How would you learn to cook in a healthier manner than how you were raised and still have great tasting food?

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Healthier cooking, healthier eating, and you don’t have to give up the meat. Here is a quick secret for all you meat eaters who want to eat healthier but not give up their carnivorous meat eating ways. Lol 99 % guarantee that any and all recipes found in Vegetarian diet and cook books will be “Healthy” for you.

But ooo, awww I don’t want to be a vegetarian, I love my meat! Ok so add your favourite meat to the dishes. For the most part vegetarians have to be conscious of their diets and are usually much more conscientious of the foods they eat.

Balance is the key, and to be a successful vegetarian you must balance your diet. The food is delicious and highly varied across the whole spectrum of food groups and tastes.

Personally I prefer a very spice and herbal enhanced diet and so add a lot of both to the meals I prepare.

Look up a local Vegetarian Group or organization, many of them offer cooking classes. Cooking in class is a no meat experience but when you get home you can add the meat of your choice if you absolutely have too. One of my favourite sites is the following: holistic-cooking.com/recipes.aro I’m sure you can find a comparable site or place nearby that you can learn from.

Oh and of course please look for the “Rainbow Diet”! http://www.examiner.com/x-32060-Toronto-Holistic-Health-Examiner~y2009m12d29-Holistic-Rainbow-diet-a-New-Years-resolution.

Healthier cooking, healthier eating, and you don’t have to give up the meat. Here is a quick secret for all you meat eaters who want to eat healthier but not give up their carnivorous meat eating ways. Lol 99 % guarantee that any and all recipes found in Vegetarian diet and cook books will be “Healthy�

For you. But ooo, awww I don’t want to be a vegetarian, I love my meat! Ok so add your favourite meat to the dishes.

For the most part vegetarians have to be conscious of their diets and are usually much more conscientious of the foods they eat. Balance is the key, and to be a successful vegetarian you must balance your diet. The food is delicious and highly varied across the whole spectrum of food groups and tastes.

Personally I prefer a very spice and herbal enhanced diet and so add a lot of both to the meals I prepare. Look up a local Vegetarian Group or organization, many of them offer cooking classes. Cooking in class is a no meat experience but when you get home you can add the meat of your choice if you absolutely have too.

One of my favourite sites is the following: holistic-cooking.com/recipes.aro I’m sure you can find a comparable site or place nearby that you can learn from.

Oh and of course please look for the “Rainbow Diet�! http://www.examiner.com/x-32060-Toronto-Holistic-Health-Examiner~y2009m12d29-Holistic-Rainbow-diet-a-New-Years-resolution.

Cooking is crucial to our diets. It helps us digest food without expending huge amounts of energy. It softens food, such as cellulose fiber and raw meat, that our small teeth, weak jaws and digestive systems aren't equipped to handle.

And while we might hear from raw foodists that cooking kills vitamins and minerals in food (while also denaturing enzymes that aid digestion), it turns out raw vegetables are not always healthier. A study published in The British Journal of Nutrition last year found that a group of 198 subjects who followed a strict raw food diet had normal levels of vitamin A and relatively high levels of beta-carotene (an antioxidant found in dark green and yellow fruits and vegetables), but low levels of the antioxidant lycopene. Lycopene is a red pigment found predominantly in tomatoes and other rosy fruits such as watermelon, pink guava, red bell pepper and papaya.

Several studies conducted in recent years (at Harvard Medical School, among others) have linked high intake of lycopene with a lower risk of cancer and heart attacks. Rui Hai Liu, an associate professor of food science at Cornell University who has researched lycopene, says that it may be an even more potent antioxidant than vitamin C. One 2002 study he did (published in the Journal of Agriculture and Food Chemistry) found that cooking actually boosts the amount of lycopene in tomatoes.

He tells ScientificAmerican.com that the level of one type of lycopene, cis-lycopene, in tomatoes rose 35 percent after he cooked them for 30 minutes at 190.4 degrees Fahrenheit (88 degrees Celsius). The reason, he says: the heat breaks down the plants' thick cell walls and aids the body's uptake of some nutrients that are bound to those cell walls. Cooked carrots, spinach, mushrooms, asparagus, cabbage, peppers and many other vegetables also supply more antioxidants, such as carotenoids and ferulic acid, to the body than they do when raw, Liu says.

At least, that is, if they're boiled or steamed. A January 2008 report in the Journal of Agriculture and Food Chemistry said that boiling and steaming better preserves antioxidants, particularly carotenoid, in carrots, zucchini and broccoli, than frying, though boiling was deemed the best. The researchers studied the impact of the various cooking techniques on compounds such as carotenoids, ascorbic acid and polyphenols.

Deep fried foods are notorious sources of free radicals, caused by oil being continuously oxidized when it is heated at high temperatures. These radicals, which are highly reactive because they have at least one unpaired electron, can injure cells in the body. The antioxidants in the oil and the vegetables get used up during frying in stabilizing the cycle of oxidation.

Another study published in the Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry in 2002 showed that cooking carrots increases their level of beta-carotene. Beta-carotene belongs to a group of antioxidant substances called carotenoids, which give fruits and vegetables their red, yellow, and orange colorings. The body converts beta-carotene into vitamin A, which plays an important role in vision, reproduction, bone growth and regulating the immune system.

The downside of cooking veggies, Liu says: it can destroy the vitamin C in them. He found that vitamin C levels declined by 10 percent in tomatoes cooked for two minutes—and 29 percent in tomatoes that were cooked for half an hour at 190.4 degrees F (88 degrees C). The reason is that Vitamin C, which is highly unstable, is easily degraded through oxidation, exposure to heat (it can increase the rate at which vitamin C reacts with oxygen in the air) and through cooking in water (it dissolves in water).

Liu notes, however, that the trade-off may be worth it since vitamin C is prevalent in far more fruits and vegetables than is lycopene. Among them: broccoli, oranges, cauliflower, kale and carrots. Besides, cooked vegetables retain some of their vitamin C content.

I cant really gove you an answer,but what I can give you is a way to a solution, that is you have to find the anglde that you relate to or peaks your interest. A good paper is one that people get drawn into because it reaches them ln some way.As for me WW11 to me, I think of the holocaust and the effect it had on the survivors, their families and those who stood by and did nothing until it was too late.

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