Red Cabbage

I’ve been eating a lot of red cabbage this week, which I have to admit has been a struggle. First I tried putting it in a coleslaw, but I had to plug my nose, and I gagged the whole way through it. I’ve been putting it in salads, which is ok if I have a very big salad with lots of other flavors. Sautéed in a stir fry with green curry it’s good, but when it’s cooked you don’t get the body cleansing effects. At one point I even mixed it with quinoa and extra hot salsa. Whatever works. Why am I so adamant about incorporating red cabbage into my diet?

1. Great Skin: It’s a great source of Vitamin C which helps with anti-oxidation and delayed the aging process. The outer leaves have lots of Vitamin E, which makes your skin glow. As an added bonus, the Vitamin A in it asks like a natural moisturizer.

2. Boosts Immunity: Red cabbage has tons of Vitamin E, which helps immunity building and the metabolic processes. If you have an autoimmune deficiency like me, you need all the help you can get producing healthy antibodies.

3. Cleanses the Body: Red cabbage contains large quantities of sulfur, and other minerals that work as cleansing agents for the digestive system, but like I said, you don’t get the full benefit when you cook it. It has a long-lasting effect because it has a ton of glucosinolates, which are an “indirect antioxidant. They trigger your body to send out it’s own natural detoxification enzymes. This can last for days.

4. No To Cancer: There have been 36 different anti-cancer chemicals found in this veggie. Since it has such a high content of anthocyanins, it’s world-class at cancer prevention. Also, in red cabbage you’ll find indoles that may reduce the risk of breast cancer by changing estrogen metabolism.

5. Strong Bones and Teeth: Tons of calcium. No osteoporosis!

6. Reduces Alzheimer Risk: This has been a big concern for me since it runs in my family. The main cause of Alzheimer’s is a building up of certain plaques in the brain. A study was done with eating red cabbage where it noticeably reduced the formation of the plaques. If you eat red cabbage (instead of other kinds) you get a high dose of anthocyanins, which protect against dementia.

Of course, I had to write this over lunch to both keep my mind off the cabbage mixed in my salad, and to remind me why I’m eating it in the first place.

Source: Green Parenthood, Live Strong

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Picture Thursday

A picture says a thousand words. Today I accepted an invitation to go to a country music concert/tailgating at the Met’s training stadium at the end of the month. I hope Dixie Chicks or Rascall Flatts will be there, because I don’t know any other country songs.

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Cure For The Winter Blahs

I know that in living in Florida (and spending my weekend on the boat soaking in vitamin D) I really shouldn’t be experiencing any winter blues, and it’s true I don’t as much as I did in Minnesota. But, with the holidays, I ate anything and everything, and rarely exercised. This has taken a profound toll on my energy, health and tightness of my skinny jeans. This is why I’ve put together a fool proof plan for getting rid of the winter blahs:

Rules:

  • Stick to the immunity-boosting, healthy, around 1,500 calorie a day meal plan I created with the help of Clean Eating Magazine
  • Drink at least 8-10 glasses of water a day
  • Drink a mug of green tea every morning
  • Running today and Sunday
  • Yoga on Tuesday and Thursday
  • Quickie circuit training Wednesday and Friday (100 jumping jacks, 20 crunches, 20 squats, 10 push ups, 25 chair dips, 60 second wall sit, 60 second plank)

What I’m eating today:

-Breakfast: Mango Smoothie (with flaxseed, tofu, orange juice and organic milk)

-Lunch: Chicken Sandwich (piece Udi’s GF bread, chicken breast, goat cheese, arugala, mustard), sliced red bell pepper, mustard dip (mustard, greek yogurt, dash of onion powder and garlic salt)

-Snack: Banana and rice cakes with almond butter

-Dinner: Sirloin meatloaf, green beans and roasted potatoes

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Picture Thursday

A picture can say it all. Today I’m channeling my childhood full of my little ponies, books, best friends and infinite possibilities. Being a grown-up this week has been hard.

