Friday, March 27, 2015

Healing Vegitarian Paleo Salad

This salad is an unusual mix with a really delicious taste, and only takes 15-20 minutes to prepare.

THIS RECIPE IS VEGETARIAN, PALEO Diet Friendly Options, GLUTEN-FREE, and HEALTHY in a CHINESE MEDICINE sense. IT CAN NOURISH SPLEEN QI, NOURISH YIN and mildly CLEAR HEAT. Combines cooked and raw, eaten Warm.
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I created this recipe with a friend who was post-surgery recovery in mind, to aid warding off potential infections. Both Hyssop and Mint have heat clearing functions. Hyssop has historical use dating back to the Bible, where it is often referred to in ceremonial cleaning and cleansing people of infections diseases.
INGREDIENTS:
1 can chick peas
1 purple sweet potato
1 regular sweet potato
~1/4 cup pecan nuts
~1/8 cup pistachio nuts, un-shelled.
4 tomatoes
sprig of fresh hyssop
sprig of fresh mint
Pepper or lemon pepper
METHOD: 
1) Cut up one large sweet potato (or two small sweet potatoes, I like to use half white/purple one and half the regular orange sweet potato), boil in pot on the stove until soft - 10 - 15 minutes.
2) Prepare the salad dressing
  • Finely chop one sprig of fresh Hyssop and 1 large sprig of fresh mint.
  • Add a generous amount of extra virgin olive oil (about 30-50ml)
  • Add a large handful of pecan nuts and 2 teaspoons of un-shelled pistachio nuts
  • Grind some pepper or lemon-pepper into the salad dressing mix.
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3) Cut up tomatoes, and any additional variation ingredients
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4) Combine Tomatoes (and any additions) with 1 can of chick peas (drained) in a large, heat proof bowl.
5) once cooked potatoes are soft (but not mushy) remove from heat, strain water from them set aside in strainer ready to add at the very end.
6) Pour salad dressing mixture over the ingredients, stirring thoroughly,  then add potatoes and stir the mixture around carefully to ensure all combined but potatoes don't go mushy.
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VARIATION INGREDIENTS:
1/2 Purple onion - Moves Qi (chee or energy) for Liver Qi Stagnation
PALEO DIET OPTION - Remove Chick Peas and increase cooked Vegitables, adding variety from Purple carrot, carrot or pumpkin. Baby Spinach leaves can be added just before serving.

Sunday, February 22, 2015

Tips For Going Sugar-Free


Tips For Going Sugar-Free 
- Marie Hopkinson

Trying to kick Refined sugar in your life? 

1) Go cold turkey - it’s better just to quit sugar, throw away your sugary
treats and spend a few days letting your body and mind adjust. Pick a time when things aren't too stressful. After a week, the cravings will significantly subside and your body will thank you enormously.

2) Remove temptation - throw away or put the chocolates and lollies out of sight so your not visually tempted.

3) Plan your treats. Quitting sugar doesn't mean you can’t have any treats. There are tons of sugar-free recipes online. Refined sugar replacements like maple syrup, coconut sugar, dried fruits, agave syrup can be used in cooking or making raw sweet treats. I recommend getting away from the sweet flavour as much as possible but having access to some of these in the first week or 2 will make it easier.

4) Look after your Spleen. The more you nurture your Spleen Energy, the less your body will crave sugar and the better you will feel.

Why Should I quit sugar? 

Sweet is the flavour of the spleen energy in Chinese medicine. It’s a very important organ for digestive processes. A small amount of sweet helps the Spleen, but too much can overwhelm the Spleen Qi (pronounced “chee”). When we crave sweet especially after eating a meal, it indicates the Spleen Qi is weak. (You will usually get diarrhoea or loose bowel movements, and see toothmarks on the tongue as well). Since the Spleen makes energy for your body to function, when it can’t diegest well, it can be a cause of tiredness.

Refined cane sugar overwhelms the Spleen energy. In a biomedical sense, this corelates with rise and subsequent drop of blood sugar levels. This gives you an instant burst of energy or buzz, followed by a low...usually lower than you felt before you ate the chocolate or lollies.

Sweet-natured foods that can nurture the Spleen energy include root vegetables like sweet potatoes, carrots, pumpkin and unrefined, cooked grains like barley, rice and millet.

In a biomedical sense, theses foods have a low gylcemic index, which means they take longer to break down and don’t require the same biochemical reaction that refined sugary-sweet natured foods do. They won’t quickly spike and lower your blood sugar level.

