Spagetti spagetti squash!!!

Nena
Nena Posts: 4
edited September 19 in Recipes
Say that five times fast! lol. you make your spagetti sauce just like you normally would but instead of making noodles you boil up some Spagetti squash.
My mom came up with that because I have alot of problems with grains and makes it hard for me to eat alot of our family favorites.I loved it let me know what you think.

Replies

  • Nena
    Nena Posts: 4
    Say that five times fast! lol. you make your spagetti sauce just like you normally would but instead of making noodles you boil up some Spagetti squash.
    My mom came up with that because I have alot of problems with grains and makes it hard for me to eat alot of our family favorites.I loved it let me know what you think.
  • Yah that's a really common pasta replacement - it's great! :smooched:
  • I was wondering were to find the squash noodles! There not at my local supermarket....do i have to order them online or something?
  • shorerider
    shorerider Posts: 3,817 Member
    Umm, you get spaghetti squash noodles from spaghetti squash. You cook the squash, then use a fork to "rake" out the noodles. The squash naturally comes out looking like spaghetti noodles.

    I think it tastes just like spaghetti and use it now all the time in place of even my low-Carb diabetic pasta, as it is even better for you!
  • songbyrdsweet
    songbyrdsweet Posts: 5,691 Member
    I was wondering were to find the squash noodles! There not at my local supermarket....do i have to order them online or something?

    Oh no, you make them! You boil a spaghetti squash, then scrape a fork down the 'meat' of it and it comes off looking all noodle-y. I used to add a little olive oil, oregano and parm cheese when I was doing South Beach.
  • Well don't i feel stupid :blushing: Thanks guys, I will try that!
  • Fitness_Chick
    Fitness_Chick Posts: 6,648 Member
    Umm, you get spaghetti squash noodles from spaghetti squash. You cook the squash, then use a fork to "rake" out the noodles. The squash naturally comes out looking like spaghetti noodles.

    I think it tastes just like spaghetti and use it now all the time in place of even my low-Carb diabetic pasta, as it is even better for you!

    Hey Shore!:happy:
    How long do you cook the squash...I've heard of this often but never tried it yet...everyone that does seems to rave about it!:tongue:

    Thanks in advance for the info:happy:
  • shorerider
    shorerider Posts: 3,817 Member
    Oh no, you make them! You boil a spaghetti squash, then scrape a fork down the 'meat' of it and it comes off looking all noodle-y. I used to add a little olive oil, oregano and parm cheese when I was doing South Beach.

    You stole my recipe! But don't forget the fresh garlic and onions! Sautee them in the olive oil, then throw in the Squash noodles and add Parmesan! YUUUMMMYY!

    Oh darn, now I'm getting hungry again and I just had a yogurt after Tam's post about yogurt made me crave one!
  • shorerider
    shorerider Posts: 3,817 Member
    Hey Shore!:happy:
    How long do you cook the squash...I've heard of this often but never tried it yet...everyone that does seems to rave about it!:tongue:

    Thanks in advance for the info:happy:

    I micro mine and it takes about 6-8 minutes or so to cook 1/2 of a medium size squash.

    I've even got my DH eating it now! :happy:
  • songbyrdsweet
    songbyrdsweet Posts: 5,691 Member
    Oh no, you make them! You boil a spaghetti squash, then scrape a fork down the 'meat' of it and it comes off looking all noodle-y. I used to add a little olive oil, oregano and parm cheese when I was doing South Beach.

    You stole my recipe! But don't forget the fresh garlic and onions! Sautee them in the olive oil, then throw in the Squash noodles and add Parmesan! YUUUMMMYY!

    Oh darn, now I'm getting hungry again and I just had a yogurt after Tam's post about yogurt made me crave one!

    Ohhhh yummmm!!! I loooove garlic..I guess I get it from my uncle, he eats garlic like apples lol!
  • :laugh: I LOOOOOVE spaghetti squash!!! it tastes like spaghetti and feels like you are being really naughty when instead you are eating a very healthy low cal meal with LOTS of veggies!!!

    Summer
  • shorerider
    shorerider Posts: 3,817 Member
    Ohhhh yummmm!!! I loooove garlic..I guess I get it from my uncle, he eats garlic like apples lol!

