Roses–A Fragrant, Cooling Delight at the Table

Summer, sunshine and roses.  What a delight they are to have in the garden with the variety of colors, blossom shapes and fragrances. Long a symbol of love, war, politics and beauty, roses have worked their way into our hearts and into our cuisine.

A little history first.   Fossil evidence date roses back nearly 35 million years, with cultivation beginning nearly 5,000 years ago–likely in China.  Now there are 100-150 estimated species of Rosa growing wild or cultivated on nearly every continent. The Romans and Middle Eastern cultures used roses for medicinal purposes, celebrations, perfume, as confetti at celebrations or to honor royalty. Well, who doesn’t want to walk on a path sprinkled with roses?

Rose oil and water was considered legal tender for trade and payments during the 7th and 8th centuries–not quite as crazed a trend as the Dutch tulips bulbs. And there was the famous “War of the Roses” in the 15th century– the red rose symbolized Lancaster and the white rose was the symbol of York.

In the early 1800′s botanically illustrator Pierre Joseph Redoute’s completed “Les Rose,” a collection of watercolor paintings from the roses in Napoleon and Josephine’s gardens at Chateau de Malmaison.  This work is still considered one of the finest botanical records of roses.

Personally, roses hold a dear place in my heart. My grandfather was a master gardener and cared for several public rose gardens as well as his own.  Grandma would harvest the petals for potpourri and jellies.  And my parents kept a very neat rose garden right outside the front door. Pretty magical to be able to loose yourself under an enormous Austrian Copper rose bush for a nap, to fill vases with roses, to be able to identify each rose just by fragrance.

Enough history and sentimentality…

Western nutritional highlights
From a western nutritional perspective, roses don’t hold significant levels of minerals and vitamins except for vitamin c, which is most abundant in rose hips rather than the petals. Where roses shine is in their energetics.

Rose’s Eastern nutritional energetics and highlights.

  Clears heat, cools the blood and stops bleeding
Rose has a very clearing, cooling and calm nature.  Patterns of blood heat include rashes, fever, nose bleeds.  Doesn’t matter which organ has the heat (liver fire=constipation, stomach fire=mouth sores, etc) rose will help cool heat patterns.
Harmonizes menstruation, strengthens and harmonizes reproductive qi
That’s right, roses are wonderful for treating reproductive disharmonies including: irregular or painful menses, PMS, low self-esteem, excessive bleeding, impotence, infertility and low libido.  But don’t just keep it to the ladies. Roses help to increase sperm count and resolve sperm incontinence.
 

Clears Liver qi congestion and promotes bile flow 
Liver qi stagnation?  In Chinese medicine the Liver is responsible for ‘free and easy flow’–meaning the qi, blood and fluids in the body are moving easily. Liver qi stagnation appears as depression, mood swings, mid back pain, pms, constipation, flank pain, nausea and headaches. If you have angst, anger, irritability or frustration you have some liver qi stagnation.
  Nourishes the Heart, settles Shen and lifts depression
Very simply put, Shen is the spirit that is housed in the Heart. When the Heart’s Blood and Qi are harmonious, Shen is nourished and we responds appropriately to the environment.  We can build meaningful relationships and can experience joy and laughter.  When it is not nourished or unsettled we see patterns of insomnia, anxiety, palpitations, and inappropriate relationships (too close or too far). In extreme conditions we can see hysteria, irrational behavior and delirium.
  Clears toxins, reduces swellings and inflammation
Think boils, furuncles, carbuncles, abscesses and shingles.  It clears toxic damp heat in the colon that causes painful diarrhea too.
   Heals and repairs the skin
Use it internally and/or externally, rose is useful for eczema, ulcers, sprains, red irritated skin, wrinkles and spider veins.

Seven ways to use roses

  • A cup of tea– There are several varieties of rose tea available at local stores, or simply get some dried organic rose blossoms and petals and have make your own.  I often mix my with other flavors–last night raspberry leaf, nettle, and rose. To further cool the day down, I dropped in a few frozen blackberries.
  • Eat rose petals–dash them over salads, top berries or cakes with them.
  • Use as rose water or rose oil–use the water to flavor teas or as a refreshing facial rinse. Drop oil into a calming bath or use as an essential oil…a few drops a day under the tongue can go a long way. Rose water.
  • Make up a vinegar–use for everything from sun burns and bug bites to an unusual salad dressing. Rose vinegar.

 

Be well!
April

reposted with permission from aprilcrowell.com


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Space Available for Bodyworkers

Space for Bodyworkers

Pulse currently has space available for certified or licensed practitioners to rent by the hour!


Available seven days a week:  $15/hour.

massage8

Excellent opportunity for those with budding practices or part-timers who just need a space to treat in every now and then.   Great for a Reiki, Acupuncture, Shiatsu, Amma, Massage, Craniosacral,  Rolfing, Thai Massage,  Alexander Technique or other health practitioner.

Pulse Holistic Health is a well-established therapy center in Boise’s North-End.  We have a bright, clean and peaceful office space for a massage therapist or other bodyworker.  Enjoy a spacious office in the heart of Boise’s Historic North End with quick access to downtown and the connector. Space features fully furnished room, reception area, large meeting space and kitchen space.

Opportunities for referrals and access to experienced practitioners and teachers. Renters must provide current licensure/certification and insurance. Future opportunity to join the Pulse Cooperative.  We have 4 rooms with varying availability.

Need more time?  Ask us about monthly rental possibilities.

room 2

Rent includes:

• All utilities paid
• Linens and linen service
• Fully furnished bodywork rooms
• WiFi
• Handicap access
• Off street parking
• Reception & conference space
• Kitchen space
• Fabulous downtown location
• Well-known established business
• Referral opportunities
• Credit card processing (small fee)

About Pulse Holistic Health–

Inspiring vitality and well-being through lifestyle education and holistic medicine. 

Pulse currently offers Acupuncture, Amma Therapy, Massage Therapy, Chinese Herbal Medicine, Holistic Nutrition, and Dietary Planning and we are open to other modalities joining us.  If you’d like to find out more about joining the Pulse team click here or call us at 955-8272

 


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Rhubarb-Spring’s Clearing and Cooling Vegetable

Rhubarb has a long medicinal history.  Its use spans Ayurvedic and Chinese medicine to Galenic and Islamic medicine.  Indeed this powerful little purgative (meaning it moves the bowels) is not an herb that is likely to disappear.  Today, rhubarb’s rhizome (root) or Da Huang (big yellow) is still used extensively in classical and newer Chinese formulas to move the bowels and release excess heat and damp conditions in the liver.

But enough of the roots, we going to talk about the stalk or stem.

Though rhubarb’s broad leaves are toxic, the stem offers a surprising array of vitamins and minerals.  The stems vary in color from deep red, pink, white to green and have a similar shape to celery stalks. Like celery, rhubarb is a vegetable despite the fact that it ends up in many desserts.  Let’s take a closer look at what rhubarb has to offer besides a very tart flavor.

Calcium–Rhubarb is loaded with silicon an important component in the absorption of calcium.  And it’s packed with calcium itself, boasting about 30-35% of the RDA based on a 2,000 calorie diet–wonderful for your bones, teeth and heart without building up a bunch of phlegm.

Vitamin K, A, C & E-Vitamin K is essential to helping blood clot and aids your body in the absorption of vitamin D and many other nutrients.  Rhubarb rocks nearly 60% of your  RDA of K  in a single cup.  It also sports a healthy amount of vitamins A, C and E–the antioxidants that clear the body of disease and free radicals. Sounds kind of liver oriented, doesn’t it Chinese medicine practitioners?

The B-Vitamins- Small amounts of the B’s are present in rhubarb, but its enough to take note of these include thiamine, riboflavin and folate, niacin, vitamin B6 and pantothenic acid.

Other nutrients and trace minerals-A single cup of rhubarb provides small amounts of magnesium which plays a role in utilizing calcium, vitamin D and potassium.  Potassium in rhubarb helps to balance out fluid and minerals–out with gout.  And the phosphorus helps to keep teeth and bones strong. Rhubarb offers some iron, supporting blood health.  And trace amounts of copper, slenium, manganese and zinc appear as well.

Now that we’ve fractionalized the poor rhubarb–let’s look at it from a whole, Chinese energetic perspective.

Rhubarb is cold energetically, it drains downward and removes excess heat and damp from the Liver, Stomach, Heart and Intestines and promotes bowel movements.  The sour flavor specifically enters the Liver, moving out congestion and dampness.

Shall I simplify?

Heat in the Liver-  What this looks like is liver qi congestion, anger, frustration, digestive stagnation, pms, ringing in the ears, –check out  Liver yang rising.  Patterns like Hep C, mono and high cholesterol are damp heat in the liver and gall bladder.

Heat in the Stomach-We see burning sensation in the stomach, acid reflux, GERD, bleeding gums, excessive thirst and bad breath.  This can also be a component in constipation caused by heat.  Yep, there is more than one pattern that can cause constipation.

Heat in the Heart-Anxiety, palpitations, nervousness, thirst, anxious and excessive speech and dream disturbed sleep.  You might actually have a burning sensation on the very tip of your tongue.

Heat in the Intestine-Heat anywhere will dry up the fluids in the system, making you thirsty.  With lack of fluids in the intestines the body cannot properly move the bowels aka, constipation.

Wonderful– Put this all together and rhubarb is a fantastic food to help purge out excess heat from the system, especially if you indulge in too many animal proteins which are hot!  Great for spring cleaning.  But before you go noshing on your plant, there are a few contraindications.

A note of caution–rhubarb is a laxative, avoid use if you are nursing, have diarrhea,  loose stools, or are very deficient.

Be well,

April

reposted with permission from aprilcrowell.com

 

 


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Pulse Practitioner’s Spring Hours

Who is here when?  

The practitioners of Pulse are available by appointment.  Although we have set schedules, occasionally we may be out of the office.

We recommend that you call ahead if you need herbs.

Thank you.

 

April Crowell

Monday: 9-12 & 3-6
Tuesday: 10-6pm
Wednesday: off
Thursday: 10-6pm
Friday: 9-12pm
Saturdays 2x a month.  Upcoming dates: April 27th, May 4th & May 25

 

Nedda Greer, LAc

  • Monday: 10-7pm   (Starting back up again April 22nd)
  • Tuesday: 10-7pm
  • Wednesday: 10-7pm
  • Thursday: 10-7pm
  • Friday: 10-6pm

 

 

Nathan Mandigo

Sunday: 12-5pm
Monday: 10-2pm
Tuesday: 10-6pm
Wednesday: 10-5pm
Thursday: 12-6pm

 

 

 

Anna Rydman

Tuesday: 6-8:30pm
Book appointments online here or give us a call at 955-8272.

 

 


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Insights on Sleepless Nights & Insomnia

Do you toss and turn all night long or wake of refreshed and energized?  Sleepless nights have plagued all of us at some time or another, however with more than 60 million Americans suffering from insomnia or regular sleep deprivation it’s not a topic to be taken lightly.

Temporary sleep disturbances are not  something to be overly concerned with, but if the pattern continues for more than 3 weeks it is considered chronic and overall health is compromised.  The senses dull, healing slows, immunity weakens, moods shift, depression sets in–the list goes on.  

A good night’s sleep is important and you should feel rested and revitalized when you awake. 

What is happening? Why are so many people suffering from insomnia or restless night.  Why are millions of prescriptions for sleep aids like Ambien written every year?  Each person’s pattern is different and each pattern can be improved on.  I certainly don’t have all the answers, but I do have some insights.

First, some brief details about sleep.

How much sleep do we need?

Most studies and experts agree that the ideal amount of sleep is about 7 1/2 to 8 hours of sleep a night. On average, Americans are clocking in at 6.9 hours–not too bad, but when you take into account that some people get 10 hours of sleep a night while others only clock in  3 or 4 hours, it starts to look bleak for millions.

What happens when we sleep?

EEG machines that track brain wave activity help us to break sleep into two broad categories. Quiet Sleep (Non-REM-rapid eye movement) and Active  Sleep (REM).

Quiet Sleep or Non-REM Sleep 

Quiet sleep is the state when we become less active and responsive.  This falls into four different stages based on what is happening in the body and the brain. In the deepest stages (3 & 4) healing and renewal.  Yes, please, I’ll have that.

  • Stage 1–You begin to drift into sleep–about the first 5-15 minutes from being awake to light sleep.  Brain waves are still fairly active.  The body temperature begins to drop, the eyes may shift slowly from side to side.  During this stage you can be easily startled or jarred awake.
  • Stage 2- This is the start of established sleep, about 10-20 minutes into sleep. The eyes become still, the breathing rate slows and stabilizes and the heart rate slows.  During this stage the brain is still a bit active and there are brief bursts of fast activity about every 2 minutes.  On an EEG machine, you will see a spike of activity if you call the sleeping person’s name at this time–but they aren’t going to pop up startled.
  • Stage 3 and 4–Deep sleep finally arrives.  There are fewer processing centers running in the brain.  Breathing becomes slow and regular, body temperature is still cooler, blood pressure drops by as much as 25% (something to note for those of you with high blood pressure).  You become less responsive to external stimulus–might have to yell your name to even cause a stir.  During this stage, less blood in the brain means the body can work on renewing itself.  The Pituitary gland releases hormones that stimulate cell regeneration, healing, growth and even immunity.  Who couldn’t use extra time here?
Non-Quiet Sleep or REM
In REM sleep the body is still or paralyzed but the mind is very active.  The eyes are closed but move rapidly, body temperature rises, blood pressure increases, the sympathetic nervous system is active keeping you in a state of fight or flight..  This is where dreaming occurs.  Let’s face it, your body may not be moving, but you aren’t getting much rest in this state.

Insight from Chinese Medicine on Insomnia and sleeplessness

Let’s start with the very simple and profound concept of Yin and Yang.  One of the founding principles of Chinese medicine Yin and Yang can be used to identify anything–all phenomenon in nature, pathology, personality and treatment.  Everything can be broken into Yin and Yang.  They are opposites that describe each other and identify each other.

Yang–literally the sunny side of the mountain–refers to anything that has characteristics of activity, work, growth, movement, warmth, summer, morning and daytime, building, and transforming.  Yang is represented in the white part of the symbol to the left.

Yin–literally the shady side of the mountain–refers to anything that has characteristics of inactivity or rest, renewal, coolness, replenishing, evening and nighttime, winter,  storing and fluids. Yin is represented in the black part of the symbol.

Confusing? The concepts are different from western logic and Aristotelian thought– Yin and Yang are opposite but complimentary qualities. Each thing or phenomenon can be its self or its contrary.  Once you understand the general qualities of what makes something Yin or Yang the rest all comes down to comparison. Where the sun is Yang (active, hot, warm) the moon is Yin (cool, dark, quiescent).  Fire is Yang, water is Yin.  Just look to opposites or the continuum of which has more characteristics than another.  Campfire or a raging forest fire? Campfire, although hot is Yin by comparison to an active raging forest fire.

Back to sleep.  

Sleep is a Yin quality–something that replenishes and nourishes the body, allowing us to recharge. Without Yin, there is no oil to fuel the fire of our Yang activity.  If you constantly go and never recharge, you will eventually break down in some way.

This is a hard concept for some of my clients.  The idea of slowing down and resting is construed by some as doing nothing–a non productive time.  It’s not, you are recharging…which you must do to be able to keep going.  Just coming to terms with giving yourself permission to rest works wonders.

In Chinese medicine there a many patterns that can lead to insomnia.  Remember: Chinese medicine looks at the functional energetic properties of organs, having a Heart pattern in CM doesn’t necessarily mean anything would show up on western tests.

  • Blood deficiency: Lack of blood to adequately nourish and settle the Shen (spirit) these patterns will have a pale tongue and weak pulse.  The person may be anemic and startle easily, anxious yet tired.
  • Heart Fire: Too much heat often from emotional issues agitates and creates restlessness. Red tongue, rapid pulse, slurring of speech, agitation.
  • Heart Blood deficiency: Being able to identify where the blood deficiency is specifically allows for concise more effective treatment. Very pale tongue, cold hands and feet, weak feeble pulse
  • Phlegm Fire Obstructing the Mind: Accumulation of phlegm clouds the orifices and the unsettles the mind. Think ADD, ADHD and mania type patterns. Red tongue, thick yellow coating, surging pulse.
  • Liver Qi Stagnation: Liver’s function of ‘free and easy flow’ is compromised and qi and blood stagnate leading to frustration, pms, anxiety. The sides of the tongue become red and the pulse tight.

And there are many more….

With just the few patterns listed above  you can see how many different patterns can lead to insomnia, and how their treatment would be different.  It’s the practitioner’s job to find out which pattern a client fits and then specialize the treatment to that client.

