Saturday 21 April 2012

Pina Colada: Alcohol-free and 100% delicious


I used to love throwing sweet juicy cocktails down my thristy gullet, but not since I became a living, breathing example of organic rejuvenation. There's no place in the Facelift Diet for skin-shrivelling booze!

But the sexiest thing is, you can make delicious 'mocktails' using yummy facelift foods, not only booze-free but rich in beauty nutrients.

Try my recipe for Pina Colada

 

You need:

1 juicy ripe pineapple (is your pineapple ripe? - video)
2 juicy limes
Coconut water from 1-2 green coconuts of one small carton of coco water

To make:

Top and tail your pineapple and cut off the peel. Cut the pineapple into long wedges and then use a knife to remove the woody core. Add to blender.

Juice the limes andd add the juice to the blender

Pour in the coconut water and blend until it is a creamy, dreamy tropical smooth drink.

Serve with ice and lime wedges for the ulitmate 'me time' beverage

Enjoy!





Friday 6 April 2012

Top 5 luxury raw food recipe blogs (food porn alert!)

I love trawling through other peoples recipe blogs, especially healthy raw foods. There are some geniuses out there who create tantalising morsels of yumminess from simple ingredients like fruits, nuts, seeds and vegetables. If you enjoy healthy juicy foods but still like to create fancy dishes, check out these blogs - they are my favourite top 5:

1. Uncooking 101
Created by Eva Rawposa and contributed to by many others. This blog features a 'recipe directory' to die for. Recipes are catagorised into: Raw drinks | Raw Breakfasts | Raw Breads and Crackers | Raw Dips and Dressings | Raw Snacks and Side Dishes | Raw Soup | Raw Salads | Raw Entrees | Raw Desserts

uncooking101.com screenshot
2. The Raw Chef Blog
By Russell James aka The Raw Chef. This is a good site for those Cordon Bleu wannabes, Russell makes some 5 star raw foods that look like they are created for royalty! I don't make complex recipes like these personally but I love to drool over the stunning photography. If you love 'Food Porn' you will love this site.

TheRawChef.com screenshot

3. Sweetly Raw
Heather Pace's blog is like peering into a high-class chocolatier/cake boutique. Not only is the girl deliciously gorgeous herself but her puddings and treats are to die for. She also sells some wonderful ebooks, I have her ice-cream one which is not only full of the best raw ice-cream recipes I have ever seen, but its also beautifully designed too. Although I don't eat these kinds of raw foods (too rich for me) I do love her creativity with raw foods and presentation.

SweetlyRaw.com screenshot
4. Golubka
This is a food blog with feeling, a rich weaving of life, food and culture. Golubka features some really decadent looking treats and has created some lower fat versions for the health-concious (raw gourmet foods are notoriusly high-fat). I love the stories that go with each recipe and the feeeling of being immersed in their family life. There are even special cute raw recipes for children and babies.

http://g0lubka.blogspot.co.uk screenshot

5. The Happy Raw Kitchen
This blog is really down to earth but still features really gorgeous recipes. You must try her raw version of Ben & Gerry's Cherry Garcia ice-cream - it's on my to-do list!

http://thehappyrawkitchen.blogspot.co.uk screenshot
I hope you enjoy drooling over these blogs as much as I did.

Wednesday 4 April 2012

Caramel Apples with Fat-Free Vanilla Ice-cream | Gluten free, Dairy free, egg free, vegan


This is an unbelievable delicious and decandent dessert, you'd never realise it was fat-free, vegan, raw, nut-free and created from 100% fruit (ok apart from the cinnamon).

I sometimes have this for breakfast because health is yummy at anytime of the day.

This recipe calls for some preperation the night before, so have a read though before you attempt making.

You need
Apples about 2-3 per person
Dates (soaked overnight) about 2-3 per person
Bananas (ripe!) about 2-3 per person
Raisins about a handful per person
Oranges (freshly juiced)
Cinnamon
Vanilla (fresh pods or natural extract)

You will also need a food processor

Prep the ice-cream:
Peel, slice and freeze your bananas overnight. That's it.

Prep the apples and caramelise them:

Peel, core and slice your apples then place in a mixing bowl. Next place you soaked dates into the food processor with enough OJ to whizz up into a runny sauce. Add some cinnamon and blend again.
Pour the sauce over the apple slices and mix thoroughly. Add your raisins and mix well again.

Leave the bowl in the fridge overnight. The sauce will 'cook' the apple making it soft.

