Betcha didn’t know…

    *Philosophie cleanse glass bottles are reused and recycled

    *Philosophie produce is all purchased from the local farmers market, using only a bike or walking for transportation

    *Philosophie containers are made of potato, corn or reused Tupperware

    *Philosophie superfoods and produce is 100% organic

Tag: living food

New Year: New You Rejuvenation Cleanse

December 24th, 2010

Only 2 spots left! Hurry & sign up!

ARE YOU READY??????

do you live in Los Angeles?

apple, carrot and ginger juice

WHAT IT IS: We prepare organic, vegan whole foods cleanses and deliver them to your door. Three days of pure foods that will satisfy and fill, while aiding in weight-loss and energy gain. Not a big time commitment for 5 lbs, is it? It’s really that simple. And for further cleansing and lifestyle maintenance, we send you home with a packet complete with recipes, tips and meal plans to continue your transition into the new year and the new you.

Only $350. or sign up a friend and both are $299.

Sign up by calling (323) 422-5348 or (310) 291-5266

or by emailing sophie@thephilosophie.com

This is a one time, never before seen special price to get YOU healthy and happy for the New Year. Start out 5 pounds lighter, save money and get the tools to keep your abundant health going with our nifty packet!

Raw, Vegan Recipe for Pesto Kelp Noodles

August 8th, 2010

Kelp noodles rawk!!! They are virtually calorie free and don’t taste like the sea at all. There is no sugar, gluten, wheat, rice or flour. Kelp is known to aid the metabolism, boost energy, aid in digestion and they contain an abundance of minerals.

Ingredients for Raw, Vegan Pesto Kelp Noodles:

*2 packages Kelp Noodles

*2 large bushels of fresh Basil leaves

*1 Cup fresh Spinach

*1/4 C Extra Virgin Olive Oil

*1/2 Cup raw Pinenuts

*2 fresh Garlic cloves

*1/2 Teaspoon Celtic Sea Salt

pinenuts

Directions:

1) soak kelp noodles in warm/hot water for at least 20 minutes. Drain and  wring out excess water.

2) combine all ingredients in food processor/Cuisinart (except kelp noodles)

3) taste the pesto. It may need more sea salt or garlic for your taste. Also, if it’s too chunky, add more olive oil or a little bit of filtered water. If it’s too watery, add more pine nuts or spinach/basil.

Pesto Kelp Noodles

If you want a variation, try my recipe for Cheezy Kelp Noodles!

Raw Food and Enzymes-What Cooking Kills

July 7th, 2010

Research from the University of Minnesota found that rats fed for 135 days on an 80% cooked food diet resulted in an increase pancreatic weight of 20-30%.

This means that the pancreas is forced to work harder with a cooked food diet. “Although the body can manufacture enzymes, the more you use your enzyme potential, the faster it is going to run out..” wrote Dr. Edward Howell, who pioneered research in the benefits of food enzymes. A youth of 18 may produce amylase levels 30 times greater than those of an 85 year old person.

Some excellent food sources of enzymes are: papaya, pineapple and sprouted seeds. Science cannot duplicate enzymes because they are the stuff of life itself. Only raw food has functional “live” enzymes. Therefore the liver, pancreas, stomach and intestines must come to the rescue and furnish the requisite digestive enzymes to the individual nourished solely on a cooked food diet.

This extra activity can be detrimental to health and longevity because it continually taxes the reserve energy of our organs. Furthermore, cooked food passes through the digestive tract more slowly than raw food, tends to ferment, and throws poisons back into the body. Colon cancer is 2nd to lung cancer as a killer in America and is related, in various ways, to eating enzyme-deficient cooked food.

All raw foods contain exactly the right enzymes required to split every last molecule into the basic building blocks of metabolism: Amino acids (from protein) glucose (from complex carbs) and essential fatty acids (from unsaturated vegetable fats.)

This isn’t a post to say you should ONLY eat raw or living foods… just to try and incorporate more in your diet. Even once a day is a great treat for your body!

Cheezy Kelp Noodles

March 28th, 2010

Kelp noodles are spectacular!!! It is virtually calorie free and doesn’t taste like the sea at all. There is no sugar, gluten, wheat, rice or flour. Kelp is known to aid the metabolism, boost energy, aid in digestion and they contain an abundance of minerals.

