Tag Archives: foodie

7 Ways to Immediately Improve the Quality of Your Food

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On a regular basis, usually while scrolling through social media sites, I come across posted articles offering up tips and information about eating healthy, and more often than not when I get part way through the article, I am cringing at the “facts” and information being shared with readers, as the information is often misguided, misunderstood, and sometimes even flat out wrong.

This happens beyond internet articles though. One of the most obnoxious tv commercials I’ve seen lately is for either vegetable or canola oil (can’t remember), where a woman is pushing her grocery cart down a store aisle and pauses to grab the olive oil, but then looks over at the vegetable (or canola) oil, puts the olive oil back, and grabs the other oil instead. The commercial ends with some “facts” about why this hydrogenated oil is a better choice than olive oil. All I can say is…you have to be kidding me. It makes me laugh every time.

So I’m here to clear up some information for you and hopefully provide you with what I truly believe to be good  & accurate information. And I admit, a lot of the information out there is contradicting and it’s sometimes hard to decide what’s right. Honestly though, some of it is just common sense, and I like to take a logical approach to eating and living a healthy lifestyle.

With that said, here is the bottom line rule to immediately improve the quality of the food you eat, resulting in a healthier and more enjoyable food and eating experience: cut out processed foods and added sugar. 

You may have heard this before, but it’s a big project to take on, and you may be thinking it’s easier said than done. Well being someone who has actually done this, and gotten to a point where these things are very limited in my daily diet, I have some specific tips to share with you on how to get started and get to a point where you aren’t regularly eating processed foods and added sugar. It’s hard to break old habits, but after some continuous effort and conscious decision making, it’ll quickly become part of your routine and be much easier than you think. So here we go…

1. Start reading the ingredients on the back of items you purchase. The reason I didn’t mention counting calories or cutting out fat as rules to eating healthy, is because they aren’t nearly as important as the ingredients that are actually in your food. I barely use the nutritional table on the back of items, but rather I read the list of ingredients. Now, there are so many ingredients that you can read but have no idea what they are. My suggestion is to do some research and inform yourself of what they are, or use my simple rule which is, if I was making this myself, would I use these ingredients to make this food? If the answer is no, I don’t buy the item. For example, I came across jarred roasted peppers, where the ingredients listed included sugar. Why would you add sugar to roasted peppers? It’s quite unnecessary. After some looking, I found another option, where the ingredients listed were simply peppers, olive oil, garlic, sea salt. That’s the one I bought. Once you start reading labels, you will quickly realize how much unnecessary sugar is added to so many things that wouldn’t normally call for sugar.

2. Learn to cook and make food from scratch. I think a lot of people buy packaged food that they could make at home because they are intimidated by cooking or they feel like they don’t have time to cook. Cooking your own food, and making food from scratch, will always be healthier than any pre-made option in a store. Hands down. Cooking is actually quite easy (and fun!), and just takes some practice. Once you learn the basics, you can easily throw something together on any given day using the ingredients you have in your fridge. I also share a lot of fun recipes on this blog- check them out! As for making time- we are all busy, but in my opinion, my health is worth my time. Find the time and use it.

3. Limit your intake of white flour based carbs and simple carbs. White flour and simple carbs turn into sugar once eaten, and are overly processed- not a good combo. There are so many delicious alternatives for carbs out there! Try complex carbs such as quinoa, farro, barley, or harvest grains (Trader Joe’s) as alternatives for pasta and white rice. Replace sliced white bread and potato bread with sprouted whole grain bread. Now, being Italian, I don’t expect anyone to cut out pasta all together ;), but limit it, and when you can, at least buy whole wheat, whole grain, or organic pasta.

4. Completely cut out sugary drinks. Soda, energy drinks, most juices, sweetened teas, etc.- just say no! These have ridiculous amounts of added sugar, and a lack of nutrition. Stick to water, sparkling water, coffee, tea, and vegetable juices. If you want fruit juice, buy or blend up a fruit drink that only includes fruit, vegetables, and either water, soy milk, or almond milk. Of course these will still have sugar, because there’s natural sugar in fruit, but at least there’s no added sugar. Want to make your water more interesting? Throw slices of lemon, lime, or cucumber into your water…delicious and fresh!