    I LOVE Garlic, too! I could eat it at every meal. I love to roast it in the oven--the whole head--then use the cloves like butter for bread. Oh my gosh--it is just toooooooooo good.

    And, it's really great for you, too! Even helps with weight control--check it out!

    __________________________________________________________________

    Health Benefits

    Whole books have been written about garlic, an herb affectionately called "the stinking rose" in light of its numerous therapeutic benefits. A member of the lily or Allium family, which also includes onions, garlic is rich in a variety of powerful sulfur-containing compounds including thiosulfinates (of which the best known compound is allicin), sulfoxides (among which the best known compound is alliin), and dithiins (in which the most researched compound is ajoene). While these compounds are responsible for garlic's characteristically pungent odor, they are also the source of many of its health-promoting effects. In addition, garlic is an excellent source of manganese, a very good source of vitamin B6 and vitamin C and a good source of selenium.

    Cardiovascular Benefits

    Numerous studies have demonstrated potential benefits of regular garlic consumption on blood pressure, platelet aggregation, serum triglyceride level, and cholesterol levels. Routine eating of garlic may also help stimulate the production of nitric oxide in the lining of blood vessel walls, which may help to relax them. As a result of these beneficial actions, garlic can be described as a food that may help prevent atherosclerosis and diabetic heart disease, as well as reducing the risk of heart attack or stroke. However, exactly which individuals are most benefitted from garlic consumption remains a matter of some debate. A study published in the Archives of Internal Medicine showed that garlic did not help lower LDL cholesterol in adults with moderately high (versus very high) levels when consumed at approximately one clove per day, six days per week, for 6 months. However, these researchers simulateously concluded that garlic might still have cardiovascular benefits for these same individuals, even though it did not help lower their LDL levels. While more large-scale research studies are needed to determine the exact nature of garlic's benefits, this food can definitely be considered a potential ally in heart health.

    A study published in Preventive Medicine shows that garlic inhibits coronary artery calcification, a process that serves as a marker for plaque formation since the body lays down calcium in areas that have been damaged. In this year-long study, patients given aged garlic extract daily showed an average increase in their calcium score of 7.5%, while those in the placebo group had an average increase in calcium score of 22.2%.

    One reason for garlic's beneficial effects may be its ability to lessen the amount of free radicals present in the bloodstream. According to a study published in Life Sciences, a daily dose of 1 ml/kg body weight of garlic extract for six months resulted in a significant reduction in oxidant (free radical) stress in the blood of patients with atherosclerosis.

    Since atherosclerotic plaques develop when cholesterol circulating in the bloodstream is damaged or oxidized, garlic's ability to prevent these oxidation reactions may explain some of its beneficial effects in atherosclerotic cardiovascular diseases. A German study published in Toxicology Letters indicates that garlic also greatly reduces plaque deposition and size by preventing the formation of the initial complex that develops into an atherosclerotic plaque. Called "nanoplaque," it is formed when calcium binds to proteoheparan sulfate and then to LDL cholesterol. Garlic prevents the binding of calcium to proteoheparan sulfate, thus decisively inhibiting plaque generation.

    Research presented at the 6th Annual Conference on Arteriosclerosis, Thrombosis and Vascular Biology held by the American Heart Association in Washington, D.C., suggests that garlic can help prevent and potentially reverse atherosclerotic plaque formation. The laboratory studies, conducted by well-known German scientist Professor Güautnter Siegel, M.D., from the University of Medicine in Berlin, Germany, found that powdered garlic (Kwai ® garlic) reduced the formation of nanoplaque (the first building blocks of atherosclerotic plaque) by up to 40% and reduced the size of the nanoplaque that did form by up to 20%.

    Dr. Siegel's research shows that garlic acts in a manner similar to HDL ("good") cholesterol, which prevents the build-up of nanoplaques by hindering the docking of LDL ("bad" cholesterol) to its receptor sites in blood vessels or existing plaques.

    Both garlic and HDL were able to reduce plaque formation and size within 30 minutes of incubation in these experiments. Existing plaques were dissolved by up to 25% within 15 minutes after the garlic was introduced, indicating a reversal of existing problems related to build-up of arterial plaque. In addition, calcification of the cholesterol docking sites in the arteries was reduced by up to 50% in the presence of the garlic extracts.