The golden rule of Chinese diet therapy, and longevity practices in general is EVERYTHING IN MODERATION. Balance isn’t just a  token yin-yang symbol, but it’s a guiding key principal to achieve health and longevity in life.

FREE Sugar-Free RECIPES ARE AVAILABLE ON OUR WEBSITE

www.metrohealth.com.au 

Metro Health and Medicine
200 Whatley Crs 
Maylands, WA 6051


Monday, January 19, 2015

Beat the Heat



If you live in Australia, no doubt you know it’s summer. Where I am in Perth, it's been up to 44 degrees already! Did you know that the weather is significant in the cause of disease according to Chinese medicine? 

Heat is one of “6 Pathogens”, that can invade the body and cause disharmonies. Heat can commonly invade the channels of the neck, face and throat causing sore-throat, hayfever or seasonal allergies. Symptoms of heat include pain – usually severe or throbbing, as heat dries up fluids it can cause body fluids to congeal. For example phlegm will get thicker, yellow or sticky, urine can become more concentrated, darker and the tongue will get redder and more dry (as the moisture of the mouth can be dried up by Heat).

Heat clearing foods can be used as a preventative during the hot weather. Fruit & Veg that are watery and not too sweet like Watermelon, cucumber, lettuce are good at keeping away heat invasions. Drinking Chrysanthemum (Ju Hua) honeysuckle(Jin Yin Hua) and dandelion (Pu Gong Ying) herbs (by themselves or add to green tea) are more targeted ways to clear heat – especially from the face and throat.

Heat can invade not only via the environment but from our diet also. In Australia this weekend (26th January) we are coming up to Australia Day – a time of national celebration where the classic Aussie thing to do is to drink alcohol. Alcohol’s nature is essentially warm-hot, so combining lots of drinking with warm weather is a perfect environment to cause Heat-invasion disharmonies. Intoxication from drinking can cause what we refer to in Chinese medicine as “toxic heat”. 

Diarrhea, vomiting, breakouts of acne are all common hangover symptoms which essentially come from the self-induced toxic heat invasion. The simplest way to avoid this is to drink less! Space drinks out with water, use some self-control, and enjoy Australia day. If you do find yourself suffering the effects of a toxic-heat hangover Chinese medicine employs more “detox” methods to clear out the toxic heat. Our Tong Kuai Hangover tea is based on the idea of clearing toxic heat from the digestive system via the bowels. Watermelon is a good hangover food as well.    

Wednesday, December 17, 2014

You're a Peach


In Chinese herbal medicine, the kernel of peaches are used as a herb, but it's fruit also has medicinal properties. While the kernels must be used by a trained herbalist as they contain poison, which is controlled by their preparation methods, the fruit is quite easily accessible and safe to use.

Peaches are coming into season in summer, soon you'll find all kinds of delicious juicy peaches around you in your local fruit and veg store.

The nature of the peach is sweet and warm, which means it's nourishing to the digestive system (Spleen-Stomach in CM) and it's moisturizing nature makes it great fruit for habitual constipation sufferers.

A recipe for high blood pressure is eating one or two fresh peaches (without stone or skin) daily.

Green (unripe) peach can be used as well:

To make the "Dried Green Peach"  simply dry unripe green peaches, with stone removed, in the sun.

The dried green peach can then be used for other recipes:

1) High Blood Pressure: Simmer 30g of dried green peach in water, drinking the liquid as you would tea.

2) For seminal emissions or spontaneous night sweating: Stir-fry 30g of dried green peach until almost scorched, then add 30g of Chinese Dates and water. Steam to cook and eat in the evening before sleep.

Hope you have fun with peaches this summer!

Monday, November 17, 2014

Diaphragm Breathing – A proven way to reduce stress

Stress comes in many forms, especially at this time of the year we can be worried about money, job security, family pressure, exams and end of study pressure or just feeling really busy as many festive season events start to fill up our calender. 

In one journal article, authors Varvogli and Darviri 1 listed Diaphragmatic Breathing as one of eleven methods for stress reduction shown by research to be effective. 

Diaphragm breathing is something I use myself a lot. As a singer and public speaker it’s an awesome technique to make your voice more powerful and long lasting but it’s medical effects are also useful for our body as a stress reduction technique. It’s even now considered evidence based medicine.

