Tag: cooking class

  • Experience Nutrition: Beautiful Farm-to-Table Wilted Arugula Salad. Chive Cashew Cream Recipe by Melanie Albert

    Experience Nutrition: Beautiful Farm-to-Table Wilted Arugula Salad. Chive Cashew Cream Recipe by Melanie Albert

    By Melanie Albert, Founder & CEO Experience Nutrition, Intuitive Cooking Expert, and Award-Winning Cookbook Author

    This week’s intuitive salad from the Soil & Seed Garden CSA at The Farm at South Mountain in Phoenix, Arizona, is inspired by the beautiful, fresh greens (arugula and red pac choy) and chives — grown by urban farmer Billy Anthony.

    I intuitively created a warm salad reminding me of the wilted spinach salad my Grandmom made when I was a kid. Today’s salad is a little different, all plant-based. While arugula is naturally a little spicy, when we gently saute and add cashew cream it becomes milder and very tasty.

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    The simple beauty of fresh farm arugula and red pac choy.

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    CHIVE CASHEW CREAM RECIPE

    Make this simple raw cream, with fresh chives (or green onions) as a simple dressing for the wilted arugula. Nutritional yeast add a cheesy flavor to this plant-based cream.

    Simple Ingredients

    • 1 cup raw cashews, soaked 2-4 hours
    • 3 tbsp nutritional yeast
    • 1 tbsp fresh lemon juice
    • Pinch sea salt
    • Handful chives, sliced
    • ¼ cup water, adjust for desired creaminess

    Simple Steps

    • Blend cashews, nutritional yeast, lemon juice, salt, and water in a small blender, such as a Nutribullet.
    • Fold in chives.
    • Save for salad.

    WILTED ARUGULA SALAD

    Simple Ingredients

    • 2 cups fresh arugula
    • 2-3 tbsp olive oil
    • Pinch sea salt
    • 2-3 heads, bok choy
    • 1 cup Chive Cashew Cheese
    • 3 tbsp toasted sesame seeds (dry toast in sauté pan on low heat)
    • 3 tbsp clives, sliced
    • ¼ cup dehydrated tomatoes

    Simple Steps

    • Pre-heat sauté pan on medium low heat.
    • Pour olive oil into pan and heat for a minute.
    • Add fresh arugula and pinch of sea salt to pan.
    • Toss arugula and cook for 30 seconds.
    • Place arugula and cashew cream into a bowl.
    • Toss arugula with cashew cream.
    • Plate with bok choy, fresh chives, toasted sesame seeds, and dehydrated tomatoes.
    • Enjoy!
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    The Farm-to-Table Wilted Arugula Salad

    Pause and enjoy the beauty of the bok choy…

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    Red Pac Choy. Grown at the Soil & Seed Garden at The Farm at South Mountain

    Red pac choy as a wrap…with left-over veggies, tapenade, and cashew cream.

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    Red Pac Choy with Roasted Veggies, Tapenade, and Cashew Cream.

    Thanks to Natural Awakenings AZ magazine for featuring my Plant-Based Thanksgiving recipes in the November 2018 issue.

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    Join our Simple Daily Plant-Based Eating Tips Facebook Page


    Purchase Melanie Albert’s award-winning cookbook, “A New View of Healthy Eating:  Simple Intuitive Cooking with Real Whole Foods”


    Purchase Tickets for Holiday Plant-Based Desserts Cooking Class at The Farm at South Mountain, Phoenix, Arizona, December 9, 2018, 11am-1pm

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    Farm-to-Table Cooking Classes and Events at The Farm at South Mountain, Phoenix, Arizona

     

     

  • Experience Nutrition: Beautiful Farm-to-Table Plant-Based Thanksgiving Tapenade Recipe by Melanie Albert

    Experience Nutrition: Beautiful Farm-to-Table Plant-Based Thanksgiving Tapenade Recipe by Melanie Albert

    By Melanie Albert, Founder & CEO Experience Nutrition, Intuitive Cooking Expert, and Award-Winning Cookbook Author

    This week I had the incredible opportunity to host a farm-to-table plant-based Thanksgiving cooking class at The Farm at South Mountain, a few minutes walk from my home. The recipes for the class, featured in the November 2018 issue of the Natural Awakenings Arizona magazine, are simple and delicious, and perfect for a plant-based holiday meal.

    One of the recipes intuitively created during the cooking class is an amazing tapenade, loved by everyone at the class for it’s flavor, beauty, and simplicity. Many who attended the class will be shopping at our local farmers’ markets this week and will prepare this appetizer to serve at their Thanksgiving meals.

