plant based
Instant Pot Beans & Rice In 30 Minutes!
Instant Pot Beans & Rice In 30 Minutes!
In this video, I show you how to make beans and rice in the Instant Pot.
Ingredients:
– 1.5 cups dried black beans
– 1.5 cups brown rice
– 2 tbsp cumin
– 1.5 tbsp chili powder
– 1 tbsp smoked paprike
– 2 tbsp Better Than Bouillon
– 1/2 chopped onion
– 4 gloves garlic chopped
– 6 cups of water
– 1/2 juice of a lime
Instructions:
1. Saute the onion and garlic for a few minutes, adding a splash of water if needed.
2. Add the rest of the ingredients (except lime juice) and stir.
3. Cook on high pressure for 30 minutes, making sure the vent is sealed.
4. Allow the pressure to release naturally for 15 minutes before releasing any remaining pressure.
5. Add the lemon juice and enjoy!
Other videos you may like:
1. Why Oil is Bad: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9iaB28Q0VrA
2. 101 Reasons to Go Vegan: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W4HJcq8qHAY&t=20s
3. What is Nutritarianism?: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iwpb2OdU_no&t=2s
4. What is the Starch Solution?: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=arm9ThlPduc&t=3s
Music:
Music By: LAKEY INSPIRED @ https://soundcloud.com/lakeyinspired
I love learning about nutrition and sharing what I’ve learned in hopes of benefiting others. Please subscribe to the channel for more content!
Calorie Density | How I Lost 25 Pounds
Calorie Density | How I Lost 25 Pounds
In this video, I share how you can eat more and weigh less using calorie density. Applying this concept to my life has allowed me to lose and keep off 25 pounds.
Resources:
Jeff Novick’s article on Calorie Density: https://www.forksoverknives.com/the-calorie-density-approach-to-nutrition-and-lifelong-weight-management/?utm_medium=email&utm_source=Newsletter062612#gs.4BkDTXU
I love learning about nutrition and sharing what I’ve learned in hopes of benefiting others. Please subscribe to the channel for more content!
Why I am no longer vegan (after 6 years)
After six years of living and preaching the vegan lifestyle I no longer follow a vegan, plants-only diet. Instead I've started eating meat again and I thought I'd share why. I've wanted to share this with you all since I started eating meat again around four months ago but I've been procrastinating on making this video partly because I wanted to see how my body responded to the introduction of meat again and also because I've been a little afraid of how it would be received. My decision to eat meat was something I didn't make lightly. I've quietly pondered about it for some time and have been researching the benefits of eating meat for over six months now. It all started after I listened to a podcast by Dr Mark Hyman which was, 'Why Vegan Diets May Not Be Good for Your Health,' featuring Jayne Buxton. This took me down a rabbit hole as it questioned everything I believed in as a vegan; that eating a plants-only diet would improve my health, how it was better for animal welfare, and how it would help in saving the planet from from the excess carbon being produced from the animal agriculture sector.
Suffice to say, having the integrity of your beliefs questioned isn't easy. But, I believe that it is important to reevaluate certain ideas we assume are facts every so often as information changes all of the time, particularly in the health and nutrition sector. Six years ago I decided to go vegan after watching a few documentaries on veganism, such as Cowspiracy, What the Health, and Forks Over Knives. This was based on a one-sided view of the story around animal agriculture and its impacts on human health and the planet. Since then I've come to learn that while a plant-based diet may work for some people it is definitely not for everyone (as with any diet, there is never a 'one-size-fits-all' approach to eating) and while others have noted an improvement in their health (which can be misleading at first and I'll delve into this further later), I did not. So here is a little about why I'm no longer vegan and why I started eating meat again and other animal products after six years of eating only plant foods.
I went vegan back in 2016 after watching the documentary Cowspiracy and learning that animal agriculture was supposedly worse than the whole transportation sector in terms of carbon emissions. I say 'supposedly' now because since then I've learnt that it isn't true. This claim was based on a 2006 report made by the Food and Agriculture Organisation of the United Nations where they said that 18% of global greenhouse gas emissions were from livestock making it a greater emitter than the global transportation sector. The Food and Agriculture Organisation actually reduced down their 18% number after receiving challenging allegations revising the new number down to 14.5%. However the damage had already been done entrenching the idea that the climate crisis is largely a result of global agricultural farming. I was one of those people who wholeheartedly believed this. If you'd said to me six years ago that I'd be making this video I would have never believed it. Being vegan has really helped shape the woman I am today and I've learnt so much from the experience. It's helped me to learn as well that changing your beliefs and ideas around something is okay.
