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The Olive Oil Hunter News #36

Chacareo Chileno Recipe, Spotlight on Cilantro, No-Bowl Marinade, Feeding Your Brain Through Fitness and Is It Time to Join a CSA?

Ready to elevate your grill game? In this week’s edition of The Olive Oil Hunter Newsletter and in many editions to come, I’m going to share with you my favorite recipes for the tastiest and easiest-to-make grilled foods. The recipes often start with a marinade—usually extra virgin olive oil, an acid such as vinegar or lemon juice, and herbs and spices—designed to infuse flavor and help whatever you’re cooking stay juicy. My first tip: The longer you marinate, the more flavorful the food becomes.

The steak sandwich is an American tradition, but I’m shaking it up by going Chilean-style. The mix of tastes and textures makes for a truly memorable experience.

Chacareo Chileno

  • The Olive Oil Hunter News #36 Chacareo Chileno

    Santiago’s signature sandwich is the chacarero, a mouth-stretching pileup of grilled steak, mashed avocado, tomato, green beans, and a shot of hot sauce on a soft roll. This unusual combination, chockful of healthy veggies, is served up at casual eateries all over the city, from lunch counters to beer halls. It’s equally delicious when made with grilled pork, chicken, or vegetables, and thanks to the olive oil-based marinade, guaranteed to be anything but ordinary! ​

    Ingredients

    • 1 1/2 pounds boneless steak, such as rib eye, strip, or sirloin
    • 5 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil, plus more for the rolls
    • 2 cloves garlic, minced
    • 3 tablespoons fresh lime juice, divided
    • 1 tablespoon chopped cilantro, plus whole leaves for serving
    • 1 teaspoon kosher salt, divided
    • 1/2 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper
    • 1 1/2 cups fresh green beans, julienned
    • 2 ripe avocados, pitted and peeled
    • 4 Kaiser rolls or other large soft rolls, sliced and lightly toasted
    • Four thick slices ripe red tomato
    • Thinly sliced jalapeños (optional)
    • Hot sauce for serving

    Directions

    Step 1

    Place the steak in a resealable plastic bag along with 4 tablespoons olive oil, the garlic, 1 1/2 tablespoons lime juice, the chopped cilantro, and 1/2 teaspoon each salt and pepper. Marinate, refrigerated, for 4 to 8 hours. Meanwhile, steam or boil the beans in salted water until tender-crisp, about 5 minutes; plunge them in ice water, then drain and set aside.

    Step 2

    Mash the avocados with the remaining lime juice, 1 tablespoon olive oil, and 1/2 teaspoon salt and set aside. Set up a grill for direct grilling and preheat to medium-high. Drain the steaks. Season well with salt and pepper and grill to medium-rare, turning once with tongs. Let rest for 5 minutes, and then thinly slice on a diagonal. Drizzle the cut sides of the rolls with olive oil. Thickly spread one-fourth of the avocado mixture on the top half of each bun. Divide the meat between the bottom halves of the buns. Top the meat with a tomato slice, jalapeños (if using), cilantro leaves, and green beans. Replace the top half of the bun and press lightly. Serve with hot sauce.

    Yields 4 servings.

Healthy Ingredient Spotlight: Cilantro

Healthy Ingredient Spotlight

Cilantro: With Olive Oil, It’s a Match Made in Culinary Heaven

There’s no question about it—cilantro is a versatile herb, as integral to Asian cuisines as it is to Mexican and Latin American ones. Rich in a variety of vitamins and minerals, cilantro is very nutritious, and I like to use both the leaves and the tender part of the stems, so little goes to waste. Depending on the recipe, you might coarsely hand-chop it or give it a whir in the blender or food processor to make a fine mince or even a purée with the help of a drizzle of extra virgin olive oil.

Growing your own cilantro in the garden or on a windowsill is quite easy, but I suggest starting with a small plant rather than seeds to speed up how soon you’ll be able to take cuttings. In the garden, at the end of the growing season when the plant starts to turn brown, seed heads will develop—you know cilantro seeds as coriander, typically sold dried and used whole or ground. You can make your own coriander by cutting off the seed heads and hanging them in a brown paper bag until fully dry. Then transfer the seeds to a spice jar, label it, and start cooking—toast or grind the seeds, homegrown or store-bought, before using for better flavor.