PREP TIME = 10 – 15 minutes

WAIT TIME = 0 – 1 hour

EQUIPMENT = High powered blender,  dehydrator

LASTS = 1-2 days

SERVINGS = 4

INGREDIENTS

  • 2 packages Sea Tangle Kelp Noodles
  • 1⁄2 c nut cheeze
  • 1⁄8 c olive oil
  • 1 t fresh oregano, minced
  • 1 t fresh rosemary, minced
  • 2 t garlic, de-centered, minced
  • 1⁄2 t Celtic sea salt
  • 1 T fresh-squeezed lemon juice
  • 2 t Bragg Aminos or Nama Shoyu
  • 3 T Nutritional Yeast

STEP 1

Soak the kelp noodles in hot water for 10-20 minutes. Drain and wring out the excess water.

STEP 2

Mix all ingredients in blender. Add sauce to kelp noodles.

STEP 3

It’s ready to serve now but if you want the pasta warm and soft, place all the pasta on a big serving plate and spread it out evenly. Then put the plate (or just put the pasta on the tray if you don’t have an Excalibur) with the pasta in the dehydrator for 1 hour at 120°F. Serve right out of the dehydrator so it is warm. If you don’t have a dehydrator you can put your oven on the lowest setting and put the plate on the stove shelf, or serve cold for a “cheezy pasta salad”!

if you don’t want to make the sauce “cheezy” you can substitute the cheese for fresh basil and spinach and make it a Pesto pasta. (my favorite!) Garnish with raw pine nuts, tomatoes and spinach leaves. (check out the recipe –>here!)


Sweet Treat-Dairy-free, sugar-free, gluten-free!

February 28th, 2010

Now that I’m pregnant, I have to get blood taken all the time. I get kinda queasy after wards, and usually need a sugar hit like fruit or juice. My husband came prepared the last time, buying me a Naked smoothie and an Almond Joy. The Almond Joy was good, and made luckily with dark chocolate, but way too sugary with a ton of horrible additives.

This recipe is a healthier version of Almond Joy made with coconut oil, carob, almonds, and agave. You’ll never know it’s dairy-free, sugar-free and gluten-free!!

  • ingredients

    1  cup melted extra virgin coconut oil

  • 1/4 cup organic raw almond butter
  • 3 drops Liquid Stevia Vanilla Creme
  • 3 drops Liquid Stevia Chocolate
  • 4 tablespoons agave
  • 1 tablespoon organic vanilla
  • 2 teaspoons cinnamon
  • 3/4 cup roasted carob powder (or chips and melt)
  • 1/4 cup organic hemp seeds
  • 1/4 cup almond meal
  • 1/4 cup unsweetened coconut

To melt coconut oil, place jar under warm/hot water.

In a medium bowl, place melted coconut oil and almond butter. Stir until both are blended. Next, stir/whisk in Liquid Stevia Vanilla Creme and Chocolate, agave, and vanilla. Add in cinnamon and stir until it blends evenly. Slowly stir in carob a tablespoon at a time. The mixture should still be slightly runny. Add in almond meal, hemp seeds, and coconut. The mixture will run off the spoon, but very slowly.

Spoon into mini cupcake trays lined with paper liners. Pour in mixture half way. Chill in freezer for 15 minutes. When the candies are set, pop out and store in a freezer safe container. Keep frozen!

Mock Salmon Pate

February 21st, 2010

missing fish? pate? meat? this may just do the trick! :)

This is a great dish to bring to a potluck or for a party.. easy to snack on with flax chips or veggie sticks and no one will know there’s not a single animal product!

Mock Salmon Pate

  • 2 cups almonds or walnuts, soaked overnight
  • 1 cup celery, finely chopped
  • 1/2 cup green onions, chopped
  • 2 med. or large carrots
  • 3 tsp. lemon juice
  • Dulse Flakes, rinsed
  • 1/4 cup purified water
  • Parsley
  • 1 head romaine lettuce, raw crackers, or 1 bunch celery stalks

Run the almonds/walnuts and carrots through a Champion juicer, using the “blank” plate to make a smooth pate. If you don’t have one, you buy organic carrot juice and almond butter and blend in a food processor.

Mix all ingredients except the lettuce in a bowl, adding the dulse to taste.

Form the mixture into a rounded (or other shape) loaf, and garnish with parsley.

To serve, spoon onto the lettuce leaves and eat like a sandwich, eat with toast or spread onto celery sticks.

How to Sprout Seeds and Nuts: Sprouting made easy

July 7th, 2009
soak and sprout 'em!

soak and sprout 'em!

 

Boost the Protein when Seeds and Nuts are Sprouted, drop the Carbs!

