Raw Food Workshop

I’ve decided to run some more raw food workshops here in London. It will be a combination of raw food recipes and a wild food walk. I’ll take you step by step how to make a selection of different foods including chocolate pudding, salads and dressings, maybe some pesto if I’ve still got basil growing, cake and chocolate. You will get to eat each recipe we make throughout the day, I’ll keep the group size to about six so there will be plenty to go round!

Edible rose hipWe’ll also go for a walk and see what wild foods we can find. Yesterday I found these rose hips which are delicious, a friend said they were just like sweeties. We should be able to collect some greens to have with our salad.

The dates are Saturday September 30th, Saturday October 7th or Sunday October 22nd. The cost for the day including food is £65, see the Funky Raw website for more info and booking, or send me an email if you have any questions.

Review of Breakthrough

Here’s my review of the film Breakthrough, a raw documentary by Storm Talifero. (First published in Funky Raw Issue 7)

Breakthrough Title
Shale Eating Fruit
Storm playing the flute
Gardening
Climbing
Food prep in the raw kitchen
This is a beautiful film. Storm is 57 but he certainly doesn’t look it. He runs, climbs mountains and makes films. He’s been eating raw for over 30 years. It’s slow and deliberate with beautiful natural music and imagery – if you are in a hurry this film is not for you!The film gives us a snapshot of how Storm, Jinjee and their 4 children live their lives. It shows how the children learn through play, and not by going to school. They are growing food in the garden and making animations and having lots of fun.It is very inspirational, just seeing the amount of energy the children have is amazing. Storm and Jinjee agree that it is necessary to stay active for health and they go mountain climbing, playing tag, etc.

The film also shows two of their family members who come and stay to learn about raw and health and weight loss on raw.

My only criticism is that I think the film could have been edited a little more, it’s an hour and 45 minutes long and there are times when it drags a little, but all in all it’s worth it.

You can purchase the film on DVD for only $19.95 (about £10) including worldwide delivery.

 

Bindweed

If you are a gardener, I’m sure you’ve come across bindweed. It’s quite an invasive weed which grows up other plants and chokes them. At the festival someone (can’t remember who) asked me “Can you eat bindweed?” I replied that I didn’t think so. Imagine my surprise when I decided to research this and found that it is indeed edible! According to Plants for a Future (PFAF), it’s “Edibility Rating” is only 2 out of 5 and it advises caution as it is a purgative, but I tried it and was pleasantly surprised, it has a fairly mild flavour and it’s tender.

By the way, the Plants for a Future website www.pfaf.org is an excellent resource for researching plants.

Festival and blended soup with seaweed recipe

Wow, the festival was amazing. So many wonderful people all in the same place. It was hard work for me at times but from the response I think it was worth it! Hopefully some people will send me some photos soon…

We’ve just started Sea Spaghetti at Funky Raw which I am so pleased about.  It’s my favourite type of seaweed and I used to eat it all the time when I lived in Spain but I’ve never found it over here so I imported my own. So this is what I made for dinner last night:

  • 2 tomatoes
  • 1 carrot
  • a few pieces of broccoli
  • about 10g of Sea Spaghetti soaked for 30 mins
  • a load of wild greens
  • 1 spring onion
  • a couple of mushrooms
  • a small piece of ginger
  • a small piece of fresh chili
  • water

I chopped the veg then put everything (including the soak water from the seaweed) into my blender and blended. As usual, I stirred in a tablespoon of flax oil before I ate. Delicious, and amazingly enough for me, a meal without an avocado!

Food log: Green Soup and Sesame Desert

Ok, here’s what I ate yesterday, all times are very approximate:

9am – a mango and about 250 grams of Lychees
11am – a banana and then chocolate pudding
afternoon – another banana or two, a large handful of figs
6pm – a Whoosh bar
7:30pm – green soup (recipe below)
11pm – sesame, banana and currant desert (recipe below)

So, eating at 11pm is not really to be recommended but sometimes that’s just how my day works out.

To make my soup, I blended the following with some water:

  • 2 sticks of celery
  • lots of wild greens (100g or more)
  • small bowl of laver seaweed, with soak water
  • 1 small avocado
  • a few basil leaves
  • a bit of chili and ginger
  • ground coriander seeds and cardamon pod

I grated some parmesan cheese on top and stirred in some flax oil.

Maybe not the most exciting soup I’ve ever made, but I liked it!

To make the sesame desert, I first soaked some currants for about 6 hours. I then put the following into the grinder.

  • 4 tablespoons of sesame seeds
  • 2 tablespoons of flax seeds
  • 1 tablespoon of raw cacao nibs

I ground all that up then put it in a bowl with a banana and the soak water from the currants and mashed it all up. I then stirred in the currants. Delicious.

Sweetcorn and Tomato Sauce

Went to the raw buffet at Spirited Palace last night, was great, so many people doing raw now. I was getting asked quite a bit what I eat so I’ll try and do some full food diaries. Today I ate: (all times very approximate)

  • 10:30am – 2 bananas
  • 12:30pm – 2 mangos
  • 2pm – 1 banana and then chocolate pudding (not exactly as in this recipe)
  • 6pm – a handful of figs
  • 8pm – salad (recipe below)
  • 9:30pm – chocolate desert (recipe below)

Sweetcorn and Tomato Sauce

  • corn cut from one cob
  • 2 tomatoes
  • 4 basil leaves
  • small piece of red onion
  • small piece of fresh chili
  • small piece of fresh ginger
  • coriander seeds and flax seeds, ground

Blend! I served this over a large plate of wild greens (between 100 and 150 grams of greens), some hemp greens, a bit of broccoli and some tiny yellow courgettes I got from the farmers market this morning. I then grated some parmesan cheese on top and a drizzle of flax oil.

