freeze individually, rather than that inconvenient lump.

If you won't use them within six months, a light dusting of sugar before freezing will both help preserve their color and prevent freezer burn.

  1. Wash and gently dry the strawberries. Don’t soak them too long in water as this will result in a loss of flavor and nutrients!
  2. Hull the berries and remove any ones that are spoiled. (Save those ones for your coulis, below)
  3. Place the strawberries on a baking sheet, not touching one another, and freeze until solid.
  4. Transfer the strawberries to plastic resealable bags or airtight containers and store in the freezer for up to six months.

2. Strawberries in Simple Syrup

Freeze the berries whole in a mildly sweet sugar-water. You can use jars or plastic containers. Packed in liquid, the berries retain their color and shape when reconstituted, making them a standalone dessert. They can also be spooned over yogurt or ice cream, or heaped onto scones and topped with cream. 

  1. Make simple syrup: Combine 4 cups water to 1 cup sugar. Dissolve the sugar in cold water.
  2. Place whole or sliced berries in containers and cover with cold syrup; use about 1/2 to 1/3 cup of syrup for each pint container. Package and freeze.
 To Thaw: Thaw in the refrigerator or on the counter. Never immerse frozen jars into hot water.

Tip 1: Make the simple syrup before you receive your fruit. It keeps for several weeks in the fridge, and will be waiting, already chilled, for the moment your fresh strawberries arrive.
Tip 2: Add a gentle, natural flavor to the simple syrup such as orange zest or vanilla bean. Your jar of berries is now dessert; thaw, open and eat with a spoon when berries are not as easily available.

3. Strawberry Coulis

Strawberry coulis adds ruby color and fresh flavor to many desserts. Drizzle over ice cream, spoon it over pancakes or crepes, serve it over chocolate cake.
  • 1 pound strawberries, washed and hulled
  • 1 Tablespoon sugar
  • 1/2 teaspoon lemon juice or lime juice
  1. Combine strawberries, lemon or lime juice and sugar in blender or food processor.
  2. Pulse until berries are somewhat chopped then blend until smooth. Taste and adjust sugar if needed.
  3. Pour into two 1/2 pint jars, leaving 1/2 an inch of space at the top of the jar, and freeze.
Makes 2 cups.
Note: Sauce will also keep up to four days in the refrigerator.

Tip: Be sure to set aside some strawberry sauce for a refreshing strawberry-limeade concentrate below!


4. Strawberry-Limeade Concentrate

Transform bruised and less-attractive berries into this refreshing cooler. By having this concentrate on hand, you can quickly and easily whip up fresh and beautiful drinks.

  • 3/4 cup strawberry coulis (recipe above)
  • 3/4 cup sugar or whole cane sugar
  • 1 cup lime juice (approximately 8 limes)
Mix ingredients together and freeze in ice cube trays.
To serve: In a drinking glass, stir together 1 cup cold water and two frozen cubes of concentrate and stir to combine. Enjoy.


Please refer to "The Doctor's Office" blog post for amazing benefits of strawberries.