Muffin Base (GF, DF, grain free)

I wanted to post a basic muffin base that I use to add chocolate chips, blueberries, raisins and a shredded carrot or whatever else your mind can come up with. I do not add nuts to my baking because I do not want to cook them. SO…these I use when I need a snack for my daughters school or need to take something to a brunch. I usually have a version of muffin in my freezer at any time to pull out for a snack in case I didn’t get to the grocery store and have a hungry preschooler who doesn’t want yet another egg!

Muffin Base (GF, DF, grain free)

  • 1/2 cup coconut flour, sifted
  • 1/4 tsp pink salt
  • 1/4 tsp baking soda
  • 4 lrg pastured eggs, room temp*very important if using coconut oil…so it doesn’t solidify**
  • 1/2 c maple syrup or honey(or other liquid sweetener of choice)
  • 1/2 – 1 Tbsp vanilla (depends on what you are adding as optional..blueberries add more, carrot add less)
  • 1/4-1/3 cup unsalted butter, melted (or coconut oil to make vegan)
  • 2-4 Tbsp coconut milk or water
  • OPT: 1/4 cup chocolate chips, 1/3 cup blueberries…etc. Really anything adding up to btwn 1/4 – 1/3 cup. **If you add frozen blueberries you will need less(or none) water.

Make 6-8 muffins. preheat 350

In food processor, blend all dry ingredients. Add in liquid ingredients. Blend until smooth. May need to scrape down the bowl. Stir in optional ingredients and fill each muffin liner with about 1/4 cup batter. Bake about 20 minutes or until toothpick comes clean. Once cooled fully, cover and store in fridge or freezer.

Note about butter or coconut oil. I like a more moist coconut flour muffin so I add more. If you like a drier version, add less.

This is my strawberry muffin. I’m experimenting with half the syrup and xylitol and soda water.

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Update on vitamin potocol

So, with help from some very experienced, amazing fellow BP’ers I have devised a new vitamin regimen for myself that focuses on adressing minor adrenal fatigue and general adrenal health. I am going to stick with this for about 3-4 months and see how I feel. I want to really thank one individual and if you want to know more about his thinking and process, not to mentions actual knowledge behind it…please follow this link and help to support him. http://www.indiegogo.com/projects/ultimate-digestive-health-book?browse_v=new&show_todos=true

On to the new routine:

AM with BP coffee and an egg or two:

  • Thorne B5 complex
  • B12/Folate
  • d3 (5000mg every other day)
  • vitA (at the moment finishing btl of betacarotine but switching to fermented CLO)
  • Ester C (NON GMO) 2000mg
  • Glutathione, cycled on and off every week or two
  • Calcium D Glucarate 1000mg

Lunch

  • zinc citrate 30mg
  • krill oil
  • two drops iodine…specifically this detoxadine kind (will increase this but need to look into how and how much if needed)
  • selenium

Bed

  • magnesium glycinate 400mg
  • Potassium citrate 200mg
  • Ester C (NON GMO) 2000mg
  • relora plus(for adrenal health)

Along with this I am making sure to eat good carbs with supper and occasionally lunch, keep up my good fats and protein. Maybe about 25/25/50 for calories from carbs/protein/fats. I am also taking 1/8 tsp salt in the am upon waking.

Cauliflower tortillas

Here is a version of cauliflower tortilla’s. Mine are as BP as I can make them but even then…I don’t know how to get around not using a microwave. If anyone has an idea…I am all ears. I now keep mine in our basement so I don’t use it for anything except this really!

