Patricia Chuey

Food and Nutrition Expert | Recipe Developer

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80 Delicious Ways to Eat More Vegetables

October 21, 2016 By Patricia Chuey

veggie-collage

Having a great supply of veggies on hand means more will get eaten. Taking steps like filling a large container in the fridge with pre-washed and cut carrots, cherry tomatoes, celery and radishes makes grabbing them super easy. Here are 80 additional ways to keep them dominating your meals…

  1. Make a delicious homemade fresh salsa by finely chopping tomatoes, peppers, garlic and cilantro. Squeeze in a little fresh lime juice and add jalapenos or red chilies if you like it hot. It’s handy for taco night or as a snack along with a few tortilla chips.
  2. Top a bed of leafy greens with warm roasted vegetables such as beets, yams or acorn squash slices.
  3. Sauté spinach, drizzle with sesame oil and a sprinkle of sesame seeds or make it gomae and serve chilled with a peanut-soy topping.
  4. Use savoy cabbage leaves as a low carb replacement for flour tortillas in wraps.
  5. Make homemade “fries” – Bake strips of fresh potato, yam or sweet potato, tossed lightly in vegetable oil with a sprinkle of sea salt.
  6. Brussels sprouts are not only available at Thanksgiving. Top with crumbled toasted walnuts, a drizzle of honey and orange or grate on a little fresh Parmesan.
  7. Serve lettuce wraps for dinner: Use crisp lettuce as a shell for minced vegetables and lentils, add grated carrot – flavor with a black bean, sweet chili or peanut sauce.
  8. Drizzle fresh tomato wedges with olive or sesame oil and balsamic vinegar.
  9. Steam broccoli and top with juicy orange slices and sunflower seeds.
  10. Marinate fresh cucumber wedges in vinegar. Add a little fresh dill for a non-pickled pickle.
  11. Make a salad of corn niblets, green and red peppers, diced carrots and red onion.
  12. Make vegetable soup from scratch – e.g. squash, minestrone, tomato, carrot, hot and sour, red pepper, fennel, corn chowder or potato-leek soup.
  13. Top celery sticks with a favourite cheese.
  14. Enhance bottled tomato sauces with extra vegetables – peppers, broccoli, mushrooms or onions.
  15. Make a vegetable-laden pizza topped with grilled eggplant, red peppers, leaves of spinach and fresh basil.
  16. Make a salt and vinegar or barbecue flavoured baked potato.
  17. Make a marinated bean salad using chickpeas, kidney beans and black beans. Add carrots, green beans and red onion for a bright and attractive boost.
  18. Make an Asian-style coleslaw of red and green cabbage, green onion, roasted almonds and sesame seeds – drizzle with sesame oil and rice vinegar. Slaw is a perfect side to fish tacos.
  19. When’s the last time you had squash? Bake, roast or broil spaghetti squash, acorn squash, pumpkin or any of the other varieties available. Ideas
  20. Sheet pan veggies. Roast a combination of cubed potatoes, onions, peppers and/or any favorite vegetables lightly drizzled with olive oil, a little salt and herbs.
  21. Make a spinach, red onion and mushroom salad.
  22. Sauté julienne carrots, zucchini and peppers for an attractive texture change to cooked vegetables.
  23. Bake a potato and top with chili or chopped, sautéed broccoli, tomato and onion.
  24. Grill vegetable kebobs made of cherry tomatoes, pineapple chunks, zucchini, red onion, baby potatoes and/or red pepper chunks.
  25. Make a salad with everything but lettuce.
  26. Make a salad with nothing but 3 or 4 different types of lettuce.
  27. Try mashed turnip or parsnip if it’s been a while. Definitely use these beauties in fall and winter stews.
  28. Keep frozen peas, beans, corn, edamame or mixed vegetables in the freezer for a quick meal addition when in a hurry.
  29. Try corn on the cob when in season topped lightly with chili or lime-flavored butter.
  30. Sauté onions, add zucchini slices and top with canned, diced tomatoes.
  31. Make a “tabouli-style” salad with lots of fresh parsley and a bit of chopped onion and tomato – add quinoa or couscous– sprinkle with olive oil and lemon juice.
  32. Make a vegetable stew of carrots, turnips, potatoes and anything else you like.
  33. Make a salad of romaine lettuce, toasted almonds, green onions and fresh or canned mandarin orange wedges.
  34. Make a coleslaw of chopped green cabbage, apples, green onion and raisins. An apple-cider vinegar based dressing finishes it perfectly.
  35. Roast an artichoke heart or make a lightened up artichoke or spinach dip.
  36. Toss together a marinated vegetable salad – marinate in a vinaigrette.
  37. Make a potato-vegetable curry.
  38. Try a mango, strawberry and cucumber salad. Mango, blueberry and cabbage is delicious too.
  39. Make a vegetable-bean chili.
  40. Top baked acorn squash chunks with apples and dried cranberries.
  41. Mix frozen peas with chives or baby pearl onions.