You probably already know that nuts are good for you.  If you don’t, let me tell you why they are! They are an excellent protein alternative for those who are trying to eat less meat and they are packed full of nutrients and heart healthy monounsaturated fats that our bodies need. One of nature’s power foods, certain varieties of raw nuts are high in vitamin E, folic acid, calcium, copper, magnesium, manganese, phosphorus, and zinc, to name just a few.

Nuts are also packed with protein and easy to carry around. They are a staple energy food that humans have relied on for thousands of years. So the next time you are looking to increase the nutrient content of your breakfast, snack food, salad, health drink or even dinner, raw nuts should be one of the first things you think of. But how can you know if you are getting all of the incredible benefits of raw seeds and nuts? Did you know that it’s possible to make this natural super food even better?

Sadly most of the “raw” nuts sold in North American stores are far from fresh, and far from raw. A standard practice in the shelling of Brazil nuts for example is to soak them in water for 1-2 days and then boil them for 5 minutes to soften the shell which makes machine or hand cracking easier. The heat from the boiling kills the nut and by the time it has reached grocery store shelves it is not only no longer alive and no longer raw, it can be full of rancid oils as well, which are toxic for your body.

Raw nuts are as much a living food as salad greens or sprouts. Nuts are seeds. The whole food goodness that makes them such a wonderful addition to your diet is because of their properties as viable seed. For a seed, or nut, to be viable it must, given the proper conditions, be able to sprout and grow into another plant. To find nuts that are fresh and alive, search for nuts that are advertised for sprouting, or purchase local varieties, the kind sold in small batches at farmer’s markets. That way you can ask how the nuts are processed.

Sprouting is practically magic when it comes to boosting the health benefits of seeds, nuts and grain. When a seed is soaked and begins to sprout, it releases the nutrients that are locked inside. Dormant seeds have in them something called enzyme inhibitors, which stop enzyme reactions. This keeps them from going bad longer, or sprouting in unfavorable conditions, but it also makes them difficult to digest. Once a seed is sprouted the enzyme inhibitors are gone and the nutrients are readily available as well as the beneficial enzymes. Sprouted seeds also increase in protein while decreasing in carbohydrates as the seed uses the carbohydrate energy stored inside to grow. Soaking also breaks down the glutens and hard to digest proteins into smaller and easier to digest components. Sprouted nuts become even more delicious and good for you than raw nuts.

Sprouting is a very simple process and has such great health benefits that it is worth trying! (and it’s fun! like doing an experiment in 7th grade science class all over again)

Here is a simple sprouting method that can be done with readily available items from your own kitchen:

Equipment: Begin with a glass jar and a clean tea towel or cheesecloth. It’s a good idea to sterilize these first in boiling water with a bit of food safe hydrogen peroxide, or grape fruit seed extract.

Step 1) Rinse and Soak Place nuts in the jar and fill it with water. Only use enough nuts to fill about 1/3 of the jar. Sprouts need room to grow. Rinse the nuts two or three times and drain with a colander. Once the nuts are rinsed fill the remainder of the jar with cool clean water. Tie the tea towel or cheesecloth over the top of the jar with an elastic band, or piece of string, or a canning jar ring. Keep the jar out of direct sunlight and allow the nuts to soak. Most nuts should soak for 4-12 hours before draining. Do not soak them for too long or they will rot instead of sprout

Step 2) Drain After 12 hours drain the water. You can prop the jar at an angle upside down to allow all of the water to drain completely. The towel or cheesecloth will hold your sprouts inside. Once the nuts have soaked they are already awake and free of enzyme inhibitors. You can eat them now, or you can allow them to sprout longer. You should taste your sprouts every time you rinse them so you know what way you like them.

Step 3) Rinse If you choose to let them sprout longer, rinse and drain every 8 hours or so. Unlike some types of seeds, sprouted nuts will not develop a long shoot. They swell rather than sprout and only produce a little bulge at one end rather than a root.

Sprouted nuts can be eaten all by themselves as a snack food, or they can be added to salads, stir fried, and included in many other recipes. The nutrients and convenience are perfect for an active lifestyle…yogis and athletes alike! 

Hopefully this post helped answer the question how to sprout seeds and nuts, any further questions, let me know!!

seeds and nuts

Specific information on sprouting nuts from Sprout People
Information on Brazil nut processing is from Thomas E. Billings’ excellent article entitled WHAT A RAW-FOODER SHOULD KNOW ABOUT NUTS