healthy cooking Guide

Healthy Cooking Utensils Section


 

Healthy Cooking Utensils Navigation


|

Cooking Guide Home Page
Partners
Tell A Friend about us
Healthy Method Of Cooking |
East Healthy Cooking |
Persian Cooking For A Healthy |
Cooking Healthy Eating |
Crockpot Healthy Cooking |
Healthy Cooking For Beginners |
Cooking Food Healthy House Exmoor |
Healthy Cooking Oil Research |
Vegetarian Organic Healthy Living Cooking Magazines |
Joan Lunden S Healthy Cooking |
Cooking Healthy Reciepes |
Cooking Healthy Ways |
Childrens Healthy Cooking Activities |
Healthy Cooking Groups |
Basics Of Healthy Cooking |

List of healthy-cooking Articles


Healthy Cooking Utensils Best seller

Buy it Now!





Social bookmarking
You like it? Share it!
socialize it

Newsletter

Subscribe to our newsletter AND receive our exclusive Special Report on healthy-cooking
First Name:
Email:



Main Healthy Cooking Utensils sponsors

 

Latest Healthy Cooking Utensils link added

...

Submit your link on Healthy Cooking Utensils!



Healthy Cooking for Two (or Just You): Low-Fat Recipes with Half the Fuss and Double the Taste
-By: Frances Price
-Price: $10.55 (New)
$9.47 (Used)

Healthy Homestyle Cooking
-By: Evelyn Tribole
-Price: $6.24 (New)
$5.49 (Used)

Techniques of Healthy Cooking, Professional Edition
-By: The Culinary Institute of America (CIA)
-Price: $37.67 (New)
$44.47 (Used)

More Healthy Homestyle Cooking: Family Favorites You'll Make Again And Again
-By: Evelyn Tribole
-Price: $9.06 (New)
$6.95 (Used)

Cooking Light Complete Cookbook: A Fresh New Way to Cook (Book & CD-ROM)
-By: Cooking Light Magazine
-Price: $21.92 (New)
$23.35 (Used)

Healthy Cooking for the Jewish Home: 200 Recipes for Eating Well on Holidays and Every Day
-By: Faye Levy
-Price: $9.44 (New)
$8.99 (Used)

Steven Raichlen's Healthy Latin Cooking: 200 Sizzling Recipes from Mexico, Cuba, Caribbean, Brazil, and Beyond
-By: Steven Raichlen
-Price: $7.70 (New)
$3.00 (Used)

 

Welcome to healthy cooking Guide

 

Healthy Cooking Utensils Article

Thumbnail example. For a permanent link to this article, or to bookmark it for further reading, click here.


You may also listen to this article by using the following controls.

Tempeh Versus Tofu - Which Wins the Health Competition?

from:

How Is Tempeh Different from Tofu, and Which Is Healthier?

Once close relatives derived from the soybean plant, Tempeh and Tofu were separated at adolescence, raised and formed for purpose in two different living environments. Yet now, they come together for one epic battle for vegetarian supremacy! Not knowing of their past, their disdain for one another is based on a misunderstanding of how similar and beautiful each is to one the other -- how... complementary... they are of one another. So we may all help to teach others and teach these native sons of soy how to better tolerate one another, we must first understand how Tempeh and Tofu came to be.

OK. Enough of that. Let's get right down to it: a primer on the soybean.

What is Tempeh? Tempeh Defined

Tempeh is to the soybean as spam is to ham, except far less disgusting and much better for you. Tempeh is made through a relatively simple process: the soybean is first made tender through soaking and then it's de-hulled. The beans are partially cooked, and then pressed into a layered cake or patty form. There are other forms of tempeh that can be derived from whole wheat or a mixture of soy and grains, yet the most commonly found variation is soy tempeh.

The protein in tempeh is far more digestible than what you would ingest through animal proteins, due to tempeh's fermentation process. As a result, combining tempeh with other meats or simply using it as a substitute has been known to greatly aid in overall digestive health. Different from tofu, tempeh is a whole soybean product that offers higher amounts of protein and dietary fiber, as well as vitamin content, all due to the fermentation process preserving the whole bean.

