Tag: vegetarian

I’ve Got Soba. Yes I Do!

This post answers the call that regularly haunts yoginis all over the world:

I’ve got Soba.  Yes I do!
I’ve got Soba. How about you?

And, lest we get stuck in some circular nutrition chant that leaves us all hungry and with an increasingly dusty box of soba noodles in our pantries, I’m going to cook my soba noodles tonight.  Yes, I am.

I’ve got a box of Soba Pasta that has been giving me the evil eye on my pantry shelf for a more than a few weeks now.  I love soba noodles and I”m pretty sure that at least one of my children will gobble them right up…….but I just haven’t been sure how to make them.  As I have a winter farm share, I’m also trying to take advantage of the local veggies that I have in my fridge that will go bad soon unless I figure out what to do with them—-and SOON!

sobaSo, tonight, I think I am making this recipe from the Eden Foods website.  I’ll let you know how it goes.  The good news is that this box of noodles won’t be calling out to me from the shelf anymore.  It will be, as we say often in our house, “All Gone.”

Ingredients

8 ounces Eden Organic Soba

3 Tbsp Eden Extra Virgin Olive Oil

1 pound organic extra firm tofu, cut into 1 inch cubes

3 cups button mushrooms, sliced
or any variety of fresh mushrooms

1 1/2 tsp fresh ginger root, finely minced

2 Tbsp Eden Shoyu Soy Sauce

1 piece Eden Kombu, 4 inches long

1/4 cup scallions, finely chopped

1/4 cup Eden Toasted Nori Krinkles
or 4 individual serving packets of Eden Spicy Nori Strips, cut into 1 inch squares

(Add All Eden Ingredients to Shopping Cart)

Directions

Cook soba as package directs, rinse, drain and set aside. Place the wakame in a small bowl, cover with cold water and soak 5 minutes. Remove, drain and set aside. Pat the tofu dry with paper towels. Heat the oil in a large skillet over a high flame until hot but not smoking. Add the tofu and stir fry until golden. Remove the tofu and drain on paper towels. Reduce the heat and sauté the mushrooms for 5 to 7 minutes until browned. Return the tofu to the skillet, add the ginger and saute 1 minute. Add the vegetable stock and bring to a boil. Add the kombu and cook 4 minutes. Remove kombu and discard. Reduce the flame to low and add the shoyu. Simmer 2 minutes. Place the soba in individual serving bowls and ladle and equal amount of the tofu, mushrooms and broth over each serving. Garnish with scallions and nori.

Nutritional Info

Per serving: 443 Calories, 19g Fat (38% calories from fat), 24g Protein, 43g Carbohydrate, 3g Fiber, 0mg Cholesterol, 640mg Sodium

Recipe re-posted from the Eden Foods website by Sharon Fennimore Rudyk, an independent yoga and meditation instructor and birth doula based in Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania.  Find out more about Sharon on her website www.sharonrudykyoga.com.

Meditation for Haiti

SAFE and EFFECTIVE FINANCIAL DONATIONS to HAITI

My web home page is the New York Times, and I would be lying if I didn’t say that the images of injured children, devastation and large numbers of bodies being scooped and dumped by trucks have not taken their toll on my heart-mind.  This is a most challenging time for Haitians all over the world.  This is most likely an understatement and one that I may never, and definitely hope to never, understand the true depth of.  The New York Times has a list of organizations currently accepting donations and you can access it here: http://thelede.blogs.nytimes.com/2010/01/13/haiti-disaster-relief-how-to-contribute/?scp=12&sq=giving%20and%20haiti&st=cse

If you live in Pittsburgh, or even close, Quiet Storm, a local vegetarian and vegan restaurant, is hosting a benefit dinner:

HAITIAN MENU Jan 19

I want to offer Yoga Matrika blog readers some links to organizations that are accepting donations:

UNICEF
http://www.unicefusa.org/?gclid=CLzslMOfp58CFWkN5Qodrxrk1Q

DOCTORS WITHOUT BORDERS
http://doctorswithoutborders.org/

PARTNERS in HEALTH
http://www.pih.org/home.html

Obviously, there is GREAT need and money is a type of energy that we can send directly to these organizations who can make sure that care is provided to the almost 3 million survivors of this most terrible earthquake.

What else can be done?  We can meditate. 

There is a very important kind of Buddhist meditation that can be practiced by anyone, of any religion, any time, any place.  Human suffering in Haiti (you can read this Human Rights report to find out more) did not begin with this earthquake and there is suffering all around you—sadness, hunger, violence, inequity, pain.  While it is easy to focus on the pain and suffering that is shocking and remarkable, this meditation asks us to to focus on human suffering in general.  This meditation gives us power to acknowledge our own suffering, to wish something better for ourselves and to extend this wish to everyone, everywhere who is experiencing suffering. 

It can be overwhelming to accept that last week, before this earthquake, in Haiti, there were children being kidnapped (according to the Human Rights Watch report, as many as one kidnapping daily) and food riots as so many people were starving to the point of violence.  The United Nations estimated in 2008 that there were 170,000 children employed in domestic labor and only 50% of primary school aged children go to school with only 2% of the population finishing high school.  The reality is that there is great need and tremendous suffering in Haiti and around the world.  Rather than turn away, we have an opportunity and an obligation to face this pain and draw on the strength of our practice to build compassion and create peace and beautiful wishes for all living beings.

MAKING A WISH: Loving-Kindness Meditation for Haiti and all Living Beings

STEP 1: Sit quietly in a chair or on the floor (if this is comfortable for you)

STEP 2: Notice the quality of your breath and do a scan of your body from your toes through the crown of your head, just noticing how you feel, any sensations in your body and places that feel open or closed.

STEP 3: Make a sincere wish for your own safety, happiness, health and well-being.  You can use phrases such as: May I Be Free of Fear and Harm; May I Be Content as I Am; May I Be at Peace with What Comes.  Or, you can just make an honest wish for yourself in your own words that is meaningful to you.

STEP 4: Extend this wish gently to all living beings starting with the people that you care about the most, see them all bathed in the light of your sincere wish.  Then, extend this wish to all the people that you know, including neighbors, friends, colleagues, the person who serves your coffee in the morning.  Then, extend this wish to everyone in your city, state and country.  Take your time.  Be honest in your wish and sincere in your desire that everyone be granted this wish. 

Step 5:  Call into your mind’s eye Haiti and the world.  See the light and energy of your beautiful wish bathing Haiti and the entire world in a beautiful light.  Be sincere in your wish that all living beings in Haiti be granted peace, health and freedom from pain and suffering.

This is different from prayer in that you are sending energy not from a higher being, but from your own heart and mind to everyone who might need it.  Although our American culture has made a commitment to certain beliefs about time and space, this meditation teaches us that we are also humans with energy that knows no boundaries and we have power to release energy in ways that defy these artificial boundaries we have created or believe in.

To Haiti and to everyone in the world who is in pain, suffering, sad, lonely, thirsty, hungry or in need.  Please know that there is a little woman and a strong community of yogis here in Pittsburgh who sit in the quiet power of our minds and send you light, love and happiness.  May you receive our solemn wish for relief and may it give you comfort and strength as you move forward into life.

Written & Posted by Sharon Rudyk
Owner and Director of Yoga Matrika and Prenatal Yoga Pittsburgh
https://www.yogamatrika.com/
http://www.prenatalyogapittsburgh.com
http://www.sharonrudykyoga.info