everyday ayurveda: spring tasting guide
Post on 22-Feb-2016
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ayurvedaspring tasting guide
everyday
photography by
Cara Brostromrecipes by
Kate O'DOnnell
Kate O’DOnnell Nine extended trips to India and 14 years studying the wisdom traditions of the sub-continent support Kate’s understanding of ayurveda. Her personal healing with a doctor in mysore, India led to a love for the ancient heal-ing system and inspired her to pursue studies at the Kripalu school of ayurveda.
Kate is a Certified ayurvedic Consultant and Yoga specialist, offering private consultations, ayurvedic yoga, and seasonal cleansing programs. Her ayurvedic lifestyle intensives, food, and yoga workshops in the Boston area aim to help others come closer to their true nature. Illuminating self-knowledge
through ayurveda, yoga, and community keeps Kate inspired.
about us
cOpyright © 2013 by Kate O’DOnnell
all rights reserveD
bOOK Design by catbirD www.thisiscatbirD.cOm
www.ayurvedaboston.com
cara brOstrOm is a photographer, an ashtangi, and an ayurveda-inspired foodie.
she loves creating photographs which educate and inspire all paths of health and wellness. she also enjoys finding new and creative ways of cooking with ayurvedic principles, and credits these seasonal tools with improved health and creativity.
she photographs yoga and many other subjects throughout
New England and beyond.
www.carabrostrom.com
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how to use this guide
contents
about usYou will notice this is a “guide,” not a cookbook, and I encourage you to journey forth into Ayurvedic cookery as an avid explorer. Be a mad scientist in the kitchen! My intent is to in-spire you be intuitive, self-motivated, and organized, so you can prepare your own healing food every day, all year long.
These recipes offer a spring tasting preview of the full Everyday Ayurveda Guidebook coming later this year, which will include simple meal themes that change with the seasons.
Ayurvedic cooking is a concept: seasonal whole foods, warm sit-down meals, quickly prepared, and generously spiced to stoke digestive fire.
breakfast: cream of grain cereal 4
lunch: south indian sambar 7
dinner: queen green soup 8
beverage: refresh-a-rama 11
seasoning: spring spice mix 12
spring shopping list 13
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Put the grain in the saucepan with the water or milk.
Warm on low-medium and hand-blend as you go. I
like to half-blend so there’s still some grains to look at
and chew on.
add your spring mix-ins and spices of choice to the
pot, keeping heat low and stirring so it doesn’t stick.
If you are toasting seeds, add raw seeds to a pan over
medium heat and stir at the same time.
the cereal will be warm and the seeds will be toasted
at the same time. Pour into a bowl, add a splash of
milk if you like and sprinkle the seeds directly on top.
sizzle.
cream of grain cereal
1 cup cooked grain (spring grain choices:
millet, buckwheat, quinoa, barley,
amaranth)
½ cup “milk” or water (spring milk choices:
rice, almond, hemp, sunflower)
mix-ins for spring: grated apple, raisins,
fruit-sweetened dried cranberries,
toasted pumpkin seed, sunflower
seed (1-2 tbsp each or whatever, how
hungry are you?)
spices for spring: cinnamon, ginger powder,
nutmeg, cayenne (any combination)
Remember Cream of Wheat? Well, wheat is not the number one choice this time of year, but how about cream of anything else? Just take your cooked grain of choice (a great use for last night’s extra), warm it up, and blend with milk to make cream cereal.
For a complete cream, soak raisins overnight and put in the blender too. Hand blenders are great here, but if you don’t have one, just don’t cream it. But changing the texture makes what may otherwise remind you of lunch, seem like the best breakfast ever.
some grains are going to soak up more than others, so you can use as much liquid as needed
to get the consistency you want. only cook it as much as it takes to get warm, as overcooking
will kill the texture and make it gummy. If you mess it up, you’ll know why and better luck next
time. that’s how I figured it out.
{breakfast}
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Combine water, mung beans and turmeric powder in
a large saucepan and bring to a boil. the mung beans
will take 30 minutes to cook, so time your veg accord-
ingly. I generally get the beans going and then start
chopping veggies and gathering spices. By the time
you get them all chopped, it may be time to add them,
about 15 minutes into it. If you soaked your beans a few
hours first, it takes only 20 minutes to cook.
Now that’s going, heat the oil on low-med. If you want
to use onion, you must cook that in here 5 minutes first.
add mustard seed, this will splutter quickly and its good
to cover it for one minute and then…add curry leaf, stir,
then hing. When you can smell it, turn off the heat. stir
the coconut into the hot mixture and let it sit for 1-2
minutes while you go wash something.
add the spiced oil to the pot. add sambar powder.
