I found this video its very interesting on why we need to eat this way!
Posts Tagged ‘Nourishing Traditions’
Why eat Nourishing Traditions ways? 101
August 18th, 2009
My Health Get NT (Nourishing Traditions) on the Internet – Web Sources & book stores
July 21st, 2009
My Health www.overstock.com – (msg 1832, 1834) According to some members, this has the cheapest price ($14.00), cheap shipping, and fast service.
BooksAMillion does for $16.12, with free shipping over….oops, can’t remember the price, but I bought the book for Kim & me as well as Not Your Mother’s Slowcooker Book (check that out at the library; lots of good recipes & info as well). – Karen
The Living Spring is selling NT for $15 http://www.thelivingspring.com/catalog/product-theParentId11-id81.html
www.amazon.com – prices start at $15.75 plus shipping
www.newtrendspublishing.com newtrends@kconline.com – The original publisher of Nourishing Traditions, they charge $25.00 plus shipping ($36.00 Canada).
Most book stores like Barnes & Noble charge $25.00 as well
For all of you who are waiting to buy your Nourishing Traditions: here’s how I got mine. I went to Amazon, which is one of my weaknesses and while I was doing my order I noticed this thing about a credit card. I am NOT a credit card person, in fact, my husband and I managed to live almost 50 yrs without one, although I do enjoy my debit card. Anyway…if you apply for an amazon credit card, you get $30 off your order! Plus, if you order more than $25 worth, you get free shipping. I did this a few months ago and then just put the card away, haven’t even activated it yet, although if you use it, you get bonus points on future Amazon purchases. I think it also has a 6 month/no interest thing, too. It’s a good way to get a free book or two.
The Ideal NT(Nourishing Traditions) kitchen
July 20th, 2009
My Health A Myheath HQ viewer wrote this to me:
Do you have an ideal kitchen design they would share? Or a
method to design one?
I said: When we moved into this house the kitchen was one of the selling points.. it’s gorgeous! But after living in it I have some beefs with it
On the plus side.. it has gorgeous blue tile countertops and white tile flooring. Light wood cabinets, some are glass faced. Shelves for cookbooks, big deep drawers, a huge
fridge.. the kind with the freezer on the bottom! and a “i still drool over it” gas range. Two regular gas burners, and the other half is a grill. We did an indoor BBQ the other day, and we’ve done kebabs a couple times. It really does rock my world. We’ve got a nice dishwasher, a skinny cabinet for cutting boards and baking sheets, and the other thing I love is the magnetic knife holders by the sink. No good if anyone has homicidal tendancies, but great if you want to keep your sharp knives sharp
Cons.. the tile is so hard to keep clean. The floor is always gross, and you cant use the counters for making bread. I rolled out my yogurt dough on a cutting board the other day, not so much the best way to do that
Its really cold in the winter, so I did all my pickle fermenting in a shelf in my bedroom. Not too bad, but not ideal either. The fridge.. well, it’s novel, but our veggies always freeze because the coldest part is on the bottom. We haven’t figured that one out. Other major problems include lack of a garbage disposal, lack of plugs and awful, awful lighting. Yeah, we could really use some better plugs and lighting. More windows! More something.. sheesh. My favorite kitchen I’ve ever been in was in a friend’s parent’s house in rural Maine. The house was built in the 1780s and the kitchen was HUGE! They had an old wood burning cookstove, but also a gas range in the kitchen too. Tons of counter space, of all different heights.. low stuff over by the windows,
traditional height by the sink. And the pantry.. oh my god. The pantry was larger than my kitchen
With allkinds of nooks and crannies for shelves and drawers and bins. It was great
I think the best idea was the one someone (sorry, dont remember who.. lol) said about drawing out your kitchen on graph paper and cutting out appliances and things to scale and moving them around to see where they fit

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