Change of Seasons

fall leaves

This is the first year in a long time that I’ve been eager for autumn to arrive.

Usually, I lament its arrival – the air cools down and the leaves fall, alerting me to the impending Dreaded Winter.  I am forced to change over my wardrobe to longer sleeved tops and pants, heavier clothing in general, and am always a little sad to put my shorts away.  However – and I wrote about this often – this summer was a scorcher, so cooler weather is truly welcome.  I actually feel a bit cheated out of my summer because on many days the only option was to stay inside with the air conditioner on.  As someone who likes to be outside, this was a disappointment.

Our ConEd bill will also decrease, which will be a relief.

Along with my welcoming of the cool, crisp fall air this year, I also welcome back a number of foods I set aside while it was hot and I didn’t want to turn on the oven: I’m cooking more whole grains, including steel cut oats for breakfast; granola and bread baking are in my plans for next weekend; and roasting winter squash!  This might be my favorite cooking technique in the cooler seasons.

We’ve been getting these hard squashes in our CSA shares for a few weeks, and they have been fantastic.  The other day I cut an acorn squash in half, scooped out the seeds, then cut each half into three pieces.  Then I roasted them with olive oil, salt, and cumin. They were amazing!

Sauerkraut season is around the corner, too, which is very exciting.  This should herald the arrival of a Harsch crock to our home.  I’d also like to make some kimchi this fall, too.  All lacto-fermented, of course.

I’m back to drinking raw milk, too – I was eating raw yogurt but not straight milk for a couple of months. I have a lot of milk in the freezer right now!  Not sure why I stopped for a little while, but my guess was that it had something to do with the warm weather, and my not eating cereal (homemade granola or porridge – I don’t eat commercial cold cereal) for breakfast.  Most of my milk intake happens at breakfast.

My running should also click back into gear – due to a couple a colds and simply overly hot and humid weather, my running suffered in August and September.  Running keeps me centered and healthy, both physically and mentally; the cooler temperatures can only facilitate getting back into a regular routine.  Truth be told, my favorite running weather is sunny with temperatures in the mid-50s.

And with a new season, comes a few changes to the blog.  I’ve cut things down to two columns, giving the content area more space.  Images can be bigger this way, too.  I’ve also added a polling feature, so I’ll showcase polls from time to time.  I’ll also be doing some more fiddling around, so you should see minor changes come and go for a little while longer.

I’m excited by this new season – it feels like a kind of restart, or at least a return to a more varied life.   Fall, I’m happy to see you!

The Heat, Energy Levels, and Saturated Fat

At least the plants like this heat!

(At least the plants like the heat!)

As you probably know, we’ve had quite the heat wave here on the east coast – Tuesday and Wednesday were back-to-back triple digit days.  Sunday and Monday were hot, up in the 90s.  This morning the news predicted temperatures in the 90s with humidity that would pump the heat index to triple digits again.  The air conditioners have been trying to cool things down at home, but it’s been oppressive, still. In a word, miserable.

Silver linings for us, though – our guest room is small and therefore the air conditioner is doing a great job in there.  We sleep there nowadays, so at least we’re getting a good night’s sleep. I work in an air conditioned office most of the day, so I am shielded from the worst of the heat.  I’m so fortunate to have air conditioned refuges; my heart goes out to those who don’t.  And today, the temperatures feel downright balmy!  It’s overcast, and a cool breeze is blowing.  Waiting outside for my lunch (a grass-fed burger, yum), it was actually comfortable.  Such a relief!

Still, I’ve found myself feeling really tired in the evenings this week.  I thought it was the heat, but like I said, I’ve only had to deal with the heat in the evenings.  I’d come home and be ready to collapse around 9pm, feeling like I normally do around 1am, drained.  Not fun.

And while I do understand that being in the heat in the evening can sap some of my energy, it seemed too extreme.   I thought, maybe I’ve just been working too hard and intensely at the office (totally possible).  Perhaps it was the sugar in the homemade gelato I ate earlier in the week?  Or not being able to run this week during the heat?  Whatever it is, it’s been a bummer.

Then yesterday afternoon I read a post by Kelly, which mentions an experience that her friend Sarah, of the Healthy Home Economist, had with her son being at camp and not eating any saturated fats, and feeling blah, tired, and anxious (I’ve been feeling a little more anxious than normal this week, too).  I reviewed in my mind what I had been eating this week and lo and behold my intake of saturated fats has been the lowest it’s been in some time.  The fat I have been eating has pretty much come from a few scoops of gelato and a little bit of raw yogurt; I ate a little pastured beef on Monday, but it is pretty darn lean and I added no fat to it when I cooked it.  Normally I have eggs a few times a week for breakfast, as well as drinking plenty of raw milk – I hadn’t had any of that this week.