Cook all together 5 minutes. add more water if its
getting thicker than soupy. You may garnish with fresh
cilantro if you like, and serve poured over basmati rice.
south indian sambar
5 cups water
½ cup split yellow mung beans,
rinsed twice
2 small tomatoes
1 cup carrot, potato, green beans,
daikon radish, any or all, chopped
coarsely
1 chopped onion, optional
¼ cup fresh grated coconut, or dried
coconut soaked in water
2-3 tbsp coconut oil
Spicing:
2 pinches hing/asafoetida
curry leaf, 2 sprigs if you find it
1 tsp turmeric
1 tsp mustard seed
1-2 tsp sambar powder
A staple all over the South of India, Sambar is a tomato/dahl/tamarind soup served with rice in its various forms, and enjoyed at all three meals. This is a great spring recipe due to its hot, light, pungent, and sour qualities. You can always reduce the sambar powder to make it milder, and reduce tomato to make it less sour.
{lunch}
I have veered from tradition a bit here by using store-bought sambar powder in order to keep it
very simple for you and using ingredients you can find easily. Look for the sambar powder as well
as the mung beans at an Indian grocery store. Fresh coconut works best and is sometimes found
in the freezer section, but dried will work here as well.
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Bring 1 cup of the water or broth to a boil; add tur-
meric. Coursely chop the veggies and throw them in,
spinach last. Boil this for 5-10 minutes. remove from
heat.
add the greens mixture to the blender with the ginger.
add the other cup of liquid, which should keep it from
being too hot. Begin blending on low, leaving an air
vent at the top to allow steam to escape as you blend.
Lay a towel over the cover if you think it may be hot
enough to make a mess. Better yet, use a hand blender
and puree right in the pot.
I enjoy this soup with rice cakes and miso, leftover
grains from lunch floating in there, or sprouted grain
toast with ghee.
serves 2.
queen green soup
2-3 leaves of kale or chard
a big handful of baby spinach
2 celery stalks
a big handful of green beans with
the points lopped off
1 handful parsley, with stems
chopped off
1 inch fresh ginger, peeled
1 tsp turmeric
2 cups water (use the water you
steamed in) or veggie broth
1 tsp ghee to garnish
Steaming, or parboiling your veggies for 5-10 minutes will introduce the lightening qualities of warmth, making this green soup easier to digest. Another plus, this has a finer texture than a raw soup, but is not as creamy as a slow-cooked variety. Try this method when you don’t have time to slow cook.
{dinner}
Now here’s the thing. If you don’t have all of those veggies, use whatever you’ve got. With a
little experimenting, you will find what tastes good to you. For example, I have found that omit-
ting the parsley makes this soup less enjoyable for me, but I love the green beans and they
make everything okay. Hungry? add a scant handful of sunflower seeds that have been soaked
for an hour or two into the blender.
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run half the juice and ginger in the blender until blended well.
While blender is running, add the honey from the top, then the rest of the juice, lemon, and cayenne if using.
Whip it for a minute in there, then drink slowly.
refresh a rama
1 cup grapefruit or orange juice
1/2 - 1 inch piece of ginger root, peeled
1/4 - 1/2 of a lemon, juiced (or lime)
1 tsp raw honey
dash of cayenne, for the adventurous
This wonderful drink cuts springtime mucous and gets you pumped up without caffeine. It’s best first thing in the morning, on an empty stomach. Wait at least 30 minutes before eating. If you find this drink too acidic, use lime instead of lemon, and omit the cayenne.
tip: try using one peeled orange or grapefruit instead of the juice. Even better!
{beverage}
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I usually grind my own spices, but these don’t grind
up easy, so I buy them powdered, at a natural foods
store that has bulk spices. these will be fresher and
you should make a new batch monthly.
mix them in a bowl with a spoon so mixture is uniform.
Funnel into a glass shakey jar (99 cents at Bed Bath
and Beyond) by folding a postcard or envelope in
half the long way and pouring the spice mix down the
chute into the jar’s mouth.
make a cute label and tape onto your jar. Keep near
the stove for some spring seasoning!
spring spice mix
2 tbsp ground cinnamon
2 tbsp ground ginger
1 tbsp ground cardamom
2 pinches black pepper
A must for cool mornings. This one works great anywhere you want a sweet taste and creates a warm-ing digestive aid. Hot cereal, tea, warm milk, etc. It also contains the main ingredients used in India’s very special Masala Chai. Use generously.
{seasoning}
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spring shopping list
Favor foods that are:
Light like sprouts, broths, berries and leafy greens
Dry like barley, rye, and beans
Warm like steamed vegetables (instead of raw), spices, and soups
Favor tastes that are:
Bitter like dandelion greens, brussels sprouts, brocolli
astringent like cranberry, pomegranate, dark raisins, spinach
Pungent like mustard greens, turnips, dash of pepper, fresh ginger
minimize foods that are:
heavy, sweet, and oily; tastes that are sweet, sour, and salty.
Use these seasonal principles of Ayurveda to guide your food shopping this spring.
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Ayurveda
is not merely a system of medicine,
it is a way of life.
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