Tuesday, November 17, 2009
salmon without garlic
Monday, November 16, 2009
Lentil soup
Thursday, October 15, 2009
Is it winter yet? Oatmeal is the breakfast of Champions!
Monday, September 21, 2009
Fried Rice
Tuesday, July 28, 2009
Hot Weather Food
Monday, July 27, 2009
Shakshuka – Poached eggs on vegetables
Shakshuka is an Israeli egg and tomato dish.
Very simple and easy to make, all you need are eggs and tomatoes.
You can incorporate other vegetables if you like, onions and peppers are a tasty addition.
To simplify the recipe below, use only tomatoes.
Use one small to medium onion and 2 tomatoes for every 2-3 eggs. The idea here is to cover the bottom of the pan with vegetables so the eggs rest on them while cooking. Slice onions and tomatoes thinly and you may also add peppers ( red/green ). Sautee over med high heat adding water to prevent sticking. Add 1 tsp of cumin and hungarian paprika (the sweet kind). Use salt, chili peppers and cayenne pepper to taste. When vegetables have softened crack the eggs on top and cover. Reduce heat to med-low until eggs are ready (about 5-10 min).
To shorten the time, add the eggs into the vegetables after they have started to cook, add the seasonings and toss with a fork to scramble the lot. When done serve with hot sauce and Grains plus sprinkled on top!
Enjoy.
Tuesday, July 7, 2009
Garlic Tops
Saturday, July 4, 2009
Swiss Chard with Yam
Friday, July 3, 2009
Flavour your water
Tuesday, June 30, 2009
Ice Cream For Breakfast? Yes!
Ice cream is another way of saying thick shake.
Who does not enjoy a cold thick sweet shake in the morning?
A powerhouse breakfast, fast and easy to prepare. All you need is a frozen banana and a blender to start.
Base for ice cream
First freeze your fruit. Once frozen, blend in blender and add a pinch of cinnamon and just enough milk/water to blend. You are not making smoothies so keep it thick.
Consider adding these on their own or in combination:
Cinnamon
Cardamom
Shredded unsweetened coconut
Nutmeg
Ginger
Cocoa
Inka (coffee substitute)
Vanilla extract or vanilla bean
Once you have creamed the banana you can throw it back in the freezer to get the ice cream consistency back.
For a smoothie add more liquid (1 cup of milk) and keep the rest the same.
You can freeze blueberries, raspberries, peaces (cut up and pit removed), apples, pears etc. For a mixed fruit flavour blend fruit together.
When adding cinnamon, coconut, nutmeg etc. to your smoothies or ice cream, start with ½ teaspoon, taste and add more if needed.
Monday, June 15, 2009
Three Fabulous Salad Dressings
Tuesday, June 9, 2009
Summer Feast - cornish hens for janice
Thursday, May 21, 2009
Spring is for sprouting!
Sunday, May 17, 2009
VIDA GRAINS
Thursday, May 7, 2009
Passion for food fosters two healthy businesses

BY ELIZABETH NOLAN
D R I F T W O O D S T A F F
Canadians are set on becoming a whole lot healthier, and will even enjoydoing so, thanks to two island businesses inspired by one woman’s passion for food.
Food that is good for you and also tastes good is central to the upcoming launch of Annette Magled’s Grains Plus product and responsible for the growing client base at her food coaching business, Salt Spring Food for Life.
Over lattes and biscotti, Magled explained that in her life, food has always had significance. She was brought up in a Jewish family in Israel and Toronto, in a culture that celebrates every important event with a special dish.
"Food is an essential part of that life. It’s a part of all celebration, religious or otherwise," Magled said, recalling the hours spent watching her grandmother in her tiny kitchen preparing pita breads, chicken and stews for up to 20 family members.
As a busy wife and mother, Magled’s adult life has seen a continuation of her passion combined
with the everyday stress of the time constraints everyone feels. As a result, she’s become an expert at preparing meals "on the fly" and improvising with what’s on hand. Her three daughters have anywhere from four to six activities between them each week, while her husband works full time and also has a singing career. With her own business and volunteer activities thrown in, Magled knows how to feed a family with limited time and still make food that nourishes and tastes good.
"I like to feed people, and I like to feed people good food, because when I eat good food I feel a definite difference between that and what weighs me down," Magled explained.
Her love of cooking for friends and family has led directly to Grains Plus, a product that Magled
hopes to launch at Natureworks in June and then outwards into Canada. The mix of whole grains
and fresh seeds is a "fibre food topping" that can be added to savoury or sweeter foods, from salads and stews to rice and quinoa, or yoghurt and muesli. Involving a mix of "superfood" fibres like hemp and flax, Magled has maximized the recipe’s ratio so that nutritionally it’s almost a complete food for its essential fatty acids, vitamins and minerals.
Besides being tasty — Magled said it’s the only way her youngest daughter will eat rice — the topping has proven health benefits within Magled’s own family. She first learned the recipe from her mother, who used it to reverse a painful condition called diverticulitis, a blocking of the intestines by undigested food. Dismayed by her doctor’s suggestion of cutting out the blocked portion, and even more by his assertion that there were no preventative measures and that a second operation would likely be necessary in a few years, Magled’s mother took a nutritionist’s advice instead. Using a Grains Plus-like recipe, she completely solved the problem.
Around four years ago, Magled served her version of the recipe to a friend, who told her, "Annette, you’ve got to share this." "I got all excited inside," Magled recalled, "because there’s nothing like it. It’s unique, it tastes good, it has health benefits. I knew my kids would be in school, I was looking for something to do, and sales is such a strong component. So it all came together.
"In addition to Grains Plus, Magled has added her own stamp to the field of personal coaching.
Through Salt Spring Food for Life she combines her skills in the kitchen with her nutritional
knowledge to help people change their habits to healthier ones. Magled entered the field around
two years ago when Deb Leblanc of DEBFIT Lifestyle Fitness Company told her she wanted to concentrate on exercise training with clients and needed someone else "to wear the food hat."
"It was a perfect fit for me, and it was like someone had given me a gift. It involved all the skills I had and she gave me some place to put them."
In her coaching work, Magled said she works on a person-to-person basis, and starts by learning about an individual’s relationship with food. After a lot of talking, small changes rather than huge
ones are introduced. "It’s not necessarily about how to change, because that can be overwhelming and sets people up for failure. Instead, we just add good things: it could be just drinking one glass of water in the morning, or putting your fork down between bites, or chewing your food more times."
Magled also helps people learn how to shop, how to plan meals and how to make meals when
there isn’t much in the fridge. Getting creative is her strong suit; where others see unconnected
grocery items, she sees ingredients for a meal. At the same time, she provides the tools to make
sure the ingredients that are hanging around are likely to be healthy ones acquired through "conscious" shopping. But perhaps Magled’s greatest gift is educating people that food that is good for you actually tastes better — the best reason to eat it.
To learn more about Grains Plus, call Magled at 250-537-6523.
Annette Magled.