The next day, when in the mood for pudding divide your caramel apples up into bowls and then make the ice cream

Vanilla Ice-Cream
Simple add your frozen banana slices to your food processor until you have 'crumbs' then leave to stand for 5-10 minutes. Pulse again then rest, pulse and rest until you have white soft 'mr whippy' style ice-cream. You may have to use a spatula to keep pushing the banana back down into the processor. Once it is all soft and 'ice-creamy' add a good splash of vanilla essence or the scrapings from inside a vanilla pod.

Serve immediately before the ice-cream melts

Low Fat Healthy Mince Pies (not just for Christmas!)

I have a confession. I LOVE mince pies. I used to be able to eat an entire 6 pie box and it wasn't even christmas! These days I am much healthier and no longer stuff my gullet with refined sugar, white flour and suet (yuk!) but I still like to make 'treats' for myself and I get a kick out of re-inventing old favourites into healthy versions that will actually feed my skin and make me vibrantly healthy.

Traditional mince pies are far too high in empty calories, fat and gluten for me to offer them as a 'facelift food', luckily it is possible to make a super-healthy-just-as-tasty version. It's not quite an enclosed pie but its a delicious substitute made with almost identical ingredients (dried fruit, apple and citrus). I call it the Mince Pie Pudding and here is the recipe for you:

Mince Pie Pudding


Ingredients

10 dates soaked overnight in enough water to cover
8 small apples peeled, cored and sliced
3 oranges juiced with a citrus juicer/lemon squeezer
Ground almonds (1-2 tsp per person)
Cinnamon powder - about 2-3 tsps
Nutmegs
200g raisins/sultanas

How to make

1. First make a sweet n spicy citrus sauce by processing together the soaked dates, orange juice and cinnamon. It should be the consistancy of a creamy salad dressing - of too thick add more juice, if too thin add another soaked date or two. Add as much spice as you like!

2. Once the sauce is nice and smooth, add your apple chunks, raisins and grate about a third of a nutmeg into the processor, now gently pulse the machine until your have a chunky blend with visible pieces of apple (albeit rather small pieces).

3. Next get as many ramekin dishes as you need and place 1-2tsp of the ground almonds in each ramekin. Tamp down firmly the ground almonds so that it forms a kind of 'pastry' on the bottom and is firmly held together. Now pile on your 'mincemeat' and fill the ramekin.

4. Place the ramekins in the fridge to firm up for at least an hour, remove from the fridge once firm and chilled and enjoy. As a certified mince pie fan I guarantee you will love these healthy festive puddings.

Rejuvenating Coconut Spinach Soup

This super-nutritious soup is very easy and is literally a green smoothie that's quite thick and eaten from a bowl as soup.


Ingredients

To serve 1

    Half a ripe Hass avocado
    Coconut water from 1 or 2 mature coconut(s)
    2 -3 large handfuls of organic spinach
    Fresh coriander to taste
    Juice from 1 lime
    2 sping onions
  

To make


Put everything in a blender or processor and blend until smooth. Add more coconut water if it's too thick and adjust the seasoning to your taste.

Serve in soup bowl and spinkle a finely chopped spring onion on top.

Facelift Food Facts
Coconut is hydrating and is isotonic; contains the same electolyte balance as the body fluids

Spinach is rich in the mineral Iron which is an essential nutrient for oxygen transportation to the cells and skin cells

Avocado is a great source of Vitamin E - one of the main skin nutrients

Luxurious pineapple pancake dessert | fat-free, raw vegan

This decadent dessert is really simple. You need:

1 fat pineapple slice per person (removed skin and hard core)
1 scoop of Sexy Fat-Free Raspberry Ice-Cream per person
1 handful of your favourite juicy berries per person
A handful of raspberries (fresh or defrosted frozen) person
2 soaked dates per person


First make your raspberry ice-cream following this recipe here and set aside in the freezer to firm up slightly.

Next make a raspberry sauce by pureeing your raspberries and dates into a sauce using a blender or food processor.

Now assemble your dessert. Grab a nice plate and place one pineapple slice on each plate - this is your 'pancake'. Now fill the hole in the pineapple pancake with a generous handful of yummy berries. Take your ice-cream out of the freezer and place a big scoop on top of the berries. Now drizzle your raspberry sauce over the yummy wonder.