  42. Make a lightened up Caesar salad.
  43. Try plain, but delicious, grilled asparagus.
  44. How about good old mashed potatoes? Love potatoes, find 75 amazing potato recipes here.
  45. Grill eggplant and top with fresh herbs.
  46. Mix snow peas with yellow pepper and fresh mushroom slices.
  47. Sauté red cabbage. Drizzle with tangy vinegar.
  48. Make vegetable and herb-stuffed mushroom caps.
  49. Toss together a quick Greek salad.
  50. Sauté tomato, broccoli and/or leftover veggies with an egg for a quick breakfast scramble.
  51. Saute string beans with diced canned tomatoes.
  52. Brighten up cauliflower with chopped celery, green onions, parsley and black olives.
  53. Make a Cobb salad of cubed tomatoes, avocado, green onion, chicken and even a little bacon and egg.
  54. Make potato salad with potatoes, radishes, celery and onion – easy on the mayonnaise or go with a vinaigrette dressing instead.
  55. Try good old raw vegetables and dip. Make the dip something tasty and high quality. Don’t limit yourself to carrots and celery. Serve snap peas, pepper strips, lightly steamed and cooled asparagus or green beans, cauliflower, cherry tomatoes and mushrooms. Hummus is an easy dip to make at home.
  56. Grill polenta and top with tomato sauce, steamed veggies, and grated Parmesan.
  57. Add a tomato slice to your breakfast sandwich or make it a toasted BLT.
  58. Bake spaghetti squash “pasta” with vegetable tomato sauce and melted mozzarella for a much lower calorie or gluten-free “noodle” than regular spaghetti. Thinly cut strips of zucchini also work as a noodle replacement.
  59. Top a dark green salad with grilled tofu, marinated in an orange-ginger dressing.
  60. Make a grilled vegetable sandwich, using as many colours of vegetables as possible or grate vegetables like beets or carrots to add to sandwiches in place of or along with lettuce.
  61. Make vegetable tofu kebobs (marinate tofu with teriyaki sauce first, then thread & grill: baste kebobs with marinade during cooking).
  62. Make a frittata (potato and vegetable omelette) with a side salad topped with a sprinkle of cheese.
  63. Puree cooked squash, carrots, cauliflower or other veggies and tuck them into pasta sauces or even baked goods like muffins.
  64. Grate fresh carrots or beets on to just about any grain or veggie dish for a colourful, crunchy boost.
  65. Make cauliflower, potato or yam “steaks’ on the barbecue by slicing into thick pieces, drizzling with a little oil and grilling.
  66. Make a commitment to try a veggie you haven’t had for a long while at least once a month. Visiting an attractive vegetable market can be very inspiring on this front. Celeriac? Fennel? Okra? Jicama? A new type of squash perhaps?
  67. Use lightly cooked sliced yam in the toaster instead of bread.
  68. Use mashed avocado or pureed cooked vegetables like carrots as a sandwich spread.
  69. Make an abundant mushroom saute using at least 2 or 3 different mushrooms.
  70. Turn leftover mashed potatoes into breakfast fritters by mixing with eggs, minced veggies and green onion and then pan frying.
  71. Google and try a good ratatouille or minestrone recipe.
  72. For a cold, crunchy treat, wash and cut the ends off a bunch or two of radishes. Leave them in a bowl in the fridge right at eye level for the kids or grownups. They’ll get eaten very quickly.
  73. Make homemade less greasy baked onion rings.
  74. Add ruby red radicchio to a green salad to instantly ramp it up a notch.
  75. Create your own house masterpiece of a tomato sauce. Make it uniquely yours with custom vegetable additions whether button mushrooms, fresh herbs, grated carrot or pureed cooked cauliflower, for example. Season with basil and oregano or spicy cayenne or jalapeno peppers.
  76. Let the kids make a different salad to accompany dinner each night, if not at least once a week. Or, set up a mini salad bar like pictured above and let them assemble their own unique salad creations.
  77. Ask for mostly vegetables on your plate when eating out (half the plate). Even at the sushi place. A side of stir fried veggies maybe or a veggie-based soup?
  78. Slice zucchini lengthwise into thick pieces and grill. Serve with a sprinkle of Parmesan or salsa.
  79. Add vegetables to the fruit you blend into a smoothie. For example, kale or spinach leaves with apple and pineapple or beets and carrots in an orange-strawberry smoothie
  80. Try different vegetable combinations for a change from the usual stir-fry:
  •  Use only green vegetables like broccoli, celery, green beans and green peppers.
  •  Try a 3-pepper stir-fry with red, green and yellow peppers.
  •  Make it Asian-style with Chinese broccoli, Bok choy, mini-corn cobs and water chestnuts.
  • Use just red and green peppers, canned diced tomatoes and fresh basil and oregano for an Italian twist.