What is Tofu? Tofu Defined

Like tempeh, tofu is derived from the soybean, yet after the bean has been processed to the soy milk product. In it's simplest form, tofu is to the soybean as cottage cheese is to dairy milk. It is the curd of soy milk pressed into chunks, slabs or bricks. Of course there are varieties of tofu, ranging from what is known as silken or soft tofu, often used in desserts, to the more common western or dried tofu that is so versatile in cooking everything from traditional Asian cuisine to filling for soups. Full of iron and calcium, as well as being cholesterol free, you can see how it serves as a great addition to any diet, especially the diet of a pregnant or aging individual.

With regards to nutritional value, tofu does one-up tempeh as it offers more protein per carbohydrate, while offering a little more versatility in terms of the dishes and foods with which it can be combined. It is easily marinated and seasoned, can be made with egg, cinnamon, fruits and nuts -- offering a fairly wide variety of flavors. It can also be found in fermented varieties, such as pickled tofu, though this isn't necessarily for everyone. Therefore, in our quest to determine which soy reigns supreme, we're slightly stumped as they both offer great edible options.

A Few of the Best Tempeh Recipes

No. I'm not going to drop a list of ingredients that you must run out to the store and purchase, because tempeh is best used in substitutions of your other favorite or former recipes. For example, the Super Bowl is right around the corner, and regardless of how you feel about football, you'll probably be at a party. How about a little vegetarian chili, prepped with tempeh, organic powders, seasoning and vegetables, served with a tasty St. Peters English Ale -- an organic favorite.

For breakfast, depending on your desire, tempeh is the perfect substitute for bacon or sausage, and is darn tasty on a bagel with egg and cheese, or egg substitute if you prefer. Tempeh is also great after it has been marinated, to create sandwich meat, or flavor for salads. And when it comes right down to it, skillet frying it with a little sea-salt and a peppercorn variety makes it a great snack in and of itself.

A Few of the Best Tofu Recipes

Do you remember the first time you dipped into Miso soup or Pad Thai, and thought, "What is this stuff?" It is so versatile, you can quite literally toss it into any of your favorite recipes. Depending on the type of tofu that is made or purchased, you can use it in anything from soups and salads, to filling a kebab skewer full of other meats and vegetables. If you're truly adventurous and have a little sweet tooth, or are attempting to convince friends and family members that a little soy in life can be a good thing, check out this recipe for Vegan Chocolate Cake.

Matty Byloos writes and manages the Green Blog known as: Green Eggs and Planet





 

Healthy Cooking Utensils News

Students cooking up health: Grad students host 6-week class to ... - Adobe Press


Students cooking up health: Grad students host 6-week class to ...
Adobe Press, CA - Jan 6, 2009
The seventh-grader and aspiring chef said her love of cooking is the primary reason she signed up for the class. “We cooked a lot of healthy foods that ...

Read more...


Family food feud - Minneapolis Star Tribune


Family food feud
Minneapolis Star Tribune, MN - Jan 5, 2009
No one tastes from a cooking utensil unless they're prepared to wash it before returning it to the pan. Hands get washed several times. ...

Read more...


The Food Section - Washington Post


The Food Section
Washington Post, United States - Jan 7, 2009
Both of them use materials that are more fully bonded to the base metal than the Teflon pans, so they resist scratching and can handle metal utensils. ...

Read more...


Keep it Healthful - Make it Up - Jewish Press


Jewish Press

Keep it Healthful - Make it Up
Jewish Press, NY - Jan 7, 2009
Some foods, of course, don't need to be cooked or pureed by any utensils other than a fork. Avocados and bananas fall into that category, as do pears (after ...

Read more...


Currying flavor: There's no mystery to diverse, spicy Indian cuisine - The Newark Advocate


Currying flavor: There's no mystery to diverse, spicy Indian cuisine
The Newark Advocate, OH - Jan 6, 2009
But in reality, Indian cooking is simple, healthy and easy, says Raghavan Iyer, author of "660 Curries" (Workman, 2008, $22.95). ...

Read more...


 

Warning: fopen(./cache/healthy-cooking-utensils.html) [function.fopen]: failed to open stream: No such file or directory in /home/bestcook/public_html/healthy/datas/pages.php on line 105

Warning: fwrite(): supplied argument is not a valid stream resource in /home/bestcook/public_html/healthy/datas/pages.php on line 106

Warning: fclose(): supplied argument is not a valid stream resource in /home/bestcook/public_html/healthy/datas/pages.php on line 107