Hemp Protein Bar Recipe

hemp seeds

Hempseeds are an awesome little superfood to add into your diet. They've got good proteins, minerals, and lots of good healthy fats. And they taste awesome and nutty and sweet.

In addition to featuring a heap of nurturing hemp protein and hempseeds, this hemp protein bar recipe features a variety of other plant-based protein sources. We've got some pumpkin seeds (also high in zinc and iron), coconut (good, healthy fats), and chia seeds (loaded with calcium and fiber). Not only do they contain all this healthy stuff, they taste great and are good little afternoon snacks (or for breakfast, or after yoga, or whenever!). This hemp protein bar recipe is adapted from Green Kitchen Stories, one of my favorite blogs (read a review of their cookbook, Vegetarian Everyday, here!).

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hemp protein bars! yums!

Hemp Protein Bars

1 cup pumpkin seeds + 2 Tablespoons for garnish
¾ cup dried shredded coconut
½ cup hempseeds
½ cup hemp protein powder or more hempseeds
¼ cup chia seeds
Pinch sea salt
15-20 Medjool dates, pitted
⅓ cup coconut oil
¼ cup raw cacao powder
1 teaspoon vanilla extract or ½ teaspoon ground vanilla

  1. In a food processor or blender, pulse pumpkin seeds, coconut, hempseeds, hemp powder, chia seeds and salt until ground but still slightly chunky.
  2. Add dates, coconut oil, cacao powder and vanilla to processer blend until smooth. Mixture should be slightly tacky.
  3. Press the batter evenly into an 8x8 inch baking dish, using a measuring cup to press evenly. Sprinkle on remaining 2 Tablespoons pumpkin seeds and press into mixture. Refrigerate for at least 30 minutes, then cut into bars or squares. Wrap them in parchment or waxed paper and store in an air-tight container. Bars will keep around a week in the fridge.

Yield: 8-12 bars

Hempseeds image from here, other photo copyright Vibrant Wellness Journal

Homemade Yogi Tea to Balance the Doshas

kjdfljd

A few weeks ago I attended an Ayurvedic cooking class with some yoga teachers and friends. The teachers have been practicing yoga, meditation, chanting and Ayurvedic cooking for many years and had a wealth of knowledge to share about this lifestyle. Ayurveda is considered the 'sister science' to yoga, both practices that can help bring balance to the body and mind. Ayurveda looks at the body as having various constitutions, known as dosha. The three dosha are pitta, vata and kapha, and most of us are a combination of at least two of these. Including certain foods into our diets can help us balance our dosha and feel better everyday.

In the class we learned three recipes that are foundational to Ayurvedic cooking: homemade ghee (clarified butter), kitchari (a balanced combination of rice and lentils) and a spiced yogi tea, which I really loved. The other recipes were good too, but the yogi tea was a magical combination that I immediately adopted into my daily life. The Ayurvedic yoga tea is made from a mixture of warming spices and just a bit of black tea, and it can be served plain or sweetened with honey and some coconut milk. It is delicious and warming, and can be beneficial to all three dosha. According to Vanice Medley, who taught the cooking class with her partner Mark, this yogi tea "Promotes health, strengthens & tonifies the nervous system, energizes the body, clears & calms the mind, cleans the blood, promotes digestion, soothes & lubricates joints, cleanses liver, keeps spine and cerebrospinal fluid healthy, and is both a remedy and preventive measure for colds, allergies, and other illnesses."

This recipe is the version I've been making at home, which is based on her recipe. I like to add a little fennel seed to sweeten my tea, and use some coconut milk at the end to make it soft and creamy. I'm literally drinking it as I type this post! This tea is a great replacement for coffee or for any type of processed drink you might have around the house. The spices are warming and cleansing, and it just tastes amazing!

Homemade Yogi Tea

1 inch piece ginger, sliced thinly
1 Tablespoon fennel seeds
4-6 whole cardamom pods, cracked
4-6 whole black peppercorns
1 cinnamon stick
3-4 whole cloves (do not overdo it with the cloves or it will taste like mouthwash)
Water
Black or green tea (optional)
Honey
Coconut or other non-dairy milk

  1. Add ginger, fennel, cardamom, peppercorns, cinnamon and cloves to a saucepan. Cover with 4 cups of water and bring to a boil. Cover, lower heat and simmer for one hour.
  2. Remove lid, add a pinch of tea if using, and let stand five minutes. Yogi tea can be enjoyed immediately, but can also be steeped overnight or all day.
  3. Before serving, stir in a few drops of honey and coconut milk. That's it!

