TPV Episode 35 Show Notes: Paleo Convenience Foods

April 19, 2013 in Show Notes

Our thirty-fifth show!
Ep. 35: Paleo Convenience Foods

First of all, a warm welcome to the newest Paleo Parents Team member, Monica of ThePaleos! Monica will be helping Paleo Parents organize some of the administrative chaos of the blog in an effort for Matt & Stacy to spend more time on blog content and spending time together.   As a side effect, she’s also helping me because she is taking over some of the essential podcast jobs, like show notes!

PLEASE comment welcoming Monica, and if there’s ANYTHING more you’d like out of the show notes (or blog in general) please let us know – since we’ve got some help we’re ready for (reasonable) requests! FYI, transcripts aren’t reasonable (yet) … sorry.

In this episode, Stacy and Sarah invite Mira and Jayson Calton, authors of Rich Food, Poor Food and Naked Calories, to share suggestions on nutrient dense paleo convenience foods. Learn about beverages that support your health, how to prepare your pantry for storms and power outages, and how to fuel your family in healthy ways while on the road or in the woods.

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The Paleo View (TPV), Episode 35: Paleo Convenience Foods

 

  • 0:00 – Introduction
  • 1:19 – News & Views
  • 34:20 – Science with Sarah: The role of vitamin D in the body
    • How the body synthesizes vitamin D and what it impacts
    • We produce vitamin D from the sun, but also get it from rich sources of food
    • Foods with high levels of vitamin D are seafood, eggs from pasture raised chickens, and pasture raised animals
    • Recent studies have been released on the crucial role that vitamin D plays while pregnant
    • Every major disease is linked to vitamin D deficiencies in some capacity
    • The role that vitamin D plays on melatonin production
    • Micro-nutrient competitors and synergies for vitamin D
  • 50:41 – Q&A
  • 1:22:14 – Outro

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photoMonica is the latest member of the Paleo Parents Team! Raised in a full-on hippy house, she was taught to love the land and the animals that feed from it. From old school hog butcherings to berry farm harvesting treks, her parents showed that health began with food choices. However, her teen years brought her down a rebellious path with food and she began to struggle with the world of weight-gain, yo-yo diets, and eating in secret. It wasn’t until her husband nudged her in the direction of the Primal Blueprint that she learned how to break my unhealthy cycle.

Now she is carving out her own hippy life and learning how to raise a paleo family in our modern-day grain and sugar crazed world. Monica can be found at thepaleos.com as well as Instagram, Twitter, and Pinterest .

Product Review: Vintage Tradition Body Balm

April 18, 2013 in Product Reviews

About a year ago, I started more seriously evaluating the products that I used on my skin, hair, and teeth.  As I struggled with the autoimmune protocol, going to such great lengths to heal my body with nutrition, it suddenly became very important to me that the products I use be as natural and healing as the food that I was eating.   One at a time, I tackled my beauty products.  First, I stopped using shampoos and conditioners, then I started oil cleansing my skin, then tossed my deodorant in favor of a mineral salt spray, and more recently, I’ve switched toothpastes.  To be fair however, I didn’t start this process with any sense of adventure.  I mostly just stopped using my old products and sortof lived with the results.  Only recently has my sense of vanity caught up with me and I’ve started to tweak my natural beauty products and expand my repertoire in search not only of products that are natural but also products that really work.

vintage-tradition-body-balmVintage Traditions makes a grass-fed tallow and olive oil based moisturizer, which they call Beauty Balm.  It is scented with essential oils and comes in three different scents:  mild manly scent, pretty girly scent, and almost unscented (there is a truly unscented version as well).   I first heard about how nourishing tallow is for your skin from Liz Wolfe’s Skintervention Guide, so I was excited to try it.  I have had the pleasure of trying out all three of these scents for the last month.  As I scraped the last bit of Beauty Balm from my last jar, I decided a) I don’t want to be all out of Beauty Balm so I had better order some more, and b) it was high time I actually write a review!

Prior to Beauty Balm, I was mostly using coconut oil as a moisturizer.  The problem with coconut oil is that it takes approximately forever to absorb.  and don’t you dare think of crawling into bed with coconut oil on your legs, lest you want to permanently stain your sheets!  Beauty Balm is such a completely different experience, it’s not a fair comparison.  The feeling of the cream is rich, smooth and luxurious.  A little goes a long way and it absorbs into my skin beautifully.  It also gives my skin a very smooth texture that I really like.  It’s been particularly wonderful on my feet, but I’ve actually started using it as a full body moisturizer.  I like it as a facial moisturizer in the evenings and find that it’s a little thick for using in the morning.

I also used it on my kids, who loved it (and who sometimes say coconut oil stings, so it was nice to find something that didn’t).  My oldest daughter was having some issues with dry skin after swimming a few weeks ago.  I literally applied Beauty Balm twice and the dry skin disappeared completely.