    Hope you enjoy the recipe and have fun creatively “plating” the tapenade using your local farmers’ organic veggies. For inspiration, take a look at some plating ideas from the cooking class at The Farm. Have fun intuitively plating your tapenade for Thanksgiving and other get-to-gethers this season.

    Thanks to Cassie Hepler, of ExploreWithCassie for the photos.

    Inspiration from the Thanksgiving Farm-to-Table Cooking Class at The Farm

    Love the creativity and colorful tapenades created at the cooking class…

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    Tapenade…

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    Tapenade…

     

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    Kalamata Olive Tapenade Recipe

    Enjoy refreshing tapenade with local Arizona veggies. This rich appetizer is an update to the olive trays that our family enjoyed with holiday meals when I was a kid. When you make your tapenade, have fun experimenting with a variety of olives and mindfully plate with favorite veggies from your farmers’ market.

    SIMPLE INGREDIENTS

    • 2 cloves garlic, minced
    • 1/2 cup sun-dried tomatoes, rough chopped
    • 1 cup Kalamata olives, pitted and rough chopped
    • ¼ cup fresh parsley
    • 1/4 cup capers
    • ¼ cup fresh parsley
    • ¼ – 1/3 cup organic extra virgin olive oil

    Extras for Plating

    • 1 cucumber, sliced
    • 9-10 dehydrated tomato slices
    • 2-3 red or purple radishes, thinly sliced
    • 2 green onions, sliced on the bias
    • 2 Tbsp goji berries, re-hydrated in water for 10 minutes

    SIMPLE STEPS

    • Gather your mise en place
    • Mince garlic
    • Rough chop the sun-dried tomatoes, soak in water to re-hydrate 5-10 minutes
    • In a food processor, pulse garlic and olives until fine, not paste-like
    • Remove the olive and garlic mixture from the food processor.
    • Place sun-dried tomatoes in food processor and process until fine.
    • Add capers and parsley and pulse a few times.
    • Place olive/garlic mixture and sun-dried tomatoes/capers/parsley mixture into a bowl and mix with a fork.
    • Add olive oil until you reach desired consistency.
    • Enjoy the tapenade on cucumbers with a few extra veggies from your local farmers.

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    Thanks to Natural Awakenings AZ magazine for featuring my Plant-Based Thanksgiving recipes in the November 2018 issue.

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    Join our Simple Daily Plant-Based Eating Tips Facebook Page


    Purchase Melanie Albert’s award-winning cookbook, “A New View of Healthy Eating:  Simple Intuitive Cooking with Real Whole Foods”


    Purchase Tickets for Holiday Plant-Based Desserts Cooking Class at The Farm at South Mountain, Phoenix, Arizona, December 9, 2018, 11am-1pm

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  • A New View of Healthy Eating: Daily Healthy Recipes by Melanie Albert: Arizona Winter Harvest Farm-to-Table Intuitive Cooking Class

    by Melanie A. Albert, intuitive cooking expert, author, speaker, retreat host, Founder & CEO Experience Nutrition Group, LLC

    I am so honored to do the work I love with such beautiful food grown by our local Arizona Farmers in natural, beautiful places in the Phoenix area.  Last weekend I had the honor to lead a Winter Harvest Farm-to-Table Intuitive Cooking class at The Farm at South Mountain, in Phoenix, less than a mile from my home.

    For this class, our culinary focus was an Asian Salad, Veggie Stir-fry, and Hummus. I shopped at the Downtown Phoenix Public Market the day before event (while also leading a Taste of the Market Cooking Demo) and the Soil & Seed Garden at The Farm also provided a CSA (Community Supported Agriculture) share for the class.

    I was so incredibly excited getting set up for the class on our sunny Arizona winter day, immersed in the variety and colors and textures of the food for the class.

    A look at the Farmers’ Market food…

    A look at The Farm at South Mountain CSA, which included all kinds of greens, black radishes, edible flowers, oranges, and pecans.

    I’m also sharing the beautiful “salad in a bowl” from The Farm, fresh and crisp and ready to enjoy with a simple flower.

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    Asian Salad

    We used the Asian Salad Dressing from my book, “A New View of Healthy Eating” as a guide for the dressings. (Scroll down for the recipe guide.) While I often teach how to make a basic salad dressing with an acid (lemon), fat (organic extra virgin olive oil), and sea salt, I have only taught the use of fresh ginger root in a salad a few times. The natural aromatherapy of the ginger really made this dressing fresh and unique.

    A look at two different Asian Salads intuitively created during the class.