Clean, Green Eating while Traveling

Travel-writingA friend recently asked me for some tips for staying healthy while traveling, and I thought that perhaps our savvy readers here at Green Upgrader would be interested too! Admittedly, it's been years since I've traveled internationally. But since I live in Hawaii, island-hopping is a very good, affordable substitute, and I am not complaining!

Whether you are traveling on short island trips or international adventures, even a few days away from home can disrupt our dietary patterns and mess up our digestion and nutrition. Here are few tips that have gotten me through international travel to Southeast Asia, mainland United States, and Europe. If you are staying closer to home this summer, here is another post about healthy backpacking foods. Hopefully you will find all of them useful!

Drink your Veggies

Green drinks are an easy, simple way to ensure that you get some daily greens into your diet. My favorite brand is AmazingGrass, which is a dry powder that includes barley grass, wheat grass, spirulina, veggies, flaxseeds and probiotics. Simply mix the powder into some water and drink! This oddly colored beverage gives you a nutritional boost when you are not eating your best. You can buy single-serve packs or larger containers in various flavors. There are many brands on the market– ask your health food store for some samples, they should always share! But be careful, some are sweetened with fructose (PowerPak) and others have dairy (Spiruteen), so I recommend avoiding those.

amazing grass

Get your Vitamins

When we're at home, most of us probably eat a pretty balanced diet and get adequate amounts micro- and macro-nutrients. But when traveling, we might be missing out on some important stuff (in Germany, I subsisted on beer, pretzels and Kaesespaetzle, the German version of macaroni and cheese!). In addition to greens powders, you might want to bring along some simple protein or meal replacement powders. The really good ones are Vega, Garden of Life and Sunwarrior– these all feature a variety of plant-based proteins, vitamins, minerals and more. These can often just be mixed or shaken with water for a quick boost to make up for all that beer! Check out the Lunchbox Bunch and Choosing Raw for some reviews of protein powders.

vega products

Make Quick Superfood Snacks

Granola bars, Larabars and other snacky foods are helpful both for long travel times (air, train, car, what-have-you), but they can also come in handy when there is just not enough food around. If you have time before your trip, make up some healthy superfood snacks like Homemade Larabars or these Mango Sunshine Cashew Bites. If you don't have time to prepare your own, stock up on Larabars, WaiLana bars or similar. Always be sure to bring along nuts, seeds, kale chips and dried fruits too, for some snacky fun. And be sure to restock anytime you can along the way– sample the local versions of trail mix, granola and get fresh fruits whenever you are able. These foods will get you by in a pinch, and keep your sweet tooth happy! And if you have even more time before your trip, prepare some wholesome, homemade airplane meals– an important start for any trip. Start your holiday off healthfully with pre-made salads, trail mixes, and wraps. My New Roots  and 101 Cookbooks both have some great suggestions. As long as there is not liquid, most foods can be taken on the airplane without a problem.

Keep your Belly Healthy

During my time in Indonesia, I often found myself with 'Bali Belly'– an unhappy tummy from unclean food. To avoid all that awfulness, take probiotic supplements before, during and after your trip to keep your intestinal flora happy and balanced, which can decrease the likelihood that you might become ill. Additionally, acupuncturists and naturopathic doctors recommend liquid collodial silver and grapefruit seed extract to keep our tummies happy on international trips. These supplements kill off the bad stuff that makes us sick. Check with a practitioner to find which method is best for you.

Hopefully these tips will help keep you well on all your holidays! Happy trails!

How and Why You Should add Greens into Your Life Now!

We all know we're supposed to eat lots of green leafy things, but many people are confused about how to choose, prep and cook these plants. There are so many greens to choose from, and today we'll cover some of my favorite reasons to eat greens and share  five easy ways to incorporate them into your life. Which you should do immediately!

three varieties of kale

But let's begin with the basics– when I write about greens, I am referring mostly to plants that fall into the botanical family Brassica. This huge family includes kale, cabbage, arugula, collards, mustard greens, among other edible non-so-leafy things like broccoli, turnips, kohlrabi, wasabi and radishes. Other greens like lettuce, spinach, dandelion and seaweeds are also important components for our diets, but they don't always pack the nutritional punch of the Brassica family. Kale, collards, watercress and mustard greens alone score 1000 on the ANDI scale, which rates foods on a nutrient-density/calorie ratio. These green leafies contain a wide spectrum of vitamins, minerals (including calcium and iron), protein and dozens of micronutrients and antioxidants; the sulfurous compounds in these plants are correlated with cancer prevention.

