Tuesday, March 24, 2020

Don't buy rice or ramen, buy THIS!


This Picture shows SPLIT 'moong beans' which
do not sprout. Don't buy this kind for sprouting.
I bought WHOLE 'moong beans'
from Spicy World.
When finances or food supply are tough, many people think it’s a smart idea to buy carb-filled rice or ramen noodles. But carb-foods just end up making you hungrier, causing you to eat more carb-foods and gaining more weight you don’t want.

The Keto * Low-Carb solution— a low-cost food that can be stocked up on, that can sit on your shelves for a while, is mung beans. I have Spicy World brand mung beans (moong dal)— bought on Amazon— and I sprout them into mung bean sprouts regularly. They sprout just as well as mung beans sold for sprouting!

Mung bean sprouts are a low-carb food allowed even on strict Atkins levels as a vegetable or even a salad ingredient. If you enjoy things like Rice-a-roni or ramen noodles, you can just use the seasonings and flavors found in your favorite rice-or-ramen foods on your cooked mung bean sprouts. 

You can cook your bean sprouts in a pot of boiling water and add your seasonings, soy-sauce, bouillon powder, garam masala, seasoned salt to the cooking water. Then drain it in a colander, add some butter or ghee or coconut oil, especially if you love butter noodles, and have the flavors you love without the carbs.

You can also stir fry your bean sprouts in a frying pan or wok. You can add other vegetables that are on hand for variety, and also meats— canned meats work— and perhaps some pecan or walnut pieces to add crunch. You can stir-fry in an egg if you like, as is done in Chinese Fried Rice. 

Stir-fried or cooked bean sprouts can stand in for rice or noodles in most recipes. Since they are wetter, some of my old favorite casserole recipes have become stir-fry recipes because the casserole version got too soggy. 

My little trick this week is that I am sprouting enough mung beans for one serving every day and trying to do it a little different each time. 

Can’t get mung beans at your grocery store? Lentils are more widely available— they had some at my food bank once— and I’ve sprouted lentils that were ten years old successfully. They are a little more carb-y, and aren’t as nice for stir-fry. Get green or black lentils— the orange ones are split lentils and don’t sprout.

THE MAGIC OF SPROUTING:
Dried mung beans: 22g carbs per 35 grams   Dried lentils: 30g carbs per 1/4 cup, dry
Mung bean sprouts, 1 cup: 6g carbs    Lentil sprouts: 100 g (2 cups?) 22 g carbs

Mung bean sprouts should be sprouted in a dark place. Can be sprouted in jars or in a Victorio sprouter. Lentils sprouts for similar use can be sprouted the same way, perhaps in a mix with mung beans.

Here’s to your health,
Nissa Annakindt

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