Easy Nutty Energy Bites

Hello Friends, Happy Monday! I wanted to share a really quick and easy recipe my family has been enjoying this summer. These tasty and easy nutty energy bites are a healthful sweet treat that I’m sure will be making their way into my kiddos lunch boxes as they head back to school this week.

You know I love my chocolate and sweet treats, but I want to make them in the most healthful way possible–with wholesome ingredients that won’t sap my energy or derail my health and with sweetness that is balanced by protein and fiber to avoid a blood sugar spike or crash.

Easy Nutty Energy Bites

I love this recipe because its so flexible. This is one of my favorite combinations, but you can use any combo of nuts, seeds, oats, unsweetened coconut flakes, chocolate chips, raisins or other dried fruit for endless variations to suit everyone in the family.

And if you’re short on time or don’t feel like rolling out all of the bites, just grab a spoon and eat it right out of the bowl like you would cookie dough, its that good!

XO,  Kristi

PS – Speaking of school, its that time again! Make sure to check out my blog post Real Food School Lunches in Under Ten Minutes a Day for my favorite healthy lunchbox options and tips for making packing healthy lunches a breeze. Well as much of a breeze as packing lunches every day can be!

Print Recipe
5 from 1 vote

Easy Nutty Energy Bites

These make a perfect, healthful treat to satisfy your sweet cravings without the blood sugar crash and without derailing your health.
Calories: 3046kcal

Ingredients

Stir together:

Add in:

  • 1/3 c chopped walnuts
  • 1/3 c raw pumpkin seeds
  • 1/3 c mini chocolate chips we use Enjoy Life brand allergen free chocolate
  • OR 1 cup total of any combination of nuts seeds, oatmeal, unsweetened coconut flakes or dried fruit you prefer

Instructions

  • Roll the "dough" into small bite sized balls. You may need to adjust the amount of almond butter, honey and protein powder slightly as there is a lot of variation in the thickness of different brands of almond butter and raw honey. If your dough is too sticky to roll out, add a bit more Complete or just put it in the fridge for an hour or so. If its too dry, add a bit more honey or a bit of nut, coconut or olive
  • oil. Adjust as needed, you can't mess these up!
  • Store in an airtight container in the refrigerator and enjoy! These freeze well if you want to save them longer.

Notes

A quick note about protein powders. I used to be a firm believer that protein powders aren't real food. Most aren't. I avoid anything with whey (a highly inflammatory and unhealthful byproduct of the dairy industry), processed or artificial sweeteners, colors, preservatives or additives. Juice Plus Complete is the only protein powder I've found that meets my definition of real food--minimally processed, nutrient dense, whole food, plant based protein from chemical-free, non-GMO legumes. grains, seeds and even mushrooms, one of the only food sources of Vitamin D--and its low glycemic and actually tastes really good! If you're interested in purchasing Complete I'd love to help! Just follow my link or shoot me a message.

Paleo Carrot Cupcakes

Happy Easter, friends!

I absolutely love spring. It has been beautiful here the past few days and getting outside for soccer games and walks around the neighborhood is so good for my soul! Easter is also one of my favorite holidays, maybe because its spring and also, I think, because the focus is on faith and enjoying time together rather than all of the other trappings that makes some other holidays so hectic and stressful.

Today I have a new recipe for you that is perfect for your Easter celebration this weekend and a book recommendation.

Paleo Carrot Cupcakes

Paleo Carrot Cupcakes

When our daughter turned one, I wanted to make carrot cake cupcakes for her birthday. Of course they had to be gluten and dairy free, but I also wanted them to be free of refined sugar and oils and as healthful as I could make them. I looked at dozens of recipes and none were quite what I wanted. So I used all of my healthy baking tricks and created these. They were a big hit with the whole family. So much so that I made them again for my husband’s birthday a month later and for Juliette’s 2nd birthday as well.

These cupcakes are so healthful, high protein and nutrient dense they could easily be breakfast muffins. Without the icing, they are completely free of any refined sugar. For moist, delicious and nutritious muffins, add in the walnuts and golden raisins and skip the icing. Shhh …. don’t tell my family they’re really super healthy muffins, they think they’re getting cupcakes.

Since I was making these for birthday “cupcakes” and now an Easter treat, I did add icing with powdered sugar to make them a bit more fun and festive, but that is completely optional.

The maple icing is my dairy-free version of a buttercream icing and its delicious with these cupcakes. I love to top them with carrot & walnuts too, but that isn’t necessarily my kiddos favorite. So eat them plain, iced, or with whatever toppers you and yours will enjoy!