Fun fact: If you’re a person who just can’t cozy up to the taste of cilantro, it’s not your imagination—it’s your DNA. Research studies, including one done by 23andMe, actually discovered that people who find cilantro unpleasant, often likening the taste to soap or dirt, have a gene that causes this perception. On a positive note, the aversion might not extend to coriander seeds, so be sure to give them a try.

Healthy Kitchen Tip: No-Bowl Marinade

Healthy Kitchen Nugget

No-Bowl Marinade

For a no-fuss, no-cleanup-needed way to marinate food, I use resealable plastic bags, as in the above recipe. Add all your marinade ingredients to a gallon bag, pop in your protein or veggies, seal, and refrigerate. You’ll get good flavor after an hour, but it will intensify the longer you leave the bag in the fridge—up to eight hours or even overnight. Turn the bag occasionally so that the marinade gets evenly distributed.

For Your Best Health: Is It Time to Join a CSA?

For Your Best Health

Is It Time to Join a CSA?

CSA stands for “community supported agriculture,” and for over 25 years, it’s been a great option for buying local seasonal food directly from a farmer. Tens of thousands of families have joined CSAs, and in some areas of the country there is more demand than there are CSA farms to meet it. How it works: The farmer offers a certain number of “shares” or subscriptions that entitle purchasers to a box of fresh-grown foods each week. The CSA model is considered a “shared risk”—customers pay up front for the whole season and the farmers do their best to provide an abundant box of produce each week.

There are also now many variations on the CSA arrangement. With some, members go to their CSA farm and pick and choose what they want from offerings. Plus, many CSAs aren’t limited to produce—some offer eggs, homemade bread, meat, cheese, flowers, and other farm products. For options near you, check out localharvest.org with its database of more than 4,000 CSA farms. You can also learn more about how CSAs work and what to expect.

Fitness Flash: Feeding Your Brain Through Fitness

Fitness Flash

Feeding Your Brain Through Fitness

Your heart isn’t the only organ that benefits from exercise. Turns out that the brain also loves it when you get up and move. That’s one of the key takeaways from Keep Sharp: Building a Better Brain at Any Age, the latest book from neurosurgeon Sanjay Gupta, MD. Aerobic exercise in particular enhances brain function and its ability to fight off disease—it lowers harmful inflammation and starts a chain reaction that boosts neural cells. If you sit for most of the day, it’s just as important for your brain as for your overall health to get up frequently and walk around.

Among Dr. Gupta’s other tenets are getting enough sleep, continually learning and challenging your brain with problem-solving and reasoning activities, staying connected with others, and eating well. He’s a fan of Martha Clare Morris, epidemiologist and founding member of the Global Council on Brain Health, and her recommendation to follow the Mediterranean way of eating with a diet built on vegetables, berries, beans, whole grains, fish, poultry, and olive oil.

Best of all, it’s never too late to get started—your brain and your body will thank you.

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The Olive Oil Hunter News #33

Cauliflower Caponata Recipe, Spotlight on Golden Raisins, How to Best Store Nuts, Cooking with Cocoa for Weight Loss, and The Link Between Exercise and Air Pollution

Cauliflower Caponata

  • The Olive Oil Hunter News #33 Cauliflower Caponata

    As you know by now, I love all foods Mediterranean, and caponata is a wonderful dish that melds many flavors of the region. Traditionally the main ingredient is eggplant, but I’m super excited to share a wonderful variation with you that capitalizes on the wild popularity of cauliflower. As a cruciferous veg, cauliflower gets high marks for its nutrients, and its mild taste really lets the sweet and savory ingredients in this recipe come through. Caponata is often served as an appetizer, but it’s also a wonderful main dish when you want something light. I love to mound it on grilled bread slices for a fast bruschetta or serve it in a bowl surrounded by bell pepper sections to use as dippers—easy-peasy when company’s coming over. Enjoy!