5. Limit your intake of hydrogenated and omega-6 oils. Oils like vegetable, canola, and corn are common hydrogenated oils and are high in omega-6’s.  Our bodies actually need a lot more omega-3’s than omega-6’s, which are healthy fats, and the following oils will give you just that: olive oil, avocado oil, and coconut oil. There are tons of other oils, but these are my favorite. I use olive oil for almost everything. There’s a reason the mediterranean diet is found to be one of the healthiest in the world (olive oil!). Not only do you want to avoid buying bottles of hydrogenated or oils high in omega-6’s for cooking, but also limit the amount of packaged foods you buy that list hydrogenated oils in their ingredients. Note: you’ll notice some packaged foods are trying to be “healthier” and list “non-hydrogentated” oils in their ingredients, which is good because they are less processed, but they still aren’t oils high in omega-3’s and good fats, which is why I would still avoid those oils (canola, vegetable, corn) as much as possible. Plus, olive oil just has so such complex flavor and is delicious with so many things!

6. Make your own snacks and limit pre-packaged snacks. Realistically, you won’t cut out pre-packaged snacks all together, but by following rule #1 (reading ingredients on packages) and making your own snacks whenever possible, you can make snacking a lot healthier. Here are some examples of super quick snacks you can make. 1. Chop up cherry tomatoes and cucumbers, then cover in a drizzle of olive oil, sea salt, and pepper. 2. Cut an avocado in half, drizzle with olive oil, chopped garlic, sea salt, and pepper. These are just a couple ideas and take only five minutes to make. It’s worth that five minutes! They taste 100x better than a bag of chips from a vending machine. Look out for my next post which will be a list of amazing yet healthy snacks and how to make them!

7. Pack your lunch for work instead of eating out. Eating out is convenient, but you don’t have 100% control of what’s in your food, either because options are limited or because ingredients in restaurants or fast food places aren’t listed or easily available. And plus, who’s going to stand there and ask someone for a list of ingredients in their food? Very unlikely. The better choice is to pack a lunch. It sounds time consuming at first, but it’s just about creating a routine, and once that routine is begun, it’s pretty easy. I pack a lunch every single day for work, and once you get good at it, you can do so in 30 minutes. And I’m not talking PB&J sandwiches…I’m talking healthy, delicious, nutritious food!

I hope these tips are ones that you can incorporate into your eating habits, and find helpful. Healthy eating isn’t a chore, it’s simply about eating high quality, fresh, and delicious food that isn’t overly processed or that has various unnecessary and questionable ingredients added to it. Eating in the Italian culture (and many cultures) is an important and treasured part of life, and is supposed to be an experience…so make it an amazing one!

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Italian word of the day:

Olio d’oliva (n) = Olive oil

 

The Famous Italian Lunch Spread: A How To.

Have you ever seen a picture of an Italian lunch spread sprawled out across a table and wonder what goes into creating it? I know the food options seem endless and it looks like a lot of work, but it’s actually quite easy if you understand the main concepts and ideas behind it. In this post, I’m going to share with you those concepts, so you can attempt to put together your own Italian lunch (or dinner) spread, and have an authentic Italian eating experience. It’s more than just the type of food included in the meal; it’s the way we eat it that makes the experience complete. So get ready……to eat A LOT.

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One of my favorite and most exciting foodie memories were the occasions my Dad would call home from work and ask my mom if we all wanted “pucha” and cold cuts for dinner. We would be soooo excited, as this was a once in while treat and our absolute favorite. Then there was the most exciting moment of all, when we would come to the table and give drooling stares to the plates of meats, cheeses, vegetables, and breads lying out all over the table.

“Pucha” in my family means “to dip” but overtime it also became the noun we called the olive oil dip that we would dip our food into when having a large Italian spread for dinner. I can’t say where it’s derived from. I can’t locate it in the formal Italian language, but it is a term my great grandparents and grandparents used which was passed down to my dad and us kids over the years. I’m assuming it was short for a word in their specific Italian dialect. Either way, it stuck and I’m going to use the term throughout this post.

Ok, so let’s start prepping our spread by beginning with the dipping oil!

The key to good “pucha,” or the seasoned olive oil that food is dipped into, is to use high quality olive oil. Cheaper olive oils can be used for cooking, but you’ll want to buy a higher grade for dipping. Some tips on how to determine and buy a good olive oil-

1. Higher quality oils usually start at about $12 and go up from there. They can be extremely expensive, but I usually stick to around $12-20 and have found some great options such as: Lucini (any large grocery store), De Cecco (any large grocery store), Colavita (any large grocery store), Sicilian Olive Oil (Trader Joe’s), and Organic Extra Virgin Olive Oil (Trader Joe’s).

