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Polenta

November 4, 2024 by towers

You have likely heard of polenta but maybe never tried it.  If you like corn, give it a try!

Polenta is a gluten-free starch that is quite satiating and best served during the cooler seasons when you are wanting a warming food.  Plain polenta can be served alone or with a full meal as the starch.  It is quick to cook AND there are lots of variations that are fun so be sure to experiment using some of the suggestions listed below.

  • Add 1/3 cup of grated pecorino or parmesan cheese to the polenta right after it is cooked.  Serve hot.
  • Add 1 cup chopped mushrooms (shitake is good) and/or frozen corn to cooked polenta.  Cook on a simmer for 10 minutes more.  Add cayenne ot hot sauce to taste for a spicier version.  Serve hot.
  • Make your favorite tomato sauce (optional to add ground beef, venison, or turkey meat) and spoon over each bowl of hot polenta.
  • Make polenta “bread sticks”.  Cook the basic polenta and immediately pour (should be the consistency of thick batter) into a baking pan lined with parchment paper to about 1/2 to 3/4 ” thickness.  Cover and refrigerate for at least 3 hours or overnight.  Once it hardens it will be easy to cut into strips (about 1″ by 4″).  These strips can be “breaded”–melt a Tbsp. of ghee in a baking tray and spread to coat the bottom of the pan.  Place the polenta sticks in the pan and then flip them so that they get coated on both sides.   Optional: sprinkle with grated pecorino or parmesan cheese and bake in a pre-heated 350 degree oven until heated through and slightly browned.  Serve immediately as part of a meal or as an appetizer.

Basic Polenta:

Serves 2

1 cup organic polenta yellow corn meal ( found in health food stores)

3 cups water

1 tsp salt

1 Tbsp. ghee

Put corn meal in a saucepan and add the water and salt.  Stir and begin to heat on medium high while stirring.  Once mixture starts to boil lower heat to low and cover with the lid cracked.  Stir every few minutes so the corn meal does not stick or clump simmering for 15 minutes.  Remove from heat and add ghee.  Stir and serve immediately or follow one of the suggestions listed above.

 

Filed Under: Monica's Recipes, Uncategorized Tagged With: gluten-free starch, polenta

Check It Out!

November 1, 2024 by towers

Please explain why you came to our office.

“Came to Dr. Burgoon due to mid to low back pain keeping me from my work and helping my family.”

Please describe your response to treatment.

“I was nervous due to the sensitive/sharp pains I was experiencing and not sure what to expect.  Dr. Burgoon’s calm and assured demeanor allowed me to settle down and trust his process.  He got me back to work within 2 days and has kept me moving well and getting stronger since.  I have told everyone I know to come check him out!”

~41 year-old male

Filed Under: Patient Testimonials

Don’t be Stiff

November 1, 2024 by towers

Please explain why you came to our office.

“I came in for neck and back pain.  There was stiffness and numbness in upper back.”

Please describe your response to care.

“Very good after 2 weeks of treatment.  My neck and back are much better and allow more movement.”

44 year-old male

Filed Under: Patient Testimonials

“Mocktail” Drink

October 14, 2024 by towers

We had a “mocktail” at our local farm to table restaurant, River and Rail, and it was very refreshing and delicious! Here is my version.  It can be made with carbonated water or plain water.  You will need to have some ginger tea made ahead of time. You could use a teabag but I like to make this concentrated and from fresh ginger root–for one serving use 2 tsp. grated ginger root simmered in 1/2 cup of water for 15 minutes before straining and cooling.

Serves 1

1/3 cup ginger tea (it should be concentrated as described above)

juice of 1/2 lemon

2 tsp. raw apple cider vinegar

2 tsp. maple syrup or 1 tsp. of maple syrup and monk fruit powder to taste

1 cup water, carbonated or plain

Mix all ingredients in a glass.  If you want it sweeter either add another tsp. of maple syrup or if you want to reduce the sugar content, use 1 tsp of maple syrup and enough monk fruit powder to sweeten to taste.  Add ice if desired.  Serve immediately.