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    Winter Harvest Saute

    Our stir-fry (really veggie saute) featured, in order of cooking:

    • Extra virgin olive oil
    • Spring green garlic
    • Green onions
    • Red and orange tomatoes
    • Sea salt
    • Sweet potatoes
    • Orange and purple carrots
    • Broccoli
    • Romanesco
    • Sweet lime and orange juices

    Click to get the recipe blog with simple steps for your veggie saute.

    Our final dishes…Asian Salads…Winter Harvest Saute…Garlic Hummus…

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    Excerpt from “A New View of Healthy Eating”

    Asian Salad with Vibrant Purple Cabbage and Tangy Citrus Ginger Root Dressing

    Make your own gourmet Asian salad with a rainbow of raw organic veggies, your favorite toasted nuts, and intuitively created ginger root dressing.

    Asian Salad: Ginger Salad Dressing: 3 Key Ingredients

    The essential ingredients for a perfect Asian dressing every time are ginger root, a soy flavoring (wheat-free tamari soy sauce or Bragg’s amino acids), and fresh citrus.

    Simple Ingredients

    • 1” fresh ginger root
    • 1 garlic clove, minced
    • ½ cup soy tamari or Bragg’s amino acids
    • ½ orange, juiced
    • ½ fresh-squeezed lemon or lime juice
    • 1 tbsp rice wine vinegar
    • 1 tsp local honey
    • ⅓ cup organic extra virgin olive oil

    Simple Steps

    • Finely mince ginger root and garlic.
    • Place in pint-size Mason jar.
    • Add all other ingredients (except olive oil) to jar and shake.
    • Taste and intuitively add ingredients to create your desired flavor.
      • Too much acid: add olive oil
      • Not sweet enough: add honey
      • Too oily: add lemon or lime juice

    The Power of Ginger

    Ginger is a tropical plant whose roots have been used medicinally in Asia for centuries. Ginger root is a natural anti-inflammatory; it reduces nausea, helps digestion, and is good for colds and flu. A simple way to add fresh ginger to your food is to use it in a salad dressing.

    “The key to a delicious ginger root salad dressing, taste the dressing while you are making it for just the right balance of ginger, citrus, and soy flavor.”


     Asian Rainbow Salad

    Along with a tangy ginger root dressing, a colorful rainbow of raw organic veggies creates a beautiful Asian salad.

    Simple Ingredients

    • 1 purple cabbage, shredded
    • 2 cups Napa cabbage, shredded
    • 1 cup carrots, shredded
    • 1 cucumber, julienned (long, thin slices)
    • 1 cup snap peas or snow peas, cut on bias
    • 6 green onions, cut on bias
    • 1 cup red or purple radishes, shredded
    • 1 cup almonds, sliced and dry toasted

    Simple Steps

    • Dry toast (no oil) sliced almonds in small sauté pan on low heat for 5 minutes.
    • Toss all vegetables in a large bowl and mix thoroughly.
    • Drizzle the Asian salad dressing on the vegetables and gently toss.
    • Top with dry toasted almonds.
    • Enjoy!

    Finally, we created a very simple basic Hummus, just like the Hummus served at the VIP Tailgate Party at the Superbowl XLIV in Miami. Today’s hummus intuitively featured lots of fresh garlic. Click for Hummus recipe.

    Hope you enjoy your local farmers’ produce with simple culinary skills and intuitive cooking. For additional ideas, Melanie Albert’s cookbook, “A New View of Healthy Eating” is available.’’

  • A New View of Healthy Eating: Special Holiday Gift Certificate: Book & Intuitive Cooking Experience in Arizona

    SPECIAL HOLIDAY GIFT:  Purchase from November 25, 2016 – January 1, 2017

    $75 Healthy Cooking Gift Certificate: Local First Arizona

    A New View of Healthy Eating new cookbook, by Intuitive Cooking Expert, Melanie A. Albert, and one 2-hour Intuitive Cooking Experience Cooking Class.

    • Book gift-wrapped and mailed (free shipping) to your family or friends.
    • Unique hands-on interactive plant-based cooking class features local Arizona farmers’ organic produce. Learn natural culinary skills and enjoy mindfully eating your creations with community.
    • Your choice of 5 monthly cooking classes held in the South Mountain area January through May 2017.
    • Gift Certificate expires May 31, 2017.

    Purchase $75 Holiday Gift Certificate Today!

    • Scroll down for details about the Gift Certificate

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    Gift Certificate Details

    3 Steps to Redeem Healthy Cooking Gift Certificate

    Step 1: Healthy Cooking Gift Certificate

    • Gift Certificate will be mailed to purchaser address in PayPal receipt.