Breathing from your diaphragm is something that’s easy to learn. Once you've practiced it, it’s quite simple to initiate in any stressful situation as well as a general practice to use to improve health.

Diaphragm breathing is the way babies breathe. If you've ever watched a new born baby breathing while sleeping you’ll usually see their abdomen moving up and down as they lie there peacefully. Your diaphragm is a big muscle – imagine a jellyfish attaching to all the bony parts across the middle of your torso – the lumbar spine and your lower ribs. It separates the lungs from the rest of your abdominal contents.

It’s easy to see the diaphragm in action although we cannot directly see or palpate very much of this muscle.

When you breathe with your diaphragm your chest should not rise up and down, rather your belly will push out when you breathe in.

As a singer, I've learned lots of techniques to learn for diaphragm breathing. The best one to get started is to lie flat on the ground or bed and start to expand your belly as you breathe in. You can put an object you can see on your abdomen – if your doing it correctly your object should go up and down as you breathe in and out.

Diaphragm breathing helps you oxygenate your body more effectively and uses one muscle – the diaphragm as opposed to lots of other muscles which are located around your shoulders and neck to pull your chest up or expand your rib cage (the intercostal muscles). Diaphragm breathing kind of gives these muscles a rest!

You can Google other diaphragm exercises or ask your health care practitioner to show you some Diaphragm breathing exercises.

REFERENCES:

1. Varvogli L, Darviri C. Stress Management Techniques: evidence-based procedures that reduce stress and promote health. Health Science Journal. 2011;5(2):74-89.


Monday, November 3, 2014

Mulberry Power

Mulberries are coming in season now in Australia. According to Chinese medicine they have really unique properties for a fruit.

Most fruits have a heat-clearing nature, but Mulberries are a tonic. They tonify the Kidney Energy (Qi) and Blood. These functions mean they are great food for:

- Helping hair growth
- Helping hair look lustrous and moisturised.
- General weakness, tiredness and low energy from deficiency.
- Helping the kind of insomnia of waking up in the night (especially when there is night sweating)

Mulberries are a special fruit because you can't buy them from a shop, so you need to pick them yourself, making their Qi (Energy) more potent because they are so fresh.

Try some mulberries for yourself and realize the power of this nutritious, medicinal food

Mulberries can be mixed with Chinese herbs for a really yummy tonic food - Go Qi Zi (GoJi Berries) and Da Zao (Red Dates) are medicinal foods.

Wednesday, October 15, 2014

Spring is Here!


To paraphrase from the Yellow Emperor, "Spring is the season where all living creatures grow"

Growth is a vital part of our lives, not just physically but mentally. The spring season brings warmpth that pushes our Yang Qi (Energy) from it's hybernative state of winter to the exterior of the body. The sun rises earlier and in the early days of spring you can feel the increasingly warmer early mornings...your body is teling you to get up earlier!

Spring is the best season to do new things.

Spring is associated with the Wood element according to the five elements theory. Wood is about growth, budding, regenration, new, creativity. The movement of this element is in a spreading direction - outwards, upwards and downwards (all directions).

It's easy to observe this inclination of growth and regeneration in nature. Flowers bloom, new seedlings sprout and animals are born in the spring season.  But what about in our bodies? Do you observe the inclination to grow, to learn, to do new things with the onset of spring?

Awareness is the first step. As you become aware of enviornmental prompts, allow your body and mind the time to explore the different lifestyle of the spring season.

Great things to do in spring are:
- Learn a musical instrument

- Take an art or dance class or workshop

- Go for a drive to the countryside, stop for a moment and take a walk in the bush.

- Get around sunrise and take a walk in your local park

- Eat regular, lightly cooked meals

- If you had a fully cooked diet in winter, you can start to add a few raw foods to your diet, like some fruit, or a salad with your cooked meats.


- Drink Chrysanthemum (Ju Hua) or Jasmine tea.

- Do any kind of exercise or increase the intensity of your exercise

- Sing

- Laugh

Spring is a good season to challenge ourselves to do new things mentally as well as getting physically active. If you live in Australia, we have Christmas around the corner, there is still time to embark on something new, read a book, change careers or make changes to our mental outlook before the new year hits us!


Seasonally, wind is a prevalent pathogen in spring which can often cause allergies, skin conditions and hayfever to be agrrivated. Chinese herbs, tea (check out our new Spring Tea below) and acupuncture can be effective treatments for these conditions. For appoiontments, please contact our clinic via our website www.metrohealth.com.au