A few tips to lessen sleepless nights
  • Meditate-many insomnia patterns have an emotional component lurking in them.  Taking time out to settle your mind works wonders on all planes of being.
  • Set up a bedtime routine-Evening is a time of yin–time to settle down and nourish. Try to go to bed at the same time every night. Our bodies thrive when we give them a little routine especially with eating and sleeping. Take time before this to settle your mind. Write out a list of your ‘to dos’ for the next day, turn off the TV or computer, go for an evening stroll, meditate.
  • Get the tech out of the bedroom-Too much constant stimuli increases brain activity (yang) and doesn’t allow the blood to settle and nourish which happens when we close our eyes.  Get the temptation to peruse the internet out of the bedroom
  • Turn out the lights-Decrease in light stimulates the body’s natural desire to rest. Light stimulates the Kidney–now yo
  • Take Calcium and Magnesium-Up to 1,000 milligrams to help relax the muscles.
  • Avoid stimulants and alcohol before bed
  • Warm up–Take a warm bath and make sure your feet aren’t cold when you go to bed.  Drink a cup of warm chamomile or sleepy time tea.
  • Kefir and fish oil-Drink a 1/4 of Kefir with a teaspoon of fish oil in it to nourish and settle yin and the nervous system.
  • Don’t eat large meals late at night--You are asking your body to digest (a yang function) during the yin time when it should be sending energy inward to rest…not transform food.
Certainly, these aren’t all that can be done to work with insomnia.  There are numerous Chinese and western herbs that work wonders when matched to the right pattern and acupuncture or Amma therapy can work wonders with helping you get back into a restful and replenishing sleep.
April Crowell 2012   reposted with permission from aprilcrowell.com


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Online Booking Changes

We’ve made some changes to the online booking system!

For those of you who have used the online booking, this will help you understand the changes and new amenities available. If you’ve never used the online booking, we encourage you to sign up and try it out.

New Features

  • Book online at any time of day
  • Manage your profile and contact information
  • Prepay for appointments
  • Buy prepaid packages and track your credit
  • Purchase gift certificates for friends and family
  • View and manage your appointments
  • Payments are processed through Authorize.net, one of the largest and most secure online credit card processing companies.

 

Let’s take a tour–

On the Pulse website home page you will notice a “Book Now” button. There is also a ‘book an appointment’ button on the top bar at the far right. This opens to a page describing how to book and you will notice the “Book Now” button in the right hand column.

Click the “Book Now” button.

If you have already signed up it will prompt you to enter your email address and password. If you have never registered it will prompt you to sign up.

The fastest way to sign up, and not have to worry about losing your password is to click the “Sign up with Facebook” option. Don’t worry, the system only pulls your name, e-mail address, and phone number (if present in Facebook) to set up your account with.

Don’t worry if you have forgotten your password. Just click “forgot password” and the system will send you a link to rest your password.

Now that you’ve logged in you will see this page, only your name will show instead of Nathan’s who took this screen shot– But what does it all do?

booking interface

To create a new booking, click the “New booking” button.

The next screen is what used to display on the Pulse booking page. Nothing has changed, just select your service type and preferred practitioner and follow the onscreen prompts.

When you reach the “Checkout” page you will have the option to pay now, or defer payment and pay in office.

Bookeo shows the practitioner’s normal prices.  You can pay for your appointment at the time of booking or pay at your appointment.  If you have a special rate set up with your practitioner, just pay at the time of the appointment.

  • To purchase a Prepaid Package Deal, our classic Buy 5 Get 1 Free deal, click on “Prepaid packages”, select the package you want to purchase and follow instructions for checking out.
  • Need to change your password, e-mail address, or contact phone number, click on “Your profile”.
  • Need to change or cancel an upcoming booking? Click on “Your Bookings” to be guided through making changes.
  • You bought a package deal but aren’t sure how many bookings you have left? Click on “Prepaid credits” to see the status of your package.
  • Want to share the joys of Amma or Acupuncture with a friend or loved one? Purchase a gift certificate for them via the “Purchase a gift voucher” button. Gift certificates are redeemed through a special button on our Welcome page and Booking page.

 

Potential Issues

You clicked the link and all you see is pictured below?

 

booking IE issue

What went wrong?

A shrewd guess would say that you are using Internet Explorer. If see what is below in your browser window, there a a couple of things to try.

  • First clear your browser history by click on the “Tools” Icon in the upper right corner, or if visible, the Tools menu option.
  • Select “Internet Options”. On the window that opens, select Delete under “Browser History” Ensure that “Temporary Internet Files” and “Cookies” are selected and click Delete.
  • Try reloading the page. If the above does not work, there are links on the page to other browsers that do not have the content issues the Internet Explorer seems to have.

 


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Herb Spotlight

February Herb Sale

20% off Freeing Contrainst

The name pretty well describes this excellent formula for PMS.  

Pulse herbsAction: Freeing Constraint moves Liver Qi stagnation, pacifies the Liver, lifts mental depression and move stagnation.

Indications: PMS, outbursts of anger or repressed anger, depression, irregular periods, painful periods, tiredness caused by stagnation of qi, sighing and hypochondrial pain.

Tongue: red sides  Pulse: wiry and full

While supplies last

Check with your Pulse practitioner today to see if it is a match for your pattern.


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Staying Warm

Life is a heat process.

From a strictly chemical view point, almost all reactions in the body are heat driven, from the formation of proteins and ATP (the fuel that runs the body), to the ability of your lungs to absorb oxygen from the air.  Without heat, many processes slow, or outright stop.

fireFrom a psycho-spiritual perspective, when we think of various descriptors that have been applied to people throughout time we see reflections of the understanding of how important heat is.  Sayings like ‘they’re cold hearted’, or calling someone ‘frigid’, or referring to an action as ‘cold’ are all examples of acknowledging a lack of warmth in someone.  Conversely, we describe people as ‘warm’ to express their caring nature, or an action giving you the ‘warm fuzzies’, or even ‘hot’ to express sexual desire.  When our ability to generate warmth declines, we can begin to feel separated from those around us.  Our ability to acknowledge the warmth of another can diminish proportionally to our own diminishing warmth.

Physically, warmth is most prevalent in the digestive system, where a lack of heat will lead to a decrease in our ability to derive nourishment from our food and, because the body tends to store what it cannot use, an increase in body mass.  A lack of heat in the digestive system can lead to difficulty taking in new ideas and information.  Also, as heat is necessary to move the bowels, it can make it harder to let go, physically, mentally, or emotionally.

Ironically, because heat is generated by both the breakdown of food and the use of those nutrients by the muscles, our diet has a major influence on our overall temperature.

In Chinese Medicine, the primary organs of digestion are the Stomach and Spleen.  If you think of the Stomach as the cook pot that the body breaks food down in, the Spleen is the fire under the pot.  While the Spleen provides the heat to cook the ingested food, the food after being broken down provides fuel for fire for the next time we eat.  So if we eat lots of food that take extra energy for the Stomach to break down, like rich heavy foods, or raw and/or chilled foods, we derive less energy from the food and have less energy for our next meal.  We can offset some of this loss through movement and exercise, but keep in mind that the energy fueling the Spleen’s fire is also what is driving the muscles.  Too much activity without proper nourishment will also deplete the body’s heat reserves.

The body can become too warm.  Spicy foods, excessive intake of beverages like coffee and alcohol, and long term exposure to hot environments can over heat the body.  This improper heat can cause the energy in the body to become agitated and reckless, drying up bodily fluids and in extreme instances, “burning” the flesh off the bones.  In keeping with one of the principles of Yin/Yang anything in extreme will turn into its opposite.  Thus excess heat can rapidly change into cold as our ability to physically hold onto warmth diminishes.

So how do we maintain warmth?

The easiest way to keep the body warm is to dress appropriately for the weather.  If the body is chilled from the outside we have to use extra energy to maintain internal warmth.  In the winter, the extremities are most susceptible to becoming cold, especially feet and knees, forearms and hands, and the head.  Keeping the feet warm and dry, and ensuring that the knees are covered keeps cold from invading the lower body, while long sleeved shirts under coats with good gloves will keep the arms and hands warm, and of course any one of all the fun winter hats available will keep the head warm.  Dressing in layers can be both fashionable and allow for accommodating interior and exterior temperatures.

Because our ability to generate warmth is directly linked to the food we consume it is important to avoid foods that cool the body.  Because the body has to warm everything we eat to body temperature, any cold beverages, raw fruits or vegetables, or chilled food of any sort should be limited if not outright avoided in cold weather.  Warming teas like Chai or cinnamon are excellent for warming digestion, while slow cooked soups and stews, casseroles, and crock pot meals are perfect in the winter time as the long cooking times help gently warm the body.

For other ways to stay warm, and or build warmth, contact a practitioner at Pulse today.

Here’s to warm fuzzies!

Nathan Mandigo


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13 New Year’s Tips to Simply Your Meals

“What’s for dinner?”

It’s a common question that can turn into an amusing (or annoying) game.  When you have a busy schedule it can be a daunting task to figure out how to eat well–let alone eat.

I’ll tell you a little secret–it’s all about habits.

Our culture has put emphasis on economy and convenience, at the cost of  our connection to self nourishment, and I’m not talking about restorative yoga.   Think about it.  We spend less time planning and preparing meals than any other culture in the world, and we have increasing disease and health costs that are directly related to dietary habits.  Diabetes, high cholesterol, high blood pressure, GERD (okay, there is a virus involved sometimes here, but I assure you, if you slow down how you eat, it improves considerably), kidney stones, ulcers, gout, heart disease–you get the picture.  We all know nutrition is important, what and how we eat is the basis for our energy, ability to health and overall health.

Wonderful.  So how to we start improving how we nourish ourselves?

Simple–create new habits that make better nourishment and eating habits a priority.

You will be hungry today, so why let that surprise you?  Why not plan for it instead? Your health and soul will thank you.   Let’s play with a few ideas.

  Create time
If your current habits don’t allow you the time to menu plan, shop, prep and cook–budget some time.  Put it in your day planner or on your ‘to do’ list.  If you skip meals, put the time for them in your planner as well.  It usually takes me about 15 minutes to make a menu for the week and I usually take 2 hours 1x a week to prep and cook so that my kitchen time is cut down during the rest of the week. It gets simpler the more you practice it–trust me–you can create time ;)
  Shop in your cupboard–use it or lose it
Browse through your cupboard, fridge and freezer before you make a menu.  If you can focus some of your menu around what you already have, you will save time and reduce waste.  Have asparagus that’s looking a little floppy–how about asparagus sauté, soup or stir fry?  This time of year, I am clearing out the cupboards and freezer from last autumn’s harvest so the I can make room for this year’s abundance.  Pumpkin custard it is…
  Make a menu
I grew up with the menu on the left–whine or complain and you can cook it yourself.  Which is fine, we are often ungrateful for what we have available and who prepares it. My mother always had a plan, so we rarely played the ‘what’s for dinner?’ game.  Anyway.  Now that you know what you have in your cupboard you can head to the store with a plan–rather than coming back with random items and nothing seems to fit together. Menus don’t have to be elaborate, and you don’t have to cook everything from scratch. The menu is a guideline. The point is to work from where you are and use to simplify and evolve your cooking and eating habits.
  Go to the store or market after you’ve made your menu
Save money, frustration and time by knowing what you need rather than trying to plan on the fly.  Try not to shop when you are hungry–ending up with pickles, chocolate, chips and little else makes for weird meals. With the farmer’s markets and CSA happenings, I actually do some of the menu planning after shopping so I can eat what’s available.  Ooooh…fresh morrels…what can these little gems become? Wild rice and wild mushroom soup or morrel, asparagus fettucine alfredo made with traditional or made with nut milk?  Yum!
  Prep a Salad
“Eat your greens.” They are essential–really, but that’s not what we are talking about this time.  Take a few moments to clean, wash and blot your greens. Or buy them that way.  I have a large planter of mixed greens (arugula, spinach, beets, mustard, chard, nasturtiums, endive) plugging along on the patio.  The mix provides variety and it only takes a few moments to go clip the large ones for the evening meal. Then you simply dress the salad.  Carrots shavings, chopped radish, little red onion, a handful of seeds or nuts and a quality dressing.  Top with a little leftover meat if you have it, serve with a grain pilaf–dinner!
  Prep a Grain Dish
Barley, rice, millet, quinoa, amaranth…lovely grains. Grains, grain salads or pilafs can be made up ahead of time and tossed over salads, served as sides or have a little meat added into them.  How about an Herbed almond, amaranth pilaf or a quiona tabbouleh? I often make up a large pan of just plain rice; toss it in soup, breakfast wraps, porridge or serve as a simple side.  Clara rolls it with a little seaweed and sesame seeds for rice balls for lunch.
  Double or Triple It
If you are already cooking, make a little more.  It’s pretty simple to double soups, stews, and many other dishes.  Use the leftovers to create breakfast. Freeze some of it down for the next time you run late or something comes up. Dips and patés are easy sources of protein, fiber and are wonderful after school snacks.  If you bake potatoes, bake extra and use the leftovers in frittatas, soups, or simply reheated and severed with fixings.
  Make a soup or stew
Soups are the most forgiving food.  They are easy to digest, easy to vary the flavor and change them into something else and a wonderful way to use up leftovers. Don’t have time to make your own?  Stock up on organic stock, frozen vegetables, dried spice mix (no msg or chemicals, please.) and BPA free cans of beans. Flavor to your tastes–voila–dinner in a hurry.  P.S. when it comes to adding items into the soup if you are unsure if the flavors will combine-here’s a trick.  Smell the soup, then smell what you are planning to add.  If your nose says ‘no’–don’t combine them.  If it’s not a ‘no’, then you can add them and adjust your flavors.
  Eat slowly with grace, joy and gratitude
“Sit down, be thankful for what you have and chew your food.”  Ever notice that food tastes better when you are in a good mood? Meal times used to be honored times, when the focus was nourishing, not what’s on CNN.  Turn off the tv, don’t answer the phone, step away from Facebook.  When we take the time to be thankful for our blessings and nourish ourselves with intention it’s really quite profound.  Often times this simple rule is enough for some of my clients to stop using antacids.

  Plan for the busy days
Orchestra, track, meetings, parties–busy, busy.  When you plan out your menu, take time to look at the week schedule.  I come home late on Thursdays, therefore, I don’t want to cook, so the menu is set that for either leftovers or dinner out.  If you know you are going to have to rush home, then grab the kid before soccer, pack up a snack or meal when you are cleaning up dinner the night before.
  Have staples and easy snacks on hand
Take stock of what you have and what you might need.  Root vegetables, squash, frozen vegetables, whole grains, dried nuts, dried fruits, nut butters, dried (or canned BPA free) lentils and legumes and seeds, etc.  Obviously, this list will vary household to household.  Look to see where you are at and how you can improve your stock.  A bowl of apples and pears setting out on the counter it is more likely that you will grab that for a snack than rush out for a candy bar. How about carrots and celery with nut butter or hummus or a handful of nuts?
  Involve the family
Learning to plan and prepare meals shouldn’t fall to just one person in the family unless you’ve divided the work that way.  Why?  It’s a life skill, everyone should learn.  Especially if there are children in the household, get them involved. Have them pick out one or two meals to have each week, have them participate in cooking and clean up.
  Be flexible and keep an open mind
Don’t worry if you fall off the menu here or there, they are just a guide to keep the hassle down. Remember to be willing to try new things and explore.  If your mind is open to being able to try new foods or create new habits, those around you will likely mirror it.  Have fun!


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Nourishing In the Depths of Winter

The Five Element Theory of Chinese Medicine (CM) carefully observed the natural phenomenon and flow of the seasons.   Each of the five (yes–five) seasons were assigned an element, organ system, quality, temperature, direction, sound, taste and emotion–just to name a few.  For example: Spring is represented by wood,  the Liver and Gall bladder organs, birth and new growth. Summer is fire, and coorelates to Heart, Small Intestines, Pericardium and Triple burner.

It reflects the peak of growth and activity.  Autumn is metal and corresponds to the Lung and Colon, it is the stage of decline.  Late summer is earth and represents the transition of seasons (equinox and solstices) it ireflects in the Spleen and Stomach and is the center force.  Winter is water and represents the Kidney and Bladder, cold and the final decline before spring’s growth. These correlations became guidelines for everything from when to go war to identifying disease patterns in the physical body.

Winter’s chilly darkness often makes us want to slow down– or hibernate.  This isn’t necessarily a bad thing.  In Chinese medicine winter is a time of reflection and introspection, a time when we should rest and conserve our Qi (energy within the body).  It is a chance to rebuild our strength for spring’s rapid burst of new life. Classically, the Chinese (and other cultures) believed that we should live in harmony with the seasons.  This was especially relevant in times when human’s lives were dominated by the elements—simply catching a cold could be life threatening.  Today, those of us living in the industrialized world suffer little from the extremes of nature yet learning to harmonize with each season can make a huge impact on our health and well-being.

Ruled by the Water element,  winter governs the Kidneys, Bladder and adrenal glands. Called the Root of Sealed storage one of the Kidney’s many functions is protect our Jing (essence). This essence is used a little everyday to nourish us, but extreme lifestyles or severe illness can deplete it rapidly.  This essence cannot be rebuilt in quantity, but activities such as meditation, proper rest and nourishment will guard it from depleteing too quickly.  Deficiency of essence appears as early greying of hair, problems with bones and teeth, poor development and early aging. The Kidneys also rule our will power and drive, they help fuel the fire that warms the other organs allowing them to transform food into energy (Qi).  A deficiency here may appear as exhaustion, cold body, lack of sex drive and the will to move forward in life.  But don’t worry, you can positivitely influence any condition of mind or body with a little direction.  By learning to shift with the ebbs and flows of the season we can move through life with greater ease and winter is a wonderful time to learn how to replenish and rebuild your storage.

Winter can be an excellent time to replenish your deep reserves.  

Below are some great ideas to help you rebuild during the cold months.

Meditate
The benefits of meditation are innumerable and it is truly one of the most profound ways to help strengthen the Kidneys and overall well being.