    Ingredients

    • 1/4 cup red wine vinegar
    • 1/3 cup golden raisins
    • 1 head cauliflower, cut into bite-sized pieces
    • 3/4 cup extra virgin olive oil, divided
    • 2 cloves garlic, minced
    • 1/2 red bell pepper, stemmed, seeded, and diced
    • 1/2 red onion, thinly sliced
    • 1/2 cup diced celery hearts or inner stalks of a full head
    • 1 teaspoon hot red pepper flakes (optional)
    • 4 to 6 peperoncini, stemmed and thinly sliced
    • 1/4 cup pine nuts, toasted
    • 2 tablespoons brined capers, drained
    • Zest and juice of one lemon
    • 2 tablespoons chopped flat-leaf parsley
    • 2 teaspoons chopped fresh oregano
    • Salt and freshly ground pepper to taste

    Directions

    Step 1

    Heat the vinegar in a small saucepan or in the microwave and pour on top of the raisins. Soak for 30 minutes to plump them and infuse flavor. In the meantime, bring a pot of salted water to boil and blanch the cauliflower for 90 seconds, strain, and cool to room temperature in a large bowl.

    Step 2

    In a large sauté pan over medium heat, add 1/4 cup of olive oil, the garlic, bell pepper, red onion, celery, and red pepper flakes, if using. Cook for several minutes, stirring frequently, until the bell pepper is tender-crisp and the onion and celery are translucent. Remove from the heat and pour over the cauliflower. Add the raisins and vinegar to the cauliflower mixture along with the peperoncini, pine nuts, capers, remaining 1/2 cup of olive oil, lemon juice and zest, parsley, oregano, and salt and pepper to taste. Gently mix the ingredients. Serve at room temperature or slightly chilled. It keeps for 5-7 days in the fridge.

    Yields 6 appetizer servings

Healthy Ingredient Spotlight: Golden Raisins

Healthy Ingredient Spotlight

Golden Raisins

Luscious golden raisins have a sweeter taste than traditional brown raisins even though they come from the same source (Thompson seedless grapes). That’s because they’re processed differently—plumped with water and dried under controlled conditions rather than in the sun. This helps them retain more phytonutrients. But they’re also treated with sulfur dioxide to keep their sunny color. If you’re allergic to sulfites or simply want to reduce your exposure to preservatives in general, a delicious alternative is the golden Hunza raisin. Grown in the Hunza region of the Himalayas and available online from many companies, like Nuts.com, these raisins are typically sun-dried without any preservatives.

Healthy Kitchen Tip: Storing Nuts

Healthy Kitchen Nugget

Storing Nuts

Shelled pine nuts are a great modern convenience, as are other shelled nuts, like pistachios and almonds. To keep nuts fresher longer, experts at the University of California, Davis, recommend storing them in the fridge or freezer rather than at room temperature, which could hasten the rate at which their healthful natural oils go rancid. Nuts will retain their quality for a year or more in the fridge at 40°F or below and up to two years in the freezer at 0°F or below (they don’t actually freeze, so there’s no thawing time needed). To prevent them from picking up any odors, keep them in clean, tightly closed plastic or glass containers.

For Your Best Health: Cooking with Cocoa for Weight Loss

For Your Best Health

Cooking with Cocoa for Weightloss

If you’re like me, you rejoiced at studies showing that dark chocolate has positive health effects thanks to plant nutrients like antioxidants and that eating judicious amounts of chocolate is associated with lowering the risk of cardiometabolic diseases, including stroke, coronary heart disease, and type 2 diabetes. Recently a team from Penn State took a deep dive into cocoa powder, which is rich in fiber, iron, and many of the same nutrients as chocolate but has a lot fewer calories. They looked to see whether it has benefits, too, specifically a reduction of fat in the liver, which is often seen in people who are overweight. Fatty liver disease has become a global health problem and a risk factor for more serious liver conditions.

The Penn State team used commercially available cocoa and fed it to one group of overweight mice on a high-fat diet. When compared to a similar group of mice that didn’t get any cocoa, these mice had slower weight gain, 56% lower levels of oxidative stress, and 75% lower levels of DNA damage in the liver. It’s not entirely understood how cocoa might account for all this, but the theory is that it may inhibit the enzymes responsible for digesting dietary fat and carbohydrates. Even better, the researchers suggest that getting about 10 tablespoons of cocoa powder a day could have similar benefits for people, especially when combined with a healthy overall diet and increased exercise. Whisk a tablespoon or two of unsweetened cocoa powder into your coffee a few times a day and enjoy it in hot cocoa instead of eating chips or cookies for snacks. It’s also a great enrichment for chili and sauces like mole. Just hold the marshmallows!

