The Happy Diabetic Kitchen

By: Robert Lewis
  • Summary

  • Our guide to the world of food, and healthy cooking and cooking love! The Menu serves up interviews with the world’s most amazing chefs and experts in the field of diabetic health. We are turning ordinary ingredients in something extraordinary and the ingredients that you will soon be landing on your kitchen table.
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Episodes
  • 88. Breaking Bread… The Art, Health, and Fun of Baking Bread at Home
    Sep 15 2024
    Healthy Benefits of Home Baked Bread

    In addition to being more flavorful and aesthetic, homemade bread can be a much healthier alternative to store-bought bread. The bread you bake at home can be lower in sodium and sugar. In addition to the whole grain goodness of your bread, you can also add a variety of seeds. Try sesame, pumpkin, linseed and sunflower seeds in and on top of your loaves for additional dietary fiber, protein, healthy fats, and antioxidants.

    We also need to talk about what will not be found in your home baked goods. Homemade bread will not contain additives. Have you ever looked at the list of ingredients that goes into a loaf of supermarket bread? …So many chemicals that are surely not healthy to eat, right? The list of additives used in industrial baking will include rising agents, emulsifiers, and preservatives to give it a longer shelf life. All of this is about profit and not about your good health. When you bake bread in your home kitchen, you will use only real food ingredients!

    What makes factory baked bread products typically unhealthy?

    Industrialized breads often use refined flour as a base ingredient, but may also include other ingredients such as:

    • Soya flour

      This flour is made from uncooked soya beans and helps strengthen dough, giving loaves structure and support during baking. It also contributes to a creamy, "bready" flavor.

    • Preservatives

      These are added to meet the shelf-life requirements. This is about profit and not about your good health!

    • Enzymes

      These are added to adapt the dough to suit the production machinery.

    • Flour improvers

      These are blends of ingredients that enhance the flour, such as fat, flour treatment agents, emulsifiers, and enzymes.

    • L-ascorbic acid

      This oxidant helps retain gas in the dough, which makes the loaf rise more.

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    Yeast in Baking…Is It Safe to Eat Yeast?

    Yeast is a single cell fungus that helps the bread to rise and become soft and spongy. Yeast is a living bacteria that dies when put into an environment that is 125 degrees or higher. When you bake your bread the yeast will die.

    There are many types of yeast used in baking. Some of them are commercial and some of them are extracted from fruit and grains. However, any type of yeast that is used in our bread baking, is completely safe unless it is consumed in raw form.

    ©2024 AnyBodyCanBake

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    55 mins
  • Episode 87: Eating Plants...Deliciously!!
    Aug 20 2024

    Linda Tyler

    Cooking Instructor and Cookbook Author

    Order The Plant-Based Anti-Inflammatory Cookbook

    Bio

    Linda Tyler is a plant-based cooking instructor, recipe developer, and writer. She teaches cooking classes for Portland Community College in Oregon and offers one-on-one plant-based lifestyle coaching. She has published recipes in vegan magazines and websites, articles on animal welfare issues, and is a frequent guest on Chef AJ Live on YouTube. She is the author of The Plant-Based Anti-Inflammatory Cookbook. She is on the video review team for Nutritionfacts.org. For more information, see www.graciousvegan.com.

    Social media links

    Website: http://www.graciousvegan.com

    Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/graciousvegan/

    Instagram: @gracious_vegan

    Pinterest: @graciousvegan

    More information on my cookbook is available by clicking here.

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    47 mins
  • 86. Living Your Best Happy Healthy Diabetic Life Chef: Robert shares his favorite tips, hacks and wisdom!!
    Jul 7 2024

    In todays podcast episodeI’ll share my favorite time saving hacks

    It’s my favorite Kitchen Hacks to make your time in the kitchen count!

    So, here comes the The happy diabetic cooking academy definition ---in the context of cooking, a "hack" refers to a clever or unconventional technique or shortcut that makes a cooking process easier, more efficient, and more effective and saves time. It's a way to achieve a desired outcome with less effort or resources. Hacks are often simple, practical, and easily implementable strategies that can improve a process or solve a cooking problem.

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    25 mins

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