Saturday, Oct 05th

hotdogMark your calendars for two upcoming neighborhood association get-togethers designed for the whole family:  Enjoy an ice cream sundae on Sunday June 2 at 5 pm when the Old Scarsdale Neighborhood Association holds their annual meeting, Sundaes on Sunday, at 12 Rochambeau Road for neighborhood residents of all ages. Bring your own toppings and enjoy free ice cream. Note: The Old Scarsdale Neighborhood borders the Post Road, the Bronx River, Wayside Lane and Popham Road. Raindate in September. For more information contact Neighborhood Association President Carolyn Mehta at 914 584 5903.

The Greenacres Neighborhood Association will host the first Great Greenacres Barbeque on Saturday June 8 from noon to 3 pm, rain or shine at Hitchcock Presbyterian Church. All Greenacres families and their kids are encouraged to attend this neighborhood celebration which will include a hamburgers, hot dogs and all the fixings. There will be fun and games for children as well as an ice cream truck and live music.

Register in advance to take advantage of these great prices: Adults, ages 15 and over are $10.00 each, children ages 5 and up are $2.00 and kids under 5 attend for free. For those who don't register in advance there will be a $2 surcharge on the day of the event. Sign up at Greenacres10583.com or mail your check to:

Greenacres Association
P.O. Box 654
Scarsdale NY 10583

For more information, email Jennifer Constantin at jconstantin@optonline.net or call her at 914-325-5091.

phoArmed with a gift certificate purchased at the Gourmet Galaxy we made our way over to Central Avenue to try Saigonese Restaurant which bills itself as "The Very First Authentic Vietnamese Cuisine in Westchester." What exactly is Vietnamese food? And is it worth a visit?

We found the restaurant in a barn style building next to the newly opened Rudy's Sports Bar on South Central Park Avenue. It was Saturday night around 8 o'clock and the restaurant was full so the accommodating hostess agreed to call us on our cell phones when a table opened up. We headed next door to Rudy's Sports Bar to start the night with a drink and settled into our bar stools to enjoy beers on tap and the five large flat screen TV's. Almost too soon we got a call that our table was ready next door.

Saigonese décor is basic but inviting and we sat at a table by the window to peruse the rather complex menu of appetizers, grilled options, "Pho" – which is rice or egg noodle soup, hot pots, Bun (vermicelli stir fry) and Com (rice dishes and vegetables. Almost all of the entrees are available with your choice of beef, chicken, pork, shrimp or salmon and include tasty and healthy vegetables and herbs such as mint and basil leaves, scallions, cilantro, mushrooms, bean sprouts, taro root, cabbage and tofu. For anyone concerned with diet or health, these entrees look like they must be good for you!

To start, the waiter recommended we try the Vietnamese crepe, a fried crepe with shrimp, pork, onion, scallion, bean sprouts, pancakeaand green beans that arrived with a lettuce, mint leaves and fish sauce. The overstuffed pancake was large enough for four of us to each enjoy a healthy portion and was flavorful and filling. We also went for the spring rolls and exotic mango salad with carrots, herbs, shrimp, roasted peanuts and special sauce. The sweet shredded mango was complimented by the acidic lime dressing and salted peanuts and this raw offering was a standout.

Though the appetizers might have been dinner in themselves, we each ordered our own entrée and everyone was pleased with their selection. I had the Ca Kho To, a.k.a Fish in a Clay Pot which was a steamy mixture of salmon, scallions and "special sauce" cooked and served in a clay pot. I can only call it "Vietnamese comfort food," the equivalent of my mother's chicken soup with a cultural twist. My companion tried the Bun, Sai-Gon Ca Biet, which was grilled pork, grilled shrimp, and a spring roll served with vermicelli noodles, chopped lettuce and mint leaves, shredded cucumber, and bean sprouts topped with roasted peanut and fish sauce. Another friend went for the famous Pho or noodle soup and enjoyed hers with shredded chicken, noodles, bean sprouts, lime and basil leaves in a "special" chicken broth. From the grilled options, a friend tried the Bun Ga Nuong which is grilled chicken and lemon grass with vermicelli noodle, chopped lettuce and mint leaves, bean sprouts, and shredded cucumber topped with roasted peanut and fish sauce. All were fresh, plentiful and satisfying.