And if the health information isn't enough to sway your towards greens, know that they taste amazing too! Greens like collards and kale have a bit of a nasty reputation as being bitter or tough, which is sometimes true. But these hearty leaves are quickly softened with a massage, some acids, or heat to create a delicate and wholesome component to your meal. And preparing greens is super easy too. Here's a helpful tip I often share with my cooking class students: prepare your greens ahead of time. Coming home to a fridge full of prepared greens (and other veggies too!) can help make meal prep much easier and so much less stressful! When you get home from the market or the store, give all your greens a cool-water bath in the sink. Then stick them into a bowl or jar and cover the stem ends with water (just like you would for cut flowers). This allows the greens to cool down, absorb some of the water they might have lost since the field, and ensures a much longer life in your fridge. To prepare, tear all the stems off your kale and collards. You can then slice the leaves thinly and store in airtight containers for up to a week. Cabbage and other greens can also be sliced ahead of time. While there might be minimal nutrition lost due to oxidation, the majority will still be there when you get to them later in the week– and if it encourages you to eat more greens, then I say go for it! As an aside, most greens are super easy to grow at home throughout the year! So if you have a garden, get thee to the seed store!

How to Add Greens into your Everyday Meals

Greens & Pasta

If you enjoy pasta or pasta salads, adding greens is super easy and can boost the nutrition of your meal. Simply add some de-stemmed, chopped greens (you prepared it ahead of time, right?) to the pasta water just before draining. The residual heat will wilt the greens very quickly, so you don't need more than a minute in the water. Drain pasta as usual, then mix with your favorite sauce. Done! Add at least one heaping cup of greens per person, which will wilt to about half that size. On those just-can't-bring-myself-to-cook kinda nights, I do this with Annie's macaroni and cheese and feel totally justified in my choice of comfort food!

Greens Stir-Fry

Perhaps you don't do pasta, and instead cook up mixtures of veggies to serve with rice or other grains. Try adding some leafies into your regular vegetable mixture right at the end of cooking. These greens need less than a minute to cook, so don't add them too early or they will lose much of their nutritional value. These add a colorful component to your meals and pair well with any type of sauce you might be using.

Green Smoothies

Green smoothies are, like, so totally popular right now. And for good reason! Because of the aforementioned nasty reputation of greens, sometimes it's easier to get kids (those big and small!) to get their greens blended with fruits and flavorful liquids. Green smoothies can be made with kale, spinach, chard and even lettuce. There are many good tutorials for creating delicious green smoothies, including Glue and Glitter's 40 Days of Green Smoothies, Choosing Raw's perfect green smoothie formula, and Kathy Palsky's many recipes for green smoothies.

Greens Rolls

Collard greens are delicious in many ways, but one of the best ways to use those beautiful big leaves is as wraps! Not only is this a gluten-free option, it's an easy way to make a quick meal out of whatever is in the fridge. Hummus? Cashew Cheeze? Leftover chili? Anything goes into a collard wrap, the same way that anything goes for burritos. Check out Honest Fare's tutorial for mastering a collard green roll, and check out my recipe for Super Greens Rolls here, featuring collards, kale, cabbage and nori for a quadruple green meal!

A Week of Greens Salad

This is my new favorite meal, and incorporates all the tips we've already covered. I usually make this salad once or twice a week, and then always have a big bowl of ready-made green goodness to use. The recipe below is just a guideline, so use what's available and make the salad work for you! And don't be scared to use this in multiple ways: in your pasta salad, in a green smoothie, in your wraps, or in stir-fries. Of if you want to feel super clean and healthy, just enjoy the salad on its own!

super green salad

Super Greens Salad

3 cups thinly sliced kale
3 cups thinly sliced cabbage
1 bunch dandelion greens, sliced
1-2 cups shredded carrots
1-2 cups fresh chopped herbs (basil and cilantro are best!)
1 lemon
Pinch of sea salt

  1. Massage the sliced kale gently by squishing together in your hands. This will release some green juice and help wilt the kale to a more palatable texture. Just a few minutes should be good!
  2. Toss the kale and all remaining ingredients into a large bowl and toss to combine. Drizzle with the juice from one lemon and just a sprinkle of salt. Toss again to combine.
  3. Enjoy immediately or keep for up to a week!