Facelift Nutrition Facts

Pineapple is an excellent source of Manganese, Vitamin C and Folic Acid. It also contains an enzyme called Bromelain which is a well known anti-inflammatory and can help the body to shed fat.
NB Pineapple alert! For those of us not blessed with a tropical climate be aware that your pineapple will be unripe and very acidic. Please sit your pineapple somewhere warm and allow it to turn completely golden yellow with no green on it at all, the leaves should be brown and crispy too. Only use ripe pineaple unless you like mouth ulcers, sore teeth and a 'geographic tongue'. You have been warned! Watch my 'How to avoid "pineapple mouth"' video


Raspberries are rich in anthocyanins, particularly Ellagic Acid which has been shown to exhibit anti-cancer and anti-tumor abilities. All berries contain fabulous anti-oxidants which are our anti-ageing best friends!

Bananas are wonderful for giving us steady energy from Carbohydrates, they also contain good amounts of the amino-acid Tryptophan which the brain can convert into Seratonin - the feel good hormone. Bananas have an excellent Potassium/Sodium ratio. They are also a high-fibre food which helps keep the colon nice and clean, a clogged colon shows up as puffy skin, outbreaks and urgh the dreaded cellulite so eat those bananas for beauty!

Top 10 Facelift Foods

Did you know that every single skin cell in your body is built, maintained and repaired by the materials you supply in your daily diet? Skincare is not all about what is applied to the outside of the skin in the form of products and treatments; food is the real key to healthy, beautiful skin that defies ageing. Making sure the right nutrients are supplied in your diet can lead to seemingly miraculous rejuvenating effects, skin can ‘de-age’ when offered the right materials for self-repair.  That’s right; you can literally eat yourself visibly younger. What’s more, the foods that can help you reverse the signs of ageing are delicious too.

How your skin ages
What do mangoes, avocadoes, nuts and apples have in common? They all contain anti-ageing nutrients that are proven to act like a ‘fountain of youth’ upon your skin cells. To understand how this seemingly simple solution can actually work, let’s reveal the science behind these biological processes.

Scientists used to believe that ageing was mostly genetic and therefore little could be done about it, save for expensive surgical techniques; now, however, the latest research shows that genetic influences only factor in 3% (ref.1) of the ‘how and why’ skin ages, the other 97% is down to our diet and environmental factors such as sun damage, smoking, pollution, drinking alcohol and other lifestyle choices (ref.2). You have probably heard about ‘free radicals’ and oxidisation too, these play a large part in how the cells age and decay (ref.3) Oxidisation to a skin cell is like rusting to a car; the slow decaying process caused by reactive oxygen molecules. Once the biological ‘rust’ has taken hold the cells age much faster. There is also the formation of wrinkles caused by collagen fibres in the skin linking together, these links cannot be undone; the only cure is prevention with a diet that inhibits this ‘cross-linking’ of collagen

But enough of the science, what can be done to halt this cellular rusting and collagen cross-linking?

It’s just your AGE - The sugar connection
You may be surprised that sugar in the diet is a major cause of wrinkles and skin ageing. Dietary sugars cross-link collagen fibres together in a process called Glycation; this glycated collagen or Advanced Glycation End-product (AGE) causes accelerated ageing. Collagen is the fibre in the skin that keeps it smooth, elastic and youthful – linked collagen is a definite no-no for keeping skin tight and youthful. There are also preformed AGEs which are already present in foods that have been heated without water; every time you eat a grilled, roasted or fried food you are ingesting these destructive AGEs. Current research shows that even the same food cooked in different ways can become an ‘age-accelerator’. For example simple boiled rice has an AGE factor of just 1 where crispy rice cereal has an AGE factor of 220. (ref. 4)

And it’s not just what you add but what you don’t add to the diet which makes a huge difference. There are certain nutrients associated with skin health including anti-oxidants which are the skin’s protection against ‘rusting’.  Being short of Zinc or the B vitamin complex can accelerate cellular decay (ref.5). But before you rush off to the health shop for bottles of pills, remember it is far better for your body (and much more delicious) to get your anti-ageing nutrients in the form of real, fresh, juicy, natural food.

The top ten facelift foods

These foods eaten on a very regular if not daily basis will start to repair and rejuvenate your skin cells, feeding them the necessary nutrients to stay healthy and initiate self-repair.

