Who says pumpkin spice is only exciting in latte form?
Don’t just reserve pumpkin for pumpkin spice lattes and pie! These easy spice cookies are a great way to spread the pumpkin love throughout the entire season.
If you don’t have any aluminum-free baking powder in your cupboard, pick some up the next time you go shopping. Aluminum may pose potential risks to your health as a neurotoxin. While the dose of aluminum is what makes the poison, some studies show a relationship between aluminum that is stored in your body and neuro-disorders (such as Alzheimer’s disease.) Limiting exposure to all metals is a protective measure we can take to optimize our health.
Ingredients
1 cup pumpkin puree, fresh or canned 1 tablespoon pure maple syrup 1/3 cup unsweetened applesauce 1 teaspoon pure vanilla extract 1/4 cup vegan palm shortening or melted coconut oil 1 cup oat flour 1/2 cup almond flour 1/2 teaspoon baking soda 1/2 teaspoon aluminum-free baking powder 1 teaspoon ground cinnamon 1/2 teaspoon pumpkin pie spice Pinch sea salt 1/2 cup chopped pecans 1/4 cup mini chocolate chips
Directions
Preheat oven to 350°F.
Mix the pumpkin, syrup, applesauce, vanilla and shortening (or oil if using) in a large bowl. Alternatively, place in a blender and blend until combined.
In a separate medium bowl sift the oat flour, almond flour, baking soda, baking powder and spices together.
Add the dry ingredients to the pumpkin mixture and mix to combine. Then fold in the pecans and chocolate chips.
Scoop 1 tablespoon of batter onto a large baking pan lined with parchment paper. Repeat until all batter is used. Place baking pan into the oven and bake for 20 to 25 minutes, or until just slightly firm. Remove the cookies from the oven and serve warm or room temperature.
Store uneaten cookies in a sealed glass container at room temperature for two days or in the refrigerator for up to five days.
Nutrition information (per serving)
Makes 3 dozen cookies
Calories: 43 Total fat: 2 g Saturated fat: 2 g Cholesterol: 0 mg Fiber: 1 g Protein: 1 g Carbohydrate: 5 g Sodium: 25 mg
Who says pumpkin spice is only exciting in latte form?
Don’t just reserve pumpkin for pumpkin spice lattes and pie! These easy spice cookies are a great way to spread the pumpkin love throughout the entire season.
If you don’t have any aluminum-free baking powder in your cupboard, pick some up the next time you go shopping. Aluminum may pose potential risks to your health as a neurotoxin. While the dose of aluminum is what makes the poison, some studies show a relationship between aluminum that is stored in your body and neuro-disorders (such as Alzheimer’s disease.) Limiting exposure to all metals is a protective measure we can take to optimize our health.
Ingredients
1 cup pumpkin puree, fresh or canned 1 tablespoon pure maple syrup 1/3 cup unsweetened applesauce 1 teaspoon pure vanilla extract 1/4 cup vegan palm shortening or melted coconut oil 1 cup oat flour 1/2 cup almond flour 1/2 teaspoon baking soda 1/2 teaspoon aluminum-free baking powder 1 teaspoon ground cinnamon 1/2 teaspoon pumpkin pie spice Pinch sea salt 1/2 cup chopped pecans 1/4 cup mini chocolate chips
Directions
Preheat oven to 350°F.
Mix the pumpkin, syrup, applesauce, vanilla and shortening (or oil if using) in a large bowl. Alternatively, place in a blender and blend until combined.
In a separate medium bowl sift the oat flour, almond flour, baking soda, baking powder and spices together.
Add the dry ingredients to the pumpkin mixture and mix to combine. Then fold in the pecans and chocolate chips.
Scoop 1 tablespoon of batter onto a large baking pan lined with parchment paper. Repeat until all batter is used. Place baking pan into the oven and bake for 20 to 25 minutes, or until just slightly firm. Remove the cookies from the oven and serve warm or room temperature.
Store uneaten cookies in a sealed glass container at room temperature for two days or in the refrigerator for up to five days.
