Our Healtheir Recipe Mom Brooke! An everyday Hero Hero

 

A few years back, Brooke’s toddler was newly diagnosed with Diabetes Type 1.  As she was desperately searching for healthier sugar free products and recipe ideas, she landed on the Kid Kritics site and signed up to be a Healthier Recipe Mom.  That’s how I “met” her.  I was immediately impressed with how proactive she was.

Brooke’s big challenge was just beginning; she had to pay total attention to every meal she prepared, reading labels of every product she purchased. Taking care of her son’s health became a full time job. Complicating this task was her limited food budget.

Eleven months later, another level was added to Brooke’s challenge. Her son was also diagnosed with Celiac Disease. Now she faced another dietary adjustment for her little guy and thus her family. Not only would she have to count her son’s carbohydrate intake, monitoring blood sugar, she would also have to study the source of his starch intake.

Recently Brooke described to me how much more difficult it was to adapt to the gluten free lifestyle versus the diabetes diagnosis. It seemed her son could no longer eat anything he liked – all wheat, rye, barley, oats were out of the question. Adding to this stress was the reality that family outings such as, church potlucks, eating at friend’s house and any restaurants would now be very limited.  But again, she took charge and decided her family would all go gluten free to avoid any dangerous cross contamination in the house. And, she wanted to eliminate the struggle keeping her child from eating gluten foods stored in their home.

Digging through gluten free brands, Brooke discovered that a gluten free diet of processed foods can be very expensive; most gluten-free convenience items are “fluff”, processed and very low in nutritional value. Plus she learned that most gluten free products have higher carb content than regular versions, making it harder for her to manage her son’s insulin regimen.

There is a silver lining in this picture. Brooke noticed changes in herself when she transitioned to a gluten free diet as well: she had more energy! Plus, her family is definitely eating healthier morning, noon and night.  She now relies on serving a lot of affordable fresh produce and home cooked meals. Without a doubt, Brooke now excels at creating and adapting delicious healthy recipes for her family!

More great news. Brook’s son has been a “champ” with the transition. Because he understands how much better he feels, at only 3 ½ years old he rarely puts up a fight if he can’t have something with gluten. Another plus – he has already become really good at asking people if something has gluten in it before he will take a bite.

Brooke is an amazing mother! She has so much on her plate and deals with it with strength, positive attitude and love. It is our honor to have Brooke as part of our “Healthier Recipe Mom” group. Using qualifying ingredients for restricted diets, she creates “good tasting” recipes the whole family enjoys!

 

To Brooke and all mothers out there we want to wish you a “Happy Mother’s Day!”  You are all heroes in my eyes.

 

It is our joy to give you a couple recipes Brooke has created using

Kid Kritics Approved Products:

Tropical Cheesecake with Pretzel Crust 

Wild Blueberry Syrup

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Spring Cleaning: Your Pantry!

It's that time of year! Time when we are inspired to clean our houses and our lives of any unwanted clutter and stress. Perfect time to also clean out your pantry and stock up with new and better foods for you.

Start off looking at your canned goods, keep only what you can't live without. Then try to switch out for buying fresh or when needed and available packaged in glass. Canned goods can come in handy on a last minute pinch, but their BPA dangers, added salt, and other artificial ingredients are not ideal for everyday consumption.

Next look at your pasta, rice, cake batter and baking flours. Make sure you have at least 80% as whole grains. Switch out white rice for brown rice. Explore other grains such as quinoa, barley, Freekeh and bulgur. The basics are also very important, look at all your "best by dates" on all your products, including herbs and spices and throw out anything expired. On average we throw away $1 for every $4 of purchased food, we must break this trend with meal planning and avoiding stocking up due to sales when you are unsure you will use it in time.

The snack section of your pantry is just as important. Look through it and see what can you substitute with more nutritious options. Try to get rid of anything with lab-made food dyes, added preservatives, excessive sugar or salt and "empty calories" type snacks which don’t provide any nutritious value and may increase underlying stress. Look at our grocery list for great ideas on snacks and more! Our Kid Kritics Approved Brands have plenty of options to make stocking your pantry an easy task.

As we defrost from winter into spring we can start looking forward to Summer! Time to look and feel our best. Having the right foods at home to fuel your body is crucial to a successful "Spring time cleaning" of your health.

… for the health of your family,

Carolina

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How To Raise A Child Who Likes Vegetables!

Kid Kritics in the kitchen“How did I raise my kids to like vegetables? How did you make them try new foods? I hear these questions at least once weekly, professionally as a registered dietitian, and as a mother.

My proud mom side takes a minute to smile and feel good! After all it is no easy task. We are all so busy that convenience and time-saving are qualities we look for when feeding our children. For me it started when my kids were just babies, with my nutrition background I had a few advantages. Today I combine my experience as a mother and registered dietitian to offer tips and suggestions so that you can have your proud moment too! There is nothing more rewarding than grocery shopping with my kids (which you remember is not my favorite thing to do) in the fruits and vegetables side of the store and hear them beg for broccoli and snow peas.