Many of the dishes on the menu are combinations of similar ingredients – but each dish did have a unique balance of textures and flavors that you would be hard pressed to find anywhere else on Central Park Avenue or even in lower Westchester. Also, since so many of the dishes are packed with herbs andvermicelli green vegetables, we felt like we were doing our bodies a favor dining there.

Even better - Saigonese does have a liquor license so it's not necessary to BYOB.

So if you're tired of the usual, give the unusual a try. You'll find an exotic mix of flavors and a healthy choice of ingredients at a very reasonable price tab. With appetizers at $6 - $12 and entrees from $8 to $13 you'd be hard-pressed to eat for less at home. Southeast Asian cuisine on South Central Avenue? You got it at:

Saigonese
158 South Central Park Avenue
Hartsdale, NY 10530
914-288-9088

Open:
Tuesday through Thursday 11 am to 9 pm
Friday and Saturday: 11 am to 10 pm
Sunday 12 noon – 9 pm
Closed Monday

veggies-heart200Can Rye Brook functional medicine Dr. Susan Blum's immune boosting plan actually help you to reverse the effects of autoimmune dysfunction?  In my family, we have an abundance of riches in the autoimmune disorder department, and recently, three different specialists taunted me with concern that I might just be developing some sort of autoimmune disorder of my own. I asked each of them what I could do to fortify my immune system to ward off this problem and head it off at the pass, and they shrugged. "Not really." "Nothing I've read". "Nothing I can say for sure".

When I heard that Dr. Susan Blum, the author of a book called "The Immune System Recovery Plan: a Doctor's 4-Step Program to Beat Autoimmune Disease" was coming to SHS to speak, I felt I had to go. Besides, she kind of put it out there that a happy immune system also meant more energy, better muscle tone, flat stomach, and excellent humor too. I figured I could help my kids fight off future would-be autoimmune assailants, and grow stronger, svelter, and nicer myself along the way. If what she said proved true, it would be a big win/win for all of us! I'd figure out how to get rid of autoimmune's menacing inflammation from my body, and reconnect with my inner, higher energy, sinewy, muscle-building wood nymph all at once.

But of course, I have grown weary of the purveyors of false hope, and I go to each new speaker these days with a healthy dose of skepticism. Manysusanblum of them are hucksters of hokum, long on hocus pocus and short on clinical evidence. But here comes Dr. Blum, actual MD, MPH with actual medical street cred: she is currently an assistant clinical professor in the department of preventive medicine at Mt. Sinai medical school and holds a masters in public health from Columbia in addition to her more "outside the box" training at the Center for Mind-Body Medicine and the Institute for Functional Medicine. She describes herself as a scientist who relies on a solid scientific foundation and builds on that to incorporate elements from integrative medicine as well. A few 10583 friends who couldn't make the lecture asked me to take notes and tell them all about it and where I thought she came down on the prophet/false prophet continuum...so here goes.

As the founder and director of the Blum Center for Health in Rye Brook, Dr. Blum practices what has come to be known as functional medicine. The idea behind this newish field is that, instead of treating symptoms, doctors put on their Dr. House hat like that prickly but endlessly wise TV show doc/diagnostician, and become diagnostic detectives, looking for the root cause of what ails you. Blum likes to quote Dr. Sidney Baker, one of the founders of this outgrowth of preventive medicine. "If you are sitting on a tack, the answer is not to treat the pain. Find the tack and remove it!" "The tack" in the example Blum uses, is the place where the immune system is in revolt...and taking it out on you. The pain or symptom is merely the result of that revolt.

Blum says you need to look at the whole patient, taking into consideration a variety of factors not always given proper credence—potential toxins in your environment, as well as lifestyle factors-- social life, stress level, relationships, diet, exercise, sleep habits and any symptoms you might be struggling with. She and her team integrate western medical practices with what are still regarded as "alternative" approaches of mindfulness and meditation.

