Digestion
Easy Sheet-Pan Eggs with Mushrooms & Spinach Recipe
Make these easy sheet-pan eggs the next time you’re serving a crowd for breakfast or brunch. Mushrooms add texture and flavor, while spinach adds a pop of color. You can also make these eggs for a meal-prep-friendly breakfast. continue reading
Braised Lentils & Kale with Fried Eggs Recipe
These braised lentils are cooked with tender kale and bathed in a fire-roasted tomato broth with an egg on top to pack in the protein. Microwaveable lentils need just a short time in the pan to finish cooking. If you have cooked or canned lentils on hand, you can use them in their place, but you may have to shave a few minutes off the cooking time so they don’t get too soft. We like how the soft, runny yolk coats the dish. If you want a harder yolk, cover the pan and add 2 or 3 minutes to the cooking time. continue reading
Sunbutter Crunch Bars Recipe
If you’re looking for a snack that satisfies your dessert cravings and incorporates your methylation superfoods, look no further than Against All Grain’s No-Bake Sunbutter Crunch Bars. These bars are filled with sunflower seeds, which are a great food to support balanced methylation, since they are rich in zinc, methionine, cysteine, magnesium, potassium, B3, B6, folate, and betaine. Phew! Their simplicity makes this a great recipe for even the most basic of cooks. continue reading
Savory Breakfast Bowl Recipe
Gaining confidence in the kitchen is key and familiarizing yourself with new recipes and cooking techniques will set you up for success! This is a versatile dish that can easily be prepared for breakfast or lunch. The featured component of this dish is a plant food known as watercress. continue reading
Savory Spinach and Mushroom Quinoa Recipe
This is a delicious dish to whip up for any meal – top with eggs for breakfast, include roasted salmon or your additional protein of choice for lunch or dinner, or enjoy it simply as a vegan dish. Quinoa is a complete protein containing all nine essential amino acids that our bodies cannot make on their own, packing in about 8 grams of protein and 5 grams of fiber in each cooked cup. continue reading