For brand new mommies I say: start from the beginning. Your baby should have an exclusively breastmilk or formula diet until 6 months of age. Then start with vegetables instead of cereals or fruit, preferably green veggies like peas or green beans. This is when you build a “taste base” for years to come by familiarizing their palates with as many flavors as possible. After vegetables, serve a variety of no added sugar fruits and cereals. Make your own, or choose the ones that have as ingredients the fruit and only and maybe some vitamin C as the preservative. No need to stick to just rice cereal, apples and bananas; venture out to barley, quinoa, avocados or coconut. Avoid refined sugar as much as possible. It has such a powerful impact on our taste buds it can make the naturally sweet taste of fresh fruits disappear. The same goes for salt; there’s no need to add it to fresh food. Use herbs and spices to add flavor. Kids who start off appreciating the natural taste of fruits and vegetables grow into adults who will crave less sugar and salt.

The good news is it’s never too late! At any age encourage your children to participate in grocery shopping, cooking, and setting the table. Give them some control of what you’ll make for a meal; let them feel included in the decision process. Vegetables, whether raw or cooked, can be a challenge. Spark your kids’ interest by telling them where it grows (or helping them grow some of their own!) Let them smell it, touch it (yes, play with it) and taste it! Children are much more likely to try a food after they help prepare it! We recently started a new family tradition of cooking together once a week. My kids look forward to helping out in the kitchen, dicing, mixing, measuring and the final presentation says it all! The more colors on the plate the more attractive it is. After all, plates filled with only brown, beige and white foods are boring. Be sure to add some naturally sourced color! It doesn’t have to be fancy, but how you plate it can make all the difference. My kids love garnishing our dinner plates with fresh basil and mint leaves; they feel like “real chefs.”

We know kids will try new foods, especially if they smell good. (90 percent of why we choose to put a food in our mouth is based on whether it smells good or not.) At Kid Kritics Taste Test, we see this happen all the time. Moms come running in and ask what we did to motivate their son or daughter to eat broccoli or other vegetables. Something about the way it looked and smelled opened their minds to taking a bite. It also helps when their friend dives in and says they love it!

We have a recipe tab on our website with hundreds of recipes that have been taste tested and approved by kids, it is hard to pick a favorite, but here are the links to three that are easy to get you started in the kitchen with your kids:

http://www.kidkritics.com/recipes/Creamy-Broccoli-Chicken-Bake/260

http://www.kidkritics.com/recipes/Veggie-and-Cheese-Pasta-Salad/269

http://www.kidkritics.com/recipes/Spinach-Dip/72

… for the health of your family,

Carolina

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Choose to have a Smart Active Brain or Fructose

Research continues to point out how the sweetener Fructose negatively impacts your brain… as well as your children's.  Please read this report by Dr. Mercola,

September 2, 2012 – Issue 2206

Too Much Sugar Makes You Stupid!

The rats fed fructose syrup showed significant impairment in their cognitive abilities—they struggled to remember their way out of the maze. They were slower, and their brains showed a decline in synaptic activity. Their brain cells had trouble signaling each other, disrupting the rats' ability to think clearly and recall the route they'd learned six weeks earlier.

Additionally, the fructose-fed rats showed signs of resistance to insulin, a hormone that controls your blood sugar and synaptic function in your brain.

Because insulin is able to pass through your blood-brain barrier, it can trigger neurological processes that are important for learning and memory. Consuming large amounts of fructose may block insulin's ability to regulate how your brain cells store and use sugar for the energy needed to fuel thoughts and emotions. The average American consumes roughly 47 pounds of cane sugar and 35 pounds of high-fructose corn syrup per year, according to the U.S. Department of Agriculture2.

Researchers concluded that a high fructose diet harms your brain, as well as the rest of your body. But there is even more to this story.

A second group of rats was given omega-3 fatty acids in the form of flaxseed oil and DHA (docosahexaenoic acid), in addition to the high fructose diet. After six weeks, this group of rats was able to navigate the maze better and faster than the rats in the non-DHA group.

The researchers concluded that DHA is protective against fructose's harmful effects on the brain. DHA is essential for synaptic function—it helps your brain cells transmit signals to one another, which is the mechanism that makes learning and memory possible. Your body can't produce enough DHA, so it must be supplemented through your diet.
 

YOUR CHOICE IS either to cut out all sweeteners, artificial included, use a little cane sugar for occasional treats, and take DHA supplements – fish oils!  OR, go down the road of destruction, ignore conclusive research, eat lots of sweet junk food, including "candy cereals" and be stupid. 

I think you are smart enough to follow choice one.