The way Dr. Blum explains it, the immune system is your defense system. It starts with the gut which is responsible for 70 percent of the body's immune capacity and covers the surface area equivalent to that of a tennis court. The eyes may be the window to the soul, but the gut is the window to the heart....the joints...the health... the whole shebang. The mind ties in to all of this when stress comes into play—and so, the mind/body connection is very powerful both for its power to heal and to harm. When the gut is working properly, there are cell layers that stick tightly together and form a protective barrier that is hard to penetrate. This barrier manages how your immune system reacts to anything foreign.

In addition to stress, Blum names triggers she calls "The four A's-- antacids, antibiotics, alcohol, and Advil (or other NSAIDs)" for setting off the cascade of events leading to autoimmune dysfunction in the gut. Any of these factors can throw off the balance of flora in the gut, and when the balance is off, the barrier is compromised, and you have a condition called leaky gut syndrome. Having a leaky gut means that anything that is inside your intestines...good or bad bacteria, can be "seen" by the immune system and provoke a response. When this goes on for an extended period of time, the immune reaction begins to malfunction and your own cells can mistake your own tissue for foreign invaders. This, in turn, sends inflammatory molecules all over your body and causes pain in many places, like the pain of rheumatoid arthritis. When the gut is not working properly, the mitochondria or "furnace" of the muscles can't get the proper nutrients and therefore can't fire properly. Blum says problems within the gut are responsible for the lion's share of a huge variety of largely undiagnosed autoimmune ailments effecting some 23 million Americans.

What is Autoimmune Dysfunction?

It can come in the form of the classic allergic response (IgE), or the food sensitivity response (IgG), joint pain, foggy brain, hardening of the arteries, among others. It comes most often to those with a genetic predisposition to it, but not exclusively to them. Dr. Blum has come up with a four-point program to heal the immune system, starting with the gut.

Step One: Treat Food as Medicine.

Treating food as medicine means making good food choices that support good health and reduce inflammation, because, she says "All calories are not created equal. You must see calories as tools in your anti-inflammatory arsenal. Apples, for example, go to the cellular level and trigger reactions in cells providing vitamin C and phytonutrients. Watermelon even sends its nutrients to the cellular level. Pretzels, by contrast, are made up of yeast and wheat, and your body processes them just like sugar. Your body digests simple flours like that fast. This makes your blood sugar shoot up, and then, drop fast, and that quick up and down messes with the hormones controlling your body. I'll bet you didn't know that skim milk makes your blood sugar bump up too!"... she says, ending her breathless list of food sins and saviors. She guessed correctly! I did not.

"And the cheerios you always hear about being so healthy...they cause a big carbo load. They create inflammation and inflammation makes you tired."

This logic, called nutria-genomics, is the idea that one's nutritional choices effect the expression of the genes of the host organism, (i.e.: the health and well being of homo Scarsdalianus).

This is the cornerstone of Blum's food as medicine philosophy: you must make good food choices, but, not all good choices are created equal. One man's perfection, is another man's poison. Bad choices are foods to which you have food sensitivities, as opposed to just food allergies.

Regular allergy tests only test for anaphylactic allergies. But there are different foods and chemicals that each of us has sensitivities to as well, and they can do different kinds of damage in each of us. So Blum's first stop is to check for food sensitivities. And the best way to do that is with a rather severe elimination diet: get rid of the five leading inflammation-causing culprits for three weeks all at once, and then slowly add them back into your diet, one at a time every four days.

Blum's version of the five deadly food sins; her olfactory axis of evil: gluten, dairy, soy, corn, eggs. Bye bye, breadsticks. Hello, ancient grains.

Autoimmune Healing Step Two: Understanding the Stress Connection:

Blum explores all of the environmental and lifestyle issues affecting her patients, looking for evidence of stress in their lives and the effects of stress on their bodies. "Cortisol, the main stress hormone, suppresses the immune system, and tends to increase the waistline too, because people with high levels of stress and cortisol, tend to crave sugar and high fat foods that, in turn, tend to settle in around the waistline." This fat, often called "brown fat" in the medical community, behaves differently from other fat in the body and creates a great deal of inflammation, which, as we have discussed....is the devil's/ autoimmune disease's handiwork.