1. Apples
These crunchy fruits are very rich in a well-documented anti-ageing phytochemical called Quercetin, this anti-oxidant is a flavonoid which has been shown in research to have a rejuvenating effect upon skin cells. (ref. 7)

2. Mangoes
One of most important vitamins for the skin is Vitamin A, lack of this nutrient leads to many different skin issues including acne. Mangoes are a very tasty fruit rich in Pro-vitamin A; they are also rich in Vitamin C which is an excellent anti-oxidant (ref.9)


3. Avocadoes
These fatty fruits are rich in another well know skin nutrient - Vitamin E, a fat soluble nutrient that is often in skincare products as it is one of the few that can be directly absorbed through the skin itself. (ref 8) (ref 9)

4. Hempseeds
These tasty little seeds are rich in Essential Fatty Acids (EFAs) which are, as the name suggests, essential. Many studies have revealed the link between skin problems and skin dryness with lack of EFAs. Dry skin is much more prone to damage and wrinkles. (Ref. 9)

5. Pumpkin seeds
These seeds are very rich in the mineral Zinc which is necessary in the biological fight against cellular decay. They also contain EFAs and Vitamin E making them a great beauty food.

6. Grapes
Grape skins contain a very powerful anti-oxidant called Resveratrol which has been shown effective in the war against those skin-ageing ‘free radicals’ (ref 10)

6. Garlic
Not just for colds and worms, garlic has shown to be a very effective anti-ager, having an active effect on fine lines and wrinkles. (ref 11)

7. Spices
Cinnamon, cloves and ginger have been shown to inhibit AGEs and therefore help avoid collagen breakdown. (ref 4)

9. Nuts
Nuts, especially brazils, cashews and almonds are rich in an anti-ageing amino acid called Arganine which studies have shown to be a nutrient that improves the appearance of skin, hair and nails (ref 12)

10. Cacao
The tastiest anti-ageing nutrient!  Raw cacao (chocolate) is very rich in two important anti-agers; Quercetin and Arganine.



References
1. Browner WS et al. ‘The genetics of human longevity’. Am J Med (2004) 117 pp851–60.
2. Getoff, N. ‘Anti-aging and aging factors in life. The role of free radicals’ Radiation Physics and Chemistry (2007) 76 pp1577–1586
3. Page, Melissa M. et al ‘Redox metabolism: Aging, longevity and dietary effects’
Mechanisms of Ageing and Development (2010) 131 pp242–252
4. Danby F. William. ‘Nutrition and aging skin: sugar and glycation’ Clinics in Dermatology (2010) 28 pp409–411
5. Ames, Bruce N. Atamna Hani, Killilea David W. ‘Mineral and vitamin deficiencies can accelerate
the mitochondrial decay of aging’ Molecular Aspects of Medicine  (2005) 26 pp363–378
7. Chondrogianni Niki et al ‘Anti-ageing and rejuvenating effects of quercetin’ Experimental Gerontology  (2010) 45 pp763–771
8. Thiele  Jens J. Ekanayake-Mudiyanselage, Swarna ‘Vitamin E in human skin: Organ-specific physiology and considerations for its use in dermatology’ Molecular Aspects of Medicine (2007) 28 pp646–667
9. Draelos, Zoe D. ‘Nutrition and enhancing youthful-appearing skin’ Clinics in Dermatology (2010) 28 pp400–408
10. Ferrari Carlos K.B. ‘Functional foods and physical activities in health promotion of aging people’ Maturitas  (2007) 58 pp327–339
11. Rahman, Khalid. ‘Garlic and aging: new insights into an old remedy’ Ageing Research Reviews
(2003) 2 pp39–56
12. Mohamed Z. Gad ‘Anti-aging effects of l-arginine’ Journal of Advanced Research (2010) 1 pp169–177

Article first published in Natural Health Magazine

Pink & Fizzy: sparkling grapefuit drink

Pink Grapefuit-ade

Sometimes only a fizzy tipple will do when a lady is thirsty. This is a variation on lemonade which is not only tartly refreshing but deliciously good for you too.

You need:

Fresh juice of half a pink Grapefruit
Dried dates
Sparkling spring water (chilled)

To make:
Soak a few dates (2-4) overnight in water. ( the soakwater ends up being a sweet sticky syrup that is amazing as a sugar substitute). Squeeze a large juicy pink grapefruit and add the juice to a tall glass, add a teaspoon or 2 of date soak water to eat glass and then top up with chilled sparkling spring water.

For effect add some frozen raspberries as cute ice cubes

Tuesday 3 April 2012

Sexy Fat-Free Raspberry Ice-Cream



Healthy fat free raspberry ice-cream, made just from fuit? YES!