Cauliflower Tortilla’s

Ingredients:

  • 3 cups of uncooked, riced, packed cauliflower (may need 2 lrg heads)
  • 6 egg whites
  • sea salt

Method

  1. Remove most of the stems of the cauliflower. Rice cauliflower. I do mine in the food processor in small batches until quite fine. Or you can grate it for more of a work out!
  2. Measure out 3 cups, packed into a microwave safe bowl.
  3. Microwave 3 minutes, stir, microwave 2 minutes.
  4. Place all cauliflower in a dish towel and wring out the water. This is super important but very tricky to do and not burn yourself.
  5. Place cauliflower in bowl and cool down a bit in the fridge. Stir it occasionally. This may take an hour or so. (place on a cookie sheet to speed up the process)
  6. When cauliflower is cool, preheat oven to 350. Line cookie sheet with parchment
  7. In a bowl, add cauliflower, eggs and salt(to taste). I use lots of Himalayan salt for these, so adjust it to your taste.
  8. Mix with a spoon. Note…it will be a bit runny. Spoon it onto your parchment and make little circles. About 8.
  9. Place in oven about 10 minutes, flip and cook another 5-7 minutes. Take out and cool on a wire rack
  10. If you want you can fry up on a pan before eating

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Bulletproof Shepherds Pie

This is one of my favorite things to make and I keep forgetting to post it! It is so versatile and you can add many other things to make it your own. My favorite part of this is the cauliflower topping…you must, must use lots of butter…that is the secret!

Shepherds Pie

Ingredients

  • 1 lb pastured bacon, chopped up and cooked
  • 2 cups diced or shredded carrots
  • 2 cups organic, diced celery(celery is a heavily sprayed crop, please buy organic)
  • 2 lbs grass fed, regular ground beef
  • Himalayan salt
  • 1 cup bone broth (or whatever broth you have on hand)
  • 2 med-lrg heads of cauliflower
  • 1/2 – 1 cup grass fed butter

Method

  1. Chop and steam cauliflower. Throw it in a food processor with a lot (like, almost 1 cup grass fed butter) and whip until really smooth. set aside.
  2. Chop and cook bacon(on medium) in a large skillet, until mostly cooked.
  3. Add celery and carrots, cook about 5 min.
  4. preheat oven 350
  5. Add ground beef , 1/2 tsp salt and about 1/2 cup broth. Simmer and stir until beef is cooked adding more liquid if necessary. by the end, the liquid should be mostly evaporated
  6. Pour ground beef mix into large ceramic pan (like a corningware with tall sides). Top with the cauliflower mixture and bake uncovered about 30 minutes.

I have added other veggies like kale, spinach, and fennel with various spices to get different flavors. I will add celery and fennel with turmeric and coriander so get a eastern flavor…so play around. This is just basic.

**edit note**
I’ve made this a few more times since my post and feel like I should comment on the use of broth. I use regular ground beef because its a healthy fat (grass fed and finished) so I don’t need to add too much broth. I add only broth or water enough to cook slowly, almost poach the meat.

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‘Alfredo’ sauce, paleo style

I’ve spent the last few months playing around with an easy Alfredo style recipe to accompany our occasional chicken meal and I have found this to work out great. Usually I make a large spaghetti squash as noodles and roast a chicken to pull all the meat off and add to our bowls. This sauce is pretty easy and could easily be changed to your own taste.

‘Alfredo’ sauce

Ingredients

  • 3-5 cloves of garlic (fresh minced/pressed)
  • fresh rosemary, 2-3 sprigs or to taste
  • ~4 T butter (or olive oil)
  • 1-2 cans full fat coconut milk
  • 2 T+ arrowroot starch
  • 2-4 T lemon juice
  • himalayan salt (to taste)
  • 2 tsp onion powder (again, not bulletproof but tasty)

Method

  1. heat butter/oil in a saucepan over medium heat. Add garlic and rosemary. Stir constantly for about 1 minute to cook a bit.
  2. Slowly add coconut milk. (I use 2 full cans so I have leftovers for lunch). Bring to a simmer, stirring constantly.
  3. Add 2 T lemon juice, onion and salt. Taste. If needed add more lemon and salt. I use a ton of lemon in this since it is so tasty when mixed with the chicken.
  4. If you need to thicken this, mix 1 T arrowroot starch with a bit of water and add to the simmering mixture to thicken. You shouldn’t need more than about 2 T if using full fat coconut milk. Remember to simmer a bit to get it to thicken before adding more arrowroot starch.
  5. serve over spaghetti squash or cauliflower rice or noodles if you choose.