5 Ways to Replace Single Use Plastic

Reusable Snack Bag

Single use plastic is a scourge on our environment, yet we continue to produce and use plastic products that are designed to head straight to the landfill after we use them just one time. Products like plastic straws and baggies are so ingrained in our culture, many of us can't imagine not using them in our day-to-day.

The problem is, all of that convenience is destroying fragile ecosystems and harming our health at the same time.

Many plastic products, like Ziplock bags are not recyclable, because the plastic is of too low a quality. Instead, they're landfill-bound, but often they don't make it that far. Whether they fall off of a trash truck or someone carelessly tosses them on the ground, those plastics make their way into waterways and eventually to the ocean where they become part of one of the huge plastic gyres. These gyres are massive areas of the ocean that are too polluted to support life.

Plastic is no good for our bodies, either. Plasticizers like BPA leach into food and water that they come into contact with. These chemicals are often untested, so we don't full know how they'll impact our health. Others are endocrine disruptors or even carcinogens. No, thank you!

Any time you replace a disposable option with a reusable one, you're making a huge impact on your health and the health of this planet. Here are a few simple ways that you can replace single use plastic with reusable alternatives.

1. Reusable Snack Bag

Just say no to wasteful plastic baggies! There are lots of companies making reusable snack bags, or you can make your own reusable snack bag!

2. Cloth Diapers

You might not think of disposable diapers as a plastic product, but those Huggies use a layer of plastic on the outside to prevent leaks. Cloth diapers have a hefty price tag initially, but you buy them once, and you're set! Compare that to the cost of buying disposables over and over, and you're not only reducing your plastic waste but saving between $900 and $1900 during your child's diaper-wearing years!

embellished glass straws

3. Glass Straws

Of course, you can skip the straw all together when you're grabbing a drink on the go, but if you don't want to give up your sipping habit, choose a reusable glass straw instead! Most glass straws are dishwasher safe, so they're easy to care for. They're also way cuter than clear disposable straws!

4. Picnic Ware

Next time you're heading to the park for a picnic, pack yourself some proper utensils instead of disposable plastic ones. If you're traveling and don't want to carry dirty dishes with you, opt for more sustainable disposables made from wood or bamboo instead of plastic.

5. To-Go Cups

When you head out to the coffee shop for that next latte, bring your own cup! The cup they put your coffee in may be made from paper, but those paper cups usually have a plastic coating to prevent leaks, and they come with a single use plastic lid. Boo!

What other ways can we replace disposable plastic products with reusable alternatives? I'd love to hear your ideas in the comments!

photos by Becky Striepe

Hand-Blown Glass Straws from Moxie Glass

glass straws

Moxie Glass makes hand-blown glass straws that are reusable, dishwasher safe, and so cute!

Some drinks are just better with a straw, aren't they? The trouble with those ubiquitous plastic straws is that they're a one-and-done situation, and you know how I feel about single use plastic! Glass straws are a great replacement for the plastic ones that are polluting our beaches and oceans.

Melissa sent me a set of her straws to try along with a reusable glass jar tumbler made just to pair with her glass straws. The tumbler is super awesome! Its screw-on lid has a hole in the middle where you insert the straw, so you can take your drinks on the go in a totally reusable, totally plastic free container.

Melissa from Moxie Glass - aka Many Minis - makes every glass straw by hand in her Colorado studio. The glass she uses is the same sort used to make Pyrex dishware! If you've ever owned any Pyrex, you know how durable this stuff is. Even I have a hard time breaking our Pyrex plates, and that is saying a lot. I'm the clumsiest clutz in Clumsy Town!

The review packet included a few different straws:

  • 2 "bendy" straws - OK, they don't bend, but they're angled, so they kind of feel like drinking from a bendy straw
  • 2 straight straws
  • 2 embellished straws - a fish and a tree frog
  • 1 wide-mouth straw

I tested them all out on a couple of different sorts of drink, and they are great! The wide-mouth straw is the one that actually comes with the tumbler she sent - it's a to-go smoothie cup, so of course I whipped up a green smoothie to try out in there.

glass straw smoothie mug

It worked great! The wider straw didn't clog at all, and the smoothie I made was on the thick side. When I would take my breakfast smoothie to go previously, I was putting it in a to go coffee mug, and it was not super ideal. I can't wait to pack my next to go smoothie in it!

