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Even Food Network Stars Have Their Demons: How Alton Brown Overcame His

There I was yesterday, racing the clock, frantically trying to absorb as much information as I could about Alton Brown. I’d be interviewing him in less than an hour for a feature story on his Feb. 9 live show at Proctors Theater in Schenectady, N.Y.

For those who haven’t heard, Brown’s tour began in October and winds down on March 2nd in Sarasota, Fla. In his nearly 6 months on the road, the celebrity chef, TV host, and author has been ricocheting around the country and dazzling live audiences with a high-voltage stage presentation that’s an unusual blend of rock concert, cooking demo, stand-up comedy, and science experiment.

It makes a bit of sense, doesn’t it, that one of the rock stars of the Food Network and Cooking Channel would be smack in the middle of a string of cross country stage performances, complete with a musical entourage and spiffed up touring bus (with a working kitchen, of course).

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In doing research on Brown, I read up on his transition from television commercial director to culinary school student to Food Network host. There were the starring roles in Good Eats, Iron Chef America, The Next Food Network Star, Feasting on Asphalt and other shows. There was a list of Brown’s best-selling books, as well as a line of Alton-esque merchandise such as travel mugs and sweatshirts bearing his bespectacled likeness. And then I stumbled upon a completely unexpected find from his past: the reformation of Brown’s eating habits that resulted in a 50-lb weight loss four years ago.

I was understandably intrigued…and not just because Brown began his transformation in 2009, the same year in which my own took place.

He essentially lost the weight by changing his eating habits and shapeshifting food choices into four lists:

* Daily (fruits, whole grains, leafy greens)

* Three times per week (oily fish, sweet potatoes, avocados)

* No more than weekly (red meat, alcohol, pasta, sweets)

* And his personal no-fly zone, meaning never (soda, fast food, processed food).

So an hour later, as Brown and I concluded our brief but voluptuous interview on his career, life on the road, and philosophy toward food, I broached the topics (you know I HAD to!) of food, weight, and how he keeps it all in balance. Herewith are his answers, some of which you may find surprising…then again, perhaps not, given the TV host’s pull-no-punch style of communicating:

SM: “Many Americans have become unhealthy due to food choices and being sedentary…”

AB: “Let’s just say the word ‘fat’ and call it a day.”

SM: “What has worked for you in keeping the weight off? It’s been more than four years.”

AB: “Some days food is a friend and other times it’s a foe. I don’t really overeat anymore…sometimes when I’m nervous. But I had to learn when to stop. And it’s also about being honest enough to take a good look in the mirror and say, ‘OK, we need to do a little work.'”

SM: “How do you handle food out there on the road?”

AB: “I set pretty harsh rules for myself when I’m on tour. We’re touring in cold regions now and I can’t just get off the bus and walk a few miles. I base my eating on what my body needs. I don’t look at it in terms of what I can’t have…but it does make sense to limit certain foods.”

SM: “You have foods that you never eat such as soda and fast food. I didn’t see dairy on any of your lists…do you eat dairy?”

AB: “I eat yogurt occasionally and like cream in my coffee, but I eat very little cheese. And I gave up drinking milk because quite frankly, it made me do bad things…it was my evil twin. Milk would whisper in my ear and say I had to have chocolate cake or cookies with it.”

SM: “What was the hardest thing to give up that was bad for you?”

AB: “Soda. Both regular and diet. I will never ever drink it again. It was harder to quit than smoking.”

SM: “Besides nutrition, what else is important to you about food?”

AB: “I don’t ever sit by myself and eat, even on the road. I think it’s important to sit and talk with people…and connect.”