Paleo Carrot Cupcakes

Might I suggest, if you are looking for a delicious, fun and healthful treat for your Easter brunch these might be the perfect thing. They will be making an appearance at our house next weekend!

If you’re looking for other Easter treats, you might also consider my Buckwheat Brownies (gluten free, dairy free and refined sugar and oil free) or these amazing little Salted Caramel Almond Clusters.

Lessons from The Blue Zones

The past few weeks I’ve been reading a book called The Blue Zones by Dan Buettner. Buettner and a team of researchers have spent years finding and researching places around the world with extraordinarily high concentrations of centenarians. They have found five such “Blue Zones” and Buettner tells stories of the centenarians he has met in each of the Blue Zones and outlines the diet and lifestyle factors which appear to contribute to the health and longevity of people of these regions. It’s a fascinating read for anyone interested in healthy living. The amazing thing is not just the longevity of the people of these regions, but their health as they age. He tells stories of 80 or 90 year olds he mistakes for 60. And they continue to be very active, walking every day, working in their farms, vineyards and gardens, caring for grandchildren and great-grandchildren, spending time with friends and family and contributing their communities well into their 80s, 90s and 100s.

Here are some of the common factors which appear to increase both the life span and more importantly, the health span of people in these regions:

  1. Move more — Stay active! Intentional exercise is wonderful, but just adding more movement to your every day life appears to make a big difference. Walk more. Park at the back of the parking lot and walk further to the store or office. If you work at a desk all day, get up and walk around the office for five minutes every hour. Climb stairs. Ride a bike. Garden. Play a recreational sport. Stretch while you’re watching tv in the evenings. Do yoga. Do isometrics while you’re standing in line at the grocery store. Chase your kids or grand kids around. The healthiest people don’t sit still and continue to stay active as they age.
  2. Eat less — Okinawans say “hara hachi bu before every meal–a Confucian-inspired adage that is a reminder to stop eating when their stomachs are 80% full. We tend to eat until we’re full. Okinawans eat until they are no longer hungry. This is a significant difference. As one researcher notes, “We gain weight insidiously, not stuffing ourselves, but eating a little bit too much each day–mindlessly.” (Buettner at 271) As a result of this attitude, people in each of the Blue Zones tend to consume fewer calories every day. Reducing calorie intake has been shown in many studies to prolong life, and an expanding waistline correlates with an increase in almost every western disease including heart disease and diabetes.
  3. Eat a whole food, plant based diet — In addition to eating fewer calories, people in the Blue Zones also eat nutritionally dense, real unprocessed foods, rather than the calorie-dense and nutritionally deficient foods commonly found in the western world. Each of these cultures also eat a very limited amount of meat. Strict Seventh Day Adventists of Loma Linda, California (the only American Blue Zone) are vegetarians. The other Blue Zones traditionally only had access to meat on rare occasions and reserved it for Sundays or holidays. Traditional Sardinians, Nicoyans and Okinawans eat what they produce in their gardens, supplemented by duram wheat (Sardinians), sweet potato (Okinawans) or maize (Nicoyans). “[S]cientists analyzed six different studies of thousands of vegetarians and found that those that restrict meat are associated with living longer.” (Buettner at 275-76) Beans, whole grains, garden vegetables, fruit and nuts are the basis of all of these longevity diets. If/when you do eat meat, make sure it is from grass-fed or pastured, hormone and antibiotic free animals. When it comes to animal products, spend your grocery dollars on quality, rather than quantity.
  4. Have a purpose — Okinawans call it ikigai and the Nicoyans of Costa Rica call it plan de vida. Both phrases translate essentially as “why I wake up in the morning”. An 11 year study of people ages 65-92 found that individuals who had a strong sense of purpose, a goal in life, both lived longer and were sharper and higher functioning than those who did not. This may be as simple as caring for grand children or a hobby you enjoy. Volunteerism–helping others–is also important to feelings of fulfillment and healthful aging. Exercising your brain by learning a new language or doing things that are novel and complex has also been shown to decrease memory loss and may decrease risk of Alzheimer’s. (Buettner at 281)
  5. Relieve stress — Its so important to our health to find time and ways to slow down, relieve stress and increase our serenity and people in the Blue Zones all seem to do this well. Sardinians pour into the streets every day at 5 pm to socialize with their friends and neighbors. Nicoyans take a break every afternoon to rest and socialize. Traditional Okinawans each have a group of life-long friends called a “moai” that they visit with every evening before dinner. For Adventists, Saturday Sabbath is an entire day when they stop their work, homework, sports and weekly activities. They spend the day focused on God, family and spending time in nature (which often includes a hike). All of this results in a greater sense of well-being and lower stress. (Buettner at 284) Chronically elevated stress hormones causes chronic inflammation, which accelerates aging and increases our risk of all of the so-called “age-related” diseases such as heart disease, diabetes, Alzheimer’s and even cancer.
  6. Belong to a faith community — Centenaries in the Blue Zones are all people of faith. Studies have shown that attending religious services make a difference in how long a person lives. One study found those who attended religious services at least once a month reduced their risk of death by about a third, an impact about as great as that of moderate physical exercise. Faith in God and a higher purpose lowers stress levels and promotes peace. “It appears that people who pay attention to their spiritual side have lower rates of cardiovascular disease, depression, stress and suicide and their immune system seems to work better.” (Buettner at 288)
  7. Make Family a Priority — Centenarians in the Blue Zones “tended to marry, have children, and build their lives around that core. Their lives were imbued with familial duty, ritual, and a certain emphasis on togetherness.” (Buettner at 290-91) “By the time centenarians become centenarians, their lifelong devotion produced returns: Their children reciprocate their love and care. Their children check up on their parents, and in four of the five Blue Zones, the younger generation welcomes the older generation into their homes. Studies have found that elders who live with their children are less susceptible to disease, eat healthier diets, have lower levels of stress, and have a much lower incidence of serious accidents.” (Buettner at 291) Another study found that elders who live with their families had much sharper mental and social skills.

