|
In the raw Local
woman’s mostly uncooked recipe places second in national
contest
By Judy Grigoraci
Food writer
Stacey
Angel entered the world of raw foods preparation and dining after
a pamphlet caught her eye. It explained the concept and gave a
telephone number for further information. She called it and hasn’t
looked back.
The
Charleston woman recently talked about her initiation one year
ago into this new way of eating and viewing nutrition: “I
took Sally Miller’s raw foods class that she conducts in
her home in Sherwood Forest. It was four hours of a broad overview
of raw foods. Sally is a wonderful resource and great mentor.
“I
went to her because, after looking at all the food fads out there,
I was confused about what could be considered ‘good’
for you. The safest and single-most universally agreed-upon approach
seems to be fresh fruits and vegetables.”
Angel acknowledged that she’s not always totally in the
raw. She applies some cooked food to a basic uncooked recipe to
appeal to a wider range of palates. And to her own.
“In
winter it’s hard to convert cooked to raw because we all
want warm food, especially after a difficult day,” she said.
“Everyone loves homey, comfy food and the feeling we get
when we enjoy it. My cooked noodles with raw vegetables may offer
the best of both worlds.”
She
developed the recipe after she and her husband, Brooke Brown,
had a craving for “something Thai.” She kept playing
with ingredients until the dish was perfected. So perfect, in
fact, that it’s a recent national award winner.
“My
mother, Mary, is a big fan of QVC shopping network,” Angel
said. “She got me hooked. I suffer from insomnia and find
that QVC is a good cure—it’s repetitive, therefore
comforting to me. However it was Mom who saw the cooking contest
invitation and encouraged me to enter. It wasn’t one for
raw foods, but I sent my Thai recipe anyway and just received
the letter from QVC telling me that I placed second.”
Angel
said as much or as little raw food can be incorporated into your
daily diet as you desire. Those who embrace it 100 percent are
100 percent vegans.
Why
raw foods? She explained that there are enzymes in raw vegetables,
fruits and nuts. When heated beyond 115 degrees, those enzymes
are lost and, in order to digest, our body has to produce enzymes,
making it work harder. If you cause less stress to your body,
there’s more energy for it to perform other tasks.
Allowing
consumed enzymes to meet the challenge of digestion, giving the
body a slight rest, seems in direct contrast with popular cooked-food
diets that would have your body toiling to burn excess undesirable
stored material.
Two
of Angel’s three daily meals are raw. She saves semi-cooked
dinners to have with her husband in their East End apartment.
He is supportive of her efforts and shares her enthusiasm for
the dishes she prepares.
Has
she totally conquered most no-no cravings? Not quite. She cheerfully
confessed her weakness for unsanctioned foods. Her particular
downfalls are pancakes, once-a-week salmon, French baguettes and
an Endangered Species-brand extreme dark chocolate bar called
“Black Panther.” Angel says it’s so good and
deeply chocolate that she has recommended it to others and now
they are addicted. It’s sold at Healthy Life Market in area
Drug Emporiums, along with white and milk chocolate varieties.
She
hasn't turned a cold shoulder to commercially prepared hot dishes,
either. For eating out, Sitar of India is her most tempting restaurant
and the biggest treat. She indulges in their cooked vegetables
as her cooked meal of the day. Delish on McFarland Street also
gets her nod as having excellent vegetarian items.
To
prove her cuisine doesn't consist of one salad after another,
Angel, a spirited home cook, developed a recipe for chocolate
truffles. They're made from raw cocoa nibs, ground to powder and
processed with soaked walnuts, dates and coconut. The mixture
is shaped into balls and rolled in cocoa powder or coconut.
She
pointed out that all nuts have to be soaked 8 to 12 hours, then
dried before using because they naturally contain enzyme inhibitors.
Soaking removes the inhibitors.
From
macadamia nuts, she makes a cheese substitute that has the consistency
and texture of a ricotta. Her frozen-fruit pie is an amalgamation
of two recipes: a raw banana-coconut ice cream to which she adds
fresh pineapple; and a maple-walnut crust.
Raw
zucchini or yellow squash “noodles” may be substituted
for the cooked pasta in the Thai recipe. Put the squash through
a spiral slicer or cut long, thin strands by hand.
Angel graduated from George Washington High School in 1988, and
later from Marshall University with an anthropology degree.
She
works for Bryan Boyd Creative Group — a marketing and ad
agency — as director of client services. She wants to enhance
her education and cooking interest by attending The Living Light
Culinary Institute in Ft. Bragg, Calif. It's a three-week focus
on gourmet raw foods.
“If
I'm going to do it [raw foods], I'm going to learn how to make
it taste good,” she joked. There's only one slight impediment.
The 21-day intoroductory course and chef training/certification
costs $4,000. Her plans aren't completely funded at the moment,
but she's saving to go to the small-town school north of San Francisco.
“Food
is a big part of pleasure in life,” she said. “It
brings us together. I want to make it pleasant for my friends
and family through these classes. I'd like to work as a raw foods
chef where I get to be creative and have fun. I think raw lends
itself better to experimentation than cooked — no spoiling,
no cross-contamination. I introduce people to raw food when I
have the opportunity by bringing something to a gathering for
everyone to taste.”
For
those who want to learn more locally about raw foods, there is
Sue Miller's $75 basics class. In addition, Miller holds specialty
$50 hands-on cooking classes with themes of “Raw Lunches,”
“What's Raw for Dinner?” and “Sprouting.”
A
potluck meal support group meets the first Sunday of every month
with a guest speaker each session. Membership is open.
The
May discussion was of attempts to start a vegetable co-op and
instructions on growing organic wheat grass, an important component
of a raw foods diet.
Angel
gets most of her ingredients from Miller. She says Miller also
stocks delicious raw cookies, crackers and snacks at her business,
Eats of Eden. Miller's e-mail address is eatsofeden@charter.net.
Angel's email is s-angel@verizon.net.
“I
want to get the message to others that there are classes, ingredients
and a support system for raw food enthusiasts. Even though I don't
do raw foods exclusively, I can tell the difference in how I feel
when I eat more uncooked foods. I feel better. There's enough
of a difference in my body to make me want to continue this eating
lifestyle.”
Spicy
Thai Delight
Half
a box of rice noodles
Sauce:
1
can coconut milk
2
rounded tablespoons raw almond butter
1
teaspoon curry powder
1 teaspoon red pepper flakes — more to taste
1 teaspoon dried basil
1
tablespoon Nama Shoyu (raw soy sauce) — more to taste
1
teaspoon freshly grated ginger
Zest
and juice of one lime
Sea salt to taste
Veggie
Topping:
2
carrots, cut into matchsticks
1
zucchini, cut into matchsticks
Half
a red bell pepper, cut into matchsticks
1
cup cherry tomatoes
1
cup broccoli florets, chopped small
Garnish:
1/2
cup diced scallions
1/4 cup chopped cashews
2
tablespoons dried coconut
Prepare
noodles according to package directions. Meanwhile, whisk together
all sauce ingredients in medium saucepan over medium heat; heat
sauce until simmering; adjust seasoning to taste. Place noodles
on serving plate; arrange vegetables over noodles; ladle on sauce;
garnish and serve. Serves 2.
Note:
Healthy Life Market has raw almond butter and organic shoyu.
Source:
http://wvgazette.com/section/Food/200505175?pt=34
|