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British Arrows

One of my favorite holiday traditions is going to the British Television Advertising Awards (now named the British Arrows) at the Walker Art Center in Minneapolis. Some of the commercials are really funny, some are strange, and sometimes they’re really depressing. All of them however, are created really well and speak to their consumer in a new and interesting way. Luckily, this year there were a lot of funny ones. Too many drunk driving/domestic violence commercials equals a sad Erika.

Here are my favorites:

Doritos: David Shane (Bronze Award)

Nike: Write The Future (Gold Award)

Match.Com: The Piano (Gold Award)

And of course, the commercial that won best of the year:

T-Mobile: Welcome Back

 

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Website Pet Peeves

Studies show that it takes only about 50 milliseconds for a visitor to form an opinion about the visual design of your website. Since I spend the majority of my day judging the layout of my sites in a grid down to the pixel and trying to figure out how to make them more usable for the customer, I feel like I’m more irritable about bad practices in web design. Here are my top 5 website pet peeves. If you’re doing this, quit it.

5. Too Much Content: Adding a whole bunch of content to your site will distract from what you’re trying to get across to  your reader. Resist the need to add information to fill up white space, and only put what you need. Don’t make your site look like this.

4. Hard to read text: Are you putting dark text one a dark background? Can I not figure out what your fancy scroll text says? Typography should be interesting AND readable. Example of good use of typography? Here.

3. Bad Usability: If it’s not clear to your user what path they should take, or you’ve made it impossible for them to take that path, then they wont get to where you want them to go. Also, use a navigation in shopping carts. I’d love to know if I’m filling out 2 pages of information, or 10 before I actually purchase. Side note: go to www.dontclick.it to see a site experiment where you don’t navigate by clicking. Pretty cool, or potential nightmare?

2. Music: I don’t care if Justin Timberlake bought MySpace–it’s dead. If your music starts playing over the music I’m already listening to, I will never forgive you.

1. <blink> or sparkling GIFs: This is the holey grail of worse website practices. It’s the equivalent of getting one of this. Do you want to use used-car salesmen tactics?

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Florida December

What a great weekend kayaking and paddle-boarding! When we went out on the kayaks yesterday, we were right in the middle of all these manatees that would come up and under us. Then we paddled a little further and there’s a bunch of dolphins everywhere! I got a video of one that you can see here.

Then today my friend, Joe and I went out paddle boarding in Jupiter. Just another Florida December.

Isn’t he cute?

I can’t believe I live in a place like this. Feel so surreal to be going home this week to a place that has snow.

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Christmas List

My mom says I have expensive taste. Anyway, here’s my Christmas List:

Zack Smith Art

Alexander McQueen Clutch

Baby Tiger

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Yellow Chocolate

What does yellow taste like? According to the mass populace of New Zealand, it tastes like pineapple custard! Check out these yellow chocolate bars.

This deliciously packaged bar started as a marketing compitiion by Yellow pages, and turned into an award winner at the Cannes International Advertising Festival. 28 year old surfer Josh Winger ended up being chosen to design, market and distribute a chocolate bar that tastes like the color yellow. He took to the street to figure out what people thought yellow tasted like. The options were: pineapple custard, banana french toast, kowhai honey and lemon tart.

Personally, I think I would have gone with lemon tart. Could you imagine if banana french toast would have won?

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Holly Golightly’s Home For Sale

If I won the lotto right now (actually, I think I’d have to win more than once), I’d buy the newly on the market four-story Manhatten townhouse that was home to Holly Golightly in Breakfast at Tiffany’s for $5.85 million. Word on the street is that most of the interior of the home was actually taped on a set, not in the real deal, but honestly, this place is better:

The townhouse was bought for $1.88 Million in 2008 by Peter Bacanovic, who you may know as someone who is going to jail for insider trading in the Martha Stewart case. So many fun things to brag about when I live there. I’ve drawn a rough sketch of how I would look after I bought the place:

Soon after I would obviously have to get some sun… and food.

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