Nourish yourself
Eat more seasonally appropriate foods like warm hearty soups, root vegetables, winter squash, whole grains, and roasted nuts, all help to warm the body’s core.  Foods that specifically benefit the Kidneys include: kidney beans, seaweeds, and micro-algae.

Rest
Try to get to bed a little earlier to rest well. Studies now also link weight gain around the middle to excess stress combined with less than 7 hours of sleep.

Get moderate exercise
Movement lifts the spirits.  If you don’t exercise much, bundle up and go for a walk.  If you exercise excessively, slow down a little to conserve your Qi.

Brighten your space
Whether or not you celebrate the holidays, refresh your home or workspace with cheerful colors or seasonal décor.  Holly’s bright berries, pine’s uplifting scent and a few splashes of red will add warmth to your home and enliven your spirit.

Get Acupuncture or Amma
A little rebalancing can go along way.

Laugh
Laughter is the sound associated with the fire element. The water and fire elements share a deep connection of mutual support and exchange.  Laughter during the dark months can help warm the connection between Kidney and Heart and lift your spirit.    ”One’s health can be judged by which he takes two at a time–pills or stairs.”

Want more information?  We invite you to register for April’s Finding Joy in the Winter Class, Saturday, January 19th. Register online at www.aprilcrowell.com.
Call today to find out how Pulse can help you with your health needs at  208-955-8272, or check us out online at www.pulseholistichealth.com
Be Well,
April



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Boning Up On Calcium

What is calcium?

Calcium (Ca) is an essential macromineral for humans.  How calcium is absorbed, what vitamins and minerals it needs to be with, how much we need and in what form is a bit a matrix to untangle.  My goal here is to present  what calcium is and why we need it without boring you to death or writing a full essay—whew.

Forward!

Calcium is the most abundant mineral in humans, making up about 1.75-2% of your body weight.  Nearly all of the  calcium in our bod

Although our bones make up our frame and create structure, they are highly subject to the body’s needs–meaning they aren’t static.  Bones are at their strongest at about age 30, and they are constantly restoring themselves…if they have the building supplies.   There is a constant adding too and pulling from the bones.  If there is a deficiency of calcium in the blood and nerves during times of high stress, we will leech the calcium from our bones weakening ourselves.y is found in the bones about–about 98%, equaling about 2.5- 3 lbs worth an adult .  A meager 1% of the overall calcium is found in the teeth.After about the age of 30, their ability to build declines.  Women are at greater risk of bone loss (osteoporosis) and calcium loss simply because of varying hormonal and physiological differences from men. Whatever your gender it important to build bone mass during youth and early adulthood.

What does calcium do?

Here is a starter list of the ‘big’ items:

  • Builds and maintains strong bones and teeth–smile pretty and stand tall
  • Calms and sedates the nervous system–relaxes you
  • Alkalizes the body–blood PH likes to be slightly acidic, however, the standard American diet is highly acidic, a primary factor in many diseases.
  • Aids in proper muscle contraction–everything from leg cramps to proper heart beats
  • Important in proper blood clotting
  • Essential for proper parathyroid (PT) functions–also if the PT is not functioning properly you will not absorb calcium properly.
  • Essential for proper secretion of hormones
  • Aids in proper bowel and gastrointestinal functioning

Calcium and the heart

Calcium circulating in the system as Ca ++ (ionized calcium) is responsible for simulating the contraction of the heart. Magnesium aids in the relaxation phase of the heart, while sodium and potassium buzz creating the impulse for the heart to beat. Generally, the calcium and magnesium are recommended at a 2:1 ratio.

Calcium and Vitamin D

Sunshine increases the body’s ability to manufacture Vitamin D, is essential in helping the body absorb calcium.  You just need about 20 minutes a day.  Want to get more specific?  Expose the back of your neck to the sun, where you can easily absorb it.

Calcium acid and dairy

Although calcium helps to alkalize our body, it requires stomach acid to absorb it.  For this reason, take calcium between meals when the stomach acid is higher.  Taken before bedtime the calcium will help calm and settle the nervous system and aid in sleep.  For seniors, women over age 35 and those with low stomach acid calcium citrate is most easily absorbed form, or consider using a HCL supplement.  Although it is true that calcium is high in dairy products, it can be hard to absorb for those with lactose intolerance.  Seek out plant based sources if you are lactose intolerant or have a lot of phlegm and mucus that dairy can increase.

Eastern peek at bones and calcium

In Chinese medicine the development of the spine, brain,  bones, and teeth is under the rule of Kidney functions (no correlation in western medicine, really here).   Any development delay or abnormality in these processes is an indicator of ‘failure to grow and thrive and essence (jing) deficiency.’   Strong tonics and specific points would be utilized to increase Kidney’s rule over growth and development.  Again, this is Eastern functional principles and has no real correlation to western medicine in this perspective.  Calcium specifically subdues yang rising (hot heads), it strengthens the body and stops pain.  Like most minerals, calcium ‘anchors the spirit’– meaning it settles down anxieties, worries and relaxes us.

How much calcium do you need a day?

Like every other mineral and vitamin it depends on your age, gender,  life conditions (stress, etc) and what you eat.

The current adequate intake (AI) is

  • Infants-1 year: 220-500 mg./day
  • Children 1-10:  800-1,000 mg./day
  • Children 10-18: 1,1000 mg./day
  • Adult men and women: 800-1,000 mg./day
  • Pregnant and lactating  women: 1,200 mg./day
  • Postmenopausal women (not taking estrogen):  1,200 mg./day

Daily intake of up to 2,500 mgs. of calcium is considered safe.  If you have a healthy diet and lifestyle activity that is mostly free of calcium killers you may not need much supplementation.  Increase supplementation during times of growth, stress, spiritual growth, lactation, pregnancy, acute illness and heart issues.  Check with your nutritionist to see what additional dosing and form you may need.

How to get more calcium and build bones

  • Exercise regularly.  Regular walking makes the body lay down extra minerals on the the bones–specifically in the hips, legs and spine.
  • Increase silicon rich foods which aid calcium absorption: Horsetail tea (the herb, not actual horse’s tail), oatstraw, kelp, kombu, lettuce, parsnips, buckwheat, millet, dandelion greens, celery and cucumber (esp. the peel), carrots and apricots.  There are a few studies that indicate that horsetail tea actually may close up dental cavities….
  • Eat foods rich in calcium, magnesium and chlorophyll–you know the green things.
  • Avoid foods from the solanum family–aka the nightshades–potatoes, eggplant, tomatoes and bell peppers.
  • Eat marrow broth regularly–’like begets like’.  Eating stock made from bones and marrow is a fantastic way to build bones.

High Calcium Foods

calcium in mg for 3 1/2 oz. portions
Food Mg of Ca
wakame 1300
kelp 1000
Swiss cheese 530
wheatgrass 514
chia seeds 450
sardines with bone 440
cheddar cheese 400
almonds 233
spinach, cooked 233
amaranth 222
parsley 203
turnip greens 191
dandelion greens 191
brazil nuts 186
sunflower seeds 175
corn tortillas 170
chick peas 150
arugula 150
quinoa 141
black beans 135
pistacios 135
kale 134
spirulina 131
molasses, blackstrap 130
tahini 130
yogurt 122
cottage cheese 120
beet greens, cooked 117
collard greens, cooked 117
whole milk 112
sesame seeds 110
dried figs 100
tofu 100
walnuts 99
salmon 80
thyme 81 (mg/T)
poppy seed 127  (mg/T)
dill 100 (mg/T)

Calcium  and bone killers

The following is a list of lifestyle and nutritional habits that increase bone loss and strip the body of calcium.

  • High fat diet
  • High protein diet–calcium is used to neutralize high acidity in blood
  • Sodas and phosphorus foods–again, calcium is called from the bones to neutralize the acid
  • High sugar intake
  • Chocolate intake
  • Coffee
  • Lack of regular exercise–especially weight bearing
  • High stress
  • Chronic Kidney disease
  • Steroids
  • Anticoagulant medicines
  • Antiseizure medicines
  • Smoking
  • Hyperthyroidism
  • Acute illness
  • Yeasted foods–bread and beer
Here’s to your healthy bones and a calm mind!

April

Reposted with permission from www.aprilcrowell.com

April Crowell, Dipl.ABT, CH


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Grace and Gratitude

He is a wise man who does not grieve for the things which he has not, but rejoices for those which he has.” – Epictetus 

“Thank you.”  It’s a very simple, very powerful statement–especially when it is said with true gratitude.  We live in a hurried culture, one abundant with blessings even in the toughest of times, yet often we overlook or give thanks for what we have. 

 

Growing up, I had four grandparents close by, along with my parent’s diligence and tight knit church family, gratitude was something that was deeply instilled in me.  All of them were far more concerned with ‘the color of my soul’ than whether I had the latest fashion to wear.  If I frowned at the food put before me, I was reminded that there were starving children who would be happy to eat it.

It doesn’t matter what your faith,  if any–the act of gratitude is one that shows respect to life, existence and consciousness itself.  It opens the heart and mind to infinite potential and wonder.  Appreciation and grace create  greater depth of love, compassion, generosity and unity which rewires the brain.  Studies have shown that people who live with gratitude have increased states of attention, energy, enthusiasm, alertness and live with a general positive attitude.  Wow!–Just think of what would happen if everyone expressed more gratitude.  The world would be a better place for all of us.

Weaving gratitude into your life

We live in a world of vice and virtue–and at any given moment we choose between the two. Taoist thought has a simple saying, “Li proceeds Qi.”  Meaning intention proceeds action or manifestation.   At any moment you can ask yourself, “What is my motivation or intention behind what I’m doing?”

To create grace and gratitude you simply practice grace and gratitude.  

Here’s some ideas

  • Meditation–My first recommendation. All meditation helps to toss off the shackles of attachment helping us reconnect with our authentic selves and life purpose. If you’ve never meditated before, you may want to try meditation with seed–Take fifteen to thirty minutes a day sit up straight and still, focusing on a candle or the horizon and specifically focus on what blessings you have in your life to be thankful for. Refuse to allow victimization to roll in.  In my personal practice I use meditation without seed focusing on non-duality. If you are completely unfamiliar with meditation, seek out an instructor.
  • Wake in the morning and list 5 things you are thankful for–Hey, you woke up and you get to breath, right? These can be big or small.
  • Start a gratitude journal–Take time to journal out the blessings of your day or of your life.
  • Prayer–All faiths have practices of gratitude and reverence. Take a moment to look at your practice, do you spend enough time being thankful?
  • Give thanks for the food you eat– Take a moment before you eat.  Whether in prayer or conscious reverence. Be aware of where the food came from, who grew, who prepared it and the opportunities that have allowed you to have it.
  • Get involved in the community–Get involved in projects or events that give back to the community that has helped to sustain you.
  • Don’t wait for the holidays-- Although the holidays are a great time to get together and express thankfulness, don’t wait for them. Write a card, send a letter, smile at a stranger.
  • Enjoy the holidays–I love the holiday season, yet some of the holiday traditions don’t quite match my family’s moral or ethical beliefs. Create something meaningful for yourself, let go of what is no longer needed, and put something better in its place.
  • Say “Please and thank you,”
  • Be open to wonder and amazement–Life gets hectic and we loose perspective falling into pessimism. Consider the beauty in a rain drop or the vastness of space.
Breath in the moment and take time to remember who helped you along the way.

“We can only be said to be alive in those moments when our hearts are conscious of our treasures. –Thornton Wilder

 Be well,

April

reposted with permission from www.aprilcrowell.com


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Nuts–A Look At The Energetics Of Our Favorite Nuts

Autumn and early winter are the peak harvest times for nuts. Nature’s little powerhouses, nuts possess all the energy, nutrients and materials to create a towering, strong tree, making them one of the richest foods available for humans to eat.

One short blog isn’t enough space to tackle all 300 edible types of nuts, but it is more than adequate to get a brief overview of the nutritional benefits and energetics of nuts along with safe handling, storage and some ideas of how to incorporate nuts into your diet.

Western nutritional highlights

Although nuts will vary in their content of protein, oils, vitamins and minerals we can look at them overall and get the general idea of what they have to offer.

  • Protein– All nuts are high in protein.  A 1/3 cup serving of cashews contains 21 grams.  However that same serving gives you 260 calories–something to consider if you are calorie counting. These amino acids are pretty well balanced but lack the methionine and tryptophan found in animal proteins. However, mixed with grains, as many traditional cultures do, you can easily balance the meal.
  • Fats–Don’t let the word scare you. We need healthy fats to maintain healthy hormones, immunity, and nervous system.  It’s fats that give nuts their delicious flavor that satiate us.  Luckily, most nuts are high in unsaturated fats (happy fats), and many of them have been shown to successfully help lower blood lipid levels (high cholesterol) and aid in the treatment of heart disease. In fact, nearly all nuts have appeared in studies and are shown to be beneficial in lowering cholesterol and protecting the heart.  Nut’s fat content varies from about 50% (found in peanuts and almonds) to the nearly 70% (found in macadamias and pecans).  Remember, a little goes a long way.  Keep your servings to about a handful a day.
  • Fiber–1/4 cup of almond provides about 4 grams of fiber.  Fiber is essential for maintaining healthy bowel movements, weight balance, hormones and colon health.  Need more info on Fiber?
  • Vitamins and Minerals–Here again, nuts vary but many contain iron, magnesium, calcium, potassium, vitamin E and zinc–to name just a few.

The Chinese energetics of nuts

As a group nuts build and strengthen the body.  They add on weight and fight deficiencies.  Yin building (fluids and fats) and warming nuts are good for thin, weak and frail types but should be avoided if there is excess dampness, phlegm or yeast.  Too many nuts can scatter the energy making a person feel ungrounded or unfocused.

  Almonds
Almonds have a fairly high fat content (60%).  They are high in vitamin E, potassium, magnesium, calcium, iron and zinc.  From a Chinese medicine perspective almonds are sweet and have a slightly warming nature.  They benefit the Lungs and Colon by relieving cough and moving out phlegm, making them useful in chronic asthma and constipation conditions.  Raw almonds are very beneficial in fighting heart disease and lowering blood lipids and the treatment of colon cancer.
Cashews
Kidney shaped cashews benefit the–you guessed it–the Kidneys and the Heart.  Lower in carbohydrates than other nuts they offer vital minerals including copper, magnesium, potassium, iron and zinc. Most of the fat in cashews is in the form of oleic acid know for protecting against cancers and heart disease.
  Chestnuts
Chestnuts are one of the oldest nut varieties.  They have been a staple for many cultures in Europe, Asia and America and there are hundreds of varieties grown throughout the world. Chestnuts hold the honor of being the only low-fat nut.  They contain a mere 1 gram of fat for 1/3 cup serving and about 70 calories.  Chestnuts contain vitamins B1, B2, B6, and folic acid. They are the only nut that contains vitamin C–providing nearly 1/2 the RDA dosage in a single 3 oz serving. The offer up fair amounts of manganese, copper and magnesium.  They have a sweet, warming and grounding nature. Chestnut soup anyone?
Hazelnuts or Filberts
Hazelnuts have been eaten by the Chinese for at least 5000 years and they have a long history throughout Europe.  Commonly appearing in candies and sweets filberts are the nut used to make Frangelica, a sweet liqueur.  A 1/3 cup serving provides nearly 500 calories and 12 grams of protein, and 48 grams of fat–but nearly all of that fat is monousaturated fat.  They are high in many of the B vitamins, vitamin E, copper and zinc.  Hazelnuts have been shown to help high cholesterol levels.
Peanuts
Not truly a nut, but a legume.  Peanuts hold the honor of being one of the most allergenic foods. They are also susceptible to a carcinogenic fungus that is more potent than DDT.  Does this mean they are bad for you?  No–peanuts are shown to protect the heart and help balance LDL and HDL levels.  They are high in B1 & B3 and trace minerals. Just remember to buy organic, high quality and use a variety of nuts, not just one type.
 
Pecans
Pecans were a staple in the Native American diet, and praised by Spanish and French explorers.  Pecans are very high in fat–nearly 71% of their content, most of which is heart healthy oleic acid. Pecans have high levels of B1, B3, B5, B6, copper, magnesium, manganese and vitamin E.  Pecan’s have been the star in multiple studies (including several by the American Heart Association).
  Pinenuts
Dozens of pine trees throughout the world produce edible seeds. Pinenuts are high in protein, low in fat and high in potassium and magnesium–another bonus for heart health. They are high in iron–great for blood building.  Famously used in Mediterranean cuisine, pinenuts are one of the most expensive nuts and one of the most unstable nuts.  They become rancid quickly, so be sure to buy from a good source and store in the freezer.
  Pistachios
Another ancient, heart healthy nut pistachios are stars when it comes to vitamins and minerals including; B1, B3, B6, copper, manganese, magnesium, zinc, selenium, calcium and potassium. Another nut shown to help lower blood cholesterol, pistachios also have the ability to reduce inflammatory dermatitis. In Chinese Medicine terms, they enter the Liver and Gallbladder and treat jaundice.
 
Walnuts
Walnuts look like little brains…and that is exactly where they benefit–the brain. Dating back to 7000 BCE, walnuts likely the oldest tree food eaten by man.  Their are two main species.  Black walnuts are smaller and little more bitter than the English walnut which has a larger, sweeter, white meat. Again, walnuts have a significant ability to lower cholesterol.  Unlike other nuts, however, walnuts are high in arginine, which allows the bloove vessels to relax.  They also possess ellagic acid, a cancer fighting antioxidant.  In Chinese medicine terms, walnuts benefit the Heart, the Kidneys, the spine and the brain.