Fitness Flash: Exercise and Air Pollution

Fitness Flash

Exercise and Air Pollution

Is exercise ever bad for your health? It could be if you exercise for long stretches in areas of high air pollution, according to a study published in the European Heart Journal. The multiyear research involved nearly a million and a half Korean city dwellers ages 20-39 who completed questionnaires asking about their physical activity over select seven-day periods. When factoring in the effects of exercise on the heart, researchers also looked at corresponding pollution levels including levels of small particulate matter, which are of great concern. As expected, the risk of heart disease was higher among people who didn’t meet recognized guidelines for exercise (a high intensity 15-30 minute workout five times a week or a moderate intensity 30-60 minute workout five times a week). But those who exceeded those guidelines and were exposed to high levels of air pollution experienced adverse effects, too.

“Overall, our results show that physical activity, particularly at the level recommended by European Society of Cardiology guidelines, is associated with a lower risk of developing heart and blood vessel disease among young adults. However, when air pollution levels are high, exercising beyond the recommended amount may offset or even reverse the beneficial effects,” explained Professor Sang Min Park of the Seoul National University College of Medicine, who led the research.

The body-wide negative effects of air pollution have been a concern for some time and for every age group—a recent study published in Nature Aging found that even short exposure can harm cognitive function, for instance. Protect yourself by checking daily pollution levels in your area with the Air Quality Index, especially before you exercise outside.

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The Olive Oil Hunter News #32

Mediterranean Deviled Eggs, Spotlight on Anchovies, Perfect Hard-Boiled Eggs, The Truth About Eggs, and How to Balance Exercise and Eating

In this issue we’ll cover how to finally achieve the perfect hard-boiled egg for the oh-so-classic hors d’oeuvre—deviled eggs, but with a Mediterranean spin.

Mediterranean Deviled Eggs

  • The Olive Oil Hunter News #32 Mediterranean Deviled Eggs

    They say what’s old is new again, and that’s definitely true about the classic hors d’oeuvre deviled eggs. But I like to put a Mediterranean spin on this popular canape with heart-healthy extra virgin olive oil as the enrichment rather than the original, butter. Olive oil not only adds creaminess, but a delicious spiciness, too. And adding a variety of garnishes lets you get super creative and give your platter of deviled eggs a festive look. Enjoy!

    Ingredients

    • 12 hard-boiled eggs, peeled
    • 2-3 tablespoons extra virgin olive oil
    • 3 tablespoons mayonnaise
    • 1 tablespoon Dijon-style mustard
    • 1 tablespoon minced shallot or onion
    • 1 tablespoon flat-leaf parsley, rough chopped
    • 2 teaspoons fresh lemon juice, preferably from a Meyer lemon
    • 1 anchovy or 1/2 to 1 teaspoon anchovy paste
    • 1/2 clove garlic, minced
    • Sea salt and freshly ground black pepper
    • Your choice of garnishes (ideas below)

    Directions

    Step 1

    Cut the eggs in half lengthwise, remove the yolks and transfer them to the bowl of a small food processor. (Alternatively, use an electric hand-held mixer.) Put the egg white halves on a deviled egg platter or other oversized dish.

    Step 2

    To the bowl with the yolks, add 2 tablespoons of the olive oil, the mayonnaise, mustard, shallot or onion, parsley, lemon juice, anchovy, and garlic and process until fairly smooth. Add salt and pepper to taste and the remaining tablespoon of olive oil if the mixture is too thick.

    Step 3

    To pipe the filling into the egg white halves, place a resealable plastic bag into a tall drinking glass and turn the edges over the rim of the glass. (For an extra fancy touch, place a wide fluted pastry tip in one of the lower corners.) Fill the bag with the yolk mixture and seal the bag after pressing out any air. Snip off one of the lower corners and then gently squeeze a generous amount of the filling into the egg white halves. If you don’t have enough filling for all the whites, chop the remaining ones and enjoy them in a salad. Garnish the deviled eggs with your choice of olive slices, slivers of sun-dried tomatoes, drained brined capers, chopped chives, good-quality anchovies, basil chiffonade, caviar and/or a sprinkle of pimentón (Spanish smoked paprika). I like to pick four to six options, depending on what I have on hand. Cover and refrigerate until you’re ready to serve. The deviled eggs can be made up to four hours in advance.