Nutrition information (per serving)
Makes 3 dozen cookies
Calories: 43 Total fat: 2 g Saturated fat: 2 g Cholesterol: 0 mg Fiber: 1 g Protein: 1 g Carbohydrate: 5 g Sodium: 25 mg
Time to toss on your coziest cardigan and simmer a batch of chili? Before you grab your pot, check out our recommendations for making it your tastiest and healthiest ever. Preventive cardiology dietitian Julia Zumpano, RD, LD, explains how to choose the right meat, beans, veggies, spices, hot sauce or chilis and toppings for your health. How to build a better chili It’s hard (though not impossible) to screw up chili. Here’s the low-down on how to make your batch — from the meat, beans, veggies, spices, hot sauce or chilis and toppings — a healthy, hearty dinner for the entire family. 1. Pick your protein Beef (protein, niacin, vitamin B12, selenium, zinc). Turkey (protein, niacin, selenium). Chicken (protein, niacin, vitamin B6, phosphorous, potassium). Pork (protein, thiamin, niacin, riboflavin, vitamin B6, phosphorous, zinc, selenium). Venison (protein, niacin, vitamins B6 & B12, thiamin, riboflavin, phosphorous, zinc). Buffalo (protein, niacin, vitamin B12, zinc, selenium). Soy crumbles (thiamin, niacin, iron, vitamins B6 & B12). Tofu (fortified) (calcium, copper, iron, manganese, omega-3 fats, phosphorus, protein, selenium). Beef chili is king in many circles. But judiciously using beef — and often going with other options — is important for your cardiovascular health and to lower your risk of diabetes. If you do use beef, make sure it’s at least 85 to 90% lean. Other ideas? Mix and match half ground beef, half another lean meat recommended above. Going vegetarian? Add 1 cup of cooked bulgur wheat or barley for a hearty mouth-feel. 2. Use your bean Kidney beans (fiber, protein, folate, iron, phosphorous, copper, manganese). Black beans (fiber, protein, folate, iron, riboflavin, phosphorous, thiamin, manganese). Chickpeas (fiber, protein, iron, phosphorous, vitamin B6, folate, manganese). Navy or great northern beans (fiber, protein, iron, potassium, folate, magnesium, phosphorous, manganese, thiamin). Pinto beans (fiber, protein, folate, thiamin, iron, phosphorous, manganese, selenium). Soy or edamame (green soy) beans (calcium, copper, iron, magnesium, manganese, omega-3 fats, phosphorus, potassium, Vitamin K, folate). Don’t skip the beans. Chock full of soluble fiber, beans play an important role in controlling “bad” LDL cholesterol levels. Fiber expands in your belly, which can help you feel full and prevent you from returning for a second bowl. The Mediterranean diet recommends at least 3 servings of beans or legumes every week. 3. Pump up the veggies Red or green bell peppers (vitamins C, E, B1, B2 & B6, folate). Onions (vitamin C & K, fiber, folate, potassium, manganese, iron). Diced tomatoes (vitamins C & K, potassium, manganese, iron). Celery (fiber, vitamins A, C & K, folate, potassium and manganese). Diced carrots (fiber, vitamins A, C & K, potassium). Cubed butternut squash (fiber, vitamins A & C, potassium, manganese, magnesium). Diced zucchini (fiber, vitamins C, K & B6, riboflavin, folate, magnesium, potassium, manganese). One secret to a healthier chili? Take your recipe and double the amount of veggies. Not only does this approach add texture and bulk to your dish without extra fat or a ton of calories — it’s also a budget-friendly way to stretch your batch! 4. Be smart about spices Chili powder (vitamins A, C, E, K & B6, iron and manganese). Cumin (iron, magnesium, copper, manganese, calcium). Oregano (vitamin K, anti-inflammatory, anti-bacterial, antiviral). Coriander (copper, manganese, iron, magnesium, anti-inflammatory, phytonutrients, antibacterial) Garlic (vitamins C & B6, manganese, immune-boosting, anti-inflammatory, antibacterial). Turmeric (iron, manganese, anti-inflammatory). There are as many chili powders as there are chili recipes! Craving spicy/smoky? Handcraft your own from dried guajillo, chipotle and ancho chilis — and paprika, cumin, oregano and garlic powder. Going store-bought? Check labels to avoid added fillers (especially if you are gluten- or dairy-free) or chemical anti-caking agents. 