Google “vegetable recipes” for endless inspiration. www.lentils.ca also has some beautiful ideas for vegetarian dishes combining lentils and vegetables.

Cheers!

 

Filed Under: Fresh Ideas Tagged With: 80 ideas for eating more vegetables, eat vegetables, how to eat more vegetables, vegetable ideas, vegetable recipes

6 Easy Ways to Eat More Squash

October 18, 2016 By Patricia Chuey

squash-collage-3

An absolute beauty of a vegetable, unfortunately squash doesn’t even make the top ten list of the most consumed vegetables. Yet, winter squash (acorn, butternut, pumpkin, kabocha, spaghetti squash…) is more than worthy. It’s a great source of vitamins, fibre and deliciousness, practically as versatile as potatoes. It’s local in Canada and although available all year long, it’s in season and at it’s peak from September through December. Store it in a cool, dark place – doesn’t have to be in the fridge until cooked.

Do not Fear: Six Delicious Ways to Use Squash

  1. Roast it to use as a side dish. To make life easier, use this HACK: Slice the top and bottom off of a whole squash, poke it to make a few holes, microwave for about 2-3 minutes, then enjoy easy peeling and chopping compared to fearing for your life (or at least the safety of your hand) with the hard skin of squash and a sharp knife. Acorn squash is delicious roasted in halves (at 400 degrees F for about 40 minutes) and served with a drizzle of maple syrup or balsamic vinegar. It can also be cut into wedges, drizzled with a little olive or canola oil and sea salt then roasted for about 30 minutes, flip it over half way through roasting. Make clean up easier by lining the baking pan with parchment paper before roasting.  (Squash halves or large chunks will take longer to roast than small cubes.)
  1. Sub spaghetti squash for regular spaghetti noodles. Simply roast the squash halves then scoop out the “noodles”. This cuts the calories in a pasta dish by 85% (30 calories/cup of spaghetti squash versus 220 calories/cup of regular spaghetti noodles). Another delicious idea is to roast the halves topped with tomato sauce, basil and feta for lasagna-like deliciousness.
  1. Toss squash cubes into a salad. Peel and cube squash, toss with olive or canola oil and sea salt and roast for about 25 minutes. Cool, then mix with leafy greens, sun-dried tomatoes, feta and a lemon-garlic vinaigrette. Cubes of roasted squash also go great in a breakfast burrito or curry dish.
  1. Puree into soup. Simply roast the squash cubes while sauteeing onion, garlic, celery and carrots in a little oil as a soup base. Add vegetable or chicken broth and herbs to the soup. Simply stir in the pureed cooked squash. HACK: use frozen cranberries as a pretty garnish that also functions to help cool hot soup when serving. Cranberry sauce is another delicious accompaniment to just about any roasted squash dish. Also local and in season at roughly the same time as squash, don’t reserve nutritious and attractive cranberries for Thanksgiving and Christmas only. HACK: freeze portions of leftover homemade cranberry sauce for a tangy addition to smoothies or warm oatmeal.
  1. Bake with squash. Use pureed cooked squash or pumpkin as you would applesauce for delicious muffins and loaves that aren’t dry. Cinnamon, nutmeg, allspice and ginger are squash’s dream teammates in fall season baked goods. Simply google pumpkin muffins for many delicious recipes.
  1. And don’t forget to use the seeds! They’re an excellent source of protein. Shelled pumpkin seeds, aka pepitas,  have 9 grams of protein in just a quarter cup!!! (approx 200 kcal). Buy already shelled pumpkin seeds (known as pepitas) and toast for extra yumminess. If you’re so inclined, you can easily roast the whole seeds from pumpkin or any squash you like.

