FOOD | HEALTH | SPIRITUALITY

Sign Up For Your BONUS GIFT!

Welcome to Sacred & Delicious! I’d like to reward your interest with two valuable gift:

The Sacred & Delicious Food List

The Sacred & Delicious Food List is an addendum to the cookbook, Sacred & Delicious. Author Lisa Mitchell decided to distribute this comprehensive list of the foods through her website so that she would be able to update it more easily. These are foods found in most modern kitchens. The list organizes the foods into categories to reflect how they fit in your diet from an Ayurvedic perspective.


While you wait for the book, enjoy reading the monthly updates on our blog,
Don’t miss out on monthly updates from the Sacred & Delicious Blog: Food • Health • Spirituality


  • Please select the truck
  • This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

Sign up now for our Sacred & Delicious Blog

Receive our bonus gift: Sacred & Delicious food list!


  • Please select the plane
  • This field is for validation purposes and should be left unchanged.

My Favorite Things: Capomo

Today I’m introducing a new section of the Sacred & Delicious Blog called My Favorite Things, and I’m launching it with a yummy coffee alternative called Capomo! If you love the taste of coffee but have given it up for any number of excellent reasons, which I enumerate later, you’re in for a treat!

Capomo is the name Tattva’s Herbs gives this coffee alternative made from the maya nut, which they claim is one of “nature’s premier antioxidants.” That may be, but I love this drink just for its divine flavor! Want some “bliss in every cup”? Try Capomo!

You can make Capomo in a coffee pot, drip coffee maker, or with a Melita. I gave all of those kitchen gadgets up when I swore off caffeine, so I simply bring a few teaspoons of the powder to a boil with water, let it simmer for a few minutes, and strain it into a mug. I love it with a dash of stevia and freshly made almond milk—so simple if you own a Vitamix. Suit yourself; some folks prefer it black.

I gave up coffee more than 25 years ago because caffeine made my heart race and kept me awake at night. I had the same sad experience with coffee ice cream. Gastro docs advise patients who suffer from acid reflux or have ulcers to avoid coffee because of its acidity. Coffee is also said to counteract some homeopathic remedies.

From an Ayurvedic perspective, I think a cup of hot Capomo is ideal for vata and kapha types, who tend to be cold.  The maya nut is naturally warming, so I suggest that people with pitta problems drink it in moderation.

Capomo’s flavor is so similar to coffee I no longer feel deprived. It’s no wonder that this is the first of My Favorite Things!

P.S. You can get a free sample (plus postage) here.

Print

CAPOMO BLISS

Serves 1

2 to 3 teaspoons Capomo grounds
¾ mug water
¼ mug fresh almond milk (page 81 in Sacred & Delicious)
1 pinch Kal Stevia or ½ teaspoon coconut sugar (optional)

 

1. Combine the water with Capomo and bring to a boil in a sauce pan, letting it simmer for three to five minutes, and strain before serving. Or make a drip coffee with your favorite form of coffee maker.

 

2. Fill the mug about ¾ full with the hot drink. Add fresh almond milk or (if you prefer) soy or coconut milk or dairy. Or serve it straight up. Add sweetener, if you wish.

 

Drink with coconut milk to cool Capomo's heating quality. Sweetener is good.

Comments are closed.