 

 

 

 

 

Filed Under: Monica's Recipes Tagged With: apple cider vinegar drink recipe, ginger drink recipe, mocktail recipe

Superfast Superfood Salad Dressing

October 6, 2024 by towers

Hooked on store-bought bottled salad dressing?  Or are you eating salads with no dressing?  (I hope you are eating a salad every day!) There is a solution and a better option to these two less than desirable choices!

The oils in almost all commercial salad dressings are high in omega-6 fatty acids.  These are pro-inflammatory and saturate the American diet to the point that the healthy ratio of about 1:1 of omega 6 to omega 3 is greater than 20 to 1 for the average American.  Very unhealthy!  This is a compelling reason to stop consuming all vegetable oils so check your ingredient labels on all (not just salad dressing) food products–if you see canola, soy, safflower, sunflower, corn, or cottonseed oils do not buy!  And for goodness sakes, don’t use them for cooking or baking.

Now as for not using any dressing on your salad, this is not only unappetizing in my opinion but counter-productive for absorbing the nutrients in the vegetables in the salad.  The oil will allow your absorption of more nutrients from the vegetables.  So if you are short on time and can’t make a more nuanced dressing such as the honey mustard dressing I posted previously, give this a try.  It is simple, tasty, and made with truly superfood ingredients.  No mixing ahead–just drizzle right on to the salad.

 

For each salad, drizzle in this order:

1 Tbsp. organic extra-virgin olive oil

1 tsp. raw organic apple cider vinegar

1/2 tsp honey

Season with salt and pepper to taste.  If you want to get fancy, season with your favorite dried herbs.

Toss the salad and serve immediately.

Filed Under: Monica's Recipes Tagged With: easy salad dressing, superfood salad dressing

Baby’s Amazing Recovery

September 24, 2024 by towers

Please explain why you came to our office.

“My eleven-month old had one HIB vaccine.   For two weeks after he struggled with fever, congestion, fever again and stiff neck.  He was miserable.  After the stiff neck, I started to worry about what was really going on!  I called Dr. Burgoon’s office and Monica told me to come in as soon as I could that morning.  (This was also after we saw our pediatrician three times in that 2 week span with no answers as to why/what was going on.)

Please describe your response to treatment.

“Dr Burgoon was barely able to touch my child’s neck/shoulders without my baby crying in pain.  He did a light adjustment and had us come back a few days later.  The change in my baby later the same day after the first adjustment was AMAZING.  He started moving his head, smiling, playing….nothing short of amazing!

Filed Under: Patient Testimonials

Chicken with Basil

August 30, 2024 by towers

Perfect for the late summer season, this one is very quick to put together if you have a few items in your refrigerator–namely, leftover chicken meat, basil oil (my version of pesto), and some chicken broth.  Follow the links for my recipes for these three items.

This dish can be eaten alone as a protein and vegetable combination for a light meal or with a starch such as rice or noodles for a more filling meal.  A cup of other vegetables would be a nice addition–zucchini, carrot, and green or red sweet pepper or a combination of them.  If you eat cheese, some grated pecorino or parmesan as a garnish would be delicious!

Serves 2:

1 cup chopped yellow onion

1 T ghee

approximately 2 cups chopped chicken meat

1 large tomato, chopped (I skinned and seeded the quartered tomato before chopping.)

3 T basil oil

1/2 cup chicken broth

Salt to taste

Saute onion in melted ghee on a skillet over medium heat for 3-5 minutes and if you are adding any additional vegetables (chop them fine so that they cook quickly), add them so that they cook with the onion.  Stir in chopped tomato,  chicken meat, and chicken broth and heat through for 5 minutes.  Remove from heat and stir in  basil oil.  Salt to taste.  Serve immediately.