 

Bulletproof coconut cookies

These are a great treat to make and are as bulletproof/paleo/primal/healthy as I could make them. I got the original recipe here, and decided (a) I didn’t need 30 cookies so (b) no sugar allowed and (c) no egg yolks (to make more bulletproof). Now, I know that cookies are totally not bulletproof but for those of us who live in the real world with our children…they are as healthy of an alternative as I can get, just remember, they are a treat… not an everyday thing for us or our children.

Ingredients

  • 1/3 cup + 1 TBSP xylitol
  • 1/4 cup grass fed, room temp butter
  • splash of good vanilla
  • 3 egg whites
  • 1/8 tsp salt
  • 1/3 cup + 1 TBSP coconut flour
  • cinnamon mix: 1 TBSP each cinnamon and xylitol

Method
1. add xylitol, butter, vanilla, egg and salt in a bowl. Beat with beaters really well. Make sure that all is mixed and incorporated.
2. add coconut flour (sift in if it is clumpy). beat it in really well.
3. let sit and thicken about 5 minutes. Make sure to actually do this step or it wont work out
4. soop with a tbsp and kinda roll the “dough” into a semi ball. Roll in the cinnamon mixture, place on parchment lined cookie sheet. Press down slightly with a fork. (I say dough because it is a loose dough/liquid mixture that makes your hands really messy!)
5. Bake 15 min or so @ 375.

Enjoy!

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Following our children’s lead

I have come to believe that if we just follow our children’s lead, we would all be much healthier and happier. Let me explain…see children have no filter on what they say or do. They purely act on instinct for which is usually right. So many things that children do are the ways we have forgotten or have been conditioned out of us. Just watch kids play. Their movements are some of the best exercises you can do. My daughter who is only three likes to try and carry our kettle-bells around the house (15/30 lbs, never mind trying to lift a heavy game off a shelf that is far over her head. Try imitating and playing like a 2-3 year old for an hour…you’ll be exhausted from all the crawling and acting like an animal, jumping, dancing , jumping off of things, running in circles and doing random yoga moves as you color laying on the floor. If they have their way kids are usually is running around barefoot, even outside.

Then comes food. Kids eat when they are hungry. They will always let you know when they are hungry, believe me. We do not need to fit our kids into a schedule for eating. Kids, if not exposed to a lot of sugary juices as a small child(1yr) by the time they are 2-3 usually choose not to drink them. They treat them like a treat. My daughter prefers water, and we lead by example. No matter what kind of lifestyle your family follows, a few things are clear to me. Kids, by choice, will always crave fats and good carbs(sweet potato, rice). Recently over the Easter holidays I sat at the table with the extended family for dessert and while my daughter, who eats a ton of good fats on a regular basis, devoured frozen banana ice cream with a spoonful of nutella for dessert. Her younger cousin who doesn’t consume probably as much, sat at the table, pushed away his dessert and pointed to the butter dish. Since he was sitting on my husbands knee, he allowed the little fellow to eat spoonful after spoonful of straight, salted butter. We had to actually stop him from eating over a 1/4 cup of butter. But that just shows you that we need fats for growing and brain function. My daughter has been cooking with me since she was 6 months old and always has reached for the butter. A friend texted me the other day, because she know ‘my butter thing’ and told me her three year old boy was helping to bake and grabbed the butter. When the mom asked him to wipe his hands so the butter wouldn’t get everywhere, he said “mmm…greasy butter. Butter makes me feel good!” Need I say more!

