Sunday, November 30, 2014

Review: The Best Green Smoothies on the Planet: The 150 Most Delicious, Most Nutritious, 100% Vegan Recipes for the World's Healthiest Drink by Tracy Russell

The Best Green Smoothies on the Planet: The 150 Most Delicious, Most Nutritious, 100% Vegan Recipes for the World's Healthiest Drink by Tracy Russell

Link to buy The Best Green Smoothies on the Planet: The 150 Most Delicious, Most Nutritious, 100% Vegan Recipes for the World’s Healthiest Drink

Rating: 4.5 out of 5

Review:

Best Green Smoothies is more than a collection of smoothie recipes. Russell is a hardcore believer in a whole food vegan diet, and green smoothies are an important component of that lifestyle. All the recipes in this book are vegan, which means they don't contain milk or yogurt or any other animal products. That separates this book from many others on the market.

This book begins with an explanation of the benefits of green smoothies, including how this is a convenient way to eat more fruits and vegetables without having to spend half the day gnawing on raw kale. Russell also offers instruction on how to make a basic green smoothie (include one "base" fruit, one "flavor" fruit, liquid, and greens) and even how to fix a smoothie that turned out badly.

To call Best Green Smoothies a cookbook would be inaccurate, since all the ingredients are raw. The only appliance in use here is a blender, the choice of which Russell does discusses early in the book. It turns out not all blenders are created equal. To characterize this as a diet book would also be incorrect. Russell doesn't advocate replacing all meals with smoothies or going on a smoothie fast. Although there are sections of the book dedicated to different types of smoothies, including detox varieties, Russell points out that any radical diet is doomed to fail. Instead it's better to gradually switch to a healthy diet of whole foods that includes green smoothies, and this will lead to greater health and fitness.

You might be wondering at this point whether a vegan smoothie recipe tastes good. I had the same question, so I decided to give one a try. The Super Antioxidant Blast Green Smoothie sounded like a good choice because it called for pomegranate and banana, both of which I had in the house. It also called for 3 cups of baby spinach, which I didn't have. So the first substitution was two cups of organic kale, which I had purchased in case I wanted to try the smoothie book. The recipe also called for one pouch of frozen acai puree. I don't know what that is, and I couldn't even ask at the grocery store because I can't pronounce acai. So I substituted extra pomegranate and hoped it was something like acai.

The smoothie turned out okay, under the circumstances. First, I mixed the fruits and it looked dark pink from the pomegranate. Then I threw in one cup of the kale and everything turned an icky gray color. So I threw in the other cup of kale and everything turned green, which was way better than gray. The taste was all right, especially since I had feared the kale would be overwhelming. It wasn't; the banana was. So I threw in a splash of vanilla extract, which made things better, but the banana was still omnipresent.

Russell prefers smoothies to be room temperature, but that sounded unappealing, so I refrigerated all my ingredients before blending and threw in a couple ice cubes. Also, the texture might have been improved if I'd been using a more powerful blender. My blender is more than 20 years old and dates from when my now-husband and I got our first place together. Probably a more powerful blender manufactured in this millennium would have done a better job crushing the pomegranate seeds. There was also a psychological hurdle here. I'm not a vegan or even a vegetarian, so making a smoothie using just water without milk or yogurt felt wrong. Certainly this wouldn't be an issue for a vegan, however.

My plan is to try another smoothie tomorrow and substitute an apple for the banana. I must make another smoothie tomorrow because I've still got a fridge full of kale. A bunch of it cost 99 cents at Kroger, and it's too hard and leafy to eat on its own without blending it.

Speaking of extra kale, this book had the same problem as most recipe books, namely it calls for a little bit of a lot of different ingredients, and then you're stuck with the leftover ingredients. For instance, a number of recipes here call for ¼ of an avocado. What do you do with the remaining ¾ ? Once you're full of veggie smoothie, you might not be in the mood to eat the majority of an avocado, and it tends to turn brown in the fridge. If you need one stalk of celery, what should you do with the rest? And where do you get only one tablespoon of chia seeds? Don't even get me started on the mountain of kale lurking in my fridge as I write this. It's like a rainforest in there.

Aside from this complaint that I have with nearly every recipe book ever written, The Best Green Smoothies offers a lot of great ideas in an easy-to-digest format. Bon appétit!


Reviewed by Peter

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