Filed Under: Monica's Recipes

Cucumber Salad

July 29, 2024 by towers

It’s cucumber season and a cucumber salad is perfect for the summer heat we’ve been experiencing.  I make this salad when I don’t have any  lettuce growing in the garden–it’s actually a nice change!  If you want to beef it up, add 1/2 cup cooked chick peas or boiled eggs (slice in half and top with 1 tsp of the dressing) or feta cheese.

cucumber salad
Serves 2

1 cucumber, peeled, quartered lengthwise, and chopped in 1/4 inch pieces

1 carrot, grated

1/2 sweet red pepper or 1 tomato, chopped

1/2 cup cultured vegetables such as sauerkraut (I had sauerkraut made from red Chinese cabbage)

miso honey mustard dressing

Mix all ingredients and top with dressing.   The dressing is salty so you may not need to salt the salad.   Serve immediately or the salad will get “soupy”.

 

Filed Under: Monica's Recipes

Healthier and Straighter!

July 15, 2024 by towers

Please explain why you came to our office.

“Family and friends suggested this office.  Kind and professional staff.”

Please describe your response to treatment.

“Feels healthier after appointment.  Back feels straighter.”

~20 year-old female

Filed Under: Patient Testimonials

What You Need to Know About Hydration

June 26, 2024 by towers

WHAT YOU NEED TO KNOW ABOUT HYDRATING

New research confirms wisdom of ancient strategies.  Another reason to include more fresh vegetables and herbs in your diet and to purify your drinking/cooking water.  Staying hydrated does not equate with chugging water!

Excerpts from the book “Quench” by Dana Cohen, MD and Gina Bria, pgs 47-48

“…Water science at the molecular level has the scientific community abuzz, and it’s shaping our understanding of how water functions, and more relevant for you, it is the basis of Quench…..This new science reveals that the water in our cells is a different type of water:  the same kind of water we can find in plants.  We already know that water exists as a liquid, a gas, or a solid, but new findings are uncovering a fourth, gel-like state of water, just 10 percent more viscous than the liquid state.  This change in water phases takes place at the molecular level.  We can’t see the molecular change with our naked eye, but in this state, water hydrates more efficiently.  For you, it means you can drink less liquid, yet be more hydrated.”

“Some of our best clues about what foods hydrate effectively come from extreme environments where access to abundant water is limited.  Here is where we most see humans turning to foods to supplement their water sources and hydration needs….Archeological and forensic analysis of ancient pottery from Hualcayan in the High Andes show surprising evidence that stews were the staple form of hydration.  They included gelatins released by grains….heating starch grains in the presence of water breaks down the crystalline layers and causes the starches to gelatinize, or form a viscous complex with water.  These grain-released gelatins further enhanced the absorptive and therefore hydrating power of the cooking water found in stew….Indeed, these ancient strategies of changing the hydrating power of water by adding plants such as grains, herbs, seeds, or roots were deployed throughout the ages, on all continents.  Overwhelming evidence resides in ethnographic and medieval records showing plants were used for hydration and the purification of water.  Slow-cooked stews and pottages released more gelatin, changing the molecular structure of cooking liquid.  Beers and meads accomplished the same change through fermentation and were globally used strategies to further purify, or replace entirely, contaminated or tainted waters.”

Monica’s general recommendations for implementing this information:

~Since hydration is essential for weight loss and for boosting metabolic rate, Americans need to eat more fresh vegetables, fruits , herb teas, stews, soups, cooked whole grains such as millet, quinoa, brown rice (NOT more breads, crackers, pasta, and other baked flour products AND NOT bottled juices, sodas, and sweetened and/or caffeinated drinks).

~Herb teas, smoothies containing 1 tsp of ground flax or chia seeds, freshly made vegetable juice, fermented vegetables such as sauerkraut, apple cider vinegar and lemon added to drinking water will all assist in staying hydrated without chugging excess water.

~Need help working out the details for your individual needs?  Schedule a nutrition appointment with Monica.

Filed Under: Healthy Habits

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Roanoke, VA 24015
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