Thursday, May 15, 2014

Super Green Salad Smoothie

I rarely share recipes for smoothies for two reasons, a) I rarely make the same smoothie twice since I typically just throw whatever is in my fridge into my vitamix, and b) because I created a smoothie guide to help you mix and match your way to your own superfood smoothies!

That said, this blend knocked my socks off the first time I made it, and after a little tinkering, I figured I’d share it.



1-2 medjool dates, pitted (or other sweetener)*
3-4 stalks of curly kale
¼ cup old fashioned oats
1 handful raw almonds soaked
3-4 broccoli florets (chopped)**
1 stalk carrot (chopped)
1 teaspoon cinnamon
1 frozen banana
½ teaspoon wheat grass powder or chlorella (optional)
4 cubes of ice
1 cup water or plant-based milk

* blending tip: if you soak the almonds and dates in water for 1 hour it will make blending easier, especially if you don't have a high-powered blender.

** blending tip: if you don't have a high-power blender, chop the broccoli and carrots into small pieces.

As always the information presented in this blog is for educational purposes only. It should not be considered as specific medical, nutritional, lifestyle, or other health-related advice.

Thursday, May 1, 2014

Robert Ostfeld, M.D. and the Cardiac Wellness Program

I am really excited to share this guest post from Robert Ostfeld, M.D. I got to meet Dr. Ostfeld at the recent NYCvegfest. Dr. Ostfeld is a cardiologist and the founder and director of the Cardiac Wellness Program at Montefiore as well as an Associate Professor of Clinical Medicine at the Albert Einstein College of Medicine in the Bronx, New York. It's a great honor to have Dr. Ostfeld share about his program! I hope you enjoy. 

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As a cardiologist, outside of an emergency medical condition that requires an urgent intervention, I have never seen anything come close to providing the breadth and depth of benefits that a whole-food, plant-based lifestyle offers.

However, ten years ago I would not have been writing this post or otherwise extolling the benefits of a plant-based diet. During my training at Yale and Harvard with many outstanding physicians and scientists, I learned little about this approach. For years after my training, I applied evidence-based medicine, recommended a “healthier” lifestyle, which typically included a Mediterranean-style diet, and watched as my patients’ diseases often progressed. I became frustrated. There had to be something more.
Fortunately, I was introduced to the work of Drs. Campbell and Esselstyn. Based on their research, I started a Cardiac Wellness Program at Montefiore Medical Center in New York City, where we encourage patients to embrace a whole-foods, plant-based diet. The results have been amazing. My patients’ chest pain and shortness of breath have dramatically improved. Their cholesterol has plummeted, they have lost weight, and they are able to eliminate or reduce the need for multiple medications for problems such as hypertension, diabetes, high cholesterol, and chronic pain.
I’d like to share a real-life example: A patient in his late 50s began to develop chest discomfort. It progressed to the point where he would feel it even as he sat still. Cholesterol blockages in his heart were the cause. He did not want any cardiac procedures, and he was started on all of the appropriate medications. However, he continued to have discomfort even walking a block or two. He then changed his lifestyle, embracing a whole-foods, plant-based diet. His cholesterol fell dramatically, he lost weight, and after just a few months he could walk over a mile. Now, two years and no procedures later, he is jogging over two miles and says he feels 30 years younger!*
Patients also describe benefits they may not have originally expected, such as more energy, improved complexion, clearer thinking, better sleep, fewer colds, improved erectile function, increased stamina, and more! In fact, patients have cried tears of joy from the results they have achieved. Frankly, I have fallen in love with being a physician all over again.
I am grateful that you are reading this, as the need for this type of lifestyle change is only growing. Heart and blood vessel disease is the number one killer of adult men and women in the United States,1, 2 and approximately two out of every three twelve-year- olds in the US has early signs of cholesterol disease in the blood vessels that feed their hearts with blood.3 We are literally killing ourselves from diet-driven disease.

Each of you influences many people in your family and community. Please join me in helping to spread awareness about the benefits of the whole foods, plant-based lifestyle.
In my years of practice I have learned that it is never too early to make this change, and it is never too late. When we are born, our bodies are like turbo engines. A few decades of animal products and processed foods later, we turn those bodies into clunkers. Let’s turn back the clock … because we can! 
*Patient identifiers have been changed. 

1. American Heart Association. Heart disease and stroke statistics–2004 update. Dallas, Texas: American Heart Association, 2003.

2. Heart disease and stroke statistics–2010 update: a report from the American Heart Association. Circulation. 2010;121:e46-e215.

3. Stary HC. Evolution and progression of atherosclerotic lesions in coronary arteries of children and young adults. Arteriosclerosis. 1989 Jan-Feb;9(1 Suppl):I19-32.

4. S Castle and A Goodman. Rethink Food: 100+ Doctors Can’t Be Wrong. Two Skirts Productions, Houston, TX, 2014.


Note: this post was originally published Here

As always the information presented in this blog is for educational purposes only. It should not be considered as specific medical, nutritional, lifestyle, or other health-related advice.