Healthy Ingredient Spotlight: Anchovies

Healthy Ingredient Spotlight

Anchovies

When it comes to anchovies, you either love them or you haven’t really tried them or your experience has been with poor-quality anchovies packed in poor-quality oil, and they were overly fishy. If that’s the case, I say it’s time to try again because anchovies impart the all-important “fifth taste,” umami, to dishes. They also typically disappear as they meld into other ingredients—this is especially true when added to a sauce or a sauté. Buy best-quality anchovies in a jar that, once opened, will keep for a few weeks in the fridge, or get a tube of anchovy paste for even easier use.

Healthy Kitchen Tip: Perfect Hard-Boiled Eggs

Healthy Kitchen Nugget

Perfect Hard-Boiled Eggs

Want perfectly round centers on your hard-boiled eggs? The day before cooking, place the eggs on their sides in their carton. To make peeling easier, cook eggs by placing them directly from the refrigerator into boiling water. Then lower the heat to a simmer to avoid the usual “boil-over.” I like to cook them for 12 minutes and then plunge them into cold water to stop the cooking process and chill them down quickly. Gently crack the shell all around and peel under running water.

For Your Best Health: Are Eggs Good for Me, or Not?

For Your Best Health

Are Eggs Good for Me, or Not?

It seems that there are as many studies on the effects of eggs on health as there are days in the year, with the results of new studies often contradicting prior findings! Take the study published in February 2021 in the journal PLoS Medicine. Researchers analyzed self-reported egg-eating for the year 1995 from a pool of more than a half-million retired Americans and then looked at the incidence of heart disease and diabetes and deaths over the next 16 years. Of all the foods recorded on participants’ questionnaires—124 to be exact— the study pointed a finger at previously exonerated eggs as the culprit for those ills. But a group of experts queried by the British group Science Media Centre, which provides interpretation and statistical analyses of scientific studies, said “not so fast.”

“The most important drawback of this study was the way egg consumption data was collected. What and how much food people ate was asked just once, and people were asked to recall what they had eaten in the past. This is problematic because people tend to forget; also their diets might change a lot, particularly if they became ill,” said Ada Garcia, PhD, one of the experts and a senior lecturer in Public Health Nutrition at the University of Glasgow in Scotland. “Studies that observe diet and lifestyle behaviours are useful to understand whether what we eat is linked to becoming ill or dying, but they are not conclusive. We eat a combination of foods and one specific part of the diet—in this case, whole eggs—cannot be fully blamed. The key thing to remember is to keep a balance in what we eat and what we do: Eating a variety of healthful foods, avoiding overeating or indulging in foods that are too high in sugar and energy, keeping an eye on how much salt we eat. Being overweight or obese, smoking, consuming too much alcohol, and not being physically active are much more important factors to consider for prevention of chronic diseases and related deaths. The conclusions of this study are overblown. Blaming eggs alone for an increased risk of cardiovascular disease is a simplistic and reductionist approach to the concept of diet and disease prevention.”

Another point to make is that many studies have acknowledged that cholesterol from foods like eggs doesn’t translate to high blood cholesterol and its health consequences—that’s due more from saturated fat. But when it comes to buying eggs, there’s a different type of confusion—this time surrounding which are the healthiest. According to the Cleveland Clinic’s Kristin Kirkpatrick, RD, LD, USDA labels don’t always tell the whole story. For instance, “organic eggs” sound great and tell you that the chickens weren’t given growth hormones, but not whether they had antibiotics or were raised humanely. “Free-range” and “free-roaming” don’t indicate the quality of the hens’ outdoor space or how often they were able to access it. “Cage-free” doesn’t tell you how crammed they might have been in the chicken house. On the other hand, she points out that “pasture-raised” means the chickens were free to hunt for their food and, as a result, their eggs tend to naturally have more omega-3 fatty acids and the antioxidant lutein—you can tell by the deeper yolk color. She points out that the gold standard for humane treatment is a stamp on the egg carton that says “animal welfare approval.” The silver medal goes to the “certified humane” designation. Want really fresh eggs? Check out small farmers in your area and visit them to check out the operation for yourself, she suggests.