Chocolate Desert

This was an experiment, I was just playing around to see what I could make so all quantities are very approximate:

I first put the following in the grinder bit of my blender:

I ground this up quite finely then added 4 or 5 dates and processed a bit more. I pit this in a dish and then added a couple of teaspoons of raw chocolate powder and 50ml of coconut oil and mashed it up with a fork.

It was delicious.

Pesto and Salsa

I’ve had raw green soup every day since I got my blender until today when I became suddenly inspired and wanted to make an exciting dinner for myself. Before I knew what was happening, I was in the shop buying pine nuts. I’ve got several pots of basil on my window sill which is great. Two different types as well, one is “Monsterous Basil” which really does have massive leaves but is not quite as strong tasting and then I have the more usual basil which is extremly delicious.

Pesto

The great thing about pesto is that it is supposed to be raw, so no compromises have to be made. Even the cheese generally used, parmesan, is usually raw. So, this is what I used:

  • Fresh basil, probably about 25 grams
  • Pine nuts, about 40g
  • 1/4 of a smallish red onion
  • Parmesan, about 30g
  • flax oil, 50ml

I used the “mill” attachment on my blender, but if you’ve got a food processor that would probably be the best tool for the job. I started out with just the pine nuts and ground them up a bit, then added the basil, a bit at a time, then the onion and grated cheese. When it was looking quite smooth, I stirred in the flax oil.

Salsa

I then decided to make a tomato salsa:

  • 4 tomatoes
  • 2 sticks of celery
  • 1/4 red onion
  • a couple of slices of fresh ginger
  • some fresh chili (also from my windowsill garden!)

Everything went into the blender, fairly simple.

I served both the pesto and salsa with a big mixed green salad – malva, jack by the hedge, nasturtium, watercress, spinach and rocket. The pesto was great, the salsa was reasonable, but they really didn’t go together in the same meal, so I ended up eating the salsa more as soup and having the pesto with the greens which was very good.

Banana and Sesame Pudding

Yep, I still had room for pudding so I made what is quickly becoming a favourite – banana and sesame pudding. First I grind about 40g sesame seeds and 10g cacao nibs (in a seeds mill or coffee grinder). I then mash this mixture with a banana and a teaspoon of raw cacao powder. And that’s it. Very quick and simple to make and delicious.

Festival

So that’s it for food today. I’m currently very busy organising the Funky Raw festival. We’re going back to Keveral farm, August 8 to 13 for raw food, yoga, tai chi, qi gong, lots of music and dancing… basically lots of fun, come and join us.

Update…

Well, there is so much happening at the moment and I’m not getting chance to tell you all about it! Jess has just launched her new online shop Total Raw Food and next to her link to this site it says “Find out what Rob had for his tea last night”, and I’ve not even been doing that recently, so I’m going to try harder.

Todays initially exciting news was that I finally bought myself a blender, but the excitement didn’t last long because it’s not a Vitamix, it’s a £25 Philips Cucina from Argos and frankly, it’s not very good 😉 I don’t really know what I was expecting for that money, and it did make me chocolate pudding so life’s not too bad.

I made a soup for dinner and this is what I put in it:

  • 3 tomatoes
  • 4 or 5 mushrooms
  • 2 small avocados
  • a load of wild greens (fat hen, chickweed, sow thistle, malva, jack by the hedge)
  • hemp greens (hemp seeds grown for about a week, with a few small leaves)
  • a couple of onion greens (from the garden, I’m sure spring onion would work if you don’t have this)
  • a handful of sprouted fenugreek seeds
  • 1 green cardamon pod
  • a teaspoon of coriander seeds
  • a teaspoon of cumin powder
  • a bit of fresh chili (which came from a plant on my windowsill)
  • and quite a bit of water to get it to blend properly

There was a lot more faffing about than with a Vitamix, I kept having to stop and stir, although I think it was the amount of water I used in the end which made it work. Just before serving I added a couple of tablespoons of flax oil and some grated organic unpasteurised cheddar. I find this kind of soup with wild greens can be a bit hit and miss, but this was wonderful, I think there are a particularly good selection of wild greens available right now.

Is the mainstream waking up???

I was shocked to read a headline yesterday in “Metro” the free newspaper:

Magic mushrooms ‘can be beneficial’

To quote some of the article

“Some volunteers who took the drug reported profound mystical experiences that were as meaningful or spiritually significant as the birth of a child or the death of a parent.”

“Even two months after taking the drug, most said the experience had changed them in beneficial ways, such as making them more loving, compassionate, optimistic and patient.”

As someone who likes to experiment with this kind of thing (currently doing long term experiments with ayahuasca), I would agree, and I’m pleased stuff like this is getting reported in the mainstream press. It’s especially ironic coming not long after mushrooms have been made illegal. You can just hear the politicians now “Look, it says magic mushrooms can make people more loving, compassionate, optimistic and patient. Quick, lets make them illegal.” What a strange world we live in!

Temptress

When the postman rang the doorbell this morning, I was surprised. I wasn’t expecting a parcel. I ran downstairs and opened the door and the postman handed me a small package, just too big to go through the letter box. I saw the packaging and realised what it was… my temptress! I ran back upstairs and opened the box, and in amongst all those corn chips, there it was:

Temptress

It was the new raw chocolate bar from Shazzie. I quickly unwrapped it, broke off a square and put it in my mouth. Mmm… this is good chocolate. I know many of you will love this chocolate, but for me, I’m going to have to say that it could do with being a bit sweeter. I think Shazzie is doing some more flavours so I hope at least one of them is for us sweet toothed people! But don’t take my word for it, Shazzie has given us 5 bars to give away next Issue of Funky Raw, but for those of you who can’t wait until September, you can buy it from Shazzie’s online shop.