Archive for the ‘food’ Category

BEEF – It’s What for Dinner IF YOU KNOW YOUR PRODUCER

Sunday, May 30th, 2010

This post originally appeared at The Good American Post.

I stopped eating conventional red meat about 7 years ago (by conventional I mean from a producer that I cannot know, i.e. Tyson).  When mad cow disease (aka: BSE (Bovine Spongiform Encephalopathy and Creutzfeldt-Jakob Disease, CJD) became an issue, I decided that I did not want to have my brain turn into mush, and that I would rather not eat beef.

But I LOVE A GOOD HAMBURGER AND STEAK, so that led me on a quest to find great beef products produced by farmers and ranchers that I trusted.  Luckily, in Colorado, there are several.

In a recent article I found on Mike Callicrate’s No-Bull website, it became apparent, again, that many people in the United States are still eating and cooking meat that is subpar and even dangerous.  Being a food-snob myself, I still refuse to eat beef from even nice restaurants because they are usually not tasty and the meat comes from huge food conglomerates that use growth hormones, large amounts of antibiotics, and new drugs like Optiflex and Zilmax, which (IN MY HUMBLE OPINION) can have untested and could have unknown results on the body of a human being.

Do you ever feel like a guinea pig?  That is because if you are not becoming more aware of your food supply – YOU ARE.

Never has it been more important to be more sustainable – find ways to purchase food from local farmers and ranchers who you trust, and grow your own food.

Read more about what is happening to beef HERE!

- Tisha Casida

Ready, Set, Action! There’s No Better Time to Grow Food & Know Your Farmer!

Sunday, May 30th, 2010

What can we do to build local economies while ensuring our food is safe and nutritious?  Well, it’s simple!  We need a “consumption revolution” (a term used by my good friend Paul Alhadef at A Wren’s Nest Farm).

We, the consumers, make choices every MINUTE that affect our local economies.  Agriculture has been and will continue to be centralized and monotonized (that is a word I believe I have just invented)  if we do not start taking drastic steps to change our eating habits!

Food Freedom has a great post on some of those things we can do, VISIT THEM HERE.

- Tisha Casida

Farmers’ Market at the Arts Center

Wednesday, May 19th, 2010

Come and check out the great lineup of vendors that we have for the 2nd Annual Loco for Local Evening Farmers’ Market at the Arts Center in Pueblo, Colorado.  We have delicious local food, music and entertainment, as well as local arts!

Check out the entire event-flier HERE—>>> L4L 2010_Event Information_5.9.10

Here are our vendors to-date:

Fresh Breads & Pastries
Hanagan Farms
A Wren’s Nest Farm
Country Roots Farm
Cattleman’s Choice Beef
Sunflower Valley Goat Dairy
Medina Farms
JC Tamales
Sassy Shack Salsa
Pueblo Recycling Park
Dirty Mountain Glassworks
Shiloh Ridge Glass
Sustainable Fort Carson
Pueblo Performing Arts Guild
That’s Natural! Featured Flavors
The Good American Post
Contact us if you would like to participate!
719-210-8273
thats.natural.info@gmail.com

Pesticide Exposure Linked to ADHD

Monday, May 17th, 2010

Some of our readers know (but certainly not everyone), that the reason that I started That’s Natural! in the first place was because of how sick I got from what I believe to be exposure to pesticides as a child growing up on a small farm in Southern Colorado.

Pesticides, especially those containing organophosphates, are incredibly unhealthy.  It appears that the pesticides act on the same brain chemicals that are related to ADHD, in this particular instance.

Many pesticides are neuro-toxins, or they affect the nervous-system of the pests that they are targeted to kill.  Although most of these pesticides have been approved for use, there is really no telling how dangerous they are in minute quantities over a period of time or as they interact with other chemicals that a human may be exposed to.

How to alleviate concern of exposure?  KNOW YOUR FARMER.  Period.  Find out who is growing your food.  Even if the food is natural or organic – KNOW THE FARMER, KNOW THE COMPANY.  Trust no one and be an avid consumer.  Your health is depending on it.

Read the whole article HERE.

- Tisha Casida, Publisher

REAL FOOD MEDIA

Wednesday, April 28th, 2010
Baked Bread by Paul Alhadef Photography

We have come across a very good site featuring various articles on what we like to call “real food”.  This is food that is (according to this site, as well as our standards):

  • Organic
  • Humanely raised (animals on pasture, not in factories)
  • Grown locally when possible
  • Whole and unrefined (real maple syrup instead of high-fructose corn syrup)
  • Processed as little as possible (raw milk instead of pasteurized and homogenized)
  • Nutrient-dense (enzymes, vitamins, minerals, and probiotics)
  • Free of additives and preservatives
  • Free of synthetic and chemical ingredients
  • Not genetically modified
  • Traditionally produced and prepared

CHECK OUR REAL FOOD MEDIA HERE!

Trinity Brewing Company = Great Beer, Fabulous Food, and Easy on the Environment

Friday, March 12th, 2010

By: Tisha Casida

Now THIS is sustainability my friends!  Trinity Brewing Company has done a fine job with their menu and dedication to the local economy, check out the post at: http://goodamericanpost.info/2010/03/12/trinity-brewing-company-great-beer-fabulous-food-and-easy-on-the-environment/

Transition Town

Friday, March 12th, 2010

By Brian Fritz

The first training for Transition Town in the United States took place in Boulder, Colorado, in September 2008.  Since then there have been multiple Transition Town Initiatives emerging throughout the country, with 15 of those in Colorado alone.
The Transition Town Initiative was developed in the United Kingdom in 2006 by Rob Hopkins, a permaculture teacher, as a practical model for allowing communities to reduce their dependency on a fossil fuel-based infrastructure, develop greater local resilience and re-localize the community resource base.  This includes all areas of the community resource: food and energy production, security and access, local economy, health care, education, transportation, etc

See the complete article on Page 10 of That’s Natural! Quarter 1 of 2010 here:
http://issuu.com/ThatsNatural/docs/tnq1_2010_web

Supporting Local Food

Tuesday, January 19th, 2010

It is SO important to take note of our farmers, ranchers and producers and ensure that we are supporting local food systems.  WE AS CONSUMERS are responsible for ensuring the future of a SAFE and HEALTHY food supply.

The Good American Post, with some of the same mission of That’s Natural! explains in depth at: http://goodamericanpost.info/2010/01/18/know-your-farmer-local-food-systems-are-most-sustainable/

Vegetables

Health & Wellness – Introduction

Monday, February 25th, 2008

Health & Wellness. It is about more than counting calories and watching one’s weight. It is also about being an AWARE Consumer and knowing EXACTLY what is going into one’s body.

Look at the labels. Start researching products and ingredients that you do not know about. Does the product claim to be “Natural” – find out if it really is. BE AN AWARE CONSUMER.

At That’s Natural! we look at “The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly”.

What are the “Bad” products in our society’s food supply and environment? What are the “Ugly” consequences of continuously consuming or being exposed to these products? What are the “Good” products and services that we can take advantage of to make our lives and communities HEALTHIER and SUSTAINABLE?

TAKE A LOOK at the “That’s Health & Wellness” Talk-Cast at the bottom of this blog!

Bad Behavior has blocked 56 access attempts in the last 7 days.