Fitness Flash: Balancing Exercise and Eating

Fitness Flash

Balancing Exercise and Eating

Could exercise be making you fatter? Exercise is an essential part of good health, but when it comes to calories, a brisk 30-minute walk, for example, only burns off somewhere between 150 and 200 calories. Yes, that can help with weight loss efforts, but here’s the rub—most people overestimate exercise’s calorie burn, plus they tend to reward themselves with food afterwards and actually take in more calories than they used in working out. This behavior was confirmed by an experiment conducted by scientists from the Technical University of Munich (TUM) and the University of Nebraska. They compared the amount of food that study participants ate after exercise as well as after a rest period.

“We were able to show for the first time that certain characteristics, such as the amount and ‘urgency’ with which a person wants to eat, change over the course of physical exertion,” said Karsten Köhler, PhD, assistant professor in exercise, nutrition, and health at TUM. “The actual results suggest that physical exertion can entice those who do sport to eat larger amounts of food more quickly after the training session. Since weight loss is a main motivation for exercising for many, and failure to achieve the desired weight loss makes it likely to quit exercising, it could be a good strategy to think about what you want to eat afterwards before you start to exercise.”

For instance, have yogurt and fruit at the ready instead of reaching for an oversized muffin. The research team is now looking at other strategies that could make exercise a more substantial part of weight loss.

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The Olive Oil Hunter News #31

Tuna Ceviche with Avocado, Spotlight on Merquén, How to Shop for Raw Fish, Diet, Exercise, Manual Jobs and Heart Health

The one I want to share with you in this edition of the Olive Oil Hunter Newsletter comes from central Chile and features one of the area’s most widely used spice mixtures: merquén (you’ll also see it spelled merkén). Rusty red in color, it’s made by grinding dried smoked goat’s horn chiles with salt and toasted coriander seeds…and it adds an unmistakable flavor to this dish. When shopping online, look for true merquén from Chile. Etnia is one brand that sources it directly.

Tuna Ceviche with Avocado

  • The Olive Oil Hunter News #31 Tuna Ceviche with Avocado

    Originally from the neighboring country of Peru, ceviche is very popular in Chile. Not surprising given Chile’s proximity to the Pacific (it has thousands of miles of coastline).

    Ingredients

    • 1 pound sushi-quality albacore or yellowfin tuna, cut in 1/2-inch dice
    • 1/2 small red onion, cut in small dice
    • 1 garlic clove, peeled and minced
    • 1 to 2 serrano or jalapeño chiles, to taste, stemmed, seeded and minced
    • 1 tablespoon brined capers, rinsed and drained
    • 1 ripe avocado, peeled, pitted, and cut in small dice
    • Coarse salt (kosher or sea) and freshly ground black pepper, to taste
    • 1/3 cup fresh lime juice
    • 1/4 cup extra virgin olive oil
    • 1/4 chopped fresh cilantro leaves, or more to taste Leaf lettuce, baby arugula, baby spinach, or radicchio leaves, for serving

    Directions

    Step 1

    Refrigerate the diced tuna while you prepare the remaining ingredients.

    Step 2

    Place the onion in a small bowl and cover with cold water. Let it sit for five minutes, then drain, rinse, and dry on paper towels. (This step removes some of the bitterness.)

    Step 3

    In a medium bowl, combine the onion, garlic, chile, capers, avocado, salt, pepper, and 2 tablespoons of the lime juice. Toss together gently. Add the tuna to the bowl.

    Step 4

    Stir together the remaining lime juice and the olive oil. Pour over the tuna and toss the mixture together. Season to taste with salt and pepper. Cover and refrigerate for 15 minutes, stirring gently from time to time.

    Step 5

    Just before serving, add the cilantro and toss. Taste and adjust seasonings. Line salad plates with salad greens, spoon the ceviche on top, and serve.