Red Hummus

This recipe was invented the morning after a night of delightful culinary excess at a food and wine fundraiser (Albany’s Wine and Dine For The Arts) in January. Although I stayed within my no gluten or sugar limits, the banquet of pulled pork and polenta, white wine risotto, short rib risotto, and two kinds of decadent liver pate, left me in desperate need of some vegetable-based cleansing. Aside from my beloved lemon water and morning fruit, this turned out to be the perfect 1 p.m. brunch on an unhurried Saturday. It’s also great as an appetizer, sandwich spread, or a post-workout snack:

1 can garbanzo beans, rinsed and drained

3 small tomatoes, chopped (or 1 cup cherry tomatoes) separated into two equal portions

2 cloves garlic, peeled and smashed

2 Tbs. extra virgin olive oil

1 tsp. Garam Masala

1/2 tsp. Tumeric

1 tsp. sea salt

1/4 cup fresh parsley leaves

2 Tbs. fresh oregano

1/2 tsp. Harissa or hot sauce

Combine all ingredients in a food processor, setting aside half a portion of tomatoes. Pulse ingredients for about a minute, stopping occasionally to scrape the sides. When less chunky, add remaining tomatoes and pulse until it’s a smooth dip. Serve immediately with crackers or rice cakes or refrigerate in an airtight container. Makes about two cups of dip.

This kept for more than a week in the (back of the) refrigerator. I had the last of it tonight for a light-fare dinner of hummus, cherry tomatoes, and sliced avocado. Wow I Love Plants!

The perfect detox after a little culinary debauchery

The perfect detox after a little culinary debauchery

Doing The Work (In The Proper Order)

I didn’t create the rules…just learned to play by them after years and years of trying to do it the diet industry’s way.

One day I realized…If I’m eating to dull the pain, distract myself from unhappy details of my life, to swath myself in a sheet of fat so I can generally hide from life and all its adventures and complexities…does it make any sense that counting calories and manipulating food groups will solve what ails me?

It was much deeper than calorie-counting and cutting back on carbs, and I knew it.

So I took an entirely different approach: work on the wounds themselves and not their symptoms. And I started the process many years ago…when I looked like this:

Summer of 1999

Summer of 1999

When I looked like this, is when my healing began.

When I looked like this, is when I began the deluge of positive thoughts and kind messages.

When I looked like this, is when I began to love myself and my body unconditionally.

If I hadn’t done the work when I looked like this, I never would have been ready to embrace a sound formula for fitness and healthy eating when it finally came along…at just the right time, of course.

Message of the Day: Do the work and Life will more than meet you half way.

Glowing after a DDPYOGA Workout

Vegan Cream of Cauliflower Soup

This isn’t the first cream of cauliflower soup recipe I’ve posted and I’m sure it won’t be the last. Cauliflower’s neutrality make it an endless artist’s palate for experimentation. And this latest experiment was born of my desire for some vegan whipped cream. For that, I needed two cans of coconut milk, refrigerated for two days so the cream would rise in a single, concentrated layer at the top.

With the cream extracted, whipped, and safely entombed in Tupperware for when a craving strikes, I was left with more than two cups of perfectly good coconut water. It would have been fine in a smoothie, but my chilled bones were calling for soup. There were enough milky strands of coconut cream left in the water to make the soup just creamy enough to not taste like I was eating a liquidated head of cauliflower. But it wasn’t fatty enough that I felt it wise to relegate myself to a tiny serving. Calorie-wise, it’s the perfect middle-of-the-road soup. It’s velvety texture is thoroughly pleasing, and I can gleefully swish a check-mark in the day’s vegetable column.

The key here is texture. And I didn’t have the patience to wield an immersion blender for the amount of time it would take to make the roughness of the cauliflower transmute to velvety smoothness, so I blended it in batches in a food processor. SO worth the effort. There’s not much going on in terms of extra flavor notes with this recipe, which means you can have a field day with your spice and condiment cupboard. Paprika, cumin, and onion powder are all viable options, but I have to say that a drizzle of truffle oil is magic.

Hope you try and enjoy!

Vegan Cream of Cauliflower Soup

1 head of cauliflower, rinsed and cut into chunks

2 cans of coconut water (with the fat strained and used for whipped cream)

1/2 teaspoon salt

In a medium stock pot or large saucepan, bring all ingredients to a boil. Cover and simmer on low heat for 20-30 minutes, until cauliflower is fork-tender. Let cool for a half-hour or so before pureeing. Puree in small batches – it’s the best way to ensure the cauliflower properly breaks down to yield proper smoothness. If serving immediately, return to the pan and reheat on low heat, stirring occasionally so it doesn’t burn or stick.

CreamofCauliflowerSoup

Bon Appetit!