I've learnt to keep more of an open mind about things that I may disagree with, as my way isn't always the right way. Plus, veganism was a stepping stone into living a more sustainable, eco-friendly life for me. It led me on the path to where I am now where I make all of my own products and live as consciously as I can. Another reason why I went vegan was because of the acclaimed health benefits. Again, this has turned out to be misleading. the nutrients found in plant foods are less bioavailable meaning they're less absorbable for our bodies than those found in animal sources. And, what's more, some nutrients can only be found in animal foods such as pre-formed vitamin A, B12, D3 and K2, haem iron, taurine, carnosine, creatine, CLA, EPA and DHA. This means that in order to receive these nutrients you have to supplement, which is what I did. But even still, synthetic forms of these nutrients found in supplements or fortified foods still aren't up to par with those naturally found in food sources, as the body recognises these forms of nutrients more than our man-made versions and these vitamins and minerals are absorbed more easily when they come from food.
Plant foods are also high in carbohydrates. When you remove animal fats and protein from the diet you need to replace it with something else and that something is often carbs. Carbohydrates are broken down by the body into a sugar known as glucose and when that sugar enters the bloodstream the pancreas responds by producing insulin which allows glucose to enter the cells in the body and provide them with energy.
Over time the insulin receptor sites in the cells become less sensitive, meaning more insulin must be produced to do the job. Eventually cells stop responding to that insulin altogether leading to a condition known as insulin resistance a precursor for type 2 diabetes. While meat is more fatty that's a good thing. The idea that animal foods raise cholesterol has been proven to be false, as fat doesn't make you fat essentially. It actually does the opposite. High-fat low-carb has been found to help reduce inflammation as the body uses ketones for energy rather than glucose. And while cholesterol has been labelled as "bad" it's a really essential component in the body. Cholesterol is a critical building block for many of the hormones that help with proper functioning of the body, it plays a part in the immune system, and is significant in the proper repair and maintenance of tissues in the body.

Without cholesterol we would have no cell renewal, and no life. Plant foods also come with an array of anti-nutrients like oxalates, lectins and phytic acid which prevent nutrient absorption and can cause inflammation in the body when consumed in large amounts. A common phenomenon that often occurs with many new vegans is the 'vegan honeymoon,' a phase which can last for months or even years. It's where people find they're initially helped by going vegan but after an extended period of time, sickness starts to set in. And this is what happened to me. In my experience, my health problems started about four years after going vegan. I became very fatigued and found it extremely difficult to lose weight, which as a young woman in my 20's I thought was very unusual.
I had also developed leaky gut, something I never experienced before and suffered with a candida overgrowth from all the sugary fruits and high carbohydrate foods I was eating. Plus, I felt hungry all the time. I experienced many nutritional deficiencies, the most common ones being zinc, iron, and B12. These deficiencies left me feeling tired and fatigued most of the time, no matter how much sleep I got. I was also losing hair and not just a little, a lot which really scared me. To help with my fatigue my naturopath suggested that I start including eggs in my diet (as I refused to eat any other animal foods at the time) and I noticed a huge improvement in my mental health, fatigue and nutritional deficiencies. A year later I went vegetarian and a year after that I started a pescatarian diet which quickly switched to an omnivore diet focusing mostly on animal foods as I could keep to a high-fat low-carbohydrate regime which I found worked best for my body.
For me when I went vegan the resounding message that was being conveyed was that as an individual, the single biggest thing you could do to help the planet and reduce your carbon footprint was to eat a plant-based diet. However this isn't necessarily the case. While we think eating plants will help the planet what we don't see are the impacts crops are having on the health of the ecosystems. Soy for example is a main staple in a plant-based diet and while it's estimated that 75% of the soy grown is used for animal feed, the feed given to livestock is mostly made up of the by-product and crushed soybean matter left over from extracting the soybean oil. So even though more soy by weight is consumed by animals the more soybean oil that is consumed by humans directly impacts the soy that must be grown to accommodate the demand, driving deforestation and damaging the soil via the use of monocropping and chemical fertilisers. Industrial monocrop agriculture requires tillage, chemical fertilisers, pesticides, herbicides like glyphosate, insecticides, fungicides and other harmful substances which degrade the soil, killing microbes.
This leads to erosion of the topsoil, resulting in flooding, and can leach chemicals into our streams, rivers and oceans. The fact is that all foods impact the environment in some way and what we should be looking at is how the plant food or animal food was produced, rather than the food itself. We can start asking questions like was this food grown in a sustainable way, without artificial fertilisers that kill insects ravage the soil, and cause runoff into rivers and oceans? Was it grown locally, or has it been imported, travelling extensive distances to arrive on my plate? We as consumers hold so much power when it comes to the food industry.