Preparing and storing nuts

Nuts are high in fats.  Once these fats are exposed to air, the oil becomes unstable  and starts to oxidize, becoming rancid, which can cause problems with allergies, asthma, joint and nerve problems, itching and burning in the mouth or lips. Whenever possible buy nuts still in their shell, which will keep for a year in a cool, dry place.  Once shelled nuts can be stored for up to a year in the freezer or a 4 months in the fridge.

How to prepare nuts

  • Soaking nuts–I recommend soaking shelled nuts for 2 hours to overnight before using.  Soaking starts the sprouting process, making the nutrients of the nuts more digestible. In bitter nuts, like walnuts, the tannins float away in the rinse -water making their flavor.  All nuts become softer, sweeter and have a more butter like texture.
  • Oven drying nuts–Once nuts are soaked, drain them and spread them out on a cooking sheet.  Bake at 350 for about 20-40 minutes stirring occasionally.  Nuts should be fragrant.  Scrape nuts from hot pan onto a cooling surface or pan.  Use immediately or cool them thoroughly before storing in the fridge or freezer.
  • Toasting nuts–In a heavy ungreased skillet, toast nuts over medium heat until fragrant, about 10 minutes. Pour nuts onto into a cooling pan or surface to stop the cooking.

A few ways to include nuts in your diet

  • Homemade granola– Make up a large batch of granola and freeze it.  Because granola has nuts, seeds and grains, all of which have oils in them, it can become rancid quickly.  Store prepped granola in the freezer and pull it out to toss on yogurt, serve with warm almond milk, pack in hiking bags or stuff into baked apples.
  • Make nut milkEasy to make and use. Nut milks have unique flavors.  Make a thicker cream to pour over hot baked apples or make thinner to add to smoothies.  They make wonderful hot chocolate too!
  • Toss them onto a salad.  
  • Add them to rice or whole grain dishes.
  • Candy them–Drizzle a little honey or maple syrup over nuts and roast with cinnamon, nutmeg and ginger. Toast until fragrant.  Or, if you prefer savory, roast them with sage, rosemary and thyme.  Great for gifts.
  • Just leave them out on the counter–If there is a bowl of nuts (shelled or unshelled) hanging out, somebody starts munching on them.  I never leave out large bowls of unshelled because of the unstable oil–but usually the bowl is emptied before they can go rancid.
  • Toss them onto hot cereals–Livens up oatmeal, teff, quinoa or whatever your morning porridge is.
  • Make a crust–Use the left over nut pulp to make a crust for meats or fish.

Be well!

April

reprinted with permission from www.aprilcrowell.com


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Give the Gift of Health

This year get your shopping done early and give the gift of health.

Buy 1 gift certificate and get the 2nd one half off!

Get one for acupuncture, Amma therapy, Herbal or Nutritional Consultation.

Give them to friends and family…or yourself.


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Pulse and Remedy Open House and Wellness Night


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What’s For Lunch? A Few Ideas For School Lunches

Autumn’s arrival means it is time to get ready to go back to school–and lunches.

School lunch or homemade lunch?  Are school lunches wonderful or awful?  Answer: It depends.

As a Holistic Nutritionist, I don’t just focus on the best quality, local and organic food.  It’s an ideal, however I fully recognize that nutrition in America is in a crisis state–swinging wildly from excess to starvation.  Many people are fortunate enough to afford broad variety and exotic foods, choosing what and when to eat while others struggle for a meal each day.

The lunch program may be hideously dismal or a bounty–how you view it will obviously be peppered with your current life situation.  Speaking professionally, the school lunch program is strongly lacking and filled with low quality food–rootbeer flavored milk?? Ick!  However, I realize there kids that are amazed with abundance and variety that school lunch has to offer.

Food is absolutely a place where we can do better as a people.  

Don’t go running after the Lunch Lady–she’s not in charge of funding.  We are seeing change through local groups and  organizations like Jamie Oliver’s Food Revolution.  However change takes time, but that is not the purpose of the this blog. My goal is to create awareness when it comes to eating. We all want our children to ‘grow and thrive’, to do well in school and have more opportunities than we’ve had.  Learning how and what to eat is a part of that and it begins with parents.  Chinese medicine isn’t just about healing–it’s education.  ”To heal the child you must heal the parent.”   Unless your child is the one shopping and cooking, it is up to the parents or guardians to teach them.

Tips and ideas to help simplify school lunches–and meals.

   Make a menu and involve the family
This helps on so many levels! Sit down for 15-20 minutes and write out a menu for 5 or 6 days. Involve the family. Being able to get up and look at list of the fridge that says “oatmeal with fruit and nuts” is what’s for breakfast and knowing that you are roasting a chicken for dinner that will become part of lunch tomorrow makes life easier–really. I base my menu around when I have time to cook and make sure there are left overs.   Make your first menu based on what’s in the house and your work schedule, or write up your menu before you shop. Need some more ideas? Check out 13 Tips to Simplify Your Meals.
 
Be prepared
Here’s a big one–write up a list with your children about what you can put in a lunch and post it on the fridge.  Sandwich? Soup? Hummus and veggies, wraps, leftovers? The trick is to create habits of thinking creatively.  Once you have a menu and a list of foods to nosh on–go shopping. Make sure you have containers to pack lunch in. There are hundreds of re-usable environmentally friendly lunch containers available now.  Pick something out that fits your budget and appeals to your child–whether that is a stainless steel bento or brown bag.


Pack the night before
Pack lunch the night before so you avoid the ‘morning rush and forget something’ syndrome. Dinner leftovers are fantastic for lunch. As you pack away dinner, have out your lunch containers and portion a little into each one.  Pop them into the fridge and grab them the next morning.  But, what about heating them up?  Honestly, not necessary in most cases.  I leave my lunch out on the counter at work all the time, it’s room temperature by lunch.  Nope–that is not enough time for it to go bad–that takes a day or two.

 What’s for Lunch?  Just a few ideas


Soups and Stews
Perfect for building minds and bodies. Soup is easy to digest, can be light or densely nutritious. Make soups from scratch and double or triple the batch. Freeze some down if you have extra. Check out some of the healthier redi-made soups like Amy’s Organics.  5 to 10 minutes on the stove top while breakfast is going and then pour it into a stainless steal thermos. Get variety going: Egyptian lentil soup, pho, beef stew, chicken and dumplings, pumpkin stew, minestrone…the list goes on.
 
Sandwiches and Beyond
Bored with sandwiches? Maybe you have to clear gluten out so many breads aren’t an option.  Think out of the box. Sandwich doesn’t have to be the main feature. How about hummus and veggies, baked sweet potatoes with a few nuts and cinnamon, leftover roast chicken? Try veggie wraps, sushi and miso soup, mashed potatoes and turkey, pot stickers–Clara was a plethora of ideas today.
  Snacks 
Snacks are must in school lunches and after school….but they are just that–a little something to tidy you over until the next meal.  They don’t need to big or heavy, sweet or overly processed. How about an apple, a handful of mixed nuts or seeds, rice cakes with almond or cashew butter, dried fruit, grain salad, nosh on some seaweed or have a little black bean dips with crackers? A little yogurt and granola, carrots and celery, kale chips–you know–real food.  Make up a specific list of snacks to have on the fridge so ideas so ideas are there for the you and the kiddos.
More than milk and cheese
Despite what the dairy industry would have you believe, milk and cheeses aren’t perfect foods.  Often milks are highly sugared and flavored, and unless organic it’s loaded with hormones and antibiotics. Same is true of cheese. Dairy also creates a tremendous amount of phlegm, so if allergies, asthma or obesity are an issue, pull it back or out of the diet. Calcium!?? Calcium is in many foods, especially greens and seaweeds. Sure a little here and there is fine, but 3-5 servings a day is way too much. Check out the list of foods high in calcium in Boning Up on Calcium.
 
What’s to drink?
Water–really. We need water for hydration, and it isn’t actually necessary to get calories in liquids unless your diet is greatly lacking in nutrients. Today’s school lunches are often packed with sugary sodas, vitamin drinks, smoothies and juices. Add a slice of lemon to water, or move to herbal teas or vegetable juices.  Sure, a little here and there is okay, but put it into perspective, are you burning through boxes of vitamin drinks or sodas?  To help wean off of sweet juicy drinks, dilute them with water or a fruity tea.

Remember–school lunch can be healthy and it doesn’t have to be overwhelming.  Pick one or two ideas and focus on those for a few weeks–build a new habit then add in another.

Be well!

April

Reprinted from Aprilcrowell.com with permission.


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Understanding the Nutrient Qi Cycle

Ever wonder why some physical complaints seem to pop up at a certain time?

Understanding the Nutrient Qi Cycle or Cycle of Tides might be helpful.

Qi (pronounced “chee”), a key concept in Chinese medicine, is as immaterial as a thought or as dense as table. Ever changing, qi moves from material to immaterial and vice verse, sometimes very quickly and sometimes very slowly.  When looking at the body, there are many flows of qi.  Each is identified and named based on what it is current function is.

The Nutrient qi cycle is just one of the main flows of qi in the body.  This rhythmic flow circulates qi and blood  in an orderly 2 hour sequence from one organ channel to the next throughout the entire day.  Understanding this flow can be helpful in creating greater wellness and  in identifying disharmonies that  seems to happen at a particular time. Whether you wake up every morning at 3 am, or feel tired at 2 pm in the afternoon can be an indicator of an imbalance in this flow.

In the Nutrient qi cycle is the energetic flow that occurs along the 12 primary channels or meridians in a constant ebb and flow.  The cycle begins at 3 am starting in the Lung channel flowing as follows:

Lungs: 3-5am

Large Intestines: 5-7am

Stomach: 7-9am

Spleen: 9-11am

Heart: 11-1pm

Small Intestines: 1-3 pm

Bladder: 3-5pm

Kidney: 5-7pm

Pericardium: 7-9pm

Triple Burner: 9-11pm

Gall Bladder: 11-1am

Liver: 1-3am

To be clear, there is energy in each channel constantly.  The nutrient qi cycle simply shows the ebbing and flowing.  Sometimes we have too little in a channel, or the channel hordes the qi and doesn’t pass it easily over to the next.  When one channel is peaked the energy in another channel will be at its weakest and these can be fantastic indicators of where to focus treatment–a few examples:

The Liver channel should flow smoothly, exiting its energy to the Lung channel at 3am in the morning.  The Liver channel ends at acupuncture point Liver 14 just below the breasts, the energy must jump to Lung 1 on the ribs above the chest.  This area is often very congested and hold excess energy that may wake the person ‘for no reason at all’ at 3 am.  Entry and exit blocks like this show up clearly in pulse assessment and can happen in any of the channels.  Personally, I find treating these patterns at their time very powerful–but coming it at 3am to treat isn’t really practical.   Still, very specific points and recommendations will remedy the situation.

The Lungs should have their peak energy from 3-5 am in the morning.  Someone with weak Lung energy may experience exhaustion, shallow breathing, coughing or wheezing during this time.   Likewise, a person wishing to strengthen their Lungs would benefit from rising early to meditate at breath during this time.

Extreme fatigue that seems to strike every afternoon at 2pm can be an indicator of deficiency in the Small Intestines.  An Amma Therapist or acupuncturist can use this information to focus in their treatment.    These imbalances show up in pulse assessment very clearly and the  practitioner would include other assessment skills  to figure out the primary disharmony.

Stomach energy is at its greatest from 7-9am, a perfect time to have breakfast so the the stomach can adequate begin assimilating and converting the food to qi for the day’s activities. Because the channel is weakest at 7-9pm, it has less energy available to nosh down a huge meal before bedtime, possibly leaving you feeling bloated and heavy.

People with Heart and anxiety issues may see their pattern flare up between the hours of 11-1.

Whether in health or disharmony having a little glimmer of understanding of the nutrient qi cycle can be helpful in focusing in treatment or assisting you in achieving higher goals, so peak at the clock next time something ‘pops up.’

Be Well,

April Crowell

 

 


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French Green Clay–Why I Recommend Mud

“You’re going to make me drink mud, aren’t you?”

“No, it’s entirely your choice.  I’m just saying that it is real– not an addictive drug. It’s inexpensive and really effective with acid-reflux.”

I chuckled as my client squirmed with the idea.  Although I had presented the idea multiple times they had fervently resisted, opting for the OC meds.  What could be the harm in trying a simple, natural clay?  Their resistance was–well, intriguing to me.  It would take them several more weeks before they gave in and tried it.  Now they are hooked.

Green clay is amazing and I consider an essential part of my herb pharmacy, first-aid and travel kit.  Here’s why.

Green clay or Illite (French Green Clay or Tuscan clay) is an organic, naturally occurring clay made up of decomposed plant material including kelp and seaweed.  Loaded with minerals and iron oxide this soft, grey-green powder has been used medicinally for centuries. Most of the world’s French Green Clay comes from deep quarries in France–hence its names.

This mineral rich mud is very alkalizing to the body and has a tremendous ability to absorb toxins and excess fluids.

Externally, green clay is used as detoxifying mask, to clear up acne and pull toxins from wounds, insect bites and stings. It naturally refreshes any area to which it is applied.

Internally, it has tremendous detoxification properties and can be used to treat acid-reflux, GERD, bloating, gas, diarrhea, morning sickness and heart burn. It calms the digestive system and helps to heal the stomach and intestines.   It pulls heavy metals from the systems and absorbs and astringes.

Sounds wonderful, right?  Here are some ways to use it.

Green Clay Drink

Use for relief from gas, bloating, heart burn and borborygmi (gurgle gut, as my daughter calls it).

Place 1 tsp. of clay in 6-8 oz. of spring or filtered water.

Stir well, allow to settle for 1-2 minutes.  Drink up to 3 x daily.

 

Green Clay Water Douche

Regular douching after the menstrual cycle and ovulation helps pull out toxins, cleanse and refreshes.  This therapy will reduce risk and occurrences or yeast infections and abnormal paps.  In cases of abnormal pap smears, the frequency of douching may actually be increased for a time–connect with your Chinese Medicine practitioner first, however.

Place 2 T. of clay and 2 quarts of body-temperature water in a large jar.
Shake well, then allow the clay to settle for 2-3 minutes leaving a slightly cloudy solution.
Pour the solution into a 2 qt. Douche bag, making sure that the sediment does not enter the bag.
If it does, the vaginal nozzle will clog.
Lying in a bathtub, insert the vaginal nozzle high into the vagina.  Open the valve and allow the water to flow through until the contents of the bag are empty.
Douche with water the day after using the Green Clay douche).
Do not douche during your menstrual period unless specifically instructed to do so by your health practitioner.

 

Green Clay Water Wash For Genital Area

For yeast infections, rashes and irritations.  Not just for the ladies.

Fill a large basin with approximately 2 qts. of warm water.  Add 1 T. of clay.  Mix well until the water becomes cloudy.
Place the basin of clay water in the tub
Squat over the basin.  Rinse genital area with clay water.

 

Green Clay Poultice

Mix up a bunch and use as a face mask (allow the mud to dry, before washing off) or make just enough to use over an infected area.

Place clay in a clean, glass or ceramic jar or small bowl
Add water in a ratio of 2 parts clay to 1 part water
Allow the clay to absorb the water without mixing or stirring; this should yield a thick, pasty mud.
Cover the jar and leave on the windowsill
Apply clay ¼ inch thick to the affected area
Cover this with a piece of lettuce leaf to maintain moisture.  Tape in place and leave on overnight or as directed
The clay should be washed off in the morning.

 

 A couple words of caution

  • No metal, please.   Do not use metal for stirring or mixing the green clay; wood or plastic utensils should be used.
  • Sunshine. The sun energizes Green Clay, and once prepared, it can be stored in a clear, covered jar on the windowsill.  Should it dry out, remove the cover allowing it to dry completely and then it can be pulverized and reused.
  • Make sure it’s pure. Make sure that you get pure illite or French Green clay.  Some products, especially those in the beauty section, might contain additional ingredients such as lavender.

 

Reprinted with permission from Aprilcrowell.com

© April Crowell 2012


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Soothing Sunburns and Sun-Tired Skin

Reprinted with permission from Aprilcrowell.com

The sun is out! 

Idaho is blessed with long, sunny days, wonderful mountains, rivers, forests and deserts.  A playground for those who love to be outside.  However, with Idaho’s dry climate and high elevation, it’s easy to get a bit scorched.  Getting sun is good, it’s the best source of vitamin D–so get out there, just start in small steps and be aware that you can still burn in little time even on overcast days.

Having a fair skinned, freckled daughter who loves to be outside has helped me become even more aware of the sun’s power and how quickly it can damage us.

Here are a few tips.

