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Healthy Food

Aryurvedic Cooking Class in Palo Alto

spices-indian

I may need a refresher course as I hope to engage in a cleansing ritual start of 2017 – for that review of basic Aryuvedic cooking is essential. I highly recommend
Jyoti and here’s some endorsements I thought was well deserving of her course… The course I took was 4-days but this is a more “express” course done in 3 days.

Sri Sri Ayurveda Cookery Course: “Art of Wholesome Cooking”:)
Sponsoring organization: Art of Living Foundation USA
Dates:Jan 27 2017 – Jan 29 2017
Timings: Friday 6:30pm – 9:30pm Saturday & Sunday: 10:00am – 4:00pm
Venue: Private Residence in Palo Alto
Teacher: Jyoti Jain
Contact:
Jyoti Jain @ 6505969583 OR
jyoti@jainfamily.com

As a comment for the course I took … it was a wonderful review of Aryuvedic concepts such as Doshas (your unique “constitutions”) and Gunas (qualities, innate tendencies – can i say …Dharma?) in the context of Samkhya philosophy … Having grown up with a lot of diversity in people, foods, cultures … I tend to think that we probably should put everything in cultural context – for example, in Aryuvedic cooking, mushrooms are considered a no-no but from other Asian food cultures, that hold mushrooms as almost medicinal, this concept is questioned. I tend to think that we can just take what works in the local indiginous land of that practitioner. Maybe back in India, eating mushrooms caused some unwanted outcome but in China, the opposite held true … and there are SO MANY varieties of mushrooms, some poisonous, some hallucinatory, some just yummy. In Japan, dehydrated Shiitake might be used as soup stock for vegans and vegetarians so …I would not rule them out. SO, the theory and the philosophy probably has to adapt to the land of the people … SO in USA, in California … here again, somethings are probably alright to change and adapt as long as the intention remains the same.

I appreciated my exposure into various spices and how they are used as spices are not something that we use heavily in Japanese culture. Japanese taste is all about the beauty of artful presentation, the simplicity, non-oil but savory UMAMI based taste, natural seasonings, delicate flavoring and as this famous Shojin cuisine chef master said … it’s about how we master pure “water” and how skillful we are in the art of cutting and slicing, i.e., the mastery over the knife use (after all it’s a sword/shogun culture with precision based forms and shapes) in how we cook. It’s not so much about heat and very little oil … so …I really enjoyed learning about a cooking method completely different. We did share one thing though – that was, how we appreciate plant-based foods and believe that food serves as our best … medicine.
img_7945img_8012 Cooking with Gratitude … OMG, so Japanese… so many common threads I recognize.img_7942Could these be? Yes, sticks of butter, organic butter from Whole Foods.img_7865Not Vegan as we made Ghee!Clarified Butter … definitely an ingredient NOT used in Japanese cuisine so …interesting especially the current vogues seems to vilify butter – perhaps it’s more about moderation and portion control:)
img_7866It might be interesting to explore use of EV olive oil or avocado oil to replace here in California just as an option:)img_7917Spices and Herbs are the key !img_7948 While these recommended books may help, best to learn from Jyoti herself – it’s all 5 senses at work when you learn from a good teacher. Once you have the foundation learned from a good teacher, you can then make substitutions and modifications to – experiment to fit your own unique needs. That’s the fun.

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Beautiful Places Healthy Living

What’s essential?

Run into this sign at a certain apothecary I’d like to go to more often.
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Anything Cute Beautiful People Healthy Living

It’s all about the Touch

Gratitude for this past year when I had the chance to interface with my favorite Reiki therapist in the Emerald Hills. Its a lovely space she creates, imbued with natural soft light. Surrounded by rainbow of crystals for each chakra care … she sets the tone for a lovely meditation practice followed by a delicious Japanese macrobiotics influenced luncheon in the woodsy living area. How I miss it! Her technique brought home and applied here for doggie restorative. Gratitude for the healers in our world. Namaste:)
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This hyper biting dog is now … sweet.
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It’s no magic.