Stuffed Green Peppers with Brown Rice
This was a great recipe from Nourishing Traditions Cookbook. More over, it wasn’t very difficult to prepare and was a culinary delight. Simply purchase 6 organic green peppers, 1 pound of grass-fed/finished ground beef, olive oil, onion, tomato paste, homemade beef stock, some herbs, grated Parmesan cheese and salt and pepper. You will also need rice which is a separate recipe that requires some planing. As you will need to soak and ferment the rice in whey for 7 to 24 hours before cooking in butter. This process neutralizes a large portion of phytic acid in grains and will vastly improve nutritional benefits and digestibility. Along with cooking the rice in butter, an necessary digestive aid when consuming grains and vegetables. Believe me this process really makes incredibly delicious rice.
An optional ingredient is 1/4 ground heart. I purchase beef and chicken hearts from my local co-op and they are from grass-fed/finished, pasture raised farm animals. I wouldn’t recommend eating the organ of commercially farmed animals.
After you remove the stems, simply brown your meat then add the other ingredients boil until liquid reduces to half. Stir in rice and
season to taste. Make sure to butter a Pyrex dish before setting the peppers in them. After filling each pepper, top with cheese and cook. Like so many of the meals in Nourishing Traditions, this is a meal in and of itself. It is very satisfying and filling.See all photos here.
We drank a very nice bottle of one of my favorite wines; a 2008 Gaja Ca’Marcanda Promis.
Bon Appetit!
This is not the place to speculate on the mysterious instructive spirit that taught our ancestors to sak and ferment their grains before eating them; the important thing to realize is that these practices accord very well with what modern science has discovered about grains. All grains contain phytic acid (an organic acid in which phosphorus is bound) in the outer layer or bran. Untreated phytic acid can combine with calcium, magnesium, copper, iron and especially zinc inn the intestinal tract and block their absorption. This is why a diet high in unfermented whole grains may lead to serious mineral deficiencies and bone loss. The modern misguided practice of consuming large amounts of unprocessed bran often improves colon transit time at first but may lead to irritable bowel syndrome and, in the long term, many other adverse effects. Soaking allows enzymes, lactobacilli and other helpful organisms to break down and neutralize phytic acid. As little as seven hours of soaking in warm acidulated water will neutralize a large portion of phytic acid in grains. The simple practice of soaking cracked or rolled cereal grains overnight will vastly improve their nutritional benefits.
Soaking in warm water also neutralizes enzyme inhibitors, present in all seeds, and encourages the production of numerous beneficial enzymes. The action of these enzymes also increases the amounts of many vitamins, especially B vitamins.
Scientists have learned that proteins in grains, especially gluten, are very difficult to digest. A diet high in unfermented whole grains, particularly high-gluten grains like wheat, puts an enormous strain on the whole digestive mechanism. When this mechanism breaks down with age or overuse, the results take the form of allergies, celiac disease, mental illness, chronic indigestion and candida albicans overgrowth. Recent research links gluten intolerance with multiple sclerosis. During the process of soaking and fermenting, gluten and other difficult-to-digest proteins are partially broken down into simpler components that are more readily available for absorption. – Sally Fallon Nourishing Traditions
Gaja Ca’Marcanda Promis 2008