We can help by buying our meat from suppliers who uphold high standards of animal welfare. This is what I've really committed to since transitioning to eating meat again. Ensuring that the food I eat has been produced in a humane, ethical and sustainable way. While grass-fed and finished beef or pasture-raised chicken, pigs, and poultry are more expensive than the standard feedlot meat, the value is worth it as you really do get what you pay for. Plus it also means that everybody wins in this scenario. The animals, the farmer, the customer, and the environment. I firmly believe that we have a responsibility to properly care for the animals on which we depend on.
It does not give us freedom to treat them any way that suits us. We must put respect and compassion at the heart of animal agriculture. Animal welfare matters and should be built into the strategies we use to farm. I hope you got something out of this video whether you are or aren't vegan. Thank you so much for watching. I hope you have a wonderful day and I'll see you soon again..
Video Transcript – As found on YouTube
Nutritarian Meal Prep With Me!
Nutritarian Meal Prep With Me!
This video shows you how I plan food for the week. I follow a vegan Nutritarian diet, also known as Eat To Live, by Dr. Joel Fuhrman.
Other videos you may like:
1. What is a Nutritarian?: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=iwpb2OdU_no&t=358s
2. What are G-BOMBS?: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=OGvEjf-kD2Y&t=408s
3. 101 Reasons to go Vegan: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=W4HJcq8qHAY
Music:
Ocean by Ehrling: https://soundcloud.com/ehrling
Music promoted by Audio Library https://youtu.be/t76-d3lGWvc
3 EASY Vegan Recipes Made With A Can Of Black Beans!
3 EASY Vegan Recipes Made With A Can Of Black Beans!
FREE GUIDES:
Free one week meal guide: https://www.plantwhys.com/free-1-week-meal-guide-sign-up-1
Free Guide: How to Ease into Eating More Plants: https://www.plantwhys.com/plantwhys-2-0
RECIPES:
Enchiladas: https://www.plantwhys.com/blog/creamy-vegan-black-bean-enchiladas
Hummus: https://www.plantwhys.com/blog/oil-free-black-bean-hummus
Bowl: https://www.plantwhys.com/blog/black-bean-quinoa-and-kale-bowl-with-mango-sauce
SHOP OUR MEAL PLAN GUIDES:
https://www.plantwhys.com/shop
AFFILIATE LINKS:
I love my air fryer: https://amzn.to/4dXy6z4
I love this large strainer: https://amzn.to/4dO49Bn
I love this small strainer: https://amzn.to/4dY6aL9
I love this tofu press: https://amzn.to/40Ub1qe
I love my nonstick large frying pan: https://amzn.to/3UW6d1p
This instant pot is great for my large family: https://amzn.to/40UbCIu
Favorite Veggie Chopper: https://amzn.to/40ZZ0zF
Favorite Large Stainless Steel Pans 20×14: https://amzn.to/3EaCn1O
Favorite Avocado Slicer: https://amzn.to/3XwAKSQ
Favorite Food Processor: https://amzn.to/3YWl4Jz
Vitamix Blender: https://amzn.to/3YubcXL
Favorite Plant-Based Cookbook for a Family with Young Kids: https://amzn.to/3YW0yZH
Favorite foods to buy from Amazon because they are hard to find at a normal grocery store:
Nutritional yeast: https://amzn.to/3QYbGnj
Liquid smoke: https://amzn.to/3VcUihc
Vital Wheat Gluten (for Seitan): https://amzn.to/3VbXppA
Soy Curls: https://amzn.to/3KfnVb9
Soy Chunks:https://amzn.to/3wDqxg8
TVP: https://amzn.to/3R0y2Eu
KEY MOMENTS:
0:00 Black Bean Recipes
0:16 Black Bean Quinoa and Kale Bowl
3:53 Black Bean Hummus
6:06 Black Bean Enchiladas
One Pot CHICKPEA VEGETABLE Recipe | Easy Vegetarian And Vegan Meals | Chickpea Recipes
One Pot CHICKPEA VEGETABLE Recipe | Easy Vegetarian And Vegan Meals | Chickpea Recipes
One Pot Chickpea Vegetable Recipe | Easy Vegetarian and Vegan Meals | Chickpea Recipes. A one pot meal chickpea recipe is perfect for easy vegetarian and vegan meals. This easy chickpeas and vegetable recipe is not only high protein but also loaded with vegetables. This one pot chickpeas recipe is a great way to add chickpeas / garbanzo beans to your plant based diet. Healthy vegetarian chickpea recipe / garbanzo recipe for your plant based, Vegan, Vegetarian meals / lunch or dinner. Check out my other vegetarian and vegan recipes for meal prep ideas.
