Gilles Arbour Bilingual Blog – Français/English

Entries categorized as ‘Nutrition’

Au Marché Bio ce matin

September 26, 2009 · Leave a Comment

François Tanguay - Au marché hebdomadaire de Saint-Basile-Le-Grand

François Tanguay - Au marché hebdomadaire de Saint-Basile-Le-Grand

Le très sympathique François Tanguay nous a accueilli ce matin au marché hebdomadaire de Saint-Basile-Le-Grand. Un grand succès cette année, l’expérience en plein air se poursuivra l’an prochain. François a une très belle production de légumes variés en provenance de sa petite ferme Les Jardins du petit tremble à Saint-Antoine-sur-Richelieu.

Aujourd’hui nous avons acheté des haricots noirs, du radis daikon blanc vraiment superbe, des cerises de terres, du kale noir (une rareté délicieuse et super nutritive), ainsi que du rutabaga, du cèleri, de la laitue, etc. Tout à 100% bio. C’était la dernière journée pour le marché en plein air en 2009, mais vous pouvez toujours aller voir son site web: http://www.lesjardinsdupetittremble.ca Bon appétit!

Categories: Environment · Family & Friends / Famille & Amis · Français · Nutrition · Photos

At The Farmers Market Today

July 18, 2009 · Leave a Comment

In spite of daily rain in Mont-Saint-Hilaire this summer, strawberries are exceptionally sweet and colorful this year. We bought two large trays this afternoon and Guylaine is transforming some of these wonderful little fruits into a strawberry shortcake as I am writing this. The house smells great!

Strawberries

Strawberries

The first harvest of corn is already out as well. The kernels are small with this early variety but the taste is surprisingly satisfying. When I traveled in Central America, I had the opportunity to eat red, blue, green, white, yellow, purple, dwarf, gigantic, sweet, hard, soft… corn cooked in myriad of ways – boiled, roasted with salt and lime, in soups, as a cream for breakfast , as tortillas, tostadas, delicious tamales, etc. It is such a versatile grain. Here in North America  we almost only eat the corn-on-the-cob varieties.  We ate a dozen ears for dinner – well actually 11 ears. Someone stole the twelfth one…

corn

Categories: Animal · English · Family & Friends / Famille & Amis · Nutrition · Photos

A Spittlebug in the Lovage Plant (Philaenus spumarius)

June 28, 2009 · Leave a Comment

We’ve all seen this – it looks like white frothy spit on the plant’s stem. Within that bubbly saliva-like mass there is a bug, or rather an immature nymph feeding on the plant juice. It is appropriately called the Spittlebug.

Lovage plant with Spittlebug

Lovage plant with Spittlebug froth

We were doing the first harvest of our lovage plants when we noticed few of them were “under attack” by these bugs. Lovage is one of our favorite herbs, it is great in soups and adds a distinct flavor somewhat similar to celery leaves. It grows easily and abundantly and we harvest it 2 or 3 times per summer in our backyard. Here is what this little guy looks like when it comes out of its hiding bubbles:

Spittlebug - Philaenus spumarius

Spittlebug - Philaenus spumarius

Categories: Animal · English · Nature · Nutrition · Photos · Plantes / Plants

Che Guevara Grand-Daughter’s Vegetarian Revolution!

June 20, 2009 · Leave a Comment

Not exactly what the Marxist Che had in mind but his grand-daughter Lydia Guevara is participating in her own kind of Revolution. The PETA Animal Rights organization is doing a new ad campaign enticing people to Join The Vegetarian Revolution!  In their usual provocative sexy style PETA  shows Lydia only armed (and dressed) with carrots. See the Spanish speaking video here.

PETA - Lydia Guevara

PETA - Lydia Guevara

Categories: Animal · English · Nutrition · Reflexion

Michelle Obama’s Agenda Includes Healthful Eating

March 11, 2009 · Leave a Comment

Michelle Obama

Michelle Obama

In her first weeks in the White House, Mrs. Obama has emerged as a champion of healthy food and healthy living. She has praised community vegetable gardens, opened up her own kitchen to show off the White House chefs’ prowess with vegetables and told stories about feeding less fattening foods to her daughters.

See more at http://www.nytimes.com/2009/03/11/dining/11lady.html?_r=2&ref=politics

Categories: English · Nutrition

Sauvegardons la «snicroûte»!