PS – Squash is a great source of vitamin E, vitamin A, fiber and B vitamins. Au naturel, it provides only 40 calories/100 g serving. Enjoy!

Watch these squash tips on CTV Morning Live Vancouver, October, 2016 here

Filed Under: Fresh Ideas Tagged With: cranberries, kitchen hacks, local vegetables, peeling squash, pumpkin seeds, roasted squash, squash soup, winter squash

Good Borscht

September 26, 2016 By Patricia Chuey

christmas-eve-borscht

With cooler weather and shorter days the desire for warm and cozy meals increases. From Grandma’s apple pie to mashed potatoes, comfort food takes many forms. To me, no food soothes the soul more than a Ukrainian meal served with family gathered at the table. As a kid growing up on the prairies, perogies, cabbage rolls, sausage and borscht were part of  every special occasion meal.  Of these lovingly homemade delicacies, borscht was most likely to show up outside of special celebrations. It was abundant in September with the beet harvest and also served randomly at other points in the year when Mom would thaw a batch she had tucked away in the freezer.

With a hearty beet harvest from the garden this year, a big batch of borscht was in order today!

Beet Borscht Makes 8 servings

  • 1 Tbsp canola oil
  • 1 medium yellow onion, chopped
  • 2 cloves garlic, minced
  • 1 celery stalk, chopped
  • 1 large carrot, chopped
  • 2 cups red or green cabbage, chopped
  • 1 tsp salt
  • 1 large potato, chopped
  • 8 small beets, peeled and chopped or grated
  • ½ cup chopped green beans or snap peas, optional
  • 6 cups reduced-sodium vegetable or chicken stock
  • 1 can (796 mL) diced tomatoes
  • 3 cups water
  • 1 Tbsp white vinegar
  • ½ cup light sour cream, optional
  • 1 Tbsp chopped fresh dill, optional
  • salt and pepper to taste
  1. In a large soup pot, heat oil over medium. Add onions and sauté for about 5 minutes. Add garlic, celery, carrots, cabbage and salt and sauté for an additional 8-10 minutes.
  2. Add potato, beets and green beans or peas, if using. Pour in stock, tomatoes and water.
  3. Add vinegar to give tartness and keep the colour of the beets.
  4. Bring to a boil, reduce heat, cover and simmer for about 30 minutes or until vegetables are tender.
  5. Serve garnished with a little sour cream and fresh dill, if desired. Extra soup freezes well.

Za zdorovie! (Cheers!)

Filed Under: Recipes Tagged With: beets, borscht, recipe, soup, Ukrainian food

There’s Not Much a Dose of Saskatchewan Can’t Fix: 10 Farm Facts to Reassure You That Your Food is Safe

September 19, 2016 By Patricia Chuey

farm-collage

I always embrace any opportunity to visit my home province. In addition to getting back to see family a few times each year, every so often I’m fortunate that my work also takes me there.

I recently had the opportunity to attend an agricultural tour sponsored by Farm and Food Care Saskatchewan and a number of groups representing many of the main foods grown or raised in Saskatchewan including flax, pulses, lentils, mustard (and Frenchs), barley, canola, chicken, eggs, beef and pork along with tourism Saskatchewan and Crop Life Canada. This type of tour came at a very important point in my professional life in regularly facing questions and grave concerns from consumers about quality in the food supply. I wish I could have magically had every person whose ever asked me about organic, free range, hormones, steroids, animal welfare, genetic modification and related issues by my side as our group of food writers, media dietitians and chefs from North America met many farmers on their farms, toured an egg processing plant, visited agriculture and bioresource greenhouses and the University of Saskatchewan Grains Innovation Laboratory. (We toured a prairie brewery too!) But, having them all join me wasn’t possible.

Because I couldn’t do that, I want to share 10 thoughts from many critical conversations on the tour. I left feeling renewed and more confident than ever in the quality of the food our Canadian farmers provide to the marketplace. Although I still feel heavy-hearted for the many people I’ve met who feel completely confused about what to eat or to safely feed their family, in many ways I felt both ‘cured’ of mass confusion and energized to continue sharing the truth of what I witnessed. Our group also left very well fed and richer in spirit for having experienced the passion and commitment these food producers put into the food they feed their families and share with Canada and the world.