  Use a quality sunscreen
The EWG (Enviromental Working Group) puts together a fabulous database covering most sunscreens.  Easy way to find out what products are toxin free and environmentally friendly or if it’s safer to just leave the stuff off your skin.
  Stay hydrated
Drink plenty of water.  Room temperature or cool water is easier for the system to absorb.  I know–ice is nice–but it makes the body work hard (creating heat) to warm it enough to absorb it. You will quench your thirst faster, without freezing your throat, with room temperature. Try and keep iced and frozen drinks to a minimum.  Add slices of lemon, cucumber and mint to water to replenish electrolytes lost through sweat.
  Aloe Gel and Juice
It’s a lovely plant, with many uses from burns to cuts and bee stings.  I highly recommend getting one.  Even people without green thumbs can grow them.  Aloe gel or juice applied to sunburns or sun damaged skin regenerates and re-hydrates the tissue while easing pain.
  Lavender and chamomile spritzer
Lavender and chamomile both protect and heal the skin. Combine 1 cup of aloe juice with 10 drops each of lavender, chamomile, and rosemary essential oil.  Keep chilled and spritz onto sunburned areas to sooth and relieve inflammation.
  Vinegar
Add a 1 1/2-2 cups apple cider vinegar to a cool bath to ease over-worked muscles or sun-tired skin.   Soak for about 20 minutes.
  Time for a Spot of Tea
Black pekoe tea is wonderful when applied directly to burnt skin.  Don’t use hot–ouch.  Use a cool or cold tea bag and apply directly to the burn use as often as needed.  If your burnt all over, make up a large batch and use gauze to distribute the tea.

© April Crowell 2012


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March 2012 Newsletter

It was one of those March days when the sun shines hot and wind blows cold:

when it is summer andin the light, winter in the shade.

–Charles Dickens

Ah, Spring!  The season of vision, planning and growth.

Perfect time for a little ‘spring cleaning’ and changes.

 

We ♥ Idaho!

There has been a little confusion about if we are moving.  We are here in Boise!  Pulse continues to serve our community at the 725 N. 15th location in Boise’s Northend.   We offer Acupuncture, Amma Therapy, Chinese Herbs and Holistic Nutrition.  We wish the Wellspring School For Healing Arts (with whom we have shared this space) great success in Portland.

 

Allergies-Seven Simple Tips It seems that ‘allergy season’ comes earlier every year.  Although it may be true that certain seasons have a propensity to bombard us with excess pollen, there isn’t really one season for allergies.   Some people only suffer during a particular season while others may suffer all year long.   Read more.
Minted Pea SoupPea Soup?  Yes!  Peas are high in minerals, vitamin C, protein and folic acid.  They are simply delicious in this bright and lively soup.  For additional color garnish with…go to recipe.
  Pulse Seeks PractitionersWe are looking for like-minded practitioners that are interested in joining our cooperative of therapists.  More here! To find out more call us at 955-8272
  Our Community–Local and GlobalWatch this area for upcoming events and happenings.Capital City Farmer’s Market begins April 21st!
  April’s Tax ReliefCome in during the month of April and get $10.40 off your next treatment of choice with any of the Pulse practitioners.  Every little bit helps, right?  Book now. 

 

 

Be well,

Anna, April, Nate and Nedda

 


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January/February Newsletter 2012

The longest journey of any person is their journey inward.

Dag Hammarskjold


Nourishing In The Depth  Of Winter

by April Crowell
Dipl. ABT(NCCAOM), Certified Instructor (AOBTA),
Certified Holistic Nutritionist

The Five Element Theory of Chinese Medicine (CM) carefully observed the natural phenomenon and flow of the seasons.   Each of the five (yes–five) seasons were assigned an element, organ system, quality, temperature, direction, sound, taste and emotion–just to name a few.  For example: Spring is represented by wood,  the Liver and Gall bladder organs, birth and new growth. Summer is fire, and coorelates to Heart, Small Intestines, Pericardium and Triple burner.  It reflects the peak of growth and activity.  Autumn is metal and corresponds to the Lung and Colon, it is the stage of decline.  Late summer is earth and represents the transition of seasons (equinox and solstices) it ireflects in the Spleen and Stomach and is the center force.  Winter is water and represents the Kidney and Bladder, cold and the final decline before spring’s growth. These correlations became guidelines for everything from when to go war to identifying disease patterns in the physical body.

Winter’s chilly darkness often makes us want to slow down– or hibernate.  This isn’t necessarily a bad thing.  In Chinese medicine winter is a time of reflection and introspection, a time when we should rest and conserve our Qi (energy within the body).  It is a chance to rebuild our strength for spring’s rapid burst of new life. Classically, the Chinese (and other cultures) believed that we should live in harmony with the seasons.  This was especially relevant in times when human’s lives were dominated by the elements—simply catching a cold could be life threatening.  Today, those of us living in the industrialized world suffer little from the extremes of nature yet learning to harmonize with each season can make a huge impact on our health and well-being.

Ruled by the Water element,  winter governs the Kidneys, Bladder and adrenal glands. Called the Root of Sealed storage one of the Kidney’s many functions is protect our Jing (essence). This essence is used a little everyday to nourish us, but extreme lifestyles or severe illness can deplete it rapidly.  This essence cannot be rebuilt in quantity, but activities such as meditation, proper rest and nourishment will guard it from depleteing too quickly.  Deficiency of essence appears as early greying of hair, problems with bones and teeth, poor development and early aging. The Kidneys also rule our will power and drive, they help fuel the fire that warms the other organs allowing them to transform food into energy (Qi).  A deficiency here may appear as exhaustion, cold body, lack of sex drive and the will to move forward in life.  But don’t worry, you can positivitely influence any condition of mind or body with a little direction.  By learning to shift with the ebbs and flows of the season we can move through life with greater ease and winter is a wonderful time to learn how to replenish and rebuild your storage.

Winter can be an excellent time to replenish your deep reserves.  

Below are some great ideas to help you rebuild during the cold months.

Meditate
The benefits of meditation are innumerable and it is truly one of the most profound ways to help strengthen the Kidneys and overall well being.

Nourish yourself
Eat more seasonally appropriate foods like warm hearty soups, root vegetables, winter squash, whole grains, and roasted nuts, all help to warm the body’s core.  Foods that specifically benefit the Kidneys include: kidney beans, seaweeds, and micro-algae.

Rest
Try to get to bed a little earlier to rest well. Studies now also link weight gain around the middle to excess stress combined with less than 7 hours of sleep.

Get moderate exercise
Movement lifts the spirits.  If you don’t exercise much, bundle up and go for a walk.  If you exercise excessively, slow down a little to conserve your Qi.

Brighten your space
Whether or not you celebrate the holidays, refresh your home or workspace with cheerful colors or seasonal décor.  Holly’s bright berries, pine’s uplifting scent and a few splashes of red will add warmth to your home and enliven your spirit.

Get Acupuncture or Amma
A little rebalancing can go along way.

Laugh
Laughter is the sound associated with the fire element. The water and fire elements share a deep connection of mutual support and exchange.  Laughter during the dark months can help warm the connection between Kidney and Heart and lift your spirit.    ”One’s health can be judged by which he takes two at a time–pills or stairs.”


Simple Marrow Broth

Marrow broth is an often overlooked food that is deeply nourishing to the body and spirit. In Chinese medicine it is excellent at treating ‘failure to grow and thrive’ (a common pattern of deficiency in children), the elderly or those recovering from illness. But you need not wait until one of these disharmonies arises to utilize its amazing benefits. Marrow broths ’build blood’,  treats anemic conditions and strengthen the brain, bones and strongly stimulates the immune system. It nourishes the Jing (essence) and creates a deep calm throughout the system. This is a fantastic recommendation for anyone with general deficiencies, large or small.

Is it difficult to make?

No, it just likes to take its time, especially if you want to get the most out of the broth.  Soup, in general, is highly nourishing and allows for a myriad of variations but there are a few rules to observe when making a marrow broth.

First—use only bones from organically raised animals and poultry. Hormones and chemicals in commercially raised animals will carry into your broth.

Second—cook it a long time—really, 6-8 hours.

Here’s how simple it is:

Ingredients

  • 1 organic chicken or turkey carcass (mostly cleaned, or use a little of the meat to help flavor the stock)  Or
  • 4-6 lbs of organic beef/lamb/elk bones and/or knuckles
  • 2 T. vinegar (optional–this helps release the marrow from larger bones)
  • 8 quarts of water

Instructions

In a large stock pot or crock pot, cook the bones in the water for a minimum of 3-4 hours, 6-8 hours is best. Really, it is that simple. For hard, larger bones you may want to crack them with a mallet to encourage the marrow to leech out. You can add in vegetables if you so choose at this point.

Skim off fat that arises to the surface during cooking.

Allow the broth to cool slightly and then remove the bones or carcass.

Line another large pot with a cheese cloth or fine sieve and pour the broth through (Careful with hot liquids–burnt fingers!)

Allow the broth to chill completely and skim off any additional fat.

You now have a beautiful base broth that you can use right away, freeze or can.

Add some flavor

Broth can be cooked without seasonings so you have a blank palette to work with or if your nutritional needs recommend you staying away from spices.  However, you can alo season the broth with salt, pepper and your favorite herbs or vegetables of your choice.

For an Asian Flavored broth:  add in soy sauce, a little ume plum vinegar, onion, carrots, mushrooms and scallions–maybe even a little dashi.

For a Italian flavored broth: add in rosemary, thyme, sage and lemon.

For a hearty middle European flavored broth like Borscht: use beef broth, potato, beets, onions and mushrooms to flavor the broth.

Eat well!

Contributed by April Crowell


Wishing you health and happiness in the

Year of the Water Dragon January 24th, 2012

Pulse has been serving the Boise area with Acupuncture, Amma Therapy, Holistic Nutrition, Chinese Herbs and Lifestyle guidance for more than 12 years.

We Thank You! From the Pulse Team:

April, Anna, Nathan & Nedda

Check out our website and facebook for great deals.


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November/December Newsletter 2011

“I would maintain that thanks are the highest form of thought; and that gratitude is happiness doubled by wonder.” ~G.K. Chesterton


A Gluten Free Holiday Menu
By Nathan Mandigo– Amma Therapist, Pulse Staff
This year the team at Pulse challenged me to come up with a gluten free menu for the holidays. Thinking through the dinners that I experienced when growing up, there were 3 main dishes that classically use flour: dressing/stuffing, gravy, and pies. But why stop at eliminating gluten and see if we can reduce or eliminate other things that are often irritants for people avoiding gluten like nightshades (potatoes, peppers, etc.) and sugar. What emerged was a list of recipes that, though maybe not “traditional”, embody the flavors and foods of the season.

For some of the home recipes below I should point out that I am a very free form cook and don’t always pay attention to how long things take or how much I put in. I have tried to give approximations where possible but encourage any tentative cooks to follow their taste buds, nose, and eyes when determining flavors and doneness.


The first up on our list is that holiday favorite, mashed potatoes. Kids love them because they are filling and fun to sculpt and play with, adults love them because they can be kids again and play with their food. Potatoes are very nutritious, but for those with weaker digestion, acid reflux or arthritis they can be hard on the system. This year how about trying squash or sweet potatoes for the main starch? Both are easy to digest and fabulously high in nutrients.

Mashed Butternut Squash

  • 1 Butternut Sqaush
  • 1-2 tbsp butter
  • Cinnamon and salt to taste
  • milk (optional)

There are two ways to go about mashing your squash. The first is to cut the squash in half and roast it in the oven until it falls apart. Cut the flesh out the skin, breaking up the strings, and mix with a little butter, cinnamon, and salt to taste. The second is to peel and cube the squash and to cook it on the stove top like potatoes.
Once tender, drain the squash, mash with butter, a little milk, cinnamon, and salt to taste.

Baked Sweet Potatoes or Yams
Most of us have frightening memories of Sweet Potatoes and Yams baked with mini marshmallows. This simple recipe yields a naturally sweet, flavorful dish with wonderful earthy tones. Despite common misperception sweet potatoes and yams are members of the morning glory family and not part of the night shade family, they are an ideal substitute for potatoes as they have similar starch content but are easier to digest.

  • 1 to 2 lbs sweet potatoes or yams peeled, washed, and diced
  • 3-4 tbsp honey
  • ¼ tsp nutmeg
  • 1/8 tsp ground cloves

Preheat oven to 300º. Grease a baking dish and place the diced sweet potatoes or yams in the dish. Drizzle with honey and sprinkle with spices. Bake uncovered until pieces are easily pierced with a sharp knife and top is a lovely golden brown approx 90 minutes. Note: Figure about 1/3 lb of sweet potatoes or yams per person, increasing the amount of veggies doesn’t necessarily require an increase in any of the other ingredients but feel free to keep the proportions as you like.


Traditional cranberry relishes are a mix of equal portions cranberries and sugar with enough water to allow the cranberries to cook. This recipe, which comes from one of my favorite cooking magazines, works to make over the classic cranberry goo into a bright, complex relish that is the perfect accompaniment for any meat.

Cranberry Chutney with Apple and Crystallized Ginger –
Cooks Illustrated Nov/Dec 2011 Issue

  • 1 tsp vegetable oil
  • 1 shallot, minced
  • 2 tsp finely grated fresh ginger
  • ½ tsp salt
  • 2/3 cup water
  • ¼ cup cider vinegar
  • 1 cup packed brown sugar
  • 12 ounces (3 cups) fresh or frozen cranberries, If using frozen cranberries, thaw them before cooking.
  • 2 Granny Smith apples, peeled, cored, and cut into ¼ inch pieces

Heat oil in medium saucepan over medium heat until just shimmering. Add shallot, fresh ginger, and salt; cook, stirring occasionally, until shallot has softened, 1 to 2 minutes.

Add water, vinegar, and sugar. Increase heat to high and bring to simmer, stirring to dissolve sugar. Add 1 ½ cups cranberries and apple; return to simmer. Reduce heat to medium low and simmer, stirring occasionally, until cranberries have almost completely broken down and mixture has thickened, about 15 minutes.

Add remaining 1 ½ cup cranberries and crystallized ginger, continue to simmer, stirring occasionally, until just beginning to burst, 5 to 7 minutes. Transfer to serving bowl and cool for at least 1 hour before serving. (Sauce can be refrigerated for up to 3 days.)


The following recipe for a gluten free stuffing recipe comes from a fun site, The Gluten Free Girl and the Chef, that I came across while looking for recipe ideas. Any gluten free bread will work, though avoiding one that is heavy on seeds and whole grains is preferable.

Stuffing – From Gluten free Girl and the Chef website

  • 2 loaves gluten-free bread, diced into one-inch cubes, toasted and cooled
  • 2 large ribs celery, medium diced
  • 1 large yellow onion, medium diced
  • 2 tbsp good olive oil
  • 2 tbsp garlic, finely chopped
  • 1 tbsp fresh rosemary, finely chopped
  • 1 tbsp fresh thyme, finely chopped
  • 1 tbsp fresh sage, finely chopped
  • 1 cup chicken stock
  • 1 egg yolk
  • ½ teaspoon salt
  • ½ teaspoon pepper

http://glutenfreegirl.com/this-is-the-gluten-free-stuffing-we-will-be-eating/Sautee the onion and celery in olive oil on medium-low heat until they are translucent. You will be able to smell the onions cooking at this point. (Take a deep whiff. That’s a beautiful smell.) Add the garlic, as well as the rosemary, sage, and thyme. Stir these in and cook until you can smell the herbs, about one to two minutes. Remove from heat.

Bring the chicken stock to boil on high heat. Place the egg yolk in a medium-sized bowl and carefully ladle two to three ounces of the chicken stock to the egg yolk, slowly, while whisking the mixture. Add the rest of the chicken stock to the egg mixture at this point. (Ladling a small portion of the stock into the egg first, and blending it, will prevent you from having scrambled eggs.)

Add the cooled celery, onion, and herbs mixture into the stock and egg mixture. Toss the bread cubes into this mixture and stir it all around with your hands (or a spoon), to coat the bread. Add the salt and pepper and toss the bread again. Place all of this into a greased casserole dish (big enough to hold three quarts) and cover it with aluminum foil.
Bake for twenty minutes at 425°, then remove the foil and bake for another ten minutes. Take a toothpick and stick it into the stuffing. If it comes out clean, the stuffing is done. If not, bake until the toothpick comes out clean.
Serves six to eight people, depending on their appetite for stuffing.


Many traditional gravy recipes start from butter and flour with drippings from the meat added to provide liquid. This alternative removes both the butter and flour but still has the rich silkiness of the traditional method.

Gravy
This simple gravy is what my Mother-in-Law uses when the turkey is stingy with its drippings. This recipe uses cornstarch but arrow-root powder can be substituted 1 for 1. Also, the amount of thickener can be increased or decreased depending on how thick you like your gravy.

  • 2 cups low sodium chicken broth or enough to add to the drippings to make 2 cups
  • 2 tsp cornstarch or arrowroot
  • 2 tbsp cold water
  • Salt and pepper to taste

Mix cornstarch with cold water and set aside. Reduce chicken broth over medium heat till you have about 1 ½ cups of liquid. Remove from heat and slowly stir in the cornstarch/water mixture, whisking constantly to avoid lumps. Return to heat and continue to cook until boiling, gravy will thicken as it cools.


No holiday meal would be complete with a couple of festive salads to balance out the heavier foods. The Beet and Pineapple salad is my alternative to the classic Jell-O fruit fluff that seems to turn up on many holiday tables, while the Rubbed Kale and Spinach is a wonderful take on a classic green salad.