The other straws were a regular diameter for drinking regular drinks, so I just tried them out with some water. Drinking from a glass straw does feel a little bit different from a plastic straw, since glass isn't pliable like plastic, but I really liked using these!

She sent embellished straws with a tree frog and with a fish. The fish one is probably my favorite. When you pull it out of the package, it kind of looks like a crack pipe, but! When you put it into the tumbler, it's freaking adorable. The fish goes on the bottom, so he's swimming in your glass!

embellished glass straws

One of the things that's made me hesitant about glass straws is the thought of having yet another thing to hand wash. It turns out this isn't an issue at all. Even these embellished straws are dishwasher safe!

You can find Melissa's glass straws in her Etsy shop or on her website!

Review: Hail Merry Raw Macaroons

raw macaroons

When you think raw food, you probably don't picture desserts, but there are lots of yummy raw dessert options out there! I recently got the chance to try out Hail Merry Raw Macaroons, and I have got to say: I was impressed!

The macaroons came in the same Conscious Box as the raw protein bars I reviewed last week. This might make it seem like the Conscious Box is full of raw food, which isn't the case. This one had a lot more raw treats than usual. Not that I mind raw snacks - they're delicious and much healthier than most cooked snacks!

The macaroons they sent me were the chocolate variety, and they were rich and cocoa-y! All of Hail Merry's macaroons are gluten free and vegan and contain no refined sugars. I was a little bummed that these were sweetened with maple syrup, though. Often, raw cookies use dates or other dried fruit to get the sweetness, which means a little boost of nutrients and fiber to balance out that sugar.

Here's the whole ingredients list:

organic maple syrup, organic shredded coconut, Fair Trade dark cocoa, organic extra virgin coconut oil, pure Madagascar bourbon vanilla, sea salt

As desserts go, I'm really impressed with this list! No mystery ingredients, and they went the extra mile to source their cocoa from a fair trade supplier. All of Hail Merry's products are also Non-GMO Verified, which means no franken-ingredients here!

Hail Merry makes macaroons, tarts, granola, and sells a few types of nuts. You can find their whole line of raw snacks on their website.

Review: Dale’s Raw Protein Bar

dales raw protein bars

Every once in a while, the awesome folks at Conscious Box send me a media box to check out full of vegan goodies, and they sent me one in December that I'm just now making my way through! There was nothing wrong with the box, it's just been a super crazy time: I didn't even open it until last week. D'oh!

The box was full of awesome goodies like a PeopleTowel and some fun vegan bath products that I can't wait to try out, but the thing I sampled right away was a vegan protein bar that came in a shiny silver wrapper.

I'd never heard of Dale's Raw Protein Bars before, and I'm so glad that I did! I've been avoiding my previous go-to vegan energy bars - Larabars - because their parent company (General Mills) funneled big money to stop the California GMO Right to Know Act. This Dale's bar kind of reminded me of a Larabar, but I think I actually liked it better! I tried the raspberry hazelnut variety, and it had crunchy chunks of hazelnut throughout the bar.

The bar itself was soft and a little bit chewy, like other date-based energy bars, but it didn't taste as strongly of dates as some of the others that I've tried. These seem like a great snack to keep in your purse for those mornings that you're too busy to eat breakfast!

What's in It

Like Larabars, these Dale's bar is date-based, which means it's naturally sweet. You don't need to add any refined sugars when you're using dates - they're nature's candy!  The bar gets its protein from peas (just pea protein - it didn't taste like peas!), rice, hemp, and almond butter, and one of the things I liked most about this bar is that aside from the pea and rice protein, all of the ingredients are things you could pick up at the grocery store. Here's the ingredients list for the raspberry hazelnut bar:

dates, pea protein, hemp protein, rice protein, almond butter, hazelnuts, coconut nectar, dried raspberries, raw cacao, coconut oil, water

How It's Made

Not too shabby, right? On the Dale's Raw Foods site, they have a video showing how the bars are made, which I thought you guys might like to see, too:

Don't you love how hands-on the production is? They even make the raw almond butter from scratch!

I've never seen Dale's in any stores (Have you? Tell us where in the comments!), but you can pick them up by the case on the Dale's Raw Foods website. At $36.99 for a case of 12, that works out to just over $3 for a bar, which I think stacks up pretty well to other energy bars I've seen, especially since Dale's is a small company.