Who doesn't like sinking their spoon into a delicious bowlful of silky ice-cream? Sadly almost all ice-cream is either an expensive combination of high-fat, high-cholesterol foods like eggs, milk and cream or it is a throat-cloyingly insipid blend of cheap vegetables oils, emulsifiers and flavourings. Both types come loaded with lashings of sugar. Cheap ice-cream is sold by volume not weight (look on the tub, it will say millilitres or litres) which means manufacturers can whip loads of air into it to bulk it up making it seem like more. Plain air was never so sweet or profitable!.

Luckily there is a 3rd option, of the facelift kind. An ice-cream so healthy and oure that you could eat it 3 times a day and it counts as a healthy snack and several of your '5 a day'. Plus it only takes about 15 minutes to make fromscratch! Sound to good to be true? Why not try it for yourself, here's the recipe:

You need:
2-3 bananas (per person)
100g of raspberries (for person)
ie for 4 people you will need 8-12 banans and 400g of raspberries

You will also need access to a freezer and a food processor or high-speed blender

To make:
Freeze the raspberries and slice up the bananas and place in a tub in the freezer for 8 hours or overnight (top tip: always keep some frozen banana slices in the fridge so you can have ice-cream for whenever the mood strikes). When you are ready to make the ice-cream, simply add your frozen banana slices (you may have to prise them apart a bit) and frozen raspberries to you food processor and pulse until a crumb-like consistency. Rest for 5-10 minutes and pulse again. Keep doing this until the mixture suddenly turns into pink 'mr whippy' ice-cream. You may need to periodically push the mixture back down the walls of the processor as it has a habit of trying to escape.

Serve immediately.

This is just a basic ice-cream recipe, you can of course pimp it up with some fruit sauces, chopped nuts (not too many), extra chopped fruit and whole unfrozen raspberries etc. Serve in a tall glass and make the healthiest sundae ever.

Sunday 1 April 2012

A manifesto for Abundance & Prosperity

I spent years not charging what I was really worth because deep down I held beliefs about money that came from both society and my poor background. I suffered with 'poverty conciousness' brought about by having lack of money throughout my upbringing and reinforced by the people that surrounded me through my adult life. Despite my open mind that understood that we create the life we want, my deep-seated beliefs would sabotage my good intentions. At the heart of it I guess I felt the same as my mum does when she says things like "People like us never get out from under".

Another part of my 'anti-awealth' beliefs came from my 'hippy' consciousness which has been merrily informing me that not only is money 'just an energy' but that wealth is almost a cardinal sin to a 'happy to be poor' free spirit like myself. Wealth is just another drug to crave while we push aside happiness for material gain. My inner hippy used to giver her opinion every time I was asked for my prices - I would want to say the price I know I am worth but instead a paltry 'safe' fee would squeak out of me instead. Charging hardly anything for my work meant I had to work 5 times harder to earn the money I needed to live on. It wasn't long before my working day was 12 hours a day 7 days a week! I never saw my friends, I rarely got outside in the sun and even though I live with my partner, we never had any quality time. Despite being a published author, a respected expert who receives many calls from TV show producers and journalists, and an entrepreneur with 2 unique businesses based on 18 years of practise - I found myself in a cold sweat every time the rent was due.

Why?

My poverty consciousness and beliefs about money were keeping me right in my comfort zone, skint. It takes courage to step out of your comfort zone and while being dirt poor constantly is certainly not comfortable it is what I was used to. I KNEW how to be skint, I don't know how to be wealthy. And this is the crux of the matter. It takes a leap of faith, mentally to change your poverty script - you can't say "when I am wealthy I will....." you have to believe in being wealthy first THEN the magic happens.

If you're in the position I used to be, hard-working but forever lacking in cash-flow, you may have deeply rooted poverty consciousness. You can change your belief systems and open the financial floodgates if you give it some effort. It does require some work but results can happen very quickly if you are CONSISTENT.

Getting professional help from a Business Coach like Marie Milligan can create a quantum leap in manifesting abundance and getting your life and business on track.

I created my own 'Abundance Manifesto' which I pinned up at home to help me change my poverty consciousness record. As you can see I address my core beliefs about money by creating abundance affirmations and by appeasing my 'inner hippy' by showing that my wealth also benefits others too - even those that won't be able to afford my real prices.

You offer a unique gift to the world and you deserve to be paid abundantly for that