2. If you want a traditional Italian experience, always buy oil “imported from Italy.” Be diligent about checking the back of the bottle for this information, because it’s not uncommon to turn the bottle over and read that the olives come from various different countries even though it’s called Italian olive oil on the front of the bottle.

3. Try specialty food stores- they will have much more variety than a large chain grocery store.

4. Buy extra virgin!

Once you have your oil, it’s time to prep it:

  1. Start with olive oil and pour as much in a shallow bowl as you think you’ll need for the amount of bread you have or the amount of people you are serving.
  2. Add a splash of balsamic vinegar; not too much as it will be too acidic and salty. Sometimes balsamic isn’t added and you can just do olive oil and seasonings, but this is to your personal liking.
  3. Once you have the oil and vinegar splash, add in seasonings. There aren’t rules on exactly what to put in your oil. The best way is to experiment and try different variations each time you make it. Again, it’s all to personal taste and liking. Here’s some suggestions though: pepper, sea salt, dried basil, dried italian seasoning, dried herbs de provence, or dried thyme.

Tip: Don’t add all of these- just a combination of a couple to a few. Growing up, we sometimes just added salt and pepper and that is delicious alone; but some dried green herbs add great flavor. I also sometimes add chopped garlic, and if you’re a garlic lover like me, this is the way to go!

 Now for the huge table spread!

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Us Italians love our variety, which is why our spread usually takes up a whole table. You can break up the variety into four groups: vegetables, cold cuts (meats), cheeses, and bread. When planning this for a group of people, make a grocery list of what you want to buy, but you can also just do this on the whim at home for you and your significant other by using what you have. This has always been my dad’s biggest rule. You obviously have to shop in a way on a regular basis so you have some of these options lying around, but once you introduce these things into your diet and shop in this manner, you can open your fridge at any given time and throw together a spread. There are endless options for each group, but here are my family’s favorites:

Vegetables Cold Cuts/Fish Cheeses Bread
Green onions Toscano salami Blue cheese Sourdough baguette
Fennel (anus) Soppressata salami Pecorino Focaccia
Tomatoes Genoa salami Mozzarella Rustic Italian
Garlic Prosciutto Parmigiano Bread sticks
Mushrooms Coppa (hot or mild) Brie Sicilian parchment crackers (my new fav from TJ’s)
Broccolini Mortadella Swiss
Radish Head cheese Goat cheese
Endive Sardines Munster
Raddichio Anchovies Really any fun variety you find!
Sundried tomatoes
Marinated peppers
Raw peppers
Artichoke hearts
Marinated button mushrooms
Olives (all kinds)
Avocado

Once you decide on the options you want, pull out large serving platters. Ones with separations in them are good for the marinated veg so their juices stay contained in one place. As for the raw veg and the cold cuts, put all veg on one or two platters and the cold cuts on the other (usually we keep the fish like sardines and anchovies separate from the cold cut platter.) Fyi, all these items are served cold- there’s no cooking involved! To save room and for nice presentation, cold cuts can be folded in half or rolled up as placed on the platter. The picture below is of our Palm Sunday lunch this year……for five people. Bet you can guess we had quite a few leftovers…..

photo-4Lastly, how to eat it! Yes, I am giving you tips on how to eat because as I mentioned in the beginning, this is significant to the experience and the best part! The idea behind the variety of cold cuts, veg, bread, and dipping oil is to be able to make endless combinations as you eat.

Simply do it in this order: pick, dip, combine, and eat.

Then you repeat, switching to a new combo. A combo usually consists of a piece of bread, hunk of cheese, piece of cold cut, and maybe veg on top, which are dipped into the oil. Sometimes in between my mini open face sandwhich combos, I pick up a strand of green onion or other veg, pucha (dip), and eat. This is all done with your hands. The only silverware present are the cheese knives or the forks to pick up marinated veg. This is not to be a super neat process, have fun and get your fingers oily!