Now, part of this is that since it’s been so hot, I haven’t had the desire to eat much of anything, especially in the evenings.  Mostly salad with no protein and little fat (just olive oil).

So, this morning I chose to up the saturated fat intake in the form of two pastured eggs fried in grass-fed butter, along with a glass of raw milk.  I had a grass-fed burger for lunch topped with some good cheese.  Tonight I’ll finish off the delicious fresh pea and pepita salad (recipe to come), but will accompany it with more eggs in butter, and topped with some raw cheddar, since I have no meat defrosted.

So, I’ll be curious to see the effects what I’ve eaten has on me tonight and into the weekend – I must say, I already feel better than I have all week.  Those eggs really gave me a solid foundation for the day.  I’ll be very happy if I can stay up later than 9pm.  Will report back!

This post is participating in Fight Back Friday, hosted by Food Renegade.

Sally Fallon In NYC, Spoke About Raw Milk

Fullscreen capture 3282010 41229 PM.bmpOn Saturday night, I was fortunate enough to see and hear Sally Fallon speak on the subject of raw milk, aka real milk.   She is, of course, the co-author of Nourishing Traditions, the best guide to traditional, nutrient-dense food history, information, and recipes, and the founder of the Weston A. Price Foundation.  She spoke to a large and enthusiastic crowd down in Chelsea who were happy to have her.

I am a raw milk drinker, so I definitely support her arguments, whether they’re about safety or nutrition.  To see what she talked about last night, just go the Real Milk site and download the Raw Milk powerpoint presentation.  There is a lot of science in there to back up the pro-raw milk arguments.

I was asked about what I got out of the talk, as I was not there to be convinced of anything new.  For, me what I gained was 1) more assurance in the effectiveness of raw milk on health; 2) reinforcement that raw milk is safe from a food safety standpoint; and 3) a reminder that simply because it’s raw is not enough – this farm fresh milk must meet certain criteria to make it acceptable for human consumption.

What are these criteria?  They are as follows:

  • From pasture-fed cows
  • Full fat
  • Cows free of TB and undulant fever
  • Milk produced under sanitary conditions
  • Milk immediately placed in cold storage
  • Regular testing program for somatic cell count and pathogens
  • Regular testing of water on the farm

So basically, make sure the cows are fed on pasture and eating grass, they are free of disease, and tested regularly (as well as testing the farm’s water), and use refrigeration.  Since the “swill milk” days, the advances in medical testing, water cleanliness, and refrigeration are light years beyond from where we were then.  The cows that supply my milk meet each and every one of these criteria.

Puy_de_Sancy

As far as its effectiveness on health, it was clearest in the list entitled, Destruction of Built-In Safety Systems by Pasteurization.   From the inactivated bioactive components like Leukocytes (they eat at all foreign bacteria, yeast and molds), to the reduced levels of medium-chain fatty acids (also found in coconut oil), to the general dismantling of the natural protective safety systems that reside in the milk, it’s clear to me that pasteurization is not something beneficial to the health of the milk.  Additionally, raw milk seems to be supportive of our immune systems, contains carriers to ferry vitamins and minerals through the gut and into the blood stream, and has curative properties, (see The Milk Cure, which should only be done with raw milk).  One woman in the audience told us that she put raw milk in her child’s ear and it cured his earache in about 4 hours!

And to touch on the food safety standpoint – why not look at one of the core reasons our milk may not be safe – the cleanliness of the animals and their surroundings, and the manner in which they are raised and treated during their lives.  Cows that produce milk that is consumed and sold as raw are under a lot more scrutiny and are tested more often.  This kind of practice is what I’d like to see – preventative, wholistic health care for the animals, rather than its opposite.  It will keep them healthy and happy, and their milk is healthy and makes the drinker happy, too!

Sally herself was in good spirits.  The talk was informative, and she presented the information in an easy and sometimes entertaining manner.  She also answered a bunch of questions from the audience, including one from a physician asking about how doctors and medical students could access education about raw milk, especially since they are (falsely) taught that all raw milk is dangerous.

Most memorable quote of the evening: “Drinking raw milk is like playing Russian roulette with an empty gun.”   Too true.

Photo credit: (cc) Jean-Pol Grandmont via a Creative Commons license