Beet and Pineapple Salad
World Vegetarian Classics, Celia Brooks Brown, Published 2005 by Pavillion Books

Notes: The recipe suggests boiling the beets to cook them; I prefer to roast them in the oven to bring out their full sweetness. This is easily done by scrubbing the beats and trimming the leaves and roots down to no more than an inch. Place a beet in the center of a piece of aluminum foil, pour a small amount of olive oil over the beet to keep the foil from sticking, wrap and cook in a low oven (250) for 2-3 hours or until a skewer poked into a beet meets little resistance. Allow the beets to cool and slip off the skins and trim the ends for slicing. Roasted beets can be stored in the foil in the fridge for 3 to 4 days before using.

The original proportions of the recipe are to serve 4. It is possible to increase the beets and pineapple significantly without increasing the other ingredients and still have a wonderfully balanced dish. If the flavors become too sweet, increase the white wine vinegar a ½ tbsp at a time and salt to taste until flavors balance.

If using raw beet (and not roasting them), bring a saucepan of water to the boil. Scrub the beets and boil until tender, about 30-40 minutes. Drain, cool and slip off the stems, roots, and skins.

  • 9 oz cooked beet
  • ½ large fresh pineapple (I use canned in water when fresh is not available in my area)
  • 1 small onion, sliced into thin rings (purple onion works very well here)
  • ½ tsp salt
  • ½ tsp sugar

Slice the cooked beet thinly. Cut the pineapple into 1 inch thick round slices, then cut the skin away. Cut the tender flesh away from the core and into bite sized pieces. In a (preferably) ceramic or glass bowl, combine the beets, pineapple and onion rings. Mix the vinegar, salt and sugar together, then toss through the salad. Leave to stand for 30 minutes to allow flavors to meld, stirring occasionally.

Rubbed Kale or Chard and Spinach Salad
This salad and its many potential variations is a perennial favorite amongst the practitioners at Pulse. This version utilizes some of the best of fall flavors to create a bright and colorful dish.

  • 1 bunch kale or chard
  • 1 bunch spinach washed and drained
  • 1 green apple, diced
  • 2 tbsp olive oil
  • ½ tsp salt
  • ½ cup dried cranberries
  • ½ cup roasted walnuts or pecans
  • ½ cup blue cheese (optional)
  • 2 tbsp apple cider vinegar

Wash and trim kale or chard in a sink of warm water. Gently rip, tear or cut the leaves into small pieces. Remove any heavy stems. Shake off excess water and then roll kale or chard in a clean towel to dry. Place in a bowl with olive oil and salt. Gently massage or rub the oil and salt into the kale or chard until it begins to soften and break down and become limp—10-15 minutes. Mix kale with the rest of ingredients and toss with vinegar to coat.


Since many people have their preference for turkey or roast and how to cook those, I am skipping the meat dish and going straight to dessert. The following for Gluten Free Pie Crust is again borrowed from The Gluten Free Girl and the Chef website. Feel free to fill the pie with your family favorites, though I have worked to keep sugar to a minimum in other places, dessert should be a guilt free affair.

Gluten-Free Pie Crust

  • 1 1/4 cup (5 ounces) almond flour (this is not the same as almond meal)
  • 2/3 cup (2 ounces) gluten-free oat flour
  • 2/3 cup (2 ounces) tapioca flour
  • 1½ cup (2 ounces) teff flour
  • ½ cup (3 ounces) potato starch
  • 1/4 cup (2 ounces) sweet rice flour
  • 2 tsp xanthan gum
  • 1/4 tsp guar gum
  • ½ tsp kosher salt
  • 5 tbsp butter, cold (or non-dairy butter sticks)
  • 4 tbsp leaf lard, cold (see website for notes)
  • 1 large egg
  • 6 to 8 tbsp ice-cold water

Finishing the dough. Combine the egg with 3 tablespoons of the water and whisk them together.Here’s where you can go two ways. If you want to do everything by hand, then do so. Add the eggy water to the dough. Work the dough together with your hands, or a rubber spatula, or whatever feels right. When the dough feels coherent, stop.
Or, you can do what I have reluctantly realized makes gluten-free pie dough even better than making it by hand: finish it in the food processor. Move the sandy dough to the food processor and turn it on. As the dough is running around and around, drizzle in the eggy water. Stop to feel the dough. If it still feels dry and not quite there, then drizzle in a bit more water. If you go too far, and the dough begins to feel sticky or wet, sprinkle in a bit of potato starch to dry it out. Again, after you make pies for awhile, you’ll know this by feel alone.

Making the crust. Wrap the pie dough in plastic wrap (or in a bowl) and let it rest in the refrigerator for 15 minutes or so. Take it out and roll out the dough between two pieces of parchment paper. This means you won’t work any extra flour into the dough. Roll it out as thin as you can. Thinner. Thinner. Come on, you can do it — thinner still. Carefully, lift the top piece of parchment paper and turn the dough upside down on the top of a pie plate. Rearrange until it is flat.

If the dough breaks, don’t despair. Simply lift pieces of the dough off the counter and meld it with the rest of the dough. Remember, there’s no gluten, so you can’t overwork the dough. Play with it, like you’re a kid again. Place the pie dough in the pie plate and crimp.

When you have a pie dough fully built, you are ready to make pie.
Put the pie pan in the refrigerator while you preheat the oven to 325° and make the filling.

Pumpkin Custard or Pie Filling
This is an old family favorite recipe of April’s. Use as a simple custard for breakfast or dessert or pour into your favorite type of pie shell.

  • 3 cups pumpkin or squash puree
  • (drain off excess water if necessary as some squash are watery)
  • 4 eggs
  • ½ cups maple syrup
  • ½ tsp cinnamon
  • ½ tsp nutmeg
  • 1/4 tsp clove
  • pinch of salt

Heat oven to 425º. Mix together all ingredients. Pour into oven safe baking dish. Bake at 425º for 15 minutes then reduce heat to 325º for 30-40 minutes or until a knife inserted comes out clean.


THANK YOU!

Pulse is deeply thankful for all those who have helped support us in our endeavors over the years.

We look forward to many more!

From the Pulse Team


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September/October Newsletter

September?  Yes, this content was originally intended to be mailed out near the beginning of September as an announcement of our Open House which occurred on October 10th, but due to massive technical difficulties on our end (not quite 100% overcome, please excuse any weird formatting), is coming to you now.  Instead of inviting you to our Open House, we are inviting you come support the current Amma Student group as they go through Student Clinic.  Student Clinic is a wonderful opportunity to experience all the benefits of Amma, for a lower rate, and simultaneously supporting the learning of the students.  More information and contact information can be found at http://thewellspring.org/classes/.

Fabulous Fiber 

By April Crowell, Dipl.ABT, CHN

“Eat your muffin, it’s full of bran—it will make you move.”  I’m not sure which was more bothersome at 14, eating the dry, flavorless muffin being presented to me or having my favorite grandmother get into a goofy discussion on bowel movements with me. Being around lots of elders, I was accustomed to what would come next if I didn’t eat the muffin. I could live without another lecture.  Thankfully, I found ways to get the benefits of fiber in the diet without the torture of these bland foods.

As a practitioner of Amma Therapy and Holistic Health, I am continually amazed at how simple dietary shifts can have the most profound effects on client’s conditions–whether young or old.  Fiber is a primary recommendation as diseases like diabetes, IBS, Crohn’s and obesity soar.

What is fiber?

Simply put, fiber is nature’s laxative and is the substance matter of plants that isn’t broken down by the body during digestion. It comes from the leaves, stems, seeds and secretions of plants.

What health benefits does fiber offer?

Although fiber doesn’t provide the body with energy, it is an essential nutrient for digestion and overall health. It adds bulk to the stools, absorbs excess water and softens the stools to make elimination of waste and toxins easier. It also:

Lentils and legumes are excellent sources of fiber

  • Protects your intestines and keeps them working comfortably to help move toxins and fecal matter out of the system
  • Prevents constipation and hemorrhoids
  • Absorbs excess moisture from the stools, reducing diarrhea
  • Reduces the risk of cancers, especially colon cancer
  • Reduces the risk and impact of diabetes by slowing glucose absorption to help regulate blood sugar
  • Treats and prevents bowel disorders including: IBS, Crohn’s disease & diverticulitis
  • Creates bulk in diet making you feel fuller, therefore aiding in weight loss
  • Manages and lowers blood cholesterol levels

Where do you find fiber?

In a nutshell, fiber is found in whole, vegetable foods this includes: nuts, seeds, lentils, legumes, whole grains (with the bran), vegetables and fruits.  If you’ve ever made jelly you have likely worked with pectin.  Pectin is a soluable fiber found in the peel of fruits including apples and pears and gives jelly its texture.  Most of the fiber in fruits and vegetable is found in the skins—so don’t peel your fruits!  There are two forms of fiber or roughage:

Soluable Fibers

Soluable fibers mostly come from plant cell walls like apple and pear pectins (yep, the same stuff that gives jelly its texture), gums, mucilages and algals.  They dissolve in water in the intestinal tract.  This process helps to delay transit time through the GI tract, regulates your blood sugar by slowing absorption of glucose and lowers cholesterol.

Insoluable Fiber

Insoluable fiber, like bran, is “scratchy” plant matter that adds bulk to increases fecal weight to produce bowel movements, slows starch and glucose absorption.

How much fiber do you need a day?The average American eats about 10-13 grams of fiber a day, that’s almost 1/2 of the daily recommendation—yikes!Today’s Standard American Diet (SAD) is heavy on refined and processed foods and full of meat products—foods that are nutrient dead and often void of fiber. The current adequate intake (AI) is

  • Children, 4-8 years of age 25 grams/day
  • Girls, 9-13 years of age 26 grams/day
  • Boys, 9-13 years of age 31 grams/day
  • Adults  38-40 grams/day
  • Adults over 50 22 grams/day

Having more than 50 grams a day of fiber is not recommended.

How to get more fiber into your diet

  • Try to eat 5-7 servings of vegetables  and 1-3 servings of whole grains daily.
  • Gradually increase your intake—about 5 grams a day. If you have no idea of how much fiber you usually eat, track your diet for a week.  There are many online sites like Calorie Counter where you can do this.   If you add too much too fast it can cause gas and bloating.
  • Eat seaweed!  Seaweed has a wonderfully high fiber content, averaging  about 32-56% of its it dry matter.
  • Try your next baking project with coconut flour—it’s gluten free and marvelously high in fiber.
  • Toss Chia seed into a smoothy or protein shake. Use it to thicken gravy or sprinkle it over your salad just before you eat it.
  • Eat more whole grains like teff, amaranth, quinoa and millet.  Rices and grains that have been hulled have much of their bran removed.
  • Leave on the skin!  Eat fruits (apples, pears, etc) and vegetables (cucumber, potatoes, etc) with their skins intact
  • Add lentils and legumes into your diet.  If you do not frequently eat them, add them slowly.
  • Add in dips like hummus or white bean dips into your diet.
  • Add in an organic bran cereal a few times a week.
  • Water please!  Drink at least 6 to 8 glasses per day, to help move the fiber through your system.
  • Spice it up! Dried herbs and spices are packed with fiber. 1 T of cinnamon boasts 4.2 grams of fiber; rosemary, savory and other spices aren’t far behind.

A Few Fiber Foods
Food Amount Grams Fiber
Grains
coconut flour 1 cup 48
navy beans 1 cup 19
amaranth 1 cup 18
black beans 1 cup 16
red lentils 1 cup 16
split peas 1 cup 16
rolled oats 1 cup 12
quinoa 1 cup 10
soybeans 1 cup 8.6
whole wheat pasta 1 cup 6
brown rice 1 cup 3.5
whole wheat bread 1 slice 2
white bread 2 slices 1.9
Vegetables
kombu 2T 9
peas 1 cup 8.8
avacado 1 med 6.8
carrots 2 medium 5.2
winter squash 1 cup 5
sweet potato 1 medium 4
kale (raw) 1 cup 1.3
Nuts & Seeds
chia seeds 2T 7
flax seed 2T 4.8
almonds 1/4 cup 4
tahini 2T 3
walnuts 1/4 cup 3
Fruits
raspberries 1 cup 6.2
pear (with skin) 1 medium 4
apple (with skin) 1 medium 4
prunes 4 dried 3.1
apricots (dried) 1/4 cup 3.5

“Delicious autumn!  My very soul is wedded to it, and if I were a bird I would fly about the earth seeking the successive autumns.”

~George Eliot

Coconut Flour Orange Cake (gfcf)
From Nourishingdays.com
Lovely oranges!  The delicate fragance of this cake is to die for!

  • 6 eggs
  • 1/4 cup coconut oil
  • 1/4 cup coconut milk
  • 6 Tablespoons raw honey
  • 1 teaspoon vanilla extract
  • 1/2 teaspoon orange zest
  • 1/2 cup coconut flour
  • 1/2 teaspoon baking powder (aluminum free)
  • 1/2 teaspoon sea salt
  • juice of 1/2 medium orange

Take your eggs out of your refrigerator and allow them to come to room temperature. Preheat the oven to 350 degrees. Measure out coconut oil and place in an 8″x8″ pan. Place the pan in the oven to melt the coconut oil. While the coconut oil is melting, whisk the eggs, coconut milk, honey, vanilla and orange zest together.

Once the coconut oil is melted (probably around five minutes or less), remove the pan from the oven and let it cool while you mix in the rest of your ingredients. Combine coconut flour, baking powder and sea salt. Stir the dry ingredients into the wet.

Once your pan is cooled enough to handle, carefully swirl your coconut oil around your pan in order to grease all sides. Then pour the coconut oil into the batter and mix until all lumps are gone.

Pour the batter into your greased pan and place on the middle rack of the oven. Bake for 35-40 minutes, until browned on top and a toothpick comes out clean.Place the cake on a cooling rack.

After the cake has cooled a bit, but is still warm, poke holes all over the top with a fork. Juice the orange half right over the whole cake, making sure to evenly distribute the juice.

Orange Coconut Oil Frosting (gfcf)Recipe notes: Be sure to melt your coconut oil in a glass bowl. I do this by putting the bowl over a small pan of simmering water.Ingredients

  • 1/2 cup coconut oil, melted in a glass bowl
  • 9 drops of liquid stevia (alternatively, you could use a couple of teaspoons of raw honey)
  • 1 packed teaspoon orange zest
  • 1/2 teaspoon vanilla extract
  • pinch of salt

Mix all ingredients into warm coconut oil. You are now going to place the bowl into the freezer in order to cool it down. It is very important to check on it every couple of minutes to catch it before it gets too cold. You want to take it out of the freezer right when it starts to get cloudy. At this point the cold bowl (and your cool kitchen) will continue to turn the liquid oil into a solid. Continue to whisk the frosting as it gets cloudier and cloudier and eventually turns into a whipped butter consistency. The idea is to get a bit of air into it. Once it is to a whipped (very soft) butter consistency plop it onto your cooled cake. Frost it very quickly before the coconut oil hardens. It will seem like a pretty thin layer of frosting, but it is just enough.

Baked Beans
From  for Self Healing  By Daverick LeggettRemember when people used to make baked beans?  Rather than opening a can, the beans were soaked and then slowly cooked in the oven—saturating the house with a luscious scent.  This is one of my favorite  in Daverick’s book (I like them all, really).  It is wonderful for the upcoming cooler months and for those who need deep blood building.  Enjoy—April

  • ½ lb haricot beans; soaked, washed and boiled until tender (about 1 hour)
  • 4   oz of pork
  • 1 lb of tomatoes
  • 1 onion
  • 2 T molasses
  • 1 ½ T red wine vinegar
  • 2 cloves garlic
  • ½ tsp fresh ground pepper
  • 1 tsp rosemary
  • 1 tsp savory
  • 3 bay leaves
  • 1 T tamari
  • 6 oz water

Presoak, wash and boil the beans.  Once the beans are underway, chop the tomatoes and cook them in an ovenproof dish until they have reduced by ½ cup.  Chop the pork into small cube and add to this.  Chop the onion finely and add all the other ingredients, stirring together well until warmed.  Drain the beans and add these.  Cover the casserole with a tightly fitted lid and cook in the oven at a low setting for three hours or more.

“The beans and molasses are deeply nourishing to the Blood, which is the main focus of this dish.  The pork nourishes the Yin.  The vinegar, pepper, onion, garlic and herbs add warmth and movement.  The tomato has a cooling action on the Liver and a cleansing action on the Blood, although its extreme coldness is moderated by the long and deep cooking time.”  Daverick Leggett

Seaweed Salad

  • ¾ oz or 20 grams assorted dried
  • seaweed (wakame, hijiki and arame)
  • ½ cucumber halved length wise
  • 2 scallions shredded
  • 1 carrot, grated
  • 1 box of mustard and cress greens
  • 2 T Japanese rice vinegar
  • 2 t.  shoyu (soy sauce)
  • 1 T mirin (rice wine)
  • 2 tsp sesame oil
  • 1 tsp white miso

Soak the different seaweeds in separate bowls of cold water—the wakame will need 10 minutes and the others 30 minutes—drain.

Cook the wakame only in a pan of boiling water for 2 minutes, the drain and let cool.  Put all the seaweeds in a bowl.  Scoop the seeds out of the cucumber and finely slice the flesh.  Add the seaweeds with the scallions and mustard and cress. Mix the remaining ingredients in a pitcher, add to the bowl, and toss together


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July/August Newsletter 2011

A New Look At the Intermountain Home Landscape Green Spaces
Part 2: Turf Alternatives

By William Habblett, CNP, CPD
Landscape Industry Certified Manager
CWI Horticulture Instructor

You have thought about your personal oasis and have concluded that you have areas where turf in those areas are just for your weekly mowing. There are many great options for these spaces that I will go into more in depth shortly. But first, we should talk about effective ways to get rid of the Kentucky bluegrass.