    Step 2: Fill out the following information for A New View of Healthy Eating book, to be shipped to your family or friend.

    Step 3: Gift Certificate Recipient makes their reservation for the Intuitive Experience Cooking Class.

    • Choose your date for one of the 5 monthly classes (January – May 2017) in the South Mountain, Arizona area.
    • Classes will be held at The Farm at South Mountain from 11am-1pm on January 22, February 19, and March 19, 2017. (6106 South 32nd Street, Phoenix; Between Southern and Baseline)
    • Stay up-to-date on additional class dates and locations for April and May here at www.EXPNutrition.com
    • Confirm your class selection by e-mailing Mel@MelanieAlbert.com. Thanks so much!

    Thank you so much and I look forward to seeing you at the Intuitive Cooking Experience class!  Melanie Albert

  • A New View of Healthy Eating: Fresh Organic Arugula Salad with 3 Ingredient Salad Dressing

    By Melanie A. Albert, intuitive cooking expert, author, and speaker. Founder & CEO Experience Nutrition Group, LLC

    This week I was inspired by fresh organic arugula grown at Maya’s Farm, less than a mile from my home. Many people do not care for arugula because it tastes too bitter. With the simple “3 Ingredient Salad Dressing” made with high quality organic extra virgin olive oil, the bitterness of the arugula is totally reduced and the arugula is a refreshing salad.

    When we create a salad with light greens, such as arugula, spinach, or spring greens, it is important to lightly toss the leaves in the dressing right before eating them. This is different from raw kale salads where we massage the kale with the dressing to break down the fibers in the kale.

    Enjoy the beauty of this simple, refreshing arugula berry pecan salad and have fun creating your own salad. Share your salad creations with us on our Facebook page: www.facebook.com/NewViewHealthyEating

    Gather your mise en place: Arugula salad with berries (blueberries, blackberries), nuts (pecans), and organic heirloom tomato.

    Dressing: organic extra virgin olive oil, local Arizona lemon, sea salt, garlic.

    Make 3 Ingredient Dressing and gently toss with the organic arugula.

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    Mindfully plate.

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    Enjoy your light, fresh berry and pecans arugula salad.

    EXCERPT from A New View of Healthy Eating

    Basic Salad Dressing: 3 Ingredients. That’s It

    Three base ingredients for a salad dressing include a fat, an acid, and salt. Optional add-ins are aromatics (such as garlic and onions), fresh herbs (like basil and oregano), and sweeteners like local raw honey and fresh dates. To make your first dressing for a kale salad, start with fresh lemon, organic extra virgin olive oil, sea salt, and garlic. Once you’ve learned how to prepare a dressing with this technique, you can use this method to create your own unique salad dressings for a raw kale salad or other fresh salads.

    SIMPLE INGREDIENTS

    • 1 fresh lemon, squeezed, approximately ¼ cup
    • Organic extra virgin olive oil, twice as much as the lemon juice, approximately ½ cup
    • ¼ tsp sea salt
    • 2-3 garlic cloves, minced (extra)

    SIMPLE STEPS

    • Squeeze a fresh organic lemon into a pint-size Mason jar.
    • Pour in twice as much olive oil as the lemon.
    • Sprinkle in sea salt and minced garlic.
    • Shake the jar.
    • Taste and notice if your dressing seems too oily or acid-tasting, or if it uses too little or too much salt. Taste testing salad dressing is a great way to mindfully use your cooking intuition. Add ingredients until the dressing tastes great.

    6 Ways to Create Your Own Salad Dressing

    Learn the simple salad dressing technique and then create your own with different fats, different acids, and various add-ins, such as freshly minced herbs or sweeteners. Use sweeteners to balance a dressing that seems too acid-tasting.

    • Fats: Olive oil, grapeseed oil, nut oils such as walnut oil
    • Acid: Citrus (lemons, limes, oranges); vinegar (balsamic, rice, red or white wine), or stone-ground mustard
    • Salt: Your choice of sea salt or Himalayan salt
    • Optional Sweeteners: Raw honey or dates
    • Optional Aromatics: Garlic, green onions, shallots, red onions
    • Optional Freshly Minced Herbs: Basil, cilantro, oregano, parsley

     A New View of Healthy Eating Book is available for you, as gifts, or for your organization.