There were countless reminders of the conscientious commitment farmers make to providing safe food to consumers and the challenges they face from often misinformed, yet vocal, adversaries. Here are a few points I encourage thinking about:

  1. Less than 2% of Canadians are directly involved in farming to provide food for the remaining 98%. Typically, the more removed a person is from the farm, the more critical they are of farming. So unfortunate and a source of mass confusion and misinformation. It’s worth finding out the farm experience and background from the person who may be criticizing farming. Asking questions is great and very strongly encouraged. Unqualified folks scaring people about farm-raised food, isn’t.
  2. Canadian farmers are very open to talking about their operations and have nothing to hide. The industry is strictly regulated and uses the latest SAFE technology to produce food that is nutritious and affordable. Big corporations have NOT taken over Canadian farms. More than 97% of Canadian farms are family owned and operated.
  3. There is zero difference nutritionally between white and brown eggs. The difference lies in the feather colour of the hens they come from. Brown are perceived as healthier. What applies to brown bread or brown rice versus white with fibre content, is NOT relevant to eggs. If you buy free range or free run eggs and the shells happen to be brown, know that isn’t a characteristic indicating a free range egg, but simply a brown-feathered hen. Free range eggs also come in white shells. There’s actually more risk of contamination in free range eggs as the conditions in which the chickens are raised can’t be monitored quite as carefully as in indoor operations. Egg farmers are committed to providing a variety of egg choices in the marketplace in response to consumer demand. I suggested the egg producers start selling a dozen odd-shaped or non-uniform eggs if we really want to see “natural” eggs. Consumers want ‘natural’ yet also want 12 eggs that look the same. Go figure?! Maybe someday NUeggs (Non-uniform eggs) will be a thing! #HeardItHereFirst
  4. Egg yolk colour is determined by the type of feed a hen eats. Wheat-based diets produce pale yolks while corn or alfalfa-based produce darker yellow. Yolk colour is not an indication of freshness or nutritional value. Organic eggs are fed certified organic grains which cost more.
  5. It is ILLEGAL in Canada to use hormones or antibiotics in chickens. “Ads promoting hormone-free chicken are like adds promoting water that is wet”. NO pigs, chickens, turkeys or egg-laying hens in our country are fed hormones. It has been illegal for decades. And they’re not used in milk production in Canada either. Some beef farmers do use approved hormones in cattle. Hormone levels in beef from cattle treated with hormones are virtually the same as beef from untreated cattle once in the food system. Any hormones are administered to cattle in safe time before they are made available for food. Calves are immunized for the same reasons we immunize children – to keep them healthy.
  6. Why the heck don’t we eat even more lentils and other pulses? If we are truly serious about food sustainability let’s eat more of these affordable, nutritious legumes from our home country – the world’s largest EXPORTER of pulses!
  7. Farmers follow strict federal laws for humane animal treatment. A Canadian farmer is not keeping you out of his or her egg operation because anything controversial is going on, but rather for strict biosecurity to protect the chickens. Farmers are as shocked and enraged as everyone else, if not more so, when situations of animal cruelty happen. I chatted with passionate, professional egg farmers who are considering taking on the expense of having large viewing windows and video cameras in the next barns they build to reassure consumers. These kind of measures becoming standard will increase egg prices. (I don’t require a web cam on my dentist’s office or other professional I trust.)
  8. Farmers are the original active environmentalists. Their livelihood depends on healthy soil, water and air to grow crops and raise livestock. We met sixth generation farmers, farmers whose healthy 87 and 91 year old parents still live and work on the farm, rugged male farmers who tear up when talking about the damage misinformation is doing to food security in Canada, strong, young female farmers who wrangle cattle and much more. The common thread: a deep commitment to the environment, passion, hard work ethic and a safe, healthy food supply for all. We were humbled when the combine drivers actually stopped during active harvest to talk to us (VERY expensive to their operation to do so) and saddened to hear farmers say that MISINFORMATION IS MORE OF A THREAT and worry to today’s farmers than crop-destruction from pests or the weather conditions. Crazy and very disturbing. We should all be concerned about that.
  9. Canadians pay a mere 10% of their available income for food, one of the lowest percentages in the world yet for top quality domestic food. Without the use of APPROVED pesticides to prevent complete crop destruction we’d risk complete crop devastation and food shortages. If no approved, regulated pesticides and GMOs were ever used, Canadian farmers would need 37 million more acres to grow the same amount of food as today.
  10. There is more risk in food raised by people who “dabble” in farming as a sideline than food produced on regulated, inspected large farm operations. That said, farmers are very happy to share gardening tips and encourage us to use any available land to grow at least some of our own food.