Before you install your new option, you will need to ensure that the Kentucky bluegrass is killed off so that it doesn’t become a pervasive weed in your new landscape. At this time, the general recommendation at this time is to use a nonselective herbicide; such as glyphosate, to kill off the grass and the root system. You will generally need to reapply in two weeks to take care of any spots that have survived the initial application. If you prefer, you can use horticulture vinegar. You will have to do multiple treatments because vinegar only kills the top plant growth. Depending on what you are applying, it is still best to remove the sod with such tools as a sod cutter. Just using a sod cutter will leave behind small root structures called rhizomes that will grow new tufts of bluegrass in your new environment. There are other techniques that you can do but don’t rely on just shutting the water off. Realistically, Kentucky bluegrass is the most drought tolerant grass with its ability to go completely dormant for extended periods of no moisture.

There are multiple options that are available to you to use as a groundcover and it comes down to function, aesthetic preference, and personal preference. I will introduce you to a few; and then hopefully, we will have your interest peaked and you can explore the many options available at your local nursery.

Creeping Thyme is one of the classic alternative ground covers that is available for your use. There are multiple types available from lemon thyme to woolly thyme. All the thymes will spread out and as the stems stay in contact with the soil, they will begin to grow roots. One of the best ways to promote this is to walk on it after light moisture so that it will get stuck in the ground. Just watch out for the happy bees when it is covered in small purple blooms.
Ajuga is a nice option that spreads by stolons. There are a few color variances in leaves out there. It may suffer some winter desiccation, but overall, it will cover an area and needs almost no maintenance. It has a nice blue bloom that occurs during the cooler season but the thick matting of rosette leaves is the real pleasure. I personally use it as the ground cover under my roses.
There is also the option of standard and Ornamental Strawberries that could be a wonderful option for you. It’s not for an area that has a lot of traffic because you might end up tripping yourself on thick plant clumps and wondering stolons. . They are an early bloomer for great color and the ornamental strawberry holds its bright fruit for an extended season.
Sedum/Stonecrop is a wonderful, drought tolerant ground cover whose usage has exploded in the green roof market because of its durability and adaptability. Colors vary from lime green to dark purple and will hold up all year long. All of them will create a wonderful carpet that will cover your open area with very few issues.

As I said, there are many more great options that exist. To the point, a book could actually be written on just this subject. But what if you are interested in options, but still want grass materials in your yard. The first options that I would suggest are they meadow type grasses that are adapted to our environment. Sheep’s fescue is one that is commonly used. It is regularly grown in clumps and is used regularly for planting in areas that can’t be easily mowed, such as hill sides. It can be seeded/planted closer together and create a more typical turf. Because of the clumping nature, it won’t be the easiest surface for sports-type activities.

Two other options for you is blue gramma and buffalo grass. They are two more grasses that perform well with our summer conditions. Buffalo grass is a very durable grass and will hold up to most family recreation. I do recommend trying to find the clone, ‘Legacy’, because it doesn’t create the burr seeds that can be a little painful to walk on. Blue gramma is a nice option for sandier sites and would prefer afternoon shade in the treasure valley. Both can be maintained by mowing at less than once per month or left to go grow to about 8” tall to blow in the wind. The only issue for some is that they both go dormant from October to May and have a strong straw appearance for that time.

Are you still a little nervous about getting away from the traditional turf appearance, but you want to know if there are options available? Two local companies supply sod that are different fescue variances that I recommend you try. ‘RTF’, ‘Compacta’, and ‘Xerilawn’ are just a few options that are available. All three of these will give you a more ‘traditional’ look and feel of turf while limiting the need for water, fertilization and pesticide usage.

Thank you for taking the time to read this article. I hope that it has inspired you to look at other options for your landscape and take the time to enjoy your landscape beyond the weekly mowing. Support my friends and your local neighbors by shopping at your local nurseries who are available to help you choose the best plants for you and your home. The images used were from www.stepables.com and you will be able to see many more options available there also.

THANK YOU, WILLIAM!


Pulse currently has space available for new practitioners! If you or someone you know is looking for a space to practice or build a practice, please call us at 955-8272 or e-mail info@pulseholistichealth.com for more information.


SUMMER NUTRITION
The heat of summer is here and there is no better to cool down than to enjoy the bounty from your garden or local farmer’s market. All foods contain energetic properties (a post-metabolic phenomenon) that create a response in the body. Foods that abound in the summer and grow in this region are excellent at cooling and protecting you from over-heating. It is also a season when our bodies can usually handle a little more raw or cooling foods.
The following recipes are simple and take advantage of foods that readily abundant in our area at this time of year.

 

 

Watermelon Salad

  • 1 watermelon (aprox 10lbs), cut into bit size pieces
  • Zest from 1 lime
  • Juice from 2-3 limes
  • ½ cup mint, chiffonade (long thin strips)
  • ½ cup salty, crumbly cheese, (ex. feta, cojito, blue cheese)

Toss all ingredients, except cheese, together. Garnish with cheese of your choice before serving.

Roasted Summer Squash

  • 6 summer squash, such as patty pan, zucchini or crookneck or any combination of
  • ½ onion, sliced into half moons
  • ¼ cup olive oil
  • ¼ cup lemon juice
  • 1 Tbsp lemon zest
  • 1-2 Tbsp each of basil, mint, and parsley

Cut squash into quarters lengthwise and then into 2-inch sections. Combine olive oil, lemon juice, lemon zest and herbs, mix and poor over squash and onions. Spread out evenly on a baking sheet and place in a 475° oven and bake until squash are slightly browned, approximately 40 minutes, turning squash a few times during the cooking process. This can also be cooked outside to the BBQ. Use an old baking sheet or grilling basket.
Recipes contributed by Anna Rydman


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May/June 2011 Newsletter

The article below is part one of a series graciously contributed by one of our clients. Watch next month for part 2!

A New Look At the Intermountain Home Landscape Green Spaces

By William Habblett, CNP, CPD
Landscape Industry Certified Manager
CWI Horticulture Instructor


Acres upon acres of Kentucky bluegrass (KBG), dusted with some perennial rye cover the landscapes of residential and commercial areas. These fields of green give back a feeling of serenity that stems from the open view that we can see for miles and the actual calming, “negative space” in the landscape where your eyes can rest. All that it asks for is just a few things: weekly mowing, edge trimming and removal from the flower and shrub beds for 36 weeks, at least 36” of moisture through the growing season, 5 pounds of Nitrogen per 1,000 sq ft per year, weed controls and at least aeration once per year. So you ask, what’s the problem with this for the simple visual serenity that has driven us for the last 150 years?

Most people average at least an hour per week mowing and maintaining their lawn. While this can be considered some great physical activity, most of us use motorized equipment that for every hours used, releases more pollutants than ten cars driven for an hour. Moisture? We average eleven inches of moisture per year in snow and rainfall in the Treasure Valley, where KBG requires at least 36” moisture to maintain summer green but will do best with 56” of moisture. But how much water does that equal? You need to apply 22,450 to 34,900 gallons of water per 25’ x 40’ section of turf per year.

Now in fairness, it is also the most drought tolerant as long as we are all willing to allow it to be dormant throughout the summer months. KBG is one of the heaviest feeders of fertilizers and we are regularly sold on programs that apply significantly more than what they require. For that same 25’ x 40’ section of turf, 25 pounds of petroleum based, synthetic fertilizer to that same area to equal the five pounds of nitrogen needed per 1,000 sq ft each year. This doesn’t include the fact that a lot of cheap fertilizers have highly soluble nitrogen that is known for polluting the water table from over usage.

Plus many landscapes are treated with multiple types of pesticides for control of crabgrass and dandelions, billbugs, and a few fungal outbreaks, such as snow mold and brown patch. While many of these things can be a destructive issue of your turf environment; realistically, they are easy to repair after the damage has passed. It just won’t have the ‘perfect’ look that a chemically treated landscape will have and maintain. Did you also know that KBG is also the most susceptible residential turf to insect and disease issues? While I could go on about the proper and improper usage of fertilizers and pesticides, the effects that some of these have on the soil, the micro and macro environment and the cultural living ecology, I would like to take the opportunity to allow my friends at Pulse Holistic to inform you of the short term and long term effects on you and your family.

Most of the chemicals used in pesticides, herbicides, and fertilizers are not recognized by the body and as such the body will do its best to expel them. If, however, the body is not strong enough, these chemicals are stored in fat cells for safe keeping until the body is strong enough the process them out. Either way, before they are excreted or stored, they have an effect on the body’s ability to balance its self.

Generally the first organ system affected is the Lungs through inhalation or absorption through the skin. Weakened Lungs can cause asthma, increased susceptibility to colds, and allergies. The other most commonly affected organ system is the Liver as it tries to cleanse and nourish the Blood by removing these toxins. The Liver most commonly will react by increasing the likelihood of headaches and migraines, tinnitus, vertigo, agitation, and anxiety. It is also quite likely that the Liver will disrupt digestions causing such symptoms as heartburn, acid reflux, indigestion, constipation, bloating, and loose stools.

If the body is not rebalanced after exposure to these chemicals acute symptoms can become chronic which take more time and effort to clear. Prolonged agitation of the Liver can lead to such diverse symptoms as tremors, neuralgia, numbness and paralysis, even stroke and heart attack.

But you probably already heard this before so you are ready to look at new options. First off, let me share with you the thought that the majority of families only need 850 square feet for average family activities. So in that perspective, I suggest lots of great beds of beautiful plants and a nice section of vegetable plants to cover the mass of your property. Properly established, a landscape of this concept will only require a few hours of maintenance a year!

One of the things that we always need to remember is the expected traffic on the area. Thoroughly evaluate how your family uses your outdoor environment and how close is the local park is for great activities. Is the grass just out there to mow or something to walk across to get to your garden beds? Do you go out and throw the Frisbee once per week? Is it just out there so your dog has something to hang out on? Personally, I think that you will find that you rarely use this green space for anything more than visually negative place. Ponder your usage and traffic patterns for now, and next month, we will discuss some turf alternative options and how to get your landscape there.

Continued in June-July 2011

Dandelion Fritters
Contributed by April Crowell

Flowers hold a special place in my heart. I grew up on my grandparent’s farm amongst vegetable gardens, vineyards, berry patches, orchards, and flower gardens. Something was always growing and blooming. It was common to see my grandfather snacking on violets or snatching and eating dandelions from a wreath I was braiding. Flowers have found their way to my table ever since and dandelions are among them.

To some, dandelions are a weed, an irritant to be tramped out. Others view them as a sign that their yards are free of poisons and toxins. They may also delight in adding the greens to salads or seasonal dishes. A client, years ago, told me of how her mother’s family had horded and harvested the plants to help them get through the depression. Taraxacum officinale is a particularly tenacious plant and is packed with many medicinal benefits, but today we are focusing on the blossoms. Dandelion flower tea can relieve headaches, depression, muscle cramps, and stomachaches. Dandelion flowers are particularly beneficial to the heart, helping calm and create joy.

How do you eat dandelion blossoms? Simple–cleaned petals can be tossed into salads, muffin batters, or crepe mixes. Dandelion Fritters made an appearance at our Easter Brunch this year. Here is how simple and fun they are.

Dandelion Fritters
First gather the flowers. They show their bright little faces when the sun comes out, so a cloudy day may not give you big beautiful blossoms. Rinse the flowers and blot them dry. In a medium bowl combine:

1 c. milk (any kind will do)
1 egg
1 cup of flour
dash of salt
kiss of maple syrup
dash of nutmeg and cinnamon
olive oil for frying

Heat oil in skillet over medium heat. Twirl blossoms in the batter until covered. Drop blossoms onto the skillet, flower side down.
Continue dipping and dropping flowers, checking the first ones every once in a while to see if they are brown. When they’ve lightly browned, flip them over and brown them on the other side. Drain fritters on a paper towel.

Serve drizzled with maple syrup, jam or honey and enjoy.


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April 2011 Newsletter

Apply yourself both now and in the next life. Without effort, you cannot be prosperous.
Though the land be good, you cannot have an abundant crop without cultivation.    Plato


Parsley Powerhouse
Contributed by Joan Hurst

More than a mere garnish!

With all the rich benefits of parsley it seems an injustice to relegate this wonderful herb to the side of the plate.

Parsley grows marvelously well here in Idaho.  It is tolerant of moderate frost and works well in the landscape to provide lush greenery under the trees.  It grows so easily, your friends and neighbors will be happy you have extra to share, once they learn all the fabulous benefits this little jewel of the garden has to offer.

Sow seeds outdoors in early spring and cover with ¼ inch soil or starter mixture.  Keep moist.  Plants will reseed by themselves if you leave the flowers intact, allowing for two crops during the year.  Plant in full to partial sun in deep, rich, moist soil.  Transplant early to avoid injuring the plant.

You may ask just what is in parsley that makes it so good for us?  Parsley contains: vitamin A, C, E, K and Folate.  It is rich in anti-oxidant flavonoids and loaded with minerals like potassium, calcium, manganese, iron, and magnesium.  These are all important components of cell and body fluids.  Parsley contains a vast array of volatile oils that have been proven to inhibit tumor formation and neutralize particular types of carcinogens.

Some individuals feel the oxalate levels in parsley contribute to already existing kidney or gallbladder problems, however, if eaten in moderation, you can still experience the benefits without causing further problems.

Parsley has been used to remedy a host of disorders including; pitting edema, jaundice, fevers, obstructions of the liver and spleen, syphilis and gonorrhea.  It has been used to expel gallstones, kidney stones and it promotes overall gallbladder health.  It can be used preventatively to build the immune system, just simmer a tablespoonful of parsley in a pint of water for 10 minutes, let it stand until cool, strain it, then drink one to three cups per day.  It is considered a stomachic, a mild diuretic and a mild antiseptic, as well as having carminative properties.  So if it’s sitting at the edge of your plate…….. go ahead and eat it.  There are hundreds of recipes for parsley, at the very least throw some in your soups and stews for a rich hearty flavor, you’ll be glad you did!  I’m sure your Pulse practitioner can share a few more ideas with you.


Barley Tabbouleh
Contributed by Anne Woodhouse
Barley offers a delicious gluten-free variation to the traditional tabbouleh made with bulgar or cracked wheat.

4 cups cooked barley
2 cups tightly packed finely chopped  fresh flat leaf parsley leaves and tender stems, about 2 bunches
2 cups peeled, seeded and diced cucumbers
2 cups diced, plum tomatoes
½ cup finely chopped fresh mint leaves
¼ cup fruity olive oil
¼ cup freshly squeezed lemon juice, more if needed
Salt to taste

Combine all the barley through mint leaves in a large bowl and toss to combine.  Blend the olive oil and lemon juice in a small cup.  Toss the salad with the dressing.  Adjust flavor to taste with salt, lemon, and olive oil.

Variations:  For a Greek taste, replace the mint with fresh dill.  Add ½ to 1 cup of fresh feta and ¼ cup of pitted kalamata olives.

Notes:  To cook 2 cups of dry barley, bring 6 cups of water with ¼ teaspoon salt to a boil.  Pull the pot from the heat and add the barley.  Return to heat and bring back to a boil over medium heat, reduce heat, cover and simmer until the barley is barely tender (it will still be a little chewy) 40-50 minutes for hull-less barley, 30-40 minutes for pearl barley.  Drain off any unabsorbed water and immediately return the barley to the hot pot, cover and steam off the heat for 5 to 10 minutes.

Hull-less barley, the hull is lost in the harvesting process and still contains the highly nutritious bran.  Pearl or pearled barley, the hull and bran are removed with abrasion.


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March 2011 Newsletter

Pulse Holistic Health provides Acupuncture, Amma Bodywork, Holistic Nutrition, and Chinese Herbal Medicine.
Located in Boise’s north end, servicing our community for more than a decade.


It was one of those March days when the sun shines hot and the wind blows cold:
when it is summer in the light, and winter in the shade. ~Charles Dickens

Spring Cleaning
From the inside out 

Have you noticed? There’s a buzzing of excitement in the air and in our bodies. This is definitely a time of change and growth. Our bodies want to move more, we have more energy within us and we want to Get Up and Go! Our minds are full of plans, ideas and our creative energy is sparked, we have come to life.

Our bodies change during the seasons, just as every aspect of nature. We are not immune to these laws of nature. If we are in harmony each change of season is accepted and we are delighted with the aspect of change. In disharmony, we resist the changes and encounter difficulties. During the spring this can result in agitation, angst, restlessness, feelings of being stuck in a situation and the inability to see any solutions. So, if one or more of these descriptions fit, here’s a few solutions for you:

Clear out the past: The more debris left on the ground (our minds or body) it takes longer for the crocus and other bulbs to push through. Nutritionally this is a good time to do a gentle cleansing or fasting, with raw vegetables and fruit juices. Check with your practitioner to see if this is an option for you. Fasting isn’t for everyone, and can do more harm than good if you aren’t prepared well.

Include a few raw foods: greens, sprouts, salads and fruits, while decreasing heavier foods such as dairy, meats and the denser root vegetables.