My favorite scent is the almost unscented.  It has a very subtle scent (it really suits the name).  My oldest daughter loves the pretty girly scent, which I also like.  Neither of us were big fans of the mildly manly scent.  Okay, my daughter said it smelled disgusting, but I think that’s a bit harsh.  It smells, well, er, mildly manly.  And the smell certainly didn’t stop me from using every itty bitty bit of it.  But, because my daughter is so fond of the pretty girly scent, I have to admit, that is what I just ordered (yes, a 9oz jar this time too… )

I think Vintage Traditions Beauty Balm would be especially useful for anyone dealing with dry skin or eczema.  I used it on my healing lichen planus lesions and I think it really helped restore barrier function to my skin.  But, it’s just a lovely rich moisturizer that would be great for anyone looking for chemical-free alternatives.  Vintage Traditions also offers 100% Satisfaction Guaranteed, so you can literally try it for yourself and if you don’t like it, you can return it.

AND Special for my readers, Vintage Traditions is offering 20% off!!!!  Click HERE to check out their products and take advantage of this discount!

 

Paleo Cinnamon Buns

April 9, 2013 in Featured Recipes, Muffins and Coffee Cakes, Paleo Bread

Paleo Cinnamon Buns | The Paleo MomWhen I was a teenager, my Uncle Bill taught me how to make real cinnamon buns.  You know, the kind with yeast-based bread?  It was a revelation and became one of my favorite treats to make.  One batch would make a whole delicious pan, full of thousands of gluten-filled calories.  And last about an hour.  To this day the smell of cinnamon reminds me of family vacations (which often ended up being adventures) to visit my uncle.

My oldest daughter especially loves cinnamon, so I was inspired to try and modify my yeast-based paleo bread recipes to create a paleo adaptation of my once famous cinnamon buns.  It actually took some fairly major modifications to the bread recipes to make a dough elastic and solid enough to roll.  Compared to the regular cinnamon buns that I used to make, these are not quite as fluffy nor as elastic (and capturing that texture wasn’t worth using a gut irritating ingredient like xanthum gum or psyllium husk, since they are pretty awesome as is).  But, I was able to capture the flavor and a nice bready texture.  My kids are in love.

I’ve made these twice now, once more generously filled with sugar and cinnamon and once more stingy.   I think they work better when you’re more generous, but they do work if you want to cut the cinnamon filling in half and makes these a little less sweet.  The photos are actually from the stingier batch, but the recipe reflects the more generous filling.

These roll fairly easily.  They are a little tricky to cut though.  If you want perfect looking cinnamon buns, I would suggests  rolling out each one individually instead of making the usual big long role and slicing off individual rolls.  But, as you can see from the pan, they still look yummy, and they still pull apart enticingly well.

Paleo Cinnamon Rolls | The Paleo Mom

Ingredients (filling):

  1. Combine sugar and spices in a bowl or spice shaker.

Ingredients (bread):

  1. Bring ingredients to room temperature (this is most important with ground nuts, almond flour, eggs and butter).
  2. Proof the yeast (which means wake it up and get it growing).  To do this, combine yeast, honey and warm water (should be luke warm, not too hot).  In about 10 minutes, it should be foaming.
  3. While waiting for the yeast to proof, combine the remaining ingredients in the bowl of a standing mixer (you could also use a Bread Machine to warm and mix your ingredients).
  4. Add the yeast and then mix on low speed for at least 5 minutes (up to about 10 if you get distracted).
  5. While you’re waiting, grease a 9″x13″ pan (you could also use a rimmed baking sheet or a muffin pan).
  6. If you have a silicone rolling mat, use that.  Otherwise, line your counter with parchment (probably two sheets overlapping).  In either case, grease the mat or the parchment with butter, lard or palm shortening.
  7. Pour out your sticky bread dough onto your prepared surface.  Grease your hands and flatten the dough into a big rectangle about 1/2″ thick by hand.
  8. Spread butter over the surface of your rectangle.  Sprinkle the entire surface with the sugar and spice mix.
  9. Now roll the dough into a log.
  10. Using a sharp knife, but 1-2″ thick slices of your dough log and transfer to your prepared pan.  It helps to clean any dough off your knife in between each cut.   Space at least 1″ apart in the pan.  You can cut as man cinnamon buns as you want.  This makes 12 quite large cinnamon buns or 18 smaller ones (I did a baker’s dozen).  Don’t worry if they aren’t perfect swirls.  As you can see from my picture, some are perfect some aren’t.  They all taste good.  If you have a reason why these need to look perfect, roll them out individually instead of the log method.
  11. Let rise in a warm corner of your kitchen for 45 minutes (I let mine rise in the oven with the light on and the door a crack open, and then take out to rise the last ten minutes on the stovetop while the oven is preheating).  It’s normal for them to not rise very much but they will then puff up much more while baking.
  12. Preheat oven to 375F with oven rack in the top third of your oven.
  13. Bake for 25-30 minutes (closer to 20 minutes if you made them smaller).
  14. Enjoy!

Paleo Cinnamon Buns | The Paleo Mom

 

 

 

TPV Episode 33 Show Notes: Breastfeeding and First Foods

April 5, 2013 in Practical Tips, Show Notes

Our thirty-third show!
Ep. 33: Breastfeeding and First Foods

In this episode, Stacy and Sarah welcome Arsy from Rubies and Radishes, author of The Paleo Slow Cooker, to talk about breastfeeding and first foods. Discussed are such topics as handling food sensitivities in babies, how to deal with issues with milk supply, and why Stacy knows so much about this stuff.

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Download this episode (right click and save)

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The Paleo View (TPV), Episode 33: Breastfeeding and First Foods

 

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