These are not isolated factors, but tend to go hand in hand. For example, moving more, faith in God or a higher power and close relationships with family all help to relieve stress. I highly recommend reading the stories of fascinating centenarians from around the world and I think you will be inspired to adopt a longevity lifestyle too.

Buona Pasqua! A blessed Easter to you and yours. I hope you each enjoy this special time with nourishing and delicious food and, just as importantly, make the time to nourish your body, mind and soul by connecting with your faith, family, friends and getting outside to enjoy God’s beautiful creation.

XOXO,

Kristi

Paleo Carrot Cupcakes (gluten free, dairy free, refined oil & sugar free)

These nutrient dense and delicious carrot cupcakes are make the perfect healthful Easter treat or first birthday cupcakes. Free of gluten, dairy and refined oils.
Prep Time30 minutes
Cook Time25 minutes
Total Time55 minutes
Servings: 18 cupcakes
Calories: 355kcal

Ingredients

  • 1 ripe banana mashed well with a fork (1/2 cup)
  • 4 oz. unsweetened organic applesauce
  • 1 c. grated carrots I have also used pulp from my carrot, orange and ginger juice
  • 1 c.
  • almond butter
  • 1/4 c.
  • coconut oil
  • , melted I put a glass jar in the oven while it preheats to melt the coconut oil
  • 3 eggs
  • 4 T
  • pure maple syrup
  • 2 tsp. vanilla
  • 1 c.
  • almond flour
  • 1 tsp.
  • baking soda
  • 1 tsp.
  • sea salt
  • 2 tsp. cinnamon
  • 1 tsp. nutmeg
  • 1/2 c. golden raisins optional add-in
  • 1/2 c. chopped walnuts optional add-in
  • Dairy Free Maple "Butter"Cream Icing
  • 1 c.
  • Nutiva Shortening
  • I have also used 1/2 c. coconut oil and 1/2 c. palm shortening
  • 1 tsp. vanilla
  • 1/2 c. pure maple syrup
  • 2 to 3 cups powdered sugar

Instructions

  • Preheat oven to 350 degrees and grease or line muffin tins to hold 18 muffins.
  • In a medium bowl, stir together all ingredients in the order listed. Add the golden raisins and walnuts if desired. Mix until well combined.
  • Scoop batter into greased or lined muffin pan, filling each cup 3/4 of the way full.
  • Bake at 350 degrees for 20-25 minutes, or until cupcakes are golden and baked through. Cool completely.
  • While cupcakes are cooling, make the icing. Combine the shortening and 2 cups powdered sugar in the bowl of your stand mixer, fitted with the paddle attachment. Add maple syrup and vanilla and mix well. Mix until combined, adding more powdered sugar as needed to achieve the desired consistency. Ice completely cooled cupcakes and enjoy!

