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Vegan Raw Food Cleanse

Celebrate the inauguration of a “new you” with a vegan raw food cleanse. It just might be the change you’re looking for. We consulted with nutrition guru and personal chef Sitarani “Sita” Brian to find a cleanse that would detoxify our bodies without depriving us entirely of solid food. Her solution: A surprisingly delicious (and easy to stick to) vegan raw food cleanse.

You’re probably already familiar with the term vegan, but what exactly does “raw food” refer to? Quite simply, raw foodists believe that foods lose their nutritional value and become harmful to the human body, if heated above 115-degrees F. Believe it or not, within the raw foodism following, there exist fruitarians who only eat fruit, and sproutarians who only eat food that has literally sprouted like bean sprouts.

In the one-week program Chef Sita designed for us, we enjoyed a colorful array of meals that were designed to rid our bodies of toxins, and provide valuable enzymes, vitamins, minerals, and antioxidants that boost energy and promote overall health.

Our satisfying menu included three meals per day with recipes like Tri-Colored Lasagna with Pesto, Tomato Sauce and Pine Nut Ricotta, Thai Salad with Marinated Greens, Carrots, Mango, Herbs and Sesame Cashews, Stuffed Pepper with Nut Cheese, Currants and Parsley, Israeli Salad with Falafel and Cashew Hummus, Fig and Grape Cleansing Shake, Carrot Ginger Juice, and Rich Cacao Milk.

The favorite of the recipes: Tri-Colored Lasagna with Pesto, Tomato Sauce and Pine Nut Ricotta is a great one to try, if you’re skeptical that raw food can taste good. This recipe comes from Raw Food/Real World written by Sarma Melngailis and Matthew Kenney of NYC restaurant Pure Food & Wine.

Tri-Colored Lasagna with Pesto, Tomato Sauce and Pine Nut Ricotta
serves 6

For the pignoli ricotta:
2 cups pine nuts
2 tablespoons lemon juice
2 tablespoons nutritional yeast
1 teaspoon salt
6 tablespoons filtered water

Place the pignoli nuts, lemon juice, nutritional yeast, and salt in a food processor and pulse a few times, until thoroughly combined.  Gradually add the water and process until the texture becomes fluffy like ricotta.

For the tomato sauce:
2 cups sun-dried tomatoes
1 small tomato, diced
¼ small onion, chopped
2 tablespoons lemon juice
¼ cup extra virgin olive oil
1 tablespoon plus 1 teaspoons agave nectar
2 teaspoons sea salt
Pinch red pepper flakes

Squeeze and drain as much of the water out of the soaked sun-dried tomatoes as you can.  Add the drained tomatoes to a Vita-Mix or high-speed blender with the remaining ingredients and blend until smooth.

For the basil-pistachio pesto:
2 cups packed basil leaves
½ cup pine nuts
¼ cup plus 2 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil
1 teaspoon sea salt
Pinch freshly ground black pepper

Place the pesto ingredients in a food processor and blend until well combined but still slightly chunky.

For the assembly:
3 medium zucchini, ends trimmed
2 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil
1 tablespoon finely chopped fresh oregano
1 tablespoon fresh thyme
Pinch sea salt
Pinch freshly ground black pepper
3 medium tomatoes, cut in half and then sliced
Whole basil leaves for garnish

1.  Cut the zucchini crosswise in half, or into 3-inch lengths.  Using a mandoline or vegetable peeler, cut the zucchini lengthwise into very thin slices.  In a medium bowl, toss the zucchini slices with the olive oil, oregano, thyme, salt, and pepper.

2.  Line the bottom of a 9 by 13-inch baking dish with a layer of zucchini slices, each one slightly overlapping another.  Spread about 1/3 of the tomato sauce over it and top with small dollops of “ricotta” and pesto, using about 1/3 of each.  Layer on about ½ of the tomato slices.  Add another layer of zucchini slices and repeat twice more with the tomato sauce, “ricotta,” pesto, and tomato slices.  Serve immediately or cover with plastic and let sit at room temperature for a few hours.  Garnish with basil leaves.

3.  Alternatively, to make individual servings, place about 3 zucchini slices, slightly overlapping, in the center of each serving plate, to make a square shape.  Spread tomato sauce over the zucchini, top with small dollops of “ricotta” and pesto and a few small tomato slices.  Repeat twice more.  Garnish with basil leaves.  Any leftover lasagna, whether made in a tray or individually, will taste great if kept in the refrigerator for at least a day or more, but it won’t look as good (which doesn’t matter if you’re standing by yourself and eating it directly from the refrigerator, as we’ve been known to do at home).

Interested in trying out a vegan raw food cleanse of your own?
Consult with Chef Sita at www.ChefSita.com or email her at sita@chefsita.com. In addition to vegan and raw foods, Sita offers multi-regional cuisine, health supportive techniques and diet management.

Food for Thought

In this month’s edition of the SideDish e-newsletter, we feature a recipe for Chunky Avocado Guacamole with Chips – just in time for your Super Bowl party.

Did you know… the Hass Avocado Board anticipates that Super Bowl fans will consume an estimated 46.3 million pounds of Hass avocados during the Feb. 1 game in Tampa?

Already knew that? Here’s more delicious food for thought to snack on….

What animal does Roquefort cheese come from?
Sheep

What salad with raw egg was created in México, not Rome?
Caesar

How much cholesterol is in 2 cups of coconut milk?

Zero.

Which country produces the largest amount of food after the US?
Brazil

What is the difference between crimini and portabella mushrooms?
Portabellas are bigger and 24 hours older

In what order were utensils created (forks, etc)?
Knives, Spoons, and lastly forks in the 11th century.

What do you call a dried, smoked jalapeno?
Chipotle

Frankfurter Sausages were first created in what country?
China

What fresh fruit replaced America’s favorite from apples?
Bananas

In what city did the first fortune cookie appear?
SF (la is also an acceptable debate)

Cool as a Cucumber- are they really cool? True or false?
The inside temperature can be up to 20 degrees colder than the outside.

What legume is used in the manufacturing of dynamite?

Peanuts

It takes 80,000 flowers to make one pound of what aromatic spice?
Saffron