Avoid foods that aggravate the Liver: In Chinese Medicine the Liver is responsible for ‘free and easy flow’ of qi and blood. It is easily affected by wind and the spring season. Foods that particularly burden the Liver include fried and processed foods, alcohol, caffeine and other drugs.

Find time to meditate: This allows the mind to be open increasing the ability to focus and to make clear decisions.

Move your body: Physical activity will encourage the movement of qi through the body. It is extremely important to add stretching to our exercise routine and gives us flexibility in our bodies and mind.

Spring is a wonderful time to make powerful surges forward! The practitioners at Pulse can help you with detoxes, cleanses and modified diets that fit your needs and goals.

Call today for more information!

Roasted Baby Beets and Arugula Salad with Lemon Gorgonzola Vinaigrette
Bon Appétit | April 2006 by Tina Miller
beet salad image
1/4 cup fresh lemon juice
1 tablespoon red wine vinegar
1/2 cup plus 1/3 cup extra-virgin olive oil
1/2 cup crumbled Gorgonzola cheese (about 4 oz)
2 cups roughly torn bite-size pieces French bread
1/4 cup assorted chopped fresh herbs (such as parsley, basil, and rosemary)
1 garlic clove, minced
24 baby beets, trimmed, scrubbed
8 ounces baby arugula (about 12 cups) 

Place lemon juice and vinegar in small bowl. Gradually whisk in 1/2 cup oil. Stir in cheese. Season with salt and pepper. (Dressing can be made 1 day ahead. Cover and chill.)

Preheat oven to 375°F. Heat remaining 1/3 cup oil in medium ovenproof skillet over medium heat. Add bread pieces; toss to coat. Add herbs and garlic; toss to coat. Sauté until bread is crisp, about 4 minutes. Using slotted spoon, transfer croutons to plate in single layer. Cool.

Add beets to same skillet, tossing to coat with any remaining herbs and oil. Cover skillet with foil and transfer to oven. Roast until beets are tender, about 45 minutes. Cool beets. Peel, if desired; cut in half.
Toss arugula with 1/2 cup dressing in large wide bowl. Season to taste with salt and pepper. Top with beets and croutons and serve.

THANK YOU! For all the wonderful referrals, it is the highest compliment.

April Crowell, Joan Hurst,
Nedda Jastremsky, Nathan Mandigo,
Anna Rydman and Anne Woodhouse.

725 N. 15th Boise, ID 83702 208.955.8272

www.PulseHolisticHealth.com

Visit our website for great deals and for more information.
Find us in the Think Boise First Coupon booklet.



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2010 Winter Newsletter

Learn to be silent.
Let your quiet mind listen and absorb.
~Pythagorus

Warm wishes for a healthy and happy season from all of us at Pulse:
April, Anna, Anne, Joan, Kim, Nathan and Nedda


Mushrooms…
A Great Tonic for Winter

Contributed by Kim Rene

For centuries, the Chinese have touted the benefits of mushrooms. Taoist sages believed that mushrooms protected them against illness and increased their longevity. Early Chinese text suggested that the Ganoderma (Reishi) had powers to protect the heart and liver, calm the mind, improve mental clarity, increase stamina and help the body resist infection. In 1928, this fungus gained acclaim in the Western world, with the discovery of Penicillin, this discovery encouraged a whole class of antibiotics we use today. Since then, scientists have confirmed these traditional beliefs by studying their effectiveness on a wide variety of illnesses and conditions. Loaded with polysaccharides, research on mushrooms have shown them to be effective cancers fighters, not by producing antitumor effects, but by strongly stimulating the immune response that activates macrophages which fight foreign pathogens. Many mushrooms also possess cytotoxic, antibacterial, antioxidant and antiviral properties.
In Chinese medicine, Winter is the season of the Kidneys which are the the root of our energy and gives us our impulse for life. During these Winter months, energy moves inward making it an ideal time to nourish at the root level. Keeping ourselves warm, getting plenty of rest and participating in activity that strengthens the core and tones the posture are all beneficial for the kidneys. Winter is also the ideal time to tone the yin energy of the body and strengthen our immune system. Mushrooms are an excellent source of nourishment for Winter. They are warm in nature and tone yin, blood and qi. Adding mushrooms to miso soup and stews is an easy way to get them into your diet. Additionally, there are a number of deeply nourishing mushroom formulas and tinctures available. Some of the mushrooms most beneficial to the kidney include Cordyceps, Coriolus, Poria, Reishi and Shiitake mushrooms.

Man-to-Man Chipotle Black Bean Stew

contributed by Anne Woodhouse
Recipe reprinted with permission from Feeding Young Athlete by Cynthia Lair

(Moon Smile Press, 2002) . Serve this yummy stew over polenta or brown rice for a delicious, nutrient-rich meal. Mexican seasoning blends come in bulk or spice bottles at the grocery store. They are usually a combination of cumin, oregano, peppers and other spices that offer a Southwestern flavor to dishes. Muir Glen makes excellent fire-roasted organic canned chopped tomatoes with green chilies which are excellent in this recipe.

  • 1 tablespoon extra-virgin olive oil
  • 1 onion, chopped
  • 2 cloves garlic, minced
  • 1 teaspoon ground cumin
  • 2 teaspoons Mexican seasoning
  • 2 teaspoons dried, crushed dulse
  • 1 cup dried black beans, soaked overnight (or for 6-8 hours)
  • 1 dried chipotle chili
  • 2 cups soup stock or water
  • 1 – 2 teaspoons sea salt
  • 1/2 cup fresh or frozen corn kernels
  • 1/2 cup chopped tomatoes with green chilies
  • 1/3 cup chopped cilantro
  • lime
  • sour cream

Heat oil in a pressure cooker or dutch oven. Add onion, garlic, cumin, and Mexican seasoning and sauté until onions are soft. Drain soaking water off beans. Add soaked beans, chipotle chili and stock or water to onions and spices. Lock lid, raise heat and bring up to pressure. Once pressure is established, lower the heat to hold pressure steady and set timer for 30 minutes. The stew can also be simmered, not pressure-cooked, and it takes about 55-60 minutes (or more). Once the heat if off and the pressure has come down, open the lid. Add salt to taste. Add corn, tomatoes, and cilantro. Serve garnished with a squeeze of lime and sour cream dollop if desired. Preparation time: 40 minutes or more. Makes 4 servings

Notes: Dulse is a sea vegetable. It helps reduce the flatulence factor of the beans as well as adding rich minerals to the dish. You can purchase seaweeds at most health food stores. Of course soaking and changing the water will also help with the flatulence, but not add in the minerals and nutrients.

Rest and Revitalize This Winter

Contributed by April Crowell
In harmony our bodies should instinctively express the fundamental principles of winter – rest, reflection, conservation and storage–yet we often find ourselves increasing busy during winter.

Below are a few simple tips to help you embrace the winter season. By recognizing the potential value within each seasonal element we can move through our lives with greater ease.

Nourish yourself– Eating warm hearty soups, root vegetables, winter squash, whole grains, mushrooms and roasted nuts help to warm the bodyʼs core.

Rest appropriately–Sleep early, rest well, stay warm, and expend a minimum quantity of energy.

Get moderate exercise—Movement helps lift the spirits. Keeping with the energy of the season.

Spend time with people whose company you enjoy.

Brighten your space—whether or not you celebrate the holidays, refresh your home or workspace with cheerful colors or seasonal décor. Hollies, bright berries, pineʼs uplifting scent and a few splashes of red will add can add warmth to your
home and enliven your spirit.


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Fall 2010 Newsletter

Late Summer & Autumn
Contributed by the Pulse Staff

The days are growing shorter and kids are off to school, the change of seasons is here again. Seasonal change represents the possibility for change in our lives. By including a few simple shifts we can stregnthen our body with the benefit of each season, providing greater health and vitality.

Late Summer is not necessarily considered a season on its own, yet it corresponds to the transition of summer to autumn, and the equinoxes and solstices.  It represents a change in direction and temperature.  Late Summer relates to the earth element an the Stomach and Spleen organ systems.

The Earth element represents the center of the body, the core of our being. The spleen processes our food as well as our thoughts, making this an excellent time to nourish our bodies and minds. Spleen nourishing foods assist our ability to focus while reducing thought patterns that are stale and repetitive. The corresponding flavor for the season is sweet. Full sweets (see below) replenish the energies of organs, providing a comforting, warming and tonifying effect, which supplements deficiencies and encourages relaxation by slowing down the many functions of the body.

To Harmonize with Late Summer:

Sweets can be viewed on a spectrum from ‘full’ to ‘empty’. Full sweets take longer to break down, do not spike the blood sugar and strengthen the body. These include meats, whole grains, legumes, nuts, dairy, pumpkin, squash and other starchy vegetables.

Fruits fall into the center of the spectrum when consumed whole with their fiber, vitamins and minerals intact. Consume these sparingly like ambrosia.

Avoid ‘empty sweets’ like refined sugars like white and brown sugar, corn syrup and fructose. They are empty of nutrients and empty of Qi and found in packaged and processed foods.

Enjoy plenty of neutral, Spleen harmonizing foods: golden, yellow, round foods: millet, squashes, prepared simply with minimal seasonings.

Autumn relates to the metal element and the Lung and Colon organ systems. The lung and colon consolidate and refine the food and air which will sustain us through the upcoming season and bring vitality to our lives. We assimilate what is useful for our bodies and let go of that which is not needed. Autumn is an excellent time of year to bring your focus inward and clean out your living and work spaces so you can breathe easier and allow the process of life to move smoothly through you. Those things which are no longer of use we can discard or recycle.

Moderate pungent foods have a dispersing and flowing quality and correspond to the metal element. They send the Qi energy up and out and disperse toxins from the body which aids in circulation of blood, moves obstruction and mucous, removes excess and fullness and stimulates vitality. Regular use of mild pungents keep the blood moving and include ginger, cinnamon, horseradish, mustard, nutmeg, turnips, cabbage, wheat germ, peppers and onions.

To Harmonize with Autumn:

Cook with less water, on low heat for longer periods of time.
In the fall, Qi moves inward and you can increase your protein intake.
Look for seasonal foods; figs, dates, guavas, honey, butternut and acorn squashes are all foods that contain moisture. 

The sour flavor will help you focus: include adzuki beans, leeks, pickles, lemon and Kim Chi.

For those who are cold add heartier flavors and focus on preparation, baking and stewing foods.

Add a little more salt to foods as you gradually move towards winter.


Community Events

Embracing the Seasons: Leap Into Autumn
A free, informative discussion
The Boise Public Library,
Thursday, September 9th, 7-8pm -Free

Allergy Remedies
WSHA class taught by April Crowell
Thursday, September 9th, 5:30-7:30, register with WSHA

1,000 Hands Buddha Qigong Workshop
Nedda Jastremsky @ WSHA
Sunday, October 10th, 10-4pm, register with WSHA

The Wellspring’s Wholistic Nutrition 2 Fall Event:
“An Evening of Heath & Wellness Through Nutrition”
Pulse will have a table at this informative free event.
Friday, October 15th, 5:30-8pm @ The Wellspring

Pulse is affiliated with The Wellspring School For Healing Arts (WSHA).
If you are interested in these classes, please visit their website at www.thewellspring.org


White Bean & Butternut Squash Soup

3-4 strips of bacon
1 cup diced onion
3/4 cup diced celery
3 cloves of garlic minced
4 cups diced butternut squash (appx. 2-2 ½ lb squash)
1/4 dry white wine
4 cups chicken broth
1 teaspoon ground cumin
1/4 teaspoon ground red pepper
1/4 teaspoon cinnamon
1/8 teaspoon ground clove
1/4 cup heavy cream
1/2 teaspoon dried oregano
1 teaspoon salt
Fresh ground pepper
2 (15-ounce) cans Great Northern White Beans
1/4 cup toasted pumpkin seeds

In a large sauce pan or dutch oven, sauté bacon until crispy. Remove bacon from pan and set aside leaving drippings in pan.

Add onion, celery and garlic to bacon drippings, sauté until tender. Add diced butternut squash to pan and sauté for about 3 minutes. Add wine and cook until wine evaporates. Stir in broth, cumin, red pepper, cinnamon and clove, bring to boil. Add beans, reduce heat and simmer another 5 minutes until squash is tender. Remove from heat and let cool slightly, remove ½ soup and blend in a blender until smooth, return blended soup to pot. Finish with cream, oregano, salt and pepper and serve topped with crumbled bacon and toasted pumpkin seeds…YUM!


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Expanding Into Summer's Light

contributed by

April Crowell, Dipl.ABT

The sun and warmth of summer allow for nature’s growth and maturation. Plants thrive and begin sharing their abundance with us.  Longer, warmer days encourage us to be more active, spending greater time outdoors.    This is a season of joy, health, vitality.  A time when we are receptive and expansive like the earth around us.

The most ‘yang’ of all the seasons, summer relates to the fire element and the Heart, Small Intestine, Pericardium and the Triple Heater organ systems of the body.  To harmonize with the season, enjoy the glorious array of fresh vegetables, greens and fruits that are available. Eat bright colors and quickly cooked foods. Raw foods are more appropriate this season–if your digestion is strong.  Avoid heavy, greasy, fried foods that will burden the body during the heat of summer.

With the rising temperatures and our increased fervor, comes the possibility of invasion of Summer Heat (heat stroke, in western terms).  Signs of Summer Heat include: sudden high fever with profuse or no sweat, nausea, headache, extreme thirst, shortness of breath, dizziness, irritability, anger and aversion to heat.

Fortunately, nature provides us with foods that help to counter or prevent the effects of Summer Heat.  Use pungent herbs such as cayenne, mustard, cinnamon and pepper to help disperse excess heat from the body by promoting sweat.  Hibiscus, chamomile and mint teas help replenish fluids and cool the body.  Foods that specifically reduce Summer Heat include: zucchini, cucumber, pineapple, coconut, lemon, lime and seaweeds.


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Nourishing Mind, Body & Soul

Winter is here, bringing holidays, parties and feasts.
Ah, yes, food–

Nothing in life is more fundamental than the food we eat. Every day the choices we make about how we nourish ourselves, and it is these choices that can have a profound effect on our well-being.

Traditionally, a great deal of time went in to selecting and preparing meals. Ingredients were whole, minimally processed foods, and largely made up of cereal grains (whole rice, millet, etc) and vegetables. People stopped what they were doing to gather with friends and family, to eat, replenish and show appreciation. Today the trend in industrial portions of the world has moved from these traditions. Modern diets include increased animal products, processed and refined foods, additives and preservatives with little (if any) whole grains or vegetables. Many of us have taken to eating meals in a frenzied manner, barely even tasting the food we ingest. At the same time we have seen a tremendous rise in degenerative diseases, cancer, nervous disorders, heart disease, obesity, diabetes, irritable bowel and Attention Deficit Disorder –to name a few.

For many, the relationship to food has become a tainted chore. Poor eating habits like eating to fulfill emotional needs, skipping meals or binging are common, creating a myriad of other health problems.

Understanding proper nutritional habits can be some of the simplest, most profound changes that one can make in taking responsibility for our health and the well-being of the planet.

Holistic Nutrition incorporates the energetic principles of Traditional Chinese Medicine theory and detailed, cutting-edge western information. Steeped in tenants of whole food wisdom, Holistic Nutrition focuses on whole, local, organic and seasonal foods that offer the best choice for optimum health for our bodies and our planet.
The fundamental aim is to create awareness in ourselves, matching the diet to each individual while reestablishing or creating a healthy relationship to food.

The key is moderation. There is no ‘perfect’ diet and our needs change: shifting with seasons, life stages and times of illness. It is not just choosing the freshest food that matters—it is also how and with whom we eat that nourishes our entire being.

Over thousands of years the Chinese have evolved a system of medicine that has stood the test of time. Its adaptability and application is even used in nutrition! All foods can be identified by their energetic quality—do they warm the body? Cool it? Descend the energy? (good for those who are “ungrounded”), eliminate excess or counter deficiency? By understanding these qualities, one can choose foods to specifically treat patterns. Someone who is always cold, would want to increase foods that are cooked (warmer than raw) and choose foods that impart energetic warmth when eaten, such as, winter squash and cinnamon. By eating seasonally appropriate foods we can also aid our bodies in adapting to the seasonal change and build our immunity.

Besides energetics, flavors play a role. Each of the 5 flavors enter a particular organ system. By either increasing or decreasing a flavor you can address specific disharmonies. For example, a runner with very tight tendons would want to avoid excess sour that enters the Liver and overly astringes the tendons. But for someone with very loose muscle tone, that need to be tightened, the sour flavor may be appropriate.

From a western perspective foods are most often viewed by their nutrition quantity. How much vitamin C? Iron? Carbohydrates? By understanding these concepts and the role proteins, carbohydrates, vitamins and minerals play, one can identify how to improve the diet for over-all health. For example, iron deficiency (called blood deficiency in Chinese medicine) is common in many vegetarians. Utilizing concepts from both an eastern and western perspective, foods can be selected that are both blood building and high in iron, thereby possibly avoiding the need for additional supplementation.

Everyone can benefit from improved nutrition. From the young to old, sick to healthy. Foods can reduce symptoms, heal and strengthen.

Above all, the food we eat should be enjoyed—and provide nourishment for mind, body and spirit.

At Pulse we work closely with our clients to educate and inspire and understanding of nutrition and foods that will help them towards better health and vitality!

Be Well!

Contributed by April Crowell, Dipl. ABT, CHN, AOBTA CI


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