Eggplant Lasagna Stacks

My son LOVES eggplant and every year eagerly waits for it to be in season at the farm and start appearing at the farmers market. He loves Eggplant Parmesan, and I try to make my gluten and dairy free version for him once every season. But it is so time and labor intensive I don’t usually make it more than once. This year (after his Eggplant Parmesan) we are still enjoying an abundance of eggplant and he asked for eggplant lasagna. I couldn’t find a recipe I liked that met our dietary needs (half of us are gluten and dairy free) so I made up my own and it turned out to be a hit with the whole family.

eggplant-lasagna-stacks-collage

This sauce is one of our favorite tricks for dairy free cooking. Adding coconut milk or cream to tomato sauce makes it amazingly creamy and delicious and mimics the flavor you would get from ricotta cheese in a traditional lasagna or baked Italian dish.

I added the sausage because, well, my kids will eat just about anything with sausage in it. We use the Salt and Pepper ground pork sausage from Fischer Farms. With all meat, we focus on quality and enjoy it in moderation. Fisher Farms’ sausage is hormone and antibiotic free, from pastured pigs and completely nitrate and preservative free. And it adds amazing flavor. For me, its a good trade off for my kids enjoying eggplant, kale and all of the other goodness in this dish. If you prefer a vegetarian dish, just leave out the sausage and instead, add more kale and a few cloves of fresh chopped garlic to the caramelized onion and season generously with salt and pepper. It will still be delicious!

eggplant-lasagna-stacks

I still have fresh herbs growing in pots on my patio. I highly recommend growing your own herbs! It is so easy and such a huge help in making real food delicious, easy and affordable. Fresh herbs are too expensive in the grocery, don’t last long and I don’t always plan ahead enough to know what I’ll need. But I spend $10 to $20 on herbs in April or early May and I’m still picking from them now in early October. I love that I can just run outside and grab whatever I need, whenever I need it.

eggplant-lasagna-stacks2

I also used kale from my Tower Garden in this recipe. This is something else I cannot recommend highly enough! It makes it so easy to grow my own greens, herbs and other vegetables (all year around if you invest in grow lights!) and I can pick whatever I need, anytime. I pick kale or chard for my green smoothie almost every morning. You can’t get any easier, fresher or healthier than that!  You can learn more about the Tower Garden here, or if you are local and want to see mine you are welcome any time.

I’ve been experimenting with goat cheese for myself and my other dairy free family members. The proteins in goat cheese are much easier to digest than cow’s milk and much less inflammatory. So it is a good, more healthful alternative for some with dairy intolerance. Its totally optional here, but I sprinkled just a bit of goat cheese on half of our pan. We love it either way.

Find time to make these Eggplant Lasagna Stacks and enjoy with a big green salad!

And please comment below and let me know if you try it. I’d love to hear what you think!

Eggplant Lasagna Stacks (Gluten & Dairy Free, Paleo)

My take on eggplant lasagna is gluten and dairy free but so full of flavor and nutrition you won't miss the noodles or the cheese! (vegan/vegetarian option)    
Prep Time30 minutes
Cook Time30 minutes
Total Time1 hour

Ingredients

  • 1 c. full fat canned coconut milk
  • 1 25 oz jar pasta sauce 2-1/2 cups (I used Aldi's organic brand)
  • 3-4 medium sized fresh eggplant choose eggplant that are firm and smooth with bright shiny skin
  • 2-3 T Extra Virgin Olive Oil
  • Salt and pepper
  • 1 lb ground sausage
  • 1 onion diced
  • 5-6 kale leaves or spinach or chard
  • 20-25 Fresh basil leaves
  • Goat cheese optional