… for the health of your family,
ellen

 

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Did you know, Protein helps diminish your desire for sweets?

When you find your kids or yourself reaching for something sweet, reach for nuts, seeds, slices of cheese or turkey instead.  You will find you are not as interested in satisfying your sugar craving.  This will help keep your family and you from eating the average of 35 teaspoons of added sugar a day!  So many grams of sugar are hidden in processed foods as high fructose corn syrup, glucose, dextrose, fructose, maltodextrin, and more. Reading labels is the smart way to avoid buying any of these foods.  And, always having some protein finger food around as an alternative will save the day!

… for the health of families,
ellen

Brain Boosters for your kids! Enter to Win a Case of Yummi Bears Organics Brain Booster by Hero Nutritionals.  Go to www.KidKritics.com/sweepstakes today!


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Yummy Healthy Birthday Cake Toppings!

Thanks to Nutrition Babes Registered Dieticians, Lauren Harris Pincus and Kathy Siegel, we have a great list of cake toppings to replace sugar-filled frosting and dyed decorations:

- Icing: gluten-free, no high fructose corn syrup, no hydrogenated or trans fats whip cream: TruWhip
- Fresh fruit, cut or sliced
- Frozen fruit, drained
- Dried fruit
- Nuts, only when there are no allergy concerns
- Non-eatable decorations: curled ribbon, plastic creatures, other plastic decor

I am adding mint leaves and flowers (for girls)! Get creative.  Have you kids help decorate their cakes. For more delicious tips about Healthier Birthday Celebrations for home and school parties listen on iTunes, Better Food Choices.  Then, please, let us know your ideas!

… for the health of your family,
ellen

Don't forget about the YOU WIN, YOU CHOSE! sweepstakes this week.  When I call the winner, he or she will tell me whether to ship a case of Original, Pizza, Hot Veggie Stix or Chips to him or her.  Plus this is the last week you can win "The Princess and the Pop Star" DVD by Veggie Tales.  Go to www.KidKritics.com/sweepstakes and enter today!


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Some Good News on Sugar

 High Fructose Corn Syrup.  Looks harmless… not

 Sugar Cane Crystals (not bleached)

Some restaurants and packaged food companies are "bowing to consumer concerns about HFCS (high fructose corn syrup) and replacing the sweetener with sugar…. It's so hard. It's in everything." True. From ketchup to oyster crackers, HFCS has been the sweetener of choice for decades. Finally, many are waking up to the reality this needs to stop due to the research associating it with cancer and more. Sugar cane crystals are still sugar but are at least less processed. This change will up their prices since part of the appeal of HFCS was how cheap it was as an ingredient. Still, this is a good move and you can thank those who spoke up and said, "We don't want it." Keep speaking out…

… for the health of your family,
ellen

* Katy McLaughlin, "Sweet Revenge, Chefs Pour on the Sugar," Wall Street Journal, 7/6 11, p. D1.

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Healthy Kid Survey by YMCA… time to take action!

"Most kids don’t come close to getting enough exercise daily and don’t eat enough fruits and vegetables: 62% of 1,630 parents with children ages 5 to 10 say their kids eat junk food one to four days a week. Only 14% of parents say their kids eat at least five fruits and vegetables a day.These results shed light on the reasons for the childhood obesity epidemic. About a third of children in the USA are overweight, which puts them at higher risk for type 2 diabetes, high cholesterol and other health problems."*

We know you care.  That's why we have the Kid Kritics program so you can serve you family healthier foods they will like!  Lean on it to up your kid's 
consumption of fruits and vegetables and to down their odds of being overweight and sick.  By the way, hundreds of YMCA children are Kid Kritics!

Come see us at the Boca Raton, FL. YMCA "Healthy Kids Day" event this Saturday! Or, find one in your neighborhood and have some fun with your  kids!

                    … for the health of your family,
                    ellen and sally

* Hellmich, Nanci, "Survey: Kids Lack Exercise, Healthful Foods", USA Today, www.usatoday.com/health, 4/13/11.

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BEWARE: AminoSweet is really aspartame. Don’t buy it.

aminosweet
Aspartame has been rebranded as AminoSweet
.  Dr. Mercola reminds us of its side effects: Headache, Change in Vision, Convulsions and Seizures, Hallucination, Nausea and Vomiting and Joint Pain.  Aspartame has also been identified as an excito-toxin, seriously effecting one's brain and nervous system.  And then you can look at the fact that it mimics Multiple Sclerosis, Parkinson's, Fibromyalgia, Chronic Fatigue Syndrome, Alzheimer's, Depression, ADD and more diseases.  NutraSweet and Canderel are other aspartame commercial names.  PLEASE, be the smart one and do not buy, drink, eat or serve any artificial sweeteners and especially aspartame brands. It's better to eat real granulated sugar in small quantities.

… for the health of your family,
ellen and sally

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