    UPCOMING PUBLIC COOKING EVENTS

    Intuitive Cooking Experience at The Farm at South Mountain

    October 9,  2016, Sunday, 11:00am-1:00pm  CLICK HERE TO PURCHASE YOUR TICKET   PRICE: $45 per person

    Want to learn how to cook with different farmer-fresh organic ingredients? Do you receive your produce from your CSA or the farmers’ market and are puzzled on how to cook with them?

    During the experience you will learn culinary skills such as making simple lentil veggie soup, unique salad with what’s in season, a perfect herbal salad dressing, and a quick hummus to enjoy with farm fresh organic veggies. Once you intuitively create your dishes, you’ll enjoy mindfully eating your beautiful creations with community in the beauty of The Farm.

    A New Look at Shopping & Cooking at the Phoenix Public Market, Fall 2016

    October 15, 2016, Saturday, 9:00-11:00am  CLICK TO REGISTER PRICE: $10 per person

    Enjoy hands-on interactive cooking demonstrations  with farmers’ market fresh produce. Learn what to look for while shopping at the Downtown Phoenix Public Market. Learn simple culinary skills, the intuitive cooking method, and enjoy dining on the food you prepared with friends and community.

  • A New View of Healthy Eating: Vegan Pesto Recipe for Spiralized Organic Veggies

    By Melanie A. Albert, intuitive cooking expert, author, and speaker. Founder & CEO Experience Nutrition Group, LLC

    This past Saturday at the Downtown Phoenix Public Market, I had the opportunity to lead a fun, hands-on cooking class, SHOP+CHOP+COOK.  During this class, I guided the participants to create their own veggie pasta. Often we think about making veggie pasta with zucchini, but during this class, we also spiralized a local organic butternut squash and a few sweet potatoes. 

    We also created a delicious vegan, dairy-free pesto with pre-soaked raw cashews, fresh organic basil from Maya’s Farm, a little lemon, garlic, extra virgin olive oil, and sea salt. This dish was so incredible that a local farmer friend of mine with “The Community Exchange” Table stopped by and enjoyed the left-overs.

    The key takeaways from this class were that we can make a pesto without cheese and we and eat some veggies raw that we would generally think we’d need to cook.

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    EXCERPT from A New View of Healthy Eating

    Spiral Veggies with Nut-Based Creamy Dressing

    Learn how to spiral colorful veggies and create a simple dressing with raw cashews and basil.

    Basic Salad Dressing: Raw Cashews & Basil Pesto

    A vegan, dairy-free, creamy dressing is the base for this colorful raw spiral veggie salad. With fresh basil and lots of garlic, this refreshing dressing is a perfect alternative to a cheese-based pesto.

    SIMPLE INGREDIENTS

    • ½ cup raw cashews, soaked 3-4 hours in water
    • ½ cup fresh basil leaves
    • 1 fluid ounce fresh-squeezed lemon juice
    • 2-3 garlic cloves, minced
    • 2 tbsp fresh-squeezed lemon juice
    • 1 tsp sea salt
    • ¼ cup organic extra virgin olive oil

    SIMPLE STEPS

    • Place all ingredients except organic extra virgin olive oil into food processor.
    • Add olive oil little by little until smooth.
    • Taste and add extra garlic, lemon juice, or basil leaves to create a taste that’s right for you.

    Cashews are an excellent substitution for cheese in raw vegan dishes, as they are creamy and smooth in sauces and dressings.

    A raw spiral veggie salad is a perfect way to introduce raw food to everyone, from young kids to adults. It’s simple, delicious, and fun to prepare.

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    Spiral Veggies

    SIMPLE INGREDIENTS

    • 1 large zucchini
    • 1 butternut squash, solid end, peeled
    • 1 sweet potato
    • 1 red beet
    • 1 golden beet

    SIMPLE STEPS

    • Spiralize veggies into long, pasta-like shapes using a spiral vegetable slicer with a small blade. Be sure to spiralize the red beets last and separate them from the other vegetables to limit bleeding.
    • After spiralizing each vegetable, slice to make the pieces shorter.
    • Allow the vegetables to sit at room temperature to dry.
    • Toss all spiralized vegetables together.
    • Add pesto to the vegetables and toss.
    • Serve and enjoy this fresh raw salad.

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    Spiralizing veggies is very mindful and meditative. I love creating the long, beautiful spirals with a rainbow of different colored vegetables.

    Have fun experimenting with spiralizing different types of organic veggies and creating a vegan pesto. Share your dishes with us on our Facebook page: www.facebook.com/NewViewHealthyEating

    I’d like to take a  moment to thank everyone who has already purchased my new book, A New View of Healthy Eating. It was a joy to share the book publically for the first time at the Downtown Phoenix Farmers Market this weekend.

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