Blum says the key to managing the destructive power of stress is figuring out how to stop ruminating on and reliving the issues that cause stress in the first place. So she has programs to help patients with meditation and other mindfulness exercises. "Stress is believed to be a contributing factor in an amazing 80 percent of all chronic conditions, including autoimmune disease, heart disease, stroke, and cancer." Too much stress can lead to adrenal fatigue, and that leaves you vulnerable the kind of inflammation that leads to developing puffiness and stiffness in joints and muscles, and general exhaustion, and the autoimmune disorders associated with those symptoms.(rheumatoid arthritis, MS, Lupus...) No thanks.

Step 3: Healing Your Gut:

When they are not working properly, the cells lining your intestinal tract cannot recognize the difference between foreign invaders and your own tissue, and they treat both as enemies. These immune cells release many, many inflammatory molecules when they are activated...and that brings about...once again...you know the devil: inflammation. (are we sensing a pattern here?) So Blum says "The bottom line is that having enough friendly flora (probiotics) in your gut reduces the incidence of allergies and autoimmune diseases. You bring the outside world into your body through your mouth every day. You need to make sure there are plenty of good bacteria in there to keep things in balance."

Finally, Step 4, Supporting Your Liver:

The fourth front to take on autoimmune disease before it hits or to reverse it if it has, is removing the body's exposure to toxins. The liver takes out the toxins that your body takes in, so Dr. Blum says you need to support your liver to help it do its job. She says we all need to be aware of the environmental toxins we are routinely exposed to, and take steps to diminish that exposure. Our individual toxic load comes from our lifetime exposure to a wide range of substances that can damage cells from dry cleaning solvents, to glue, to paint, to pesticides, to heavy metals like mercury, lead, and arsenic. Too much exposure to toxins starts to clog up your liver, and that can lead to feeling puffy all over, muscle pain, tingling in your extremities, or unexplained weight gain.

When the liver, which functions as the body's strainer, is clogged with toxins, it is hard for the filter to work well, and it slows down. Blum offers a plan to boost the liver enzymes' detox functioning, remove heavy metals, and reverse disease. This part was the fuzziest for me, but if her clinical findings bear out over a larger group, she's got a very interesting plan.

Conclusion: So What Do We Make Of This?

After I told my rheumatologist about what I'd learned from Dr. Blum's lecture, she said, cautiously, that she HAD heard anecdotal evidence from patients to support Blum's claims, (taking gluten and dairy out of their diet gave them greater strength and energy) but since she hadn't read the program herself, she couldn't endorse it. Blum claims that too many doctors simply don't have or don't take the time to stay up to date on advancements in their fields, and if they did, they'd be hopping on the functional medicine bandwagon in droves. It certainly seems that it would be worth looking into.

So, where does this leave this me and my merry band of skeptics? While I am not a physician, and I can't claim to evaluate the merit of one study over another for anyone but myself and my family, but I can say that the old saw "an ounce of prevention is worth a pound of cure" makes good sense here. And while giving up bread and cheese does seem like some pretty harsh medical concessions to make, it beats prescription medications with unpleasant side effects. And if there is anything I can do to head off the risk of autoimmune disease at the pass, I want to try it.

As Blum says, "If you go to a GI doctor, they look for disease under a microscope. They do not measure flora. Disease takes time to happen. Why not do what you can to prevent it blossoming?" In the offices of two other specialists, I have been told I may have some sort of as yet not fully manifest autoimmune disorder in the works. Do I just sit there and wait for it to hit? I say no. But it's not going to be easy giving up those axis of evil foods. I'm the gal who jokes that if I ever got sent to prison on a bread and water diet it wouldn't be a hardship if the bread had a nice crust. Still, the upside is just too huge to ignore.

My gut tells me I just have to give it a shot!