May 14, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Quand j’étais enfant à Saint Gabriel-de-Brandon au Québec, mon père avait l’habitude de se procurer de l’ail des bois dans le vinaigre et aussi lorsque c’était disponible des racines de «carcajou» (La dentaire à deux feuilles – Dentaria diphylla). Les anglophones appelaient cette racine «snake root» à cause de ses formes sinueuses. Les Québecois ont déformé le mot anglais et l’ont appelé la «snicroûte».

J’avais remarqué quelques rares talles de cette plante au pied du Mont-Saint-Hilaire près de chez moi. Malheureusement, on y fait présentement un développement résidentiel. Guylaine et moi avons entrepris l’an dernier de sauvegarder ces plantes. Armés de nos outils de jardin nous avons transplanté la «snicroûte» dans une partie humide de notre cour arrière. Les racines sont fragiles et elles restent en surface de la terre. Nous étions moins que certains du résultat.

Succès! Nos plantes adoptives poussent bien et ont l’air très heureuses chez nous. Les racines goûtent le raifort et ont des propriétés médicinales digestives. J’en récolterai une partie à l’automne que je dégusterai en pensant à mon père qui aimait bien la nature aussi.

Categories: Français · Nature · Nutrition · Photos · Plantes / Plants

Yes – Organic Food Is More Nutritious

April 15, 2008 · Leave a Comment

Nothing new really – we’ve known that all along. But it is great to see it is now confirmed.

Read the whole report here.

New Evidence Confirms the Nutritional Superioirty of Plant-based Organic Foods
March 18, 2008

NEW EVIDENCE SETTLES A LINGERING QUESTION -
IS ORGANIC FOOD MORE NUTRITIOUS?

Forty New Studies Published in Last Six Years Provide a Firm Foundation for Some Clear-cut Answers: Yes, Organic Plant-Based Foods ARE More Nutritious, and Provide on Average a 25% Nutrition Premium

BOULDER, Colo. – March 18, 2008 – A comprehensive review of 97 published studies comparing the nutritional quality of organic and conventional foods shows that organic plant-based foods (fruits, vegetables, grains) contain higher levels of eight of 11 nutrients studied, including significantly greater concentrations of the health-promoting polyphenols and antioxidants.

In this first comprehensive review of the scientific literature comparing nutrient levels in organic and conventional food completed since 2003, a team of scientists conclude that organically grown plant-based foods are 25% more nutrient dense, on average, and hence deliver more essential nutrients per serving or calorie consumed.

Nutrient levels were studied in 236 matched pairs of foods with scientifically valid results on the levels of 10 nutrients, plus nitrates (high levels are undesirable because of food safety risks). Each matched pair contains, for example, an apple crop grown organically and another apple crop from a nearby conventional farm with similar soils, climate, plant genetics, irrigation systems, nitrogen levels, and harvest practices.

The new report is published as a “State of Science Review” by The Organic Center and is entitled “New Evidence Confirms the Nutritional Superiority of Plant-based Organic Foods.” The co-authors are Charles Benbrook, the Center’s Chief Scientist, Xin Zhao of the University of Florida, and three Washington State University (WSU) scientists Jaime Yanez, Neal Davies, and Preston Andrews. Dr. Andrew Weil, a Center board member, wrote the “Foreword.” The full report and its executive summary are freely accessible on the Center’s website (http://www.organic-center.org/science.nutri.php?action=view&report_id=126).

Selecting Scientifically Valid Studies

The team reviewed the study design and analytical methods used in 97 published, peer-reviewed studies appearing since 1980. Earlier studies were excluded because of the lack of clear, binding definitions of organic farming, changes in analytical methods, and the recent recognition of the importance of antioxidant plant phytonutrients. Studies before 1980 rarely reported data on total antioxidant activity or total polyphenols.

Many of the 97 studies covered more than one crop or food. Out of a total of 135 study-crop combinations, 70% were deemed “acceptable” or “high quality” based on a five-point screening system. Dr. Xin Zhao of the University of Florida helped design the screening system in order to “assure the organic and conventional crops were grown on the same type of soil, using similar tillage and planting methods, the same plant variety, and well-defined and established organic and conventional farming systems.”

In addition, the team assured that the crops were picked at a comparable level of maturity, handled the same way after harvest, and tested in the same form using the same methods.

The 94 “acceptable” study-crop combinations were then reviewed for the reliability of the analytical methods used to quantify nutrient levels. On average, each study measured about ten nutrients using, on average, about six methods (some methods are able to quantify levels of several nutrients). Out of the approximate total 560 study-crop-method combinations, about 10% (55) were deemed “invalid” based on the criteria established by the team.

