Turmeric Cayenne Eye Opener

I am a morning person. I am typically up and starting my day somewhere between 4:30 and 5:30 a.m. Partly this happens because I am NOT a night person and am usually in bed between 8 and 9:00 p.m.!

I like a big breakfast and I like my coffee but as I’ve gotten older, I found that I’m not ready for breakfast right away and even coffee I prefer after a cup of lemon water or herbal tea.

In September, I saw a blog post for a homemade tea blend: Heidi Swanson of 101 Cookbooks, Turmeric Tea

Turmeric is a powerful anti-inflammatory herb and I like the taste. I typically add it to fish, I buy a curcumin-salmon oil capsule that both Bear and I take and I like turmeric, cayenne and black pepper on a hard boiled egg.

Heidi’s tea blend appealed.

I experimented off and on.

Then, I saw Martha Rose Shulman of the New York Times’ Tonic and Teas article

Ms. Shulman ran with Heidi’s honey-turmeric paste idea as well as additional blends, particularly a Meyer Lemon-Ginger-Turmeric-Cayenne and a Ginger-Lime-Coconut-Honey-Turmeric blend.

As Heidi notes in a second tea post (Ginger-Mint tea), blending and making your own herbal tea vs using tea bags is a bit akin to making homemade soup vs canned soup – you control the flavor and blend and can change it up however you like.

And as a person who enjoys puttering in the kitchen, I am finding this early morning ritual of making my own blend of tea to be a relaxing and almost meditative start to my day.

My current favorite takes a little from several recipes.

I knew I wanted lemon, honey and turmeric. Black pepper is added with turmeric as it makes the turmeric bio-available to the body. And after seeing Ms. Shulman’s addition of cayenne, I added that also. Cayenne is another spice with many reputed health benefits – particularly for the heart, blood pressure, circulation and digestive health. Plus, I LIKE it!

While the water is heating to just below a boil, I fix a paste of a spoonful of honey, 1/4 tsp of turmeric and 1/4 tsp of cayenne.

I juice a small Meyer Lemon and get the pepper mill ready.

When the water is hot, put the honey spice paste spoon in the cup, pour in the hot water, then the lemon juice. Add some fresh ground pepper, stir well.

This morning I sat in the sunroom with the light of the nearly full moon reflecting on the snow and ice in the yard, sipped my tea and enjoyed the quiet comfort of Bear and Auggie near.

Perfect.

The cayenne has heat but with the lemon, honey, turmeric, black pepper and water – it is not the kind of heat you think of when you add cayenne or other hot peppers to food. It is a warming heat – more like a shot of brandy kind of heat, but without the head spinning effects of alcohol. It is a comforting heat, to me.

Now, the other thing that turmeric needs to help the body get the most benefit, is some fat. Some people commented that they took a spoonful of coconut oil. My choice is a spoonful of peanut butter: fat AND some protein. This works for me as that bit of protein is plenty to keep me going until I’m ready for my actual breakfast. And I like it.

Martha Rose Shulman’s blend of Ginger-Coconut-Lime-Turmeric and honey is wonderful as well, but takes a bit longer as the coconut has to brew. I liked the coconut water, though, so when I cut the lemon for my morning tea, I cut a few slices, add the slices to coconut and water and let that steep in the refrigerator.

I’ve been using the coconut-lemon water as a base for a small smoothie later in the day if I need a picker-upper between meals. I blend the contents of the jar, a little yogurt, flax or chia, kale or spinach – more spices and the result is a mini-green smoothie.

Another great way to combine the fat, pepper, turmeric and cayenne is on a hard boiled egg.

One morning this week, with a perfectly ripe avocado in my fruit bowl… I mashed it, added the hard boiled egg with spices, sweet grape tomatoes, a slice of toast – and I called it breakfast.

***Edit 1/29/2014 I’ve had some wonderful fresh organic mint lately and have been adding some mint leaves to the brew – even better. Also, I’ve noticed a decrease in some shoulder and hip discomfort. But even more – I often have some rapid heartbeats when I lie down at night…Dr. says not abnormal. In any case, since increasing turmeric and cayenne, those have gone away.

Midweek Mess

Mid-January.

Temperatures in the 40’s daytime, freezing overnight.

Frozen ground = nowhere for melting snow to go.

Midweek Mess.

Testing, testing

First work week of 2014.

Finally have my Windows 8.1 computer set up with all software…mostly.

This is the first post on the new machine AND with the current Photoshop CC.

CC = Creative Cloud = ???

I haven’t dealt with the several PS plug-ins that I have and so made my little tweaks manually.

Also a new version of my FTP software which is the thing that I use to send the photos to the blog.

AND, I got a new phone, also Windows 8. That has nothing to do with this post except that I’m a little overwhelmed with new stuff this week.

Mostly it went well. I had a little glitch with my email setup on the phone resulting in 1 lost email after a skim at the grocery – sorry Margaret! – but learned some things in the process (IMAP4 NOT Pop3 on Windows Phone!).

So, here goes…a few photos from today – a messy, slushy, 38F, blustery day…with some blue sky and sun by afternoon.

Hot dogs for supper

All over the internet food blogs, folks are eating clean and light and Lord knows what all else they are calling the New Year’s resolutions for good health.

Every year, the same thing…starting with the idea of perfection..

Harummph :) !!

Here at the house of Summers, we take a MUCH more casual approach to a New Year as in we continue on with living our lives, enjoying the simple things and the joy of simple moments…musical beds, etc., etc.!!

And tonight???

Hot dogs for supper! (And French fries and ketchup!!!)

Week End

Saturday: The road home, from the road home, the road home on the other side of the highway where we walked.

Sunday: At home.

Sunday’s high: 15F

Sunday Supper: Black Eyed Pea and Vegetable Barley Soup.