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experiencelifemag.com
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Vital Nourishment
Looking to enhance your vitality - or to rebuild it after a
health crisis? Author and cancer survivor Rebecca Katz sees great-tasting whole
foods as a natural and delicious place to begin.
By Dara Moskowitz Grumdahl |
November 2007 |
Delicata
Squash With Dino Kale and Cranberries
Vitality is not a word that arises very often in our daily lives. We know when
we feel tired, run-down, exhausted, overwhelmed, depressed or sick — but
vital? It calls to mind the phrase ”vital signs,”
a topic normally associated with those in dangerously poor health. Rebecca Katz
wishes the term got more play in the world of healthy people — and that
we were all so attuned to what makes us feel vital that
we would demand it from the foods we eat.
Katz is a cancer survivor and the coauthor of the colorful bestseller One
Bite at a Time: Nourishing Recipes for Cancer Survivors and Their Friends (Celestial
Arts, 2004). She wrote the book for people dealing with cancer, be they caregivers
or patients. But it’s not just for sick people; it’s for those who
want foods that taste great and give the body all the things it needs to feel
at its vital best.
I caught up with Katz by phone recently at a farmers’ market in northern
California. “The problem is that there is just so much information out
there today about nutrition, superfoods, phytochemicals, antioxidants, good
fats, bad fats, and so on, that people lose the thread about why we eat food
to begin with,” Katz told me. “I call it nutritional analysis leading
to culinary paralysis. People have all this information, and then they have
the old foods they’re emotionally connected to,” like casseroles
made from processed food, “and they think healthy foods have to be hippie
gruel, and then they just freeze. But healthy food is not yucky food!”
To remedy this confusion, Katz focused her book around one guiding principle:
We naturally respond to nourishing foods because they taste great. “I
know that we gravitate toward foods with the freshest taste, the best taste,”
Katz said. “It’s a basic human instinct, to eat well. It’s
in our DNA, and no amount of fast food can take that away from us. Maybe we
get numb to it over time, but when we’re exposed to nutrient-rich foods
with all the good things in them — minerals, antioxidants, phytochemicals
— we’re just: Wow! More of that. Give me more of that.
That’s why, in my book, I chose to lead with taste. In order
for food to be healthy and vital, it needs to be eaten. We don’t get any
health benefits from vegetables in the crisper drawer going bad while we order
a pizza! Food is only healthy if we eat it, which is why it has to be delicious,
it has to be yum!”
For instance, Katz heard from lots of people last year who served her recipe
for Delicata Squash With Dino Kale and Cranberries at their family’s Thanksgiving
(reprinted here). “I’d hear things like, ‘I told people what
I’m bringing, and they responded — You’re not bringing
the green bean casserole? You’re not coming!’”
Katz recalled. “You know how emotional food is. But then, when the squash
and dino kale were actually on the buffet table, people ate it. They loved it!
The ‘yums’ were really happening. Kids especially loved it. The
thing about that dish that works is, one, it’s beautiful to look at. It’s
also got the combinations of flavor in there, a little bit of sweet, a little
bit astringent — the taste buds are tickled by that. And then, once people
are eating nourishing, whole foods, you just see light bulbs go on over their
heads — they feel better, they feel energy, they feel excited, they feel
healthy. I’ve seen it time and time again — you pull people in through
their taste buds, and their body just responds.”
Cancer patients are acutely attuned to that response, especially when they’re
dealing with treatments that leave them feeling thoroughly tapped out. In that
situation, Katz says, a bowl of soup made from whole foods can mean the difference
between feeling exhausted or energized. What people who don’t have cancer
often fail to realize, however, is that you don’t have to be sick before
you pay attention to your body’s vitality: The same things that maximize
your defenses and resiliency when you’re dealing with cancer are the same
things that make you feel nourished and strong when you’re perfectly healthy.
Wouldn’t it be amazing if we all checked in with our own “vital
signs” at every meal? If we did, we might eat very differently —
satisfying our hunger, and replenishing the source of our vitality in the process.
Dara Moskowitz Grumdahl is a Minneapolis-based food and wine critic.
Nominated seven times for James Beard Awards — the Oscars of the food
world — she received four awards for her restaurant and wine column in
the Village Voice Media–owned newspaper City Pages. Her
work has been included in the Best Food Writing anthologies
of 2001, 2003, 2004, 2005 and 2007.
Delicata
Squash With Dino Kale and Cranberries (Back
to Top)
Serves four
6 cups dino kale, stemmed and torn into small, bite-size pieces
4 delicata squash
2 tbs. extra-virgin olive oil
1/4 tsp. dried sage
1/4 tsp. ground allspice
1/2 tsp. sea salt
1/8 tsp. red pepper flakes
1/4 cup dried cranberries
Preheat the oven to 425 degrees F. Cover the kale with cold water and set aside
until ready to use.
Peel the squash with a sharp vegetable peeler. Cut in half lengthwise, scoop
out the core and seeds, and cut into 1/2-inch pieces. Toss the squash with 1
tablespoon of the olive oil, the sage, allspice and 1/4 teaspoon salt. Spread
the squash in a single layer on a baking sheet. Roast for 15 minutes, or until
tender.
While the squash is roasting, heat a large sauté pan over medium heat.
Add the remaining 1 tablespoon olive oil, red pepper flakes and cranberries.
Stir 10 seconds, and add the kale and 1/4 teaspoon salt. Sauté until tender.
The water that adheres to the greens should be enough water to cook them. If
needed, add 1 tablespoon of water to finish cooking.
Stir the roasted squash into the sautéed kale. Serve immediately in a shallow
serving bowl or as a side dish to a main course.