5. Kick up the heat Dried cayenne pepper (vitamins A, C, E, K, B6, manganese). Jalapenos, Mexican dried chiles (vitamins A, C, K & B6, folate, potassium, manganese, iron, magnesium). Hot sauce (vitamins C & A, flavonoids, antioxidants). Canned chipotle chiles in adobo sauce (vitamin A, fiber, iron). Chili powder’s not the only heat around. Differentiate your chili from the pack with your choice of dried, fresh or pickled peppers. After all, while it may feel like a fire in your belly, these peppers are actually firefighters — helping extinguish inflammation in your body. 6. Tantalizing toppings Red onion (fiber, folate, vitamins B6 & C, manganese, potassium, phosphorous). Avocado (vitamins C, E, K, B1, B2, B6, folate, potassium, magnesium, fiber, heart-healthy unsaturated fat). Chopped scallions (fiber, vitamins A, C & K, folate, calcium, iron, potassium and manganese). Cilantro (vitamins C & K, choline). 2% shredded cheese (calcium, vitamin D). Nutritional yeast (protein, B vitamins: thiamine, riboflavin, niacin, vitamin B6 and vitamin B12). Sour cream (low-fat or fat-free) (calcium, vitamin D). Plain Greek yogurt or dairy alternative yogurt (calcium, vitamin D, protein) – can be used to replace sour cream. Don’t spoil it! A good bowl of chili speaks for itself. Why destroy it — and your waistline — by drowning it in high-fat, high-calorie toppings? Steer clear of processed oyster crackers or saltines and use a light hand when selecting fresh, color-adding finishes. Gotta have your cornbread? Make yours healthier: Make yours from scratch and sidestep all of the sugar and partially hydrogenated fats in many premade mixes! Use cornmeal, and substitute whole-wheat flour for the usual all-purpose. Keep it moist and low-fat by using either low-fat buttermilk or reduced-fat milk curdled with vinegar. (For those who are dairy-free, almond milk curdled with apple cider vinegar works like a charm!) Skip the butter. Use applesauce to replace the fat (this will also increase the moistness) or choose a good fat like peanut, avocado or canola oil. Go true Southern style. That means skip the sugar entirely. While there’s always some debate, most purists will agree that a true cornbread is savory, not sweet! If you must have sugar, cut it in half or at least one-quarter. Using applesauce to replace the butter will also provide a sweetness that can allow for omitting the sugar or at least cutting in half.
Oats and oatmeal have powers you probably didn’t know about — like nutrients to help lower cholesterol and enough fiber to help you feel fuller longer. They just might be quiet heroes of #BetterBreakfastMonth.
(Arx0nt/Moment via Getty Images)
By Michael Merschel, American Heart Association News
Let’s admit it: Oatmeal is a total nerd. It lacks fashion sense – the color they named after it is somewhere on the drab side of beige. It’s often seen with Sesame Street’s Bert, who also loves bottle caps, paper clips and pigeons.
But when it comes to healthy eating, oatmeal and the oats it comes from can definitely hang with the cool kids at the breakfast table.
“It has many, many good qualities,” said Candida Rebello, director of the nutrition and chronic disease research program at Louisiana State University’s Pennington Biomedical Research Center in Baton Rouge.
Extensive studies have associated oats and oatmeal with plenty of heart-healthy benefits, such as lowering cholesterol (both total and “bad” LDL cholesterol) and helping with weight control.
