The Alliums

The Alliums

Alliums, a Latin word for garlic, are monocotyledon flowering plants, like onions, garlic, leeks, chives, shallots, scallions and leek. The allium family contains sulfuric compounds, which makes it pungent. These important culinary herbs add delicate flavor and pungency to the dish. But not only that, these are important source of vitamins and minerals, antioxidants, anti-inflammatory quercetin, anti-lipidemic saponins, and antihypertensive allyl sulfides. No wonder it is included in the list of Superfoods! 

In ancient Egypt, garlic was prized more than gold. And today in China, businessmen invest more in garlic than in gold and silver. Moreover, an old story about an onion cut in half, left in a windowsill, saved a family during a flu epidemic in1919 that had taken many people’s lives. The doctor who visited the family, to his amazement explored their house of what could possibly protect them from the virus. His focus turned into the onion that the mother usually leaves by their window. He examined the onion under a microscope, and found many viruses and bacteria trapped therein.

There are many potent mixtures of garlic and onions to help prevent flu and to strengthen the immune system. But one that is really powerful is the Rocket Fuel of Dr. Agatha Thrash. It is a great natural antibiotic and anti-viral concoction.

Rocket Fuel

  • ½ cup lemon juice
  • 4-5 garlic cloves
  • ¼ onion, medium size
  • 2 to 3 inch ginger
  • 3-4 tablespoons of honey
  • a pinch of cayenne
  • ¾ cups of water

Process well all the ingredients in a blender. Drink a cup to ward off microorganisms and boost your immunity! If storing it, leave it in a glass container (because it will burn the plastic), and drink it as soon as you can.

Myrtle Pettit is a Certified Clinical Nutritionist. She finished her Masters in Public Health with a concentration in Nutrition at Liberty University, Lynchburg, VA. Furthermore, her drive to combine theory and practice led her to Living Light Culinary Institute, Fort Bragg, CA, to be certified as a Raw Food Chef and Instructor. She also holds a Master Food Preserver from Cornell University. Myrtle offers one on one consultation, provides health lectures, seminars, and healthy cooking classes to promote a healthier lifestyle. She’s very supportive of her students’ journey to health in every stage.
Blood Purifier

Blood Purifier

Detox clinics are in a boom, because many people are in need of a good ol’ cleanse. And detoxification specialists uses chelation therapy to remove heavy metals effectively and immediately from the body. But we have a simple recipe…

 

Blood Purifier

 

  • 1 whole beet
  • 2 golden delicious apples
  • 2 red delicious apples
  • 2 cups of grapes (millinara or rosanella)
  • 4-5 leaves of kale
  • 6 stalks of celery
  • 2 inch ginger (optional)

Juice the fruits and veggies in a high-powered juicer. And drink to your health!

NOTE: You can reduce the amount of beet, if you’re not used to its taste. But beets contain powerful phytonutrients and antioxidants, particularly betalains and vulgaxanthin, which support detoxification process and anti-inflammatory response. Nature has a way of telling us what it is for. Its color and taste almost resembles to that of the blood. And it is indeed good for the blood!

Myrtle Pettit is a Certified Clinical Nutritionist. She finished her Masters in Public Health with a concentration in Nutrition at Liberty University, Lynchburg, VA. Furthermore, her drive to combine theory and practice led her to Living Light Culinary Institute, Fort Bragg, CA, to be certified as a Raw Food Chef and Instructor. She also holds a Master Food Preserver from Cornell University. Myrtle offers one on one consultation, provides health lectures, seminars, and healthy cooking classes to promote a healthier lifestyle. She’s very supportive of her students’ journey to health in every stage.
Since Sliced Bread

Since Sliced Bread

Once upon a time, bread making was a time-consuming and intricate art form, involving small-batch capacity clay ovens and stone ground flour made from family grown grains. As hungry mouths gathered to partake in the satisfaction of a hard day’s work and a well-balanced meal, words like “boxed,” “prepackaged,” and “ready-made” were unheard of, and the concepts of “gluten intolerance” and “gluten-free” were entirely inconceivable. Today, the gluten-free phenomenon has taken over. Is it just a fad? Or is there something more to it?