We have a WORLD CLASS food system that is envied around the world. We need to understand it, celebrate and support it. Absolutely learn and make informed decisions about crop spraying, GMOs, organic vs conventional and where food comes from but avoid information from unreliable, misinformed people that is negatively impacting the very food system that feeds us and many others on our planet. I remain 100% confident that it makes more sense to question unrecognizable ingredients in packaged food (even the organic ones) with lengthy ingredients lists and long shelf lives than the wholesome home grown WHOLE food from Canadian farms.

Thank you Saskatchewan!

(Sincere thanks also to the chefs and hosts at the Delta Bessborough, Wilbar Farms, Wilbar Cattle Company, Agar’s Corner, Riverside Country Club, Wanuskewin Heritage Park, Boffins Public House and the University of Saskatchewan)

Reference: The Real Dirt on Farming

Filed Under: ChueyOnThis Tagged With: Canada's food system, chickens, eggs, farm tour, farming, GMO, hormones, Saskatchewan food, world class food system

Garbage Food

August 15, 2016 By Patricia Chuey

Garbage Food

Immersed in the food and nutrition profession, I’m always surveying the landscape and trying to come up with simple yet impactful messaging to encourage eating well and feeling great about it.

I continue to promote taking an 80-20 approach to healthy eating. Perfection is never the goal or the requirement in achieving optimal health. Where being mindful of the source and quality of what we eat is important, being meticulously “clean” about eating in every choice is also not necessary. Washing our hands before we eat is actually the most important and proven effective “clean eating” measure we can take in preventing illness. Cook at home and you’ll also be well on your way to mastering clean eating!

You’ve heard me speak about how doing diet math and precisely tracking each morsel you eat by using the numbers on the Nutrition Facts section of food labels isn’t the answer either. Instead, reading the Ingredients List and noting what the food is actually made of is useful. Many of the very best foods out there, think fruits and vegetables, have no labels at all and minimal packaging. They don’t have to try to convince us they’re good for us with bold  misleading claims about what they don’t contain. I’ve also encouraged choosing mostly food that rots if left on the counter for too long since foods with an eternal shelf life don’t typically provide the natural nourishment we require.

To all of these guiding principles and in an ongoing effort to make all of this even easier, I’m adding this latest rule of thumb for choosing great food:

Decent food doesn’t generate excess garbage.

Garbage food promotes both garbage as waste/litter and garbage behaviour.

Sadly, I’m reminded of this every time I head out on one of my regular running routes. I run up a rural-ish road that takes me past a lush green sports field and along a path leading to spectacular ocean and mountain vistas. The scenery is pristine, fresh and energizing. I can’t imagine throwing a speck of litter onto this sacred ground and the beauty that’s all around.

I think, or at least hope, it’s the minority, but every time I head out on this route I see garbage at various points on the side of the road. I never see salad bowls, nut butter jars, fish bones, vitamin bottles or paper bags from wholegrain bread strewn along the route. What is always there is pop cans, potato chip bags, chocolate bar wrappers, slurpee cups or fast food shrapnel – all litter from what can be considered unhealthy food we should eat less than 20% of the time, if at all. Note: Real ‘rock stars’ don’t litter. There are also always cigarette butts on the ground. A serious fire hazard in this wooded part of the country, I’ve always wondered how our beautiful earth can possibly be considered someone’s ashtray??? Sober or not when doing it, I wonder if some people aren’t even conscious of the fact they’re littering? That seemed to be the case in a news clip I saw where a local reporter interviewed a young couple who denied littering mere moments after throwing their McWaste out their car window – an action that was captured on film.