💬 Let me know if you enjoyed my healthy vegan chickpea recipe. Is there another chickpeas recipe you’d like to see me prepare?
▶️ CHICKPEA RECIPE INGREDIENTS: (3 to 4 servings)
3 Tablespoon Olive Oil
225g / 2 cups Onion – sliced
1+1/2 Tablespoon Garlic – finely chopped
1 Tablespoon Ginger – finely chopped
2 Tablespoon Tomato Paste
1+1/2 Teaspoon Paprika (NOT SMOKED)
1+1/2 Teaspoon Ground Cumin
1/2 Teaspoon Turmeric
1+1/2 Teaspoon Ground Black Pepper
1/4 Teaspoon Cayenne Pepper (Optional)
200g Tomatoes – Blend to a smooth Puree (after being pureed 1 to 1+1/4 Cup approximately)
200g / 1+1/2 cup approx. Carrots – chopped
200g / 1+1/2 cup Red bell pepper approx. – chopped
2 cups / 225g Yellow (Yukon Gold) Potatoes approx. – chopped small (1/2 inch pieces)
4 cups / 900ml Vegetable Broth
Salt to taste
250g / 2 cups approx. Zucchini – chopped (1/2 inch pieces)
120g / 1 cup approx. Green beans – chopped (1 inch long)
2 cups / 1 (540ml) Can – Cooked Chickpeas (drained)
1/2 cup / 20g Fresh Parsley (loosely packed)
👉 Garnish:
Lemon Juice to taste (I have added 1 teaspoon lemon juice)
Drizzle of olive oil (I have added 1/2 tablespoon organic cold pressed Olive oil)
▶️ METHOD:
Start by blending the tomatoes to a smooth puree. Prep the vegetables and set aside.
To a heated pan add the olive oil, onion, 1/4 teaspoon salt. Sweat the onions on medium heat until it’s soft. It will take about 3 to 4 minutes. Adding salt to onion will release it’s moisture and help it cook faster so please don’t skip it. Note we are NOT browning the onions here.
Once the onions are soft, add the chopped garlic and ginger and fry for 30 seconds or until fragrant. Add the tomato paste, paprika, ground cumin, turmeric, black pepper, cayenne pepper and fry for 30 seconds. Now add the fresh tomato puree and mix well. Add the chopped carrots, red bell pepper, yellow potatoes, salt, vegetable broth and mix well. Turn up the heat. Cover and bring to a vigorous boil. Once it starts to boil, give it a mix and cover the lid. Reduce the heat to medium-low and cook for about 20 minutes. This will allow the potatoes to cook a bit, before we add the quick cooking vegetables to it.
After 20 minutes, uncover and add the zucchini, green beans, cooked chickpeas, parsley and mix well. Now turn up the heat and bring it to a rapid simmer. Once it starts to simmer, cover the lid and cook on medium heat (DO NOT COOK ON LOW HEAT AT THIS POINT) for about 10 minutes or until the potatoes are cooked to your liking. COOK UNITL THE VEGETABLES ARE SOFT, but at the same time don’t let it get too mushy.
Uncover and turn the heat to medium high and cook for another 1 to 2 minutes or to the desired consistency. PLEASE NOTE – THIS STEW IS NOT SUPPOSE TO BE WATERY. It’s more towards the thicker consistency. Turn off the heat. Garnish with fresh lemon juice and a drizzle of olive oil and some chopped fresh parsley. Mix well.
✅ 👉 NOTE – THIS STEW IS NOT SUPPOSE TO BE WATERY
Serve hot with some pita and couscous.
▶️ IMPORTANT NOTES:
👉 Adding salt while frying the vegetables will release it’s moisture and help it cook faster so please don’t skip it
👉 Every stove is different so regulate the heat as required. Cooking time and intensity of heat may vary depending on the type of stove you are using
👉 THIS STEW IS NOT SUPPOSE TO BE WATERY
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Welcome to Food Impromptu! Food Artist, Plant-Based and Vegan Recipes Creator 🌱
Here you will find easy and nourishing vegan recipes for your everyday cooking. My goal is to make the transition to a Plant Based diet achievable and effortless using everyday ingredients. I draw my inspiration from classic, traditional, and modern cuisines. I take pride in creating recipes and videos for your best viewing experience. Subscribe to stay up to date on the latest vegan recipes!
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