Oatmeal has a host of vitamins and minerals. Two examples: According to the U.S. Department of Agriculture, a one-cup serving of cooked oatmeal has about 1.8 milligrams of vitamin B1, or thiamin. That’s close to 15% of what an adult needs each day. It also has 1.36 mg of manganese, which is 59% of the daily recommendation for men and 76% for women. Manganese has roles in immunity, blood clotting and the way cholesterol and blood sugar are metabolized.
But that’s not what makes oats stand out, Rebello said. That same cup of cooked oatmeal has just 166 calories and nearly 4 grams of dietary fiber.
And the type of fiber is where oats start to distinguish themselves. It’s called beta-glucan. Put that in the conversation, and it’s like the scene in a movie where oatmeal takes off its glasses and everyone realizes just how beautiful it is.
Not literally. It’s a soluble fiber, which means it dissolves in hot water, where it thickens. “When you eat oatmeal, the kind of sliminess that you see – that comes from this viscosity that beta-glucan generates,” Rebello said.
That helps you feel full longer, she said. And it helps undigested food travel farther down your digestive tract, where it feeds the friendly bacteria living there.
Beta-glucan is abundant in oats and barley and has been shown “quite unequivocally” to help maintain healthy cholesterol levels, Rebello said.
Oats also are rich phytonutrients – plant-derived substances that may boost health. One class of such phytonutrients is avenanthramides, which are found only in oats. Avenanthramides may have antioxidant and anti-inflammatory effects, although Rebello said their possible benefits are not as well-researched as those for beta-glucans.
Oats have been linked to heart-health benefits since the 1960s and come in many forms. The differences involve levels of processing.
Oats grow in an inedible casing called a hull. Inside the hull is a seedlike groat. That groat is encased in bran. “In other whole grains, like in wheat, you can remove that bran layer,” Rebello said. “But in oats, this groat is very soft, so that bran layer cannot really be removed.”
That means oats are almost always a whole-grain food, and those are a key part of a healthy eating pattern.
If oats are labeled “steel cut,” it simply means they were processed with a steel cutter, Rebello said. Rolled oats are steamed first, then pressed with a roller. “If the roller crushes it into thinner flake, then you get quick-cooking oats,” she said. “If it is then rolled into an even thinner flake, you get your instant oats.”
Rebello said that nutritionally, there is little difference between steel cut and rolled oats. Instant oats, however, have a higher glycemic index, meaning they raise your blood sugar faster.
When oats are ground to flour, the coarser portion is extracted and called oat bran. The beta-glucans will be concentrated in the flour rather than the bran, she said.
Oat milk is derived from oats and water, but processing may add ingredients such as sugar, salt, oil and more. Oat milk has some dietary fiber, Rebello said – commonly 2 grams per cup – but the amount of beta-glucan is rather small.
Unfortunately, Rebello ruled out sugar-filled oatmeal cookies as a healthy food (although she’s not averse to having one as a treat now and then).
How, then, to embrace oats? “Just eat regular oatmeal,” she said. Half a cup of rolled oats cooks up quickly and will keep you full a long time.
Oatmeal with your favorite fruit can be a sweet way to start the day. Cook it in low-fat milk for creaminess and add unsalted nuts to bolster its heart-health value. If you’re time-pressed in the morning, try a healthy version of overnight oats, which can be prepared the night before.
It’s important to remember that no single food, even oats, can do it all, Rebello said, noting that if you eat a nutritious breakfast but then load up on sugar and fat the rest of the day, “that’s really not going to help you much.”
But you should go ahead and invite oatmeal into your breakfast club, Rebello said. “I definitely recommend eating oats.”
If you have questions or comments about this American Heart Association News story, please email editor@heart.org.
The Mediterranean diet has been shown time and again to lower heart attack and stroke risks. But it’s not about eating specific amounts of particular foods. It’s a pattern of healthy eating that includes
Happy #NationalWatermelonDay! Aside from being delicious and refreshing, watermelon is a rich source of potassium and magnesium, a good source of vitamins C and A, and it has fair amounts of vitamins B1, B5 and B6. And you get all of that for only 46.5 calories per cup.