On the conscious cleanse we start each day with a quart
of lemon water (we add a drop of stevia) and write for 15 minutes. After
walking the Ruckus Pack (Mishkami, Bean, Sophie & Pearl) breakfast is a green
smoothie. Each night before bed I cut everything up, so in the morning hunger
we can just add 2c water and press blend. I’ve fallen in love with the way the
coarsely chopped plant manifestations look in the glass blender together.
The idea is to start with ¾ fruit and ¼ vegetable (i.e.
Blueberries, bananas, pineapple and lettuce) and slowly invert that until the
smoothie is mostly greens & other veggies (i.e. Kale, spinach, cuke and
lemon or mango). And we usually throw a couple tablespoons of a ‘superfood’
like ground flax, chia or hemp seeds and a bit of coconut or flax oil.
Lunch is usually a big salad, or leftovers from the night
before. Dinner has become a playground of vegan, gluten, and soy free wonders.
Day 1 dinner was quinoa tabouli and wilted mustard greens tossed with
portobello mushroom gravy.
Part of the cleanse is the food combining principle not to
have grains & proteins in the same meal (except lentils) and to really
emphasize vegetables. So on Day 2 we went all out with three veggie dishes with
little proteins: raw mustard & salad greens with mung bean sprouts, toasted almonds and
vegan caesar salad (which includes cashews & dates); sesame sautéed kale,
chard and dandelion greens; and citrus infused steamed broccoli.
Day 3 was leftovers and Day 4 we switched back to grains
with veggie fried rice drizzled with ume plum vinegar and lemon jus on a bed of
red leaf lettuce and raw kale massaged with olive oil.
I want to share my quick version of the Vegetable
Medley (or as Frankie likes to slur it ‘Vegetable Melody’) recipe. It’s one of
our new favourite dishes. It’s a veggie ‘stir-fry’, except it’s actually
steamed and you only put oil on at the end.
Vegetable Medley
First you chop up a bunch of veggies, aiming for a rainbow
of colour choices. As you chop, separate into 3 bowls, based on degree of
hardness. After my meltdown, (see post Tears and Green Poop) Frankie offered to help out more with cooking during the cleanse and actually did all the chopping you see here!
Into a inch or two of boiling water the first bowl goes,
with ginger, garlic, onion and anything harder (broccoli stems, carrots).
Steam for about 5 minutes. (Our lid system looks tricky,
don’t worry it’s just because we don’t have a lid large enough to fit this
pan.) Next goes the second bowl for another 5ish minutes with things like
tougher kale leaves, celery, mushrooms, chard stems, etc…
When everything seems about ready (still vibrantly coloured
yet pierce-able without too much force) you add things that just need a 1-2
minute wilt, like chard leaves and baby spinach. Add, stir and turn off the
heat.
When it’s done the idea is to drizzle each bowl with just
1-2T of oil (we like to blend sesame & olive) and a pinch of sea salt or
dash of Ume Plum vinegar. Then you
feast on the flavours of the veggies themselves.
We did this recipe on a transition day and found it a little
dull. When we made it again on Day 6 we were shocked by the bursting flavours
of each morsel, and to realize how desensitized our tongues had been before!
Vegetables melodies,
~Sab
On Frankie’s farm, somewhere north of Siler City, NC





Thanks for sharing. I just completed a 28 day cleanse. It is amazing how our taste buds do get desensitized. Eating clean really helps to reset and restore the body.
ReplyDeleteSo we were cleansing in sync without even knowing it. Awesome Jetson :)
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