Perhaps the worst food I’ve ever come across for lack of nutrition along with over-packaging is those gimmicks marketed as a kid’s lunch or snack pack. As I ran along on a gorgeous blue sky day and saw a couple of those on the ground, all I could think about was how garbage food leads to garbage behaviour. I had to write this post because I suspect many of my nature-loving friends have also made this observation at one point or another and been baffled by it. If I see a trash bin nearby, I pick up the trash to discard properly. I then wash my hands while shaking my head in wonder. Then I reflect on the walking group I can start someday for earth-conscious nature-loving retired folk who value fresh air, getting outside for walks in the company of friends and doing something to keep the neighbourhood beautiful.

I know I’m speaking to the converted, but continue to respect your body and the earth by eating wholesome, low garbage-generating food. Ingesting quality, nourishing food also leads to clearer thinking and most likely the kind of thoughts that would prevent throwing garbage out your car window or anywhere you feel instead of in a proper recycling or trash bin. Also encourage kids to eat for their health and the health of their planet.

Filed Under: ChueyOnThis Tagged With: bad food=bad habits, clean eating, garbage, litter, waste

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Patricia Chuey

It has been my life’s work to create peace of mind around food and health. What an absolute joy to connect with so many who have shared, done the work and now reap the benefits of an energized, healthy life!

Recipes


Delicious, nourishing creations to add to your collection. Easy enough for any day. Impressive enough for entertaining!

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Chuey On This


There's always something in the food news to chew on. Patricia shares perspective.

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Fresh Ideas


Fun, inspiring food tips and tricks from the kitchen.

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Emma Lee

Patricia Chuey was a freelance writer for Urbanbaby & Toddler magazine for 9 years. Her articles were not only accurate and timely but also engaging and well written. In readership surveys, her articles received some of the highest marks from our discerning readers.

Jack Hourigan

Patricia brings vast nutritional knowledge, quick wit and professionalism to every show. She is a pleasure to work with, is a talented dietitian and has a calming presence on and off camera…everyone should have a Patricia Chuey in their lives…we’d all be a little happier and healthier!

Intrawest Staff

This was the BEST lunch and learn I have ever been to. Informative, not lecturing like this topic can sometimes be. Patricia was a very effective presenter and I found it incredibly beneficial to me. She was fantastic; informative, funny and interesting!

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You make me look sooo good. The staff are buzzing around talking to each other and saying how great you are. Thank you once again for making our staff appreciation day function so successful.

Tori Wesszer

“Patricia was the very first mentor I ever had, and I’ve looked up to her ever since the day I walked into her office.  An extremely accomplished business woman and dietitian, Patricia’s passion for helping people succeed is truly unprecedented.  I’ve had the great fortune of learning from Patricia over the years, and can put… Read more “Tori Wesszer”

Deanie Foley Gillespie

Patricia developed 96 original recipes for BC Tree Fruits. In addition to providing recipe development and nutritional analysis, she also determines if recipes are suitable for low fat, heart healthy and diabetic diets. Patricia always met the challenge of creating recipes that target our numerous fruit commodities as she brings vast industry knowledge to the… Read more “Deanie Foley Gillespie”

Ann Collette

I have had the pleasure of working with Patricia Chuey in her capacity as a dietitian, recipe developer, writer and consultant for more than 15 years. Patricia has truly distinguished herself, not only for her comprehensive knowledge of nutrition and contemporary nutrition-related issues but also her empirical knowledge of health in general – attributes that… Read more “Ann Collette”

Jeff Bohnen

Patricia came back to Intrawest for a return engagement as a guest of our Health & Safety Committee, and was just as great the second time around! Not only is she funny and engaging, but she also has an amazing ability to be a teacher, not a preacher. Her easy-to-remember, common sense approach to nutrition… Read more “Jeff Bohnen”

Karen Stark

Working with Patricia was a wonderful experience, her knowledge, experience and passion for food was very apparent. She worked on several tofu recipes for us and for our tofu cookbook that helped it become a great seller on store shelves

Karen Meurer

Patricia exudes her own joy de vivre and is always ready to roll. She is graceful and professional while sharing her knowledge and expertise with our viewers. She is someone you can relate to and look forward to seeing. Patricia “invites you in” and you want to stay. She is the perfect expert/co-host.

Rhonda Klatik

I’ve had the pleasure of working with Patricia for the past 9 years conducting Health and Wealth seminars. Patricia is one of the most captivating and enjoyable speakers I know. Her subtle humour and extensive knowledge of nutrition and well-being amazes her audiences. I recommend attending her highly sought after seminars. You’ll learn the key… Read more “Rhonda Klatik”

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Eating well is just one spoke in the wheel of health. An active life...

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