Kids unlearn their good habits from us. We use food as rewards (I do too, which I know I shouldn’t), we passively teach breakfast foods are generally sugar and carbs, we think kids should be bundled up when its chilly, and heaven forbid we put socks and shoes on them to go outside in the yard to play and get dirty. Being exposed to chilly and even freaking cold weather has its advantages(for a short duration). Kinda like if you wear your winter coat in the house for an hour, when you go outside you are still going to be cold because your body has become used to the temperature. It isn’t healthy to over bundle. Kids and teens rebel against us and undress as soon as they know we are out of sight. They hate being too warm, let alone have movements restricted. Children are in constant motion and their metabolism is so high they are always warm. Socks and shoes outside, give me a break! Most kids hate it! I hate it…well I do like my flip flops, but I’d rather go barefoot in the yard and on the beach. Anyone that knows me, knows I would wear my flip flops all year round and am 95% of the time barefoot at home. Being barefoot and grounded to the earth may have some advantages. Grounding mats and the theory behind them are a fringe idea, but one that I have fully accepted.

Anyways…just some food for thought.

Lets talk cauliflower

Now, myself and my daughter don’t really love potatoes. We do however, love cauliflower. Here are two easy ways to make cauliflower into starch like lunch or dinner sides. There are lots of recipes for this out there, but I have been doing it this way for a long time and still love it every time I make it…which is way to often if you as the hubby.

Whipped Cauliflower

Ingredients

  • 1 head of cauliflower
  • ½ lb of butter (yes that is the right amount, sometimes I use more)

Cut your cauliflower into medium sized chunks. Use all the white bits. Steam your cauliflower in a steamer on the stove until it is very fork tender. Save the water (freeze it) and use a stock base for bone broth or soups. Dump it all in a food processor or a good blender(Blendtec or Vitamix). Add the butter in chunks. Puree until it is fluffy. If you cannot get it fluffy, you don’t have enough butter. You could add milk but since we are milk free, not an option. Add some Himalayan salt and call it a day! YUM!

 Riced Cauliflower

Ingredients

  • 1 head of cauliflower
  • 2-4 T butter
  • Opt: cilantro

Cut cauliflower into small chunks using all the white bits. Put the raw cauliflower into a food processor and pulse until it becomes crumbly, not a puree. You may need to do two small batches instead of one. In a hot fry pan, melt butter and add the cauliflower. Cook until translucent…depending on how much you have, about 10 minutes. Add chopped cilantro for the last few minutes if you want to. Add Himalayan salt to taste.

Butter in your coffee? Pardon?

You heard me. Yes, I put butter in my coffee. Not only do I put butter I add MCT oil too. It all whips together to make a very creamy and frothy latte like drink. So, this is usually my breakfast and it keeps me going until lunch. This idea of butter in your coffee is fairly foreign to most, but when talking a friend, she said, “oh, my grandfather used to put butter in his purculator coffee.” Guess the health benefits of butter have been lost on a few generations!

So here is the rundown. I learned of this crazy idea through The bulletproof Executive Blog. I figured, if it would keep me going all morning and I am only putting healthy things onto my body why not try it. I love butter so great.

Butter Coffee, as I make it

  • 400 mls coffee
  • 2-3 T unsalted butter, grass fed (or as good as you can get, see below)
  • 1 T MCT oil
  • Optional: few shakes of cinnamon
  • french press
  • Something to wiz it: Blentec, vitamix, magic bullet, immersion blender or even a little frother.

So I brew the coffee with a dash of cinnamon in a french press. While it sits, warm up the blender under hot water so when you add the coffee it doesn’t crack. I learned the hard way! I cut up 2-3 T butter and dump it in my warm blender/bullet/or tall cup with 1 T MCT oil. Add hot coffee and wiz until creamy and frothy. Drink up!

If you read on my Bulletproof page, it tells you about my trials with the MCT oil when I first started…read it before you make coffee.

Now there are lots of things to consider when making this. One is coffee quality and second is MCT oil and third, can you find grass fed butter? I will tackle the coffee first. You want to find high quality, low toxin coffee. It can be some work if you don’t want to order online from upgraded self but it may be worth it if you live in Canada as the shipping is outrageous! I summerized the steps from the original post on bulletproofexec.

First: Google “Best coffee in ____”  Ignore most individual reviews raving about coffee because the average person wouldn’t know a great cup of coffee from an average one, so they always use sugar and go by cool the décor and baristas are. Look for a coffee snob who knows their coffee and check out the coffee shop website.