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Since my blog also focuses on healthy eating and being aware of processed food, some tips: Pay attention to the quality and ingredients in Italian cold cuts you buy. Cheap brands will have unnecessary added ingredients like corn syrup….(really!?). Unfortunately, a lot of types of salami have some sort of added sugar for preservation reasons, but just try to find brands with as little as possible. As for prosciutto- there should never be any other ingredients except pork and salt. Traditional prosciutto is made through a curing process, where the ham is cured with salt, making no other preservatives necessary.

Also, you may be thinking “those cold cuts sure have a lot of fat.” I’m here to remind you that some fat and especially healthy fats, like those found in avocados and olive oil, are not your enemy- sugar is! So enjoy your fatty prosciutto, cheese, and olive oil- just do so with the meats and cheeses in moderation. This is why this kind of spread isn’t eaten every single day, and is a once in while lunch choice. There’s a reason 90 year Italians in Italy are riding bikes and zooming past out of breath tourists up steep staircases……..

I hope this has helped and that you enjoy creating your own Italian eating experience. After a few dips of this or that, don’t forget the most important part, which is to wash it all down with a big glass of vino!

Mangia.

Welcome to my world of cooking & food!

I’ve always loved good food. Back in elementary school, I’m sure we’ve all experienced that familiar moment at lunch when everyone checks out what each other’s parents have packed them, and that embarrassing minute when you pull out something different, prompting the kid next to you to ask “Ew, what’s that?”

Yea, I’ve been that embarrassed kid from time to time, but most of the time I proudly pulled out my food and when asked what the “weird” thing in my lunchbox was, I would think to myself, “Who doesn’t eat mortadella?? You’re the weird one.” I was proud of my “weird” cultural food that I thought of as completely normal.

I was extremely lucky to be raised to understand and eat good food. As part of an Italian family with my dad being a cooking guru, I was taught at an early age to follow some basic rules in the kitchen, both in eating and cooking:

  1. Use and always have on hand fresh, quality ingredients
  2. Buy local
  3. Eat what’s in season

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I will be expanding on these rules in future blog posts.

I admit, being raised with this mindset about food, spoiled me a bit and got me into a bind in college when everyone’s on a budget and buying cheap, poor quality food. Nope, not me- I even asked my parents if we could buy a plastic cutting board for my freshman dorm room so I would be able to slice and eat my sticks of Italian salami. Being the foodies they are, of course they obliged. That memory’s a good one and always makes me laugh.

Although my eating habits in college made it difficult for me to stick to a budget, I realized later, that my habits weren’t a problem, I just needed to rethink how to fit my food desires into my budget. Now at 27, I can tell you that eating good, healthy food doesn’t have to be extremely expensive. It can be, and when I have some extra money I go for the really good stuff, but it’s also not too hard to shop on a budget. You just have to learn what to look for and make some price comparisons. I mean, can anyone really argue that a bag of $3.50 Doritos is really a better buy than a 2lb bag of organic carrots for $1.99? I would hope not. I would much rather spend the same amount of money on fresh vegetables and fruit, and maybe more if necessary.

With that said, I’m putting the budget topic aside, because what this blog is really about is me sharing with you how to eat and cook healthy, delicious food. And yes, those words go together. Healthy doesn’t mean some crazy diet or restricting yourself of good food. Healthy to me is eating fresh, natural, and knowing the ingredients that are in your food. It means removing yourself from the American eating indulgences of processed food with mass produced, low quality ingredients, white, doughy bread, and sugar packed deli meats and canned goods. I am ashamed that this is what has become of food, and it’s a major downer to walk through a modern grocery store and realize 75% of the stuff in there isn’t good for you. But I have decided to put a positive spin on it, and have completely jumped into a world of healthy, delicious, high quality food. The rest of America can eat how they want but I won’t take part.

My great grandparents used “organic” ingredients before the term was popular due to growing their own veg, cooking everything from scratch, and using only fresh ingredients. They didn’t have the processed food choices we have today. Anyone who has ancestors and roots in Europe as well as many other places around the globe, and are familiar with those roots, know the lifestyle and ways of eating I’m talking about. So my goal? To stay true to my Italian roots and eat like my great grandparents Agostino and Angela did.

I’ll be posting my experiences in the kitchen and cooking tips weekly (hopefully more if my schedule permits!), as well as food experiences and my photography during my travels. I hope you will follow me and let me share with you all the amazing things I’ve learned about food and cooking.

Cooking and eating well is easy (and fun)………you just have to start!