Team member Dr. Jaime Yanez of WSU emphasizes that “while analytical methods have steadily improved over the years, we found that some recently published high-profile papers utilized analytical methods that were ranked ‘high quality,’ while other methods in the same papers were ‘invalid’ based on our explicit criteria.”

Comparing Nutrient Levels

The team identified eight or more valid matched pairs for 10 nutrients, plus nitrates including:
- Four measures of antioxidant activity;
- Precursors of three vitamins A, C and E;
- Two minerals (phosphorous and potassium);
- Nitrates (higher levels are undesirable), and
- Total protein.

There were 191 matched pairs in which the antioxidant, vitamin and mineral levels were compared. The organic food was more nutrient dense in 119 of these pairs, or 62%, compared to 36% of the conventional matched pairs with more nutrients. There were no differences in 2% of the pairs.

The conventional samples contained modestly higher levels of protein in 85% of 27 matched pairs (an advantage), but also much higher levels of nitrates in 83% of 18 matched pairs (a nutritional and food safety disadvantage).

Matched pairs comparing potassium, phosphorous, and total protein accounted for over 75% of the 87 matched pairs in which the conventional food was more nutrient dense. In general, compared to vitamins and antioxidants, these three nutrients are of less importance because they are present in the average American diet at adequate to excessive levels.

The organic food was more nutrient dense in 75% of the matched pairs comparing total antioxidant capacity, total polyphenols, and two key flavonoids, quercetin and kaempferol. The typical American diet delivers barely half the recommended levels of these important, health-promoting nutrients, which is, according to co-author Dr. Benbrook, “a major reason why the federal government recommended such a significant increase in the number of daily servings of fruits and vegetables as part of the new USDA dietary guidelines that were issued in 2005.”

The report also describes some of the reasons rooted in plant physiology that explain why several nutrients tend to rise or fall together in organic versus conventional crops grown under comparable conditions. Co-author Dr. Preston Andrews, an expert in horticultural plant growth and development at WSU, explains that “In most well-designed comparison studies, we see marginally to markedly elevated levels of Vitamin C, total phenolics, antioxidant activity, and certain flavonoids in organic samples, coupled with generally lower levels of protein, nitrates, and beta-carotene, the precursor of Vitamin A. In most cases the explanation is rooted in the forms of nitrogen available to the plant and how the plant responds to excessive levels of readily available nitrogen.”

Magnitude of Differences Heavily Favors Organic Foods

Several methods were used to place the magnitude of the differences in nutrient levels between organic and conventional foods into perspective. In two-thirds of the matched pairs favoring the conventional food, the differences in favor of conventional were under 10%, compared to 26% of the matched pairs in which the organic food was more nutrient dense by a margin under 10%.

The premium in favor of the conventional food was 21% or greater in just 15% of the matched pairs in which the conventional food was more nutrient dense, whereas in the more nutrient dense organic food matched pairs, 41% favored organic by 21% or more, and 24% of the pairs were 31% or more nutrient dense.

The largest differences were in the case of the flavonoid quercetin, where the organic foods were 2.4-times more nutrient dense on average, and nitrates, where levels were 1.8-fold lower in organic foods (a desirable nutritional feature).

The consistency of the differences observed, the relative importance of the nutrients for which the organic samples tended to be markedly higher, and the sizable advantage in many of the organic foods within matched pairs lead the team to conclude -
“Yes, organic plant-based foods are, on average, more nutritious in terms of their nutrient density for compounds validated by this study’s rigorous methodology.”

Commenting on the results, Dr. Neal Davies, a professor in the School of Pharmacology at Washington State University, and a study co-author, said “We have carried out many careful comparisons of both nutrient levels and biological activity of antioxidant polyphenols in organic and conventional foods over the last five years. Not only are we seeing a general trend in favor of the nutrient density of organic food, but also evidence that nutrients are often present in organic foods in a more biologically active form.”

Categories: English · Nutrition

Going Nuts!

January 30, 2008 · Leave a Comment

nuts-w.jpg

Complicated but delicious. First we soak the pecans and change the water 3 to 4 times in 24 hours. All the acrid flavor disappears with the water. Then we dehydrate the nuts for up to 8 hours at low temperature (118 F). The nuts become very crisp, sweet and delicious. It’s worth it!

Categories: English · Family & Friends / Famille & Amis · Nutrition