Love Bites

Energy Truffles: Photo by Jonas Mohr and Anne Ross Photography

What’s inside your Valentine’s Day chocolates? How about GMOs, trans fat, soy lecithin and corn syrup?

Fortunately, not all brands contain the bad stuff, and a little chocolate might even be good for you. Highlights: dark chocolate is rich in flavonols, which act as antioxidants, and may help reduce blood pressure, improve blood flow, lower blood sugar levels, ease inflammation and improve cholesterol levels. Cocoa beans also contain phenylethylamine, a compound that triggers your brain to release endorphins. Look for dark chocolate that’s at least 70% cocoa for maximum health benefits.

The following picks are all lower in sugar and free from hydrogenated oils, soy lecithin and high fructose corn syrup:

  • Gnosis chocolates are organic, vegan and kosher, and free of soy, gluten, and dairy. The company uses ethically sourced raw cacao, low-glycemic sweeteners, nutrient-dense superfoods and medicinal herbs sourced from the Amazon and the Himalayas. Bars are slightly soft and can taste almost coffee-like; for a more traditional taste with a punch of fruit flavor, try the Passion Truffle Collection, featuring aphrodisiacal herbs.
  • Energy Truffles are vegan, gluten-free, organic and mostly raw. Flavors such as peanut butter, salted fudge, vanilla, coconut and berry may resemble traditional Valentine’s Day chocolates, but the dense, chewy treats are packed with nuts, seeds and superfoods including goji berries, maca and chia.
  • ChocoVivo uses no milk powder, soy lecithin or additional cacao butter—and handcrafts its dark chocolate bars with traditional methods that the Mayans and Aztecs used more than 2,000 years ago. The wafer-like bars have a slightly crunchy texture and profoundly rich, complex chocolate flavor.
  • Theo creates organic, fair trade, sustainable, non-GMO chocolates. For a smooth, traditional indulgence, try flavors such as Burnt Sugar, Lemon, Mint and Hazelnut Gianduja.

How sweet it is.

Energy Truffles photo by Jonas Mohr and Anne Ross Photography

Tree to Bar: The Grenada Chocolate Company

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Some people play golf; others build model trains, bake cupcakes or brew craft beer. “I was kind of a cocoa hobbyist,” says Mott Green, founder of Grenada Chocolate Company, of the ten years he split between a small home in Grenada’s rainforest and as a vagabond.

Green dropped out of university in 1988 to pursue the life of a wandering activist. Enchanted by Grenada early in his travels, he built a bamboo hut in the forest two miles away from where his chocolate factory stands today. Continue reading

Weekly Round Up, 10.12.12

Cacao Beans

Here are some of the best food stories we came across this week:

  • Readers of Food Labels Weigh Less – A U.S. National Health Interview Survey of 25,000 people found that those who reported scrutinizing labels while grocery shopping had lower body mass indexes and weights than those who paid less attention to what was in their food; the difference was especially pronounced for women. Living in urban areas, being college educated and married increased the likelihood of reading nutrition labels.
  • National Chocolate Consumption Tied to Nobel Prize Odds – Don’t eat it just for the antioxidants: It turns out the higher a country’s chocolate consumption, the more Nobel laureates it spawns per capita, according to findings released today in the New England Journal of Medicine. The Swiss have won the most, followed by the Swedes. The Swiss average 120, 3-ounce bars for every man, woman and child, per year, or one bar about every three days. No word on if hot cocoa counts. Continue reading

Weekly Round Up, 8. 17.12

How You Like Them Apples?

Here are some of the best food stories we came across this week:

  • Bagged Apple Slices Recalled for Possible Listeria Contamination – Packaged apple slices across the country were recalled this week due to potential contamination by the bacteria listeria monocytogenes, all from one processing plant. They’re sold nationally under the labels Ready Pac, Wawa, Wegmans, Safeway Farms and Hannaford, plus fast food chains McDonald’s and Burger King. Want fries with that? Continue reading

6 Top Foods for Beauty

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Glowing skin is anything but skin deep: the epidermis is often the visible scorecard for how well we eat. Look for these go-to beauty foods at your local farmers’ market or health food store, and start noshing your way to luminous skin and glowing inner health:

1. Berries. As rich sources of antioxidants, berries help protect your skin’s collagen from free radical damage (think: wrinkles) caused by too much stress, sun and pollutants.
2. Dark leafy greens. Kale, collards, chard, spinach, arugula, watercress, parsley, and wheat and barley grasses are all rich in chlorophyll, a pigment that catches the sun’s energy and emanates its radiant benefits to you.
3. Radishes. This humble root might hold the triple crown of glowing skin: vitamin C, sulfur and silicon, which all support collagen production and help keep skin moist and elastic.
4. Dark chocolate and raw cacao. The super dose of antioxidants in high-quality, organic, raw chocolate and 70% dark chocolate can help increase hydration, improve blood flow, enhance skin texture and cell renewal. Cacao has a high concentration of sulfur, known to promote beautiful skin.
5. Flax, hemp and chia seeds. These beautifying seeds are rich sources of ALA (alpha-linoleic acid) omega-3 fatty acids. High levels of ALA can help prevent wrinkles and protect against sun damage, resulting in youthful, nourished skin that glows.
6. Olive oil. Organic, cold-pressed olive oil is rich in vitamin E and fatty acids, which can help keep skin looking soft, smooth and radiant.

Lastly: Dry, rough and dull skin can be a sign of dehydration. Ensure your body is hydrated by drinking plenty of water.

Photo by Yogendra Joshi

Recipe Makeover: Guinness Chocolate Cake from Nigella Lawson

Guinness Choc Cake photo

Guinness and chocolate make for a winning combination in Nigella Lawson’s Guinness Chocolate Cake.  In my makeover of this outstanding recipe, I’ve kept all the delicious chocolatey flavor while swapping in ingredients that are better for you and for the environment — from locally brewed stout to raw cacao and dairy from pasture-raised cows. Continue reading

Chocolates We Love (Hint: So Will Your Valentine)

Lagusta chocolate hearts

If you choose your chocolate wisely, it can be all pleasure — no guilt. An antioxidant bomb, dark chocolate can lower your blood pressure, increase your blood flow, lower your cholesterol and give your skin a sexy boost of H2O. And, of course, it’s considered an aphrodisiac, too (‘just sayin’). Continue reading