Instructions

  • Pre-heat oven to 375 degrees.
  • Trim the top stem end off of your eggplant and cut into 1/4" slices with a mandolin or sharp knife. (I recommend a good mandolin for this, as it makes it so much quicker and easier and ensures your slices are the same thickness. I have this OXO Mandolin and love it! You will need 44-48 slices. In my casserole dish, I can fit 11-12 "stacks" with 4 slices of eggplant in each stack.) Rub the eggplant slices with olive oil, lay them in a single layer on baking sheets and sprinkle with salt and pepper. Roast eggplant for about 5 minutes and then remove from oven.
  • While eggplant is roasting, combine coconut milk and pasta sauce in a small saucepan and warm it over low heat.
  • Combine onion and sausage in a skillet and cook over medium high heat until the sausage is browned and the onion is caramelized. While its cooking, chop the kale. Slice the leaves into thin ribbons and then cut up the ribbons into small bits. Add the kale to the sausage and onion mixture and stir until the kale is wilted. Remove from heat.
  • Spread a very thin layer (about 1/2 cup) of sauce in the bottom of a 9x13 pan or a comparable size casserole dish (I use a 2 qt. Pampered Chef stoneware casserole dish and can fit 11-12 stacks, depending on the size of my eggplants).
  • Choose 11-12 of the largest eggplant slices and lay them in a single layer in on top of the sauce. (You want to start with the largest slices and with each layer, use the next largest so that you end up with the smallest slices on top of your stacks.)
  • Divide the sausage mixture into four parts and use one quarter of the mixture for each layer. Place a spoonful of the sausage mixture in the center of each eggplant slice. Tear 5-6 basil leaves into pieces and sprinkle on top of the eggplant and sausage mixture. Pour 1/2 to 3/4 cup of sauce over each stack. The stacks will not be completely covered with sauce.
  • Repeat this layering two more times: Top each stack with another slice of eggplant (using the largest slices of eggplant first) then top with the sausage mixture, torn basil leaves and 1/2 c. of sauce. Reserve 5-6 basil leaves to add as a garnish, just before serving.
  • After the fourth and final layer of eggplant, spoon the remaining sauce over the stacks. Then top with the last portion of the sausage mixture, spooning some on top of each stack.
  • Top with crumbled goat cheese, if desired.
  • Cover the casserole dish with foil and bake at 375 for 30 minutes. Alternatively the dish can be refrigerated at this point and put back in the over before you're ready to serve.
  • Stack the remaining basil leaves and slice them into a thin julienne. When your Eggplant Lasagna Stacks are done, sprinkle them with fresh basil just before serving.
  • Enjoy!!

Notes

For a vegan/vegetarian option, simply omit the sausage and instead, to the caramelized onion add 12-15 leaves finely chopped kale, 3 cloves minced garlic and salt and pepper. Layer as instructed above.

Maple Pecan Pumpkin Spice Muffins

Maple Pecan Pumpkin Spice Muffins

It’s fall!

I’m already seeing pumpkin everything, everywhere. So in honor of the first day of fall and one of my favorite times of year, I’m joining in the pumpkin love today.

You should absolutely jump on the pumpkin bandwagon this fall too. Not just because its delicious, but because pumpkin is packed full of nutrition. Pumpkin is very high in Vitamin A, one serving providing 245% RDA. It is also a good source of calcium, Vitamin C, several B vitamins (including folate) and a number of minerals including magnesium, potassium and phosphorus.

Maple Pecan Pumpkin Spice Muffins

These amazingly moist and flavorful muffins are the perfect way to satisfy your pumpkin spice cravings with health promoting ingredients and without any sugar or other harmful ingredients.

They are free of gluten, dairy, sugar and refined oils. They are paleo and vegetarian, and can easily be made vegan as well by substituting flax eggs. They are high in protein due to the almond butter, almond meal and eggs. Use eggs from pastured chickens for a healthy dose of omega -3s. And they freeze well too. I love to keep these in the freezer to pull out and pop in the oven for a quick healthy weekday breakfast.

Treat yourself to some delicious, healthful, pumpkin-y goodness!

Maple Pecan Pumpkin Spice Muffins (gluten & dairy free, paleo)

Ingredients

  • 1 very ripe banana mashed
  • 1 c.
  • Organic pumpkin purée
  • 3 eggs
  • 1 c.
  • Almond butter
  • 1/2 c.
  • Real maple syrup
  • 1 tsp.
  • Vanilla extract
  • 1 c.
  • Almond meal
  • 1 tsp.
  • Baking soda
  • 1 tsp. Unprocessed sea salt (I use
  • Celtic Sea Salt
  • or
  • Redmond Real Salt
  • )
  • 2 tsp. Ground cinnamon
  • 1 tsp. Ground ginger
  • 1/2 tsp. Ground nutmeg

Instructions

  • Preheat oven to 350 degrees and grease a muffin tin well with coconut oil or a bsking spray. If you prefer you can use paper or silicone muffin wrappers, but I really like these muffins with a bit of a crusty edge from baking directly in the pan.
  • Placed ripe, peeled banana in a mixing bowl and mash it with a fork.
  • Add the pumpkin purée and eggs and mix well. Add in the almond butter, maple syrup and vanilla, mixing until the batter is smooth and well combined.
  • Stir in the dry ingredients and spices and mix until combined.
  • Spoon into muffin tins,filling each cup about 3/4 of the way full. You should have 18 muffins. Bake 20-22 minutes. Cool for 10 to 15 minutes and then carefully remove the muffins from the pan and allow them to finish cooling on a wire cooling rack.
  • Enjoy your healthy pumpkin-y goodness!