Category: Tips

  • The Best Way to Pit an Avocado

    Here is the best way, hands down (and hands safe!) to pit an avocado. Oh, sure, we know all the tips and ways that others remove the pit from their avocados, but our way is truly the best way to remove that seed – it’s fast, it’s easy, it’s safe, and it leaves the rest of the avocado intact.

    Some people will tell you to split the avocado in half, and then drive a knife into the seed, using the knife to twist the pit out of the avocado. This not only isn’t very safe, but will sometimes lead to the pit splitting, but still embedded in the avocado.

    Others will tell you to take it out with a spoon, or to squeeze it out. These methods do work, but they are messy, and often result in sacrificing part of the avocado flesh.

    Our method has none of these problems, making it not only neat and easy, but also frustration free.

    Here’s how to do it. You will need:

    Avocado
    Progressive fruit scoop (see link below)

    Split avocado in half…

     

    avocado-pit-1

     

    …and gently glide the fruit loop under the pit.

     

    pit-avocado-2

     

    And there you have it. A perfectly pitted avocado.

     

    pitted-avocado

     

    You can buy a set of 3 fruit loops (3 different sizes) for just $11.00 on Amazon:

    Buy Progressive International 3 Piece Fruit Scoops Set on Amazon

  • Vegetarian Marshmallows (Actually, Vegan Marshmallows!)

    Order vegetarian marshmallows (vegan marshmallows!) from Vegan Essentials

    At last, a source for fantastic vegetarian marshmallows (which are, in fact, even vegan marshmallows)! This means that they are also kosher marshmallows (although not necessarily Kosher marshmallows, as in officially approved – but they are free of animal products).

    A lot of people may not realize that marshmallows are not vegetarian or vegan. That’s because usually marshmallow ingredients include gelatin (or gelatine), which traditionally comes from the bones of animals.

    Now, I don’t know the secret to Sweet and Sara’s vegan marshmallow recipe, but let me tell you that these are some amazing, gourmet marshmallows. And so we were very sad when our local connection for this confection, 3 Little Figs, closed down. But they were nice enough to put me in touch with the source – who in turn told me where we could get them online.

    And so, I am telling you!

    Order vegetarian marshmallows (vegan marshmallows!) from Vegan Essentials

  • Cheese That’s Safe for Vegetarians to Eat – Even Vegetarian Brie!

    You know that most cheese is made with rennet, right? And you know where rennet comes from, right? If you don’t, well, brace yourself.

    Rennet is derived from the enzymes in a newborn baby calf’s stomach. That’s right, nearly as soon as the baby is born, they slaughter it to get those enzymes so that they can make the cheese from the milk that its mother will no longer be able to feed it. (Heartbreaking, isn’t it?)

    But it is possible to make cheese without using animal rennet. In fact, any cheese that is marked “Kosher”, by definition cannot have a product derived from a dead animal mixed in with the dairy, so it will not have animal rennet.

    Unfortunately, a lot of Kosher cheese (not all, but a lot) is also rather, well, bland (to be kind).

    Other than that, it’s hard to find cheese that you can know does not use animal rennet. For some reason, many cheese producers simply list in the ingredients, instead of rennet, the word “enzymes”. And enzymes can mean either animal rennet, or non-animal rennet. And I certainly don’t want to chance it, do you?

    But here’s something interesting – there are cheese producers who make really good cheese, and who don’t use animal rennet. Why they don’t shout this from the rooftops is beyond me. They are missing a big market.

    One example is Tillamook, a cheese that is sold in many supermarkets across the United States. If you look at their ingredient list, you’ll find that it clearly says “We do not use animal rennet.” But you have to really look. All Tillamook cheese is safe for vegetarians – and free from animal rennet – except for their special 2 year reserve cheddar, which I’ve only seen a few times anywhere. (I know all this because we toured the Tillamook factory, up on Oregon, and they are very proud of the fact that they use no animal rennet, and they warned us about that special 2 year reserve cheddar.)

    We particularly go through a lot of Tillamook’s medium cheddar, which we buy in 2 lb. loaves, and my husband and I also love their sharp cheddar, but they also make other standards, such as Monterey Jack, Colby Jack, and pepper Jack.

    A brand with which you may be less familiar, but which is well-known in California, and also rennet free, and organic to boot, is Horizon.

    Horizon is awesome because in addition to being organic and rennet free, they sell a lot of pre-shredded cheese, which is awesome for making pizza, Mexican food, etc.. And they sell several varieties, for example they sell a shredded mozzarella, a shredded cheddar, and a shredded Monterey Jack. They even sell a blend of shredded cheddar, colby and jack!