SharonDContributor Sharon Dizenhuz is a former reporter and anchor on New York 1 News and a Scarsdale mom.

burratapastaBurrata on the Post Road in Eastchester has just celebrated their first successful year and invited friends and patrons to mark the big day for a party of handcrafted pizzas and drinks. Chef Chas Anderson, pictured here, has also added some new items to the menu and will soon be open for Sunday brunch as well as lunch and dinner seven days a week. New tastes to try on the appetizer list include arancini, (creamy parmigiano risotto rice balls) and Tuna Tartare, which is diced yellow fin tuna, minced shallots, fennel, taggiasca, olives and parsley. This winter Burrata started offering pastas along with their wood-fired pizza, and here's a photo of Pasta Al Forno which his baked maccehroni, fontina and taleggio cheese and prosciutto. There are summer ales for warm weather, new Rose's and light white wines.burratatuna
Burrata , 425 White Plains Road, Eastchester, NY 10709 (914) 337-3700

Looking for somewhere to take Mom for Mother's Day on Monday May 12?

Harry's of Hartsdale is offering a prix fixe brunch / lunch menu for Mother's Day with three courses as well as a young adults menu geared for children under 12 from 10 am - 3pm. For dinner, their regular dinner menu will be available along with specials geared for the mom's in your life from 4:30-9pm.

Harrys of Hartsdale, 230 East Hartsdale Avenue, Hartsdale (914) 472-8777

Fig & Olive is offering a special Mother's day Prix Fixe brunch and dinner menu. Start with a Rose Mojito accompanied by lobster bisque or crab and heirloom tomato salad. Chef Pascal suggests the salmon with grilled radicchio or the primavera risotto entree and raspberry meringue for dessert. $40 brunch and $52 dinner. Celebrate your mother at Fig & Olive.

Fig & Olive Westchester: Vernon Hills Shopping Center / 696 White Plains Rd, Scarsdale, NY 10583 – Open 11:30am to 10pm -  (914) 725-2900

Tengda on Garth Road is offering a free dinner for mom with any four entrees on Mother's Day. ... not including the prix fixe Mother's Day menu.

Tengda Asian Bistro, 56 Garth Road, Scarsdale, (914) 723-8868

asparagusI just discovered that former NY Times food writer and author Amanda Hesser has a terrific food website. Founded with partner Merrill Stubbs, Food52 features recipes from recognized chefs and community readers with a passion for food. The site is called Food52 and was founded to "bring cooks together from all over to exchange recipes and ideas and to support each other in the kitchen. We wanted to create a buzzing place for others who do what we do all day long: talk about food!"

Everything looks delicious on the site which is attractively designed and easy to navigate.

Here's just one of the appealing seasonal recipes I found this week:

Absurdly Addictive Asparagus by kaykay

"The title pretty much says it all. With her recipe, kaykay takes an already promising set of ingredients and artfully combines them in such a way that the resulting dish exceeds the sum of its parts. 2-inch lengths of asparagus, crisp-tender to the bite, take center stage in a savory tangle of leeks, pancetta, garlic, orange zest, parsley and pine nuts. The rendered fat from the pancetta, along with a knob of butter, is just enough to keep the vegetables from being dry without smothering the fresh flavors. The recipe is supposed to serve 4, but we could easily imagine polishing off an entire pan by ourselves."

Serves 4

4 ounces pancetta, cut into 3/8 inch to 1/4 inch dice
1 tablespoon butter
1 pound asparagus, woody ends trimmed and sliced into 2 inch pieces on the bias
1 1/4 cup leek, thinly sliced crosswise (white and pale green parts only)
2 cloves garlic, minced
Zest of one lemon
1 teaspoon orange zest
2 tablespoons toasted pine nuts
1-2 tablespoon Italian parsley, chopped
Salt and freshly ground pepper to taste

In a large non-stick pan, sauté pancetta, stirring frequently, over medium heat, until crisp and lightly golden.
Add 1 tablespoon of butter to pan. Add asparagus pieces and leek and sauté until asparagus is tender crisp, about 3-4 minutes.
Add garlic, lemon and orange zest, toasted pine nuts and parsley and sauté for about 1 minute, until fragrant. Season to taste with freshly ground pepper and salt and serve immediately.

This recipe was the winner of the Best Asparagus Recipe Contest. Check out Food52 for virtual inspiration in the kitchen.