As tired intestines admit defenseless defeat, they allow undigested glutens to cross the blood-brain barrier (the filter of tiny blood vessels that carry clean blood to your brain and spine). Now the immune system has to get involved. Up in arms, it sends angry antibodies to fight off the unidentified foreign objects in your blood. They get the job done, but there are some consequences known as autoimmune disease (when your immune system turns on you). There are many causes and effects of autoimmunity and gluten is not always the enemy, but chances are it’s never an innocent bystander either. Frankly, with the modern convenience and instant access availability of bread products, we tend to overdo it. This may perhaps be the biggest factor in the rapid rise of gluten-intolerance and associated autoimmunity.

 

You may think, “My autoimmune condition has nothing to do with this,” but many people have reversed and even eliminated various health problems by cutting back, or completely eliminating gluten from their diet for a time— and even permanently. You may say, “I’m healthy and I don’t have a problem with gluten,” but there are still many reasons why you may want to consider passing on the pasta, such as reducing weight, fatigue, and brain fog. Try it. You may discover that good health is the greatest thing since sliced bread.

 

First, what exactly is gluten? It’s a name used to describe the family of proteins found in many grains, such as wheat, rye, barley, and spelt. These proteins give bread its structure, elasticity, and that hearty, chewy, texture we know and love. Gluten is why dough gets so stretchy as you knead it, why pasta doesn’t just fall apart as you cook it, and why crackers don’t just turn into crumbles. Basically, gluten is one tough cookie.

 

 

 

 

People have been eating glutinous goods since the Bible times without threat of digestive disturbance. But something changed. After wheat underwent many rounds of hybridization to produce shorter, sturdier crops for exponentially greater yields and even greater profits, those “amber waves of grain” didn’t wave quite like they used to anymore. As a result, already tough gluten became nearly indestructible.

 

 

 

 Even in the healthiest of digestive tracts, our bodies have never been experts at breaking down gluten’s stronghold— but we always had help. The combined efforts of the bacteria in our digestive systems and the long fermentation process involved in the bread making of yesterday all aided in gluten’s complete breakdown. But with modern-day sliced bread, instant yeast, and boxed cereal, bread products take hours and not days to make. At the same time, the overabundance of antibiotic usage (and other microbiome destructors) has rendered most digestive systems almost depleted of their tiny task force, leaving them understaffed and overworked.

 

 c

As tired intestines admit defenseless defeat, they allow undigested glutens to cross the blood-brain barrier (the filter of tiny blood vessels that carry clean blood to your brain and spine). Now the immune system has to get involved. Up in arms, it sends angry antibodies to fight off the unidentified foreign objects in your blood. They get the job done, but there are some consequences known as autoimmune disease (when your immune system turns on you). There are many causes and effects of autoimmunity and gluten is not always the enemy, but chances are it’s never an innocent bystander either. Frankly, with the modern convenience and instant access availability of bread products, we tend to overdo it. This may perhaps be the biggest factor in the rapid rise of gluten-intolerance and associated autoimmunity.

You may think, “My autoimmune condition has nothing to do with this,” but many people have reversed and even eliminated various health problems by cutting back, or completely eliminating gluten from their diet for a time— and even permanently. You may say, “I’m healthy and I don’t have a problem with gluten,” but there are still many reasons why you may want to consider passing on the pasta, such as reducing weight, fatigue, and brain fog. Try it. You may discover that good health is the greatest thing since sliced bread.

Bianca Humpert is an independent writer and a homemade health enthusiast. Her own curious battle in pursuit of perfect health was born out of necessity when she was diagnosed with a severe case of Multiple Sclerosis in 2012 at the ripe age of twenty. Six years later, after a serious diet overhaul; much soul-searching, life-changing, and divine-intervening, she lives medication free, citing faith, food, and family as the primary reasons for her preferred health status. Now she embraces the opportunity to use her love of the written word, and her cherished obsession with healthy living to share what she has learned with others.

Juice for your Health

Juice for your Health

Juicing is an important detoxification, we can do for our bodies. Everyday we are bombarded with toxins coming from our environment.

World Wild Life is an organization that helps preserve world’s biodiversity by reducing the amount of global footprint. They have found that since 1930, the world’s chemical production have increased dramatically, 400 fold. These chemicals can travel through air, water, and can be accumulated by plants, animals and human beings. Man can ingest it through food or water, and even absorb it through its largest organ, the skin. It can disrupt many bodily processes, create hormonal imbalance, damage DNA, and cause cancer.