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Vital Nourishment
Looking to enhance your vitality - or to rebuild it after a
health crisis? Author and cancer survivor Rebecca Katz sees great-tasting whole
foods as a natural and delicious place to begin.
By Dara Moskowitz Grumdahl | Edibles Department, November 2007 |
Delicata
Squash With Dino Kale and Cranberries
Vitality is not a word that arises very often in our daily lives. We know when
we feel tired, run-down, exhausted, overwhelmed, depressed or sick — but
vital? It calls to mind the phrase ”vital signs,”
a topic normally associated with those in dangerously poor health. Rebecca Katz
wishes the term got more play in the world of healthy people — and that
we were all so attuned to what makes us feel vital that
we would demand it from the foods we eat.
Katz is a cancer survivor and the coauthor of the colorful bestseller One
Bite at a Time: Nourishing Recipes for Cancer Survivors and Their Friends (Celestial
Arts, 2004). She wrote the book for people dealing with cancer, be they caregivers
or patients. But it’s not just for sick people; it’s for those who
want foods that taste great and give the body all the things it needs to feel
at its vital best.
I caught up with Katz by phone recently at a farmers’ market in northern
California. “The problem is that there is just so much information out
there today about nutrition, superfoods, phytochemicals, antioxidants, good
fats, bad fats, and so on, that people lose the thread about why we eat food
to begin with,” Katz told me. “I call it nutritional analysis leading
to culinary paralysis. People have all this information, and then they have
the old foods they’re emotionally connected to,” like casseroles
made from processed food, “and they think healthy foods have to be hippie
gruel, and then they just freeze. But healthy food is not yucky food!”
To remedy this confusion, Katz focused her book around one guiding principle:
We naturally respond to nourishing foods because they taste great. “I
know that we gravitate toward foods with the freshest taste, the best taste,”
Katz said. “It’s a basic human instinct, to eat well. It’s
in our DNA, and no amount of fast food can take that away from us. Maybe we
get numb to it over time, but when we’re exposed to nutrient-rich foods
with all the good things in them — minerals, antioxidants, phytochemicals
— we’re just: Wow! More of that. Give me more of that.
That’s why, in my book, I chose to lead with taste. In order
for food to be healthy and vital, it needs to be eaten. We don’t get any
health benefits from vegetables in the crisper drawer going bad while we order
a pizza! Food is only healthy if we eat it, which is why it has to be delicious,
it has to be yum!”
For instance, Katz heard from lots of people last year who served her recipe
for Delicata Squash With Dino Kale and Cranberries at their family’s Thanksgiving
(reprinted here). “I’d hear things like, ‘I told people what
I’m bringing, and they responded — You’re not bringing
the green bean casserole? You’re not coming!’”
Katz recalled. “You know how emotional food is. But then, when the squash
and dino kale were actually on the buffet table, people ate it. They loved it!
The ‘yums’ were really happening. Kids especially loved it. The
thing about that dish that works is, one, it’s beautiful to look at. It’s
also got the combinations of flavor in there, a little bit of sweet, a little
bit astringent — the taste buds are tickled by that. And then, once people
are eating nourishing, whole foods, you just see light bulbs go on over their
heads — they feel better, they feel energy, they feel excited, they feel
healthy. I’ve seen it time and time again — you pull people in through
their taste buds, and their body just responds.”
Cancer patients are acutely attuned to that response, especially when they’re
dealing with treatments that leave them feeling thoroughly tapped out. In that
situation, Katz says, a bowl of soup made from whole foods can mean the difference
between feeling exhausted or energized. What people who don’t have cancer
often fail to realize, however, is that you don’t have to be sick before
you pay attention to your body’s vitality: The same things that maximize
your defenses and resiliency when you’re dealing with cancer are the same
things that make you feel nourished and strong when you’re perfectly healthy.
Wouldn’t it be amazing if we all checked in with our own “vital
signs” at every meal? If we did, we might eat very differently —
satisfying our hunger, and replenishing the source of our vitality in the process.
Dara Moskowitz Grumdahl is a Minneapolis-based food and wine critic.
Nominated seven times for James Beard Awards — the Oscars of the food
world — she received four awards for her restaurant and wine column in
the Village Voice Media–owned newspaper City Pages. Her
work has been included in the Best Food Writing anthologies
of 2001, 2003, 2004, 2005 and 2007.
Delicata
Squash With Dino Kale and Cranberries (Back
to Top)
Serves four
6 cups dino kale, stemmed and torn into small, bite-size pieces
4 delicata squash
2 tbs. extra-virgin olive oil
1/4 tsp. dried sage
1/4 tsp. ground allspice
1/2 tsp. sea salt
1/8 tsp. red pepper flakes
1/4 cup dried cranberries
Preheat the oven to 425 degrees F. Cover the kale with cold water and set aside
until ready to use.
Peel the squash with a sharp vegetable peeler. Cut in half lengthwise, scoop
out the core and seeds, and cut into 1/2-inch pieces. Toss the squash with 1
tablespoon of the olive oil, the sage, allspice and 1/4 teaspoon salt. Spread
the squash in a single layer on a baking sheet. Roast for 15 minutes, or until
tender.
While the squash is roasting, heat a large sauté pan over medium heat.
Add the remaining 1 tablespoon olive oil, red pepper flakes and cranberries.
Stir 10 seconds, and add the kale and 1/4 teaspoon salt. Sauté until tender.
The water that adheres to the greens should be enough water to cook them. If
needed, add 1 tablespoon of water to finish cooking.
Stir the roasted squash into the sautéed kale. Serve immediately in a shallow
serving bowl or as a side dish to a main course.
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