    Serves 4 to 6 — Recipe from cooking.nytimes.com

Healthy Ingredient Spotlight: Merquén

Healthy Ingredient Spotlight

Merquén

Merquén is a spice created by Chile’s indigenous Mapuche people and it’s an essential ingredient in Mapuche cuisine. It’s the star of puré de papas picante (spiced mashed potatoes), pebre (salsa), and mani merquén (roasted peanuts). Try it sprinkled on your favorite nuts as well as on fresh popcorn. It’s both spicy and smoky, and reminds me of Spain’s pimentón, so it’s great in many classic Spanish dishes, too.

Healthy Kitchen Tip: How to Shop for Raw Fish

Healthy Kitchen Nugget

How to Shop for Raw Fish

Seafood shopping can be a true challenge, especially when you want fish that’s safe to eat raw. While the citrus juice used in ceviche changes the chemistry of raw seafood, it doesn’t remove every possible toxin. So, you still want to start with the freshest fish possible. The reason to look for sushi-grade (or sashimi-grade) tuna is that it has been harvested, transported, and stored to exact specifications so that it is always maintained at a safe (meaning cold enough) temperature. A very safe option is buying frozen fish filets that have gone through super-freezing, in which just-caught fish are frozen rapidly at temperatures between −76 °F to −112 °F, a method that also kills parasites. When allowed to thaw in the fridge, fish treated this way can actually taste fresher than fresh. If the fish listed as sushi grade at your store is labeled “previously frozen,” ask the fishmonger if it was super-frozen. If it was, then you can buy without worry. Because of growing demand for sushi-grade fish, you can now buy it online from some top-notch seafood companies, like New York’s famous Fulton Fish Market, and get it shipped right to your home.

For Your Best Health: Diet and Exercise Go Hand-in-Hand

For Your Best Health

Diet and Exercise Go Hand-in-Hand

Salt and pepper, seltzer and lime, olive oil and balsamic vinegar—there are some things that just go hand in hand. The same is true for diet and exercise. You likely already know that the US Department of Health and Human Services offers separate recommendations for each: the Physical Activity Guidelines for Americans and the Dietary Guidelines for Americans. But what was unclear was whether you could achieve health benefits from sticking to just one set of recommendations. Though many of us suspected the answer, we now know for sure: It takes both, especially to prevent a dangerous condition known as metabolic syndrome. This is a combination of health risk factors, including excess fat around the waist, insulin resistance, and high blood pressure, which are conditions that, in turn, set the stage for heart disease, stroke, and type 2 diabetes.

Researchers analyzing data from 2,379 participants of the decades-long Framingham Heart Study found that adhering to the diet guidelines alone lowered the odds of metabolic syndrome by 33%, and adhering to physical activity guidelines alone lowered them by 51%, but following both lowered the odds by 65%.

And there’s no time to lose. “The earlier people make these lifestyle changes, the more likely they will be to lower their risk of cardiovascular-associated diseases later in life,” said the study’s corresponding author Vanessa Xanthakis, PhD, assistant professor of medicine and biostatistics at Boston University School of Medicine.

Fitness Flash: Manual Jobs and Heart Health

Fitness Flash

Manual Jobs and Heart Health

Speaking of exercise, a 10-year study published in the European Heart Journal has some startling findings about health effects of jobs that require a lot of activity, whether from standing all day or doing heavy physical labor. While workers might be moving all day long, if the work activity causes blood pressure to stay high all day long, too, that’s risky for your heart—and quite the opposite of the heart-health benefits of a 30-minute leisure-time walk, for instance. “Many people with manual jobs believe they get fit and healthy by their physical activity at work and therefore can relax when they get home. Unfortunately, our results suggest that this is not the case,” said Professor Andreas Holtermann, PhD, of the National Research Centre for the Working Environment in Copenhagen, Denmark. “And while these workers could benefit from leisure physical activity, after walking 10,000 steps while cleaning or standing seven hours in a production line, people tend to feel tired, so that’s a barrier.”

Professor Holtermann is piloting several approaches to make work activity more beneficial. These call for using new strategies to complete tasks, like rotating between sitting, standing, and lifting during a shift for those on a production line, as well as ways to infuse sedentary jobs with chunks of heart-healthy fitness time.

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