Next: Look for single-origin coffee, hopefully from central america using water process method and generally a light roast(higher caffeine). This can be tricky but in every city, Canada and USA, I have visited over the last little while has one. Be patient and keep looking.

Next up, MCT oil, short for Medium-chain triglycerides. MCT oil is extracted from palm and  coconut oil concentrating it to be about 6 times stronger, and without the flavour, of coconut oil. A good quality MCT oil will be 100% capric and caprylic acid and has a perfect 8-10 carbon saturated fat level. It will give you fast energy, help maintain healthy cholesterol levels by controlling LDL(bad)  and boosting HDL(good) cholesterol levels, improves your bodys absorption and use of many vitamins and minerals and is a easy, fast source of good fat that can be mixed into any smoothie, soup, coffee, hot chocolate…or made into ice cream! You can use it to cook with as a regular oil under temperatures of  320 F. This you will need to buy at a health food store. If you already have coconut oil on hand, try it…but only a tablespoon. Otherwise, it will give you the runs!

Now on to grass fed butter. If you are in Canada, bad news. Our dairy laws do not allow the sale or import of grass fed milk or butter…why? I have not been able to put my finger on it. There are many ranches that offer grass fed and finished beef, so  why not dairy. Anyways, the best we can get here is either Organic Meadows which requires the cows to be partially grass fed or L’Ancêtre which also cannot claim total 100%. We can however bring it across the border ourselves, so plan a road trip to a big city…little ones often do not carry the butter in quantities worth the drive! However, if you are in the USA, good news. Organic Pastures and Kerrygold butter are amazing. There are lots of others as well, so look around for some that are priced well. Kerrygold can be anywhere between $2.50 – $4 a half pound depending on the store! Also, you have the opportunity to contact your local farmer and get even better raw unprocessed, grass fed butter.

So whats the deal with the butter you ask…well I don’t think I could so as thorough of a job as the Weston A. Price Foundation does. Here is a brief overview.

  • Butter is an easily absorbed source of vitamin A, needed for a wide range of functions. It also contains all the other fat-soluble vitamins (D, E and K2), which are often lacking in the modern industrial diet.
  • Butter is rich in important trace minerals, including manganese, chromium, zinc, copper and selenium (a powerful antioxidant).
  • Butter provides short- and medium-chain fatty acids, which support immune function, boost metabolism and have anti-microbial properties. It also provides balanced omega-3 and omega-6 fats. Arachidonic acid in butter is important for brain function, skin health and prostaglandin balance.
  • Most importantly, in my opinion,  when butter comes from cows eating green grass, it contains high levels of conjugated linoleic acid (CLA). This is a compound that gives excellent protection against cancer and also helps your body build muscle rather than store fat. If they are not fed grass they have almost no CLA to their butter
  • There are something called Glycospingolipids which are a special category of fatty acids that protect against gastrointestinal infections, especially in the very young and the elderly.
  • Good cholesterol is needed to maintain intestinal health and for brain and nervous system development in the young as well as old.
  • Now this one I’d never heard about…the “Wulzen Factor” Apparently, this is a hormone-like substance that prevents arthritis and joint stiffness, ensuring that calcium in your body is put into your bones rather than your joints and other tissues. The Wulzen factor is present only in raw butter and cream; it is destroyed by pasteurization.

So lets look at the facts. Butter can protect against heart disease and provide antioxidants. It has strong anti-tumor effects and the CLA can protect against cancer. Less stiff from arthritis and vitamins A,D,K2 are all needed for proper calcium and phosphorus absorption…so less chance of osteoporosis. Because of the iodine and vitamin A content of butter, it helps our thyroid function proper. Less GI infections in the young, old and weak immune system. Butter’s content ensures optimal growth of children. Good Saturated fat is critical to lung function and protecting against asthma. CLA and short- and medium-chain fatty acids help control weight gain. High fat content allows our bodies to have normal reproduction and fertility. Yeah…I would butter is awesome. Well…grass fed that is.

I truly hope that this has at least peaked an interest in you if not opened your eyes to the misinformation that we have been led to believe.