And many Volatile Organic Compounds (VOCs) have found its way to our very homes. Environmental Working Group (EWG) has found substances in more than 2,000 home cleaning products in the US to cause health problems, such as asthma, cancer, reproductive and developmental toxicity, allergies and irritations, even causes burns and poisoning.

 

 

Everyday, we obtain many hits of cancer-causing agents. That’s why it’s important not only be aware of what products we use at home, but also what we put in our bodies. Detoxification is one way to eliminate many of the toxins bioaccumulated in our system.  And juicing is one effective way to do that. It not only cleanses but nourishes our system.

Wheat grass and barley grass, have been extensively researched. These are two powerful, nutrient-packed green grass. You take it in a powder form, but the nutrients however becomes more bioavailable when it is freshly juiced. You can mix it with apples, cucumber, lemons, kale and celery. But even just an ounce shot of wheat grass juice is equivalent to the nutrient content of 20 pounds fruits and vegetables. Powerful! It’s rich in vitamins and minerals, essential amino acids, enzymes, chlorophyll and a plant steroid (betasitosterol). Wheat grass is a great blood detoxifier!

But for others who are allergic to wheat, there is a great option, barley grass. Barley grass, though on a bitter side compared to the slight sweetness of wheat grass, produce less gastric symptoms. It is considered to have more calcium (11x) than cow’s milk, more potassium (5x) than spinach, and more vitamin C (7x) than oranges, and has 80 mg of vitamin B12 per 100 grams.

These two are the Super Grass!

Start juicing today, and give your system a good spring cleaning!

Myrtle Pettit is a Certified Clinical Nutritionist. She finished her Masters in Public Health with a concentration in Nutrition at Liberty University, Lynchburg, VA. Furthermore, her drive to combine theory and practice led her to Living Light Culinary Institute, Fort Bragg, CA, to be certified as a Raw Food Chef and Instructor. She also holds a Master Food Preserver from Cornell University. Myrtle offers one on one consultation, provides health lectures, seminars, and healthy cooking classes to promote a healthier lifestyle. She’s very supportive of her students’ journey to health in every stage.

Choose Health, Choose Life

 

Today, we face the challenge of sorting through tons of information about health, in order to find relevance in the bits and pieces of what we get. We are in a crisis of solving the public health issues, despite the advancement in research, science and technology. The double burden of diseases, both communicable and lifestyle diseases, remains prevalent in our society. Moreover, we have a broken food system.

Food is a necessity for survival. It is vital to health and wellness. The nutrients we need come from the food we eat. The food is broken down, metabolized and assimilated into our body. Hippocrates, the father of medicine, recognized its substantial role in man’s existence. “Let food be thy medicine, and medicine thy food.” And it is no wonder why our society is sick and overweight, because many have not fully understood the value of eating healthy. It is one thing to die of hunger, but another thing to die of excess. A trite saying goes, “Eat to live not live to eat”. We have to eat at a cellular level. Eat to nourish our bodies.

Perhaps it’s not just the issue of making informed decision, but the problem lies in other predisposing, precipitating and perpetuating factors. Similar lessons we can adopt from 5 A’s of access to care can be applied to access to food: affordability, availability, accessibility, accommodation, and acceptability. We have to use these measures to improve our current food system. It would not take overnight, for it is a long overhaul process. But one by one we can make a difference.

And that is our aim at Kitch’n Gardens, to help people make educated and informed decision in their lifestyle choices. As well as to integrate both knowledge and practical know-how to grow food and cook healthy. The more people are surrounded with healthful choices, the easier it is for them to make that shift. We can choose to be passive spectators or be active participants in finding solutions to these problems.

Therefore, choose health, choose life, and make a difference!

 

Myrtle Pettit is a Certified Clinical Nutritionist. She finished her Masters in Public Health with a concentration in Nutrition at Liberty University, Lynchburg, VA. Furthermore, her drive to combine theory and practice led her to Living Light Culinary Institute, Fort Bragg, CA, to be certified as a Raw Food Chef and Instructor. She also holds a Master Food Preserver from Cornell University. Myrtle offers one on one consultation, provides health lectures, seminars, and healthy cooking classes to promote a healthier lifestyle. She’s very supportive of her students’ journey to health in every stage.