    The most recent example of really good cheese that is vegetarian, but you’d never know it without asking, is the cheese from the Marin French Cheese Company. They make, among other yummy cheeses, the wonderful Rouge et Noir Triple Creme Brie. Now, nowhere on the package will you find them telling you that it’s vegetarian and rennet-free. They use that horribly ambiguous word “enzymes” in the ingredients list. But I happened to be at Whole Foods one day, and they had a Marin French Cheese Company rep there handing out samples, and he was telling the world that it was vegetarian. “Are you sure?” I asked. “Absolutely,” he responded, “you can even look it up on our website.” And so I could, and you can too – you can read about how all of their cheeses are rennet-free here.

    You can buy their Rouge et Noir Triple Creme Brie here.

    It’s wonderful served with some fresh pears. And it’s fantastic with the top skin sliced off, and warmed apricot preserves poured on top.

    So there you have it. If cheese is part of your diet, now you can have delicious cheese that you know to be vegetarian.

  • How to Assemble a Samson Juicer – the Video

    This video is part 3 of our 3-part series, How to Disassemble, Clean, and Assemble Your Samson Juicer. These easy to follow short videos show you how to take apart your Samson Juicer, how to easily clean your Samson Juicer in under 5 minutes, and how to put your Samson Juicer back together!

    For more info on the Samson Juicer click the picture:

    Samson Ultra Electric Twin Gear Wheatgrass Juicer - Perfect Juice Machine for Juicing Fruits, Vegetables, Wheat Grass, Barley Grass & More.

  • How to Clean a Samson Juicer – the Video

    This video is part 2 of our 3-part series, How to Disassemble, Clean, and Assemble Your Samson Juicer. These easy to follow short videos show you how to take apart your Samson Juicer, how to easily clean your Samson Juicer in under 5 minutes, and how to put your Samson Juicer back together!

    These items were used in this video (click on pictures for more information):

    Club1 Nail Scrub Brush

    GILLETTE CO BRAUN DIV #D4010 HS Osc Toothbrush

    MIU France PE Flexible Cutting Board, 3 pack

    Samson Ultra Electric Twin Gear Wheatgrass Juicer - Perfect Juice Machine for Juicing Fruits, Vegetables, Wheat Grass, Barley Grass & More.

  • How to Disassemble a Samson Juicer – the Video

    I couldn’t find any decent instructions for how to disassemble, clean, and assemble our Samson Juicer – so I made some!

    Here’s the video for how to take apart the Samson Juicer for cleaning. The videos for how to clean the Samson Juicer and how to assemble the Samson Juicer will be up on the site soon.

    For more info about the Samson Juicer, click the picture:

    Samson Ultra Electric Twin Gear Wheatgrass Juicer - Perfect Juice Machine for Juicing Fruits, Vegetables, Wheat Grass, Barley Grass & More.

  • How to Clean Teflex Sheets

    Cleaning Teflex sheets isn’t hard, but it can be unwieldy. Here is a tip to clean Teflex sheets easily, and with minimum of fuss!

    I was in a store a few days ago, and I happened to notice a box, 14″ x 14″, made to hold scrapbooking paper. It was about 4 inches deep, with a hinged lid. Nearly perfect for holding Teflex sheets.

    I bought the box, and ran home with it. I laid my Teflex sheets in the bottom of the box, and filled it with hot, soapy water. Then I left the Teflex sheets soak for a while, while I did some other things.

    When I came back to the box, I opened the lid, which opened all the way out and became a work surface for scrubbing the Teflex sheets! (Not that they really need scrubbing – wiping will usually do.)

    It was incredibly easy to put the box next to the sink, remove a sheet from the soapy water, slide it onto the opened lid, give it a scrub, and rinse it in the sink!

    See?:

    And where do you put your Teflex sheets to dry?

    Why, on the racks in your dehydrator, of course!

    The only thing which would make this more perfect would be if I could find a box which was 14.5″ x 14.5″, just to allow a tiny bit more room.

  • A New Use for Your Old Oven! Raw Food Warmer!

    Do you have a gas oven with a pilot light? If so, your oven may be perfect for gently warming those raw dishes which cry out to be served slightly warm!

    Remember that a basic precept to eating raw is that the delicious and nutritious enzymes, anti-oxidants, and other rawiddy goodness are lost or destroyed when food is subjected to temperatures above about 115 degrees farenheit. This is why so many recipes call for using the dehydrator at gentle temperatures.

    Well, I have a gas stove, and it turns out that the pilot light causes the oven to be at a constant temperature of about 120. All the time. Always there, always waiting. And my oven has a little tab I can flip out to keep the door opened just a crack (but you could easily use, say, a wooden spoon to accomplish the same thing), and when that door stays open just a crack, it brings the temperature down to about 105.

    Perfect for gently bringing a chilled dish to serving temperature!