Thursday, December 16, 2010

Winter Recipe


Baked marinated salmon with scallions

This is great and easy to make.  The recipe utilizes salmon which enhances Kidney Qi and scallions benefit the Liver. Preheat the oven to 425º and then bake the fish with this rule in mind: For each inch of thickness of the fish (measuring at its thickest part), bake it for 10 minutes.  

Ingredients


Oil for baking (canola or corn oil works well)
4 or 5 scallions, washed and trimmed, then cut in half lengthwise
Marinade (see recipe below)
Salmon (about 1 pound) marinated overnight

Directions

1.    Cover the bottom of a baking dish with oil. (For an 8-inch by 12-inch baking dish use about 5 tablespoons of oil.)
2.    Line the bottom of the oiled dish with about ¾ of the scallions and spoon about ½ of the marinade over the scallions.
3.    Place the fish in the center of the dish on the bed of scallions already covered with marinade.
4.    Spoon the remaining marinade over the fish and toss the remaining scallions over the marinade.
5.    Cover the dish with foil and refrigerate, allowing the fish to marinate overnight (if you are really pressed for time, this step can be several hours, however, the flavor is best when more time is allowed).
6.    Remove dish from refrigerator and bake uncovered at 425º until fish is fully cooked. Serve hot.
  

The Marinade


This recipe makes about 5 to 6 tablespoons of marinade, which is enough for approximately 1 pound of fish. The various sauces used in this marinade can be found at your local Asian food market.

 Ingredients


2 tablespoons of hoy sin sauce
1 tablespoon of oyster sauce
2 tablespoons of soy sauce (try mushroom-flavored soy sauce for a treat)
½ teaspoon of fish sauce
2 teaspoons of finely chopped ginger root

Directions

Combine all ingredients thoroughly in a small mixing bowl.



A big thanks to American Healing Technologies, Inc. for the recipe!!!!

Thursday, October 28, 2010

Present in the Moment with a Grin

There is no need in life to be continually just pushing along, drudging along.  If you are awake and open in living situations, it is possible for them and you to be creative, beautiful, humorous, and delightful.  This natural openness is right effort as opposed to any old effort.  Right effort is seeing a situation precisely as it is at that very moment, being fully present, with delight, with a grin.

From "The Myth of Freedom and the Way of Meditation"


Hey Everyone - I love this excerpt!!  What a great way to look at the challenging days that we all face.  Make a copy and put it somewhere so you can remind yourself of the importance of enjoying the present moment!

Monday, October 25, 2010

How to Look at Fear

When fear occurs in your life, you should examine the nature of fear.
This is not based on asking logical questions about fear: "Why am I
afraid?" "What is the cause of my fear?" It is simply looking at the
state of fear or panic that is taking place in you. Just look at it. We
can always find good reasons to be afraid. But in this case, rather than
taking an analytical approach to fear, you should just look at your fear
directly.
From: Smile at Fear: Awakening the True Heart of Bravery, Pema Chodron

Wednesday, August 25, 2010

A word on confidence...

I love this expert.  Imagining that our confidence is like the sun rising in the morning.  This is a great way to lessen all those judgements about confidence and get in touch with our natural talents.

"Developing confidence is like watching the sun rise. First it seems very feeble and one wonders whether it will make it. Then it shines and shines. Confidence is not about arrogance or pride. It is a natural unfolding process. It's not a question of needing confidence or not needing it. It's naturally there. In fact, we actually don't have to develop confidence. It's more that we have to acknowledge the confidence that already exists."


From: Smile at Fear: Awakening the True Heart of Bravery

Sunday, August 22, 2010

Fall Recipes

Share your ideas for fall recipes.  Try to challenge your creativity and include some different ingredients.

Here is a great fall hot tea recipe (good for the lungs and sinuses):

2 Tangerine peels
4 Scallions
Sliced Ginger (to taste)
5 Almonds
Boil 4 minutes and strain
Add Honey (to taste)

Saturday, August 21, 2010

Hello Everyone

You guys asked for a blog and here it is.  It was a lot of fun putting it together.  I hope you all can meet here to share ideas and support each other along your individual journeys.  Remember to relax and have some fun.  Try to do something you really want to do today!

Dr J