    New Research More Fully Explains Garlic's Cardiovascular Benefits

    Laboratory research by US and Swedish scientists published in the August 2005 Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences reveals the mechanism behind garlic's cardiovascular benefits.

    The compounds in garlic responsible for its pungency also excite a neuron pathway providing cardiovascular benefits. Garlic's pungency-and that of the other members of the Alliumgenus of plants, such as onions, leeks and chives-results from its organosulphur compounds, allicin and diallyl disulphide (DADS). In this current in vitro study, allicin and DADS were found to activate perivascular sensory nerve endings, inducing the relaxation and enlargement of blood vessels, lowering blood pressure and improving blood flow throughout the body.

    Garlic's numerous beneficial cardiovascular effects are due to not only its sulfur compounds, but also to its vitamin C, vitamin B6, selenium and manganese:

    Garlic is a very good source of vitamin C, the body's primary antioxidant defender in all aqueous (water-soluble) areas, such as the bloodstream, where it protects LDL cholesterol from oxidation. Since it is the oxidized form of LDL cholesterol that initiates damage to blood vessel walls, reducing levels of oxidizing free radicals in the bloodstream can have a profound effect on preventing cardiovascular disease.

    Garlic's vitamin B6 helps prevent heart disease via another mechanism: lowering levels of homocysteine. An intermediate product of an important cellular biochemical process called the methylation cycle, homocysteine can directly damage blood vessel walls.

    The selenium in garlic not only helps prevent heart disease, but also provides protection against cancer and heavy metal toxicity. A cofactor of glutathione peroxidase (one of the body's most important internally produced antioxidants), selenium also works with vitamin E in a number of vital antioxidant systems. Since vitamin E is one of the body's top defenders in all fat-soluble areas, while vitamin C protects the water-soluble areas, garlic, which contains both nutrients, does a good job of covering all the bases.

    Garlic is rich not only in selenium, but also in another trace mineral, manganese, which also functions as a cofactor in a number of other important antioxidant defense enzymes, for example, superoxide dismutase. Studies have found that in adults deficient in manganese, the level of HDL (the "good form" of cholesterol) is decreased.
    Practical Tip: National Health and Medical Research Council (NHMRC) Level III-3 evidence shows that consuming a half to one clove of garlic daily may have a cholesterol-lowering effect of up to 9%.(Tapsell LC, Hemphill I, et al. Med J Aust)

    Anti-Inflammatory, Antibacterial and Antiviral Activity

    Garlic, like onions, contains compounds that inhibit lipoxygenase and cyclooxygenase, (the enzymes that generate inflammatory prostaglandins and thromboxanes), thus markedly reducing inflammation. These anti-inflammatory compounds along with the vitamin C in garlic, especially fresh garlic, make it useful for helping to protect against severe attacks in some cases of asthma and may also help reduce the pain and inflammation of osteoarthritis and rheumatoid arthritis.

    In addition, allicin, one of the sulfur-compounds responsible for garlic's characteristic odor, is a powerful antibacterial and antiviral agent that joins forces with vitamin C to help kill harmful microbes. In research studies, allicin has been shown to be effective not only against common infections like colds, flu, stomach viruses, and Candida yeast, but also against powerful pathogenic microbes including tuberculosis and botulism.

    Although garlic alone appears unable to prevent infection with Helicobacter pylori (H. pylori), the bacterium responsible for most peptic ulcers, as well as gastritis, frequently eating this richly flavored bulb may keep H. pylori from doing much damage. A study recently conducted at Faith University in Istanbul, Turkey, compared two groups of healthy individuals: one was selected from individuals who regularly ate lots of raw and/or cooked garlic, while the other group was composed of individuals who avoided it. For 19 months, blood samples were regularly collected from both groups and evaluated for the presence of H.pylori. While the incidence of H.pylori was pretty comparable-the bacterium was found in 79% of garlic eaters and 81% of those who avoided garlic-the garlic-consuming group had a clear advantage in that antibodies to H.pylori were much lower in their blood compared to those who ate no garlic. (Antibodies are formed when the immune system reacts to anything it considers a potential pathogen, so less antibodies to H.pylori means less of the bacterium was present.) Among those who ate garlic, those who ate both raw and cooked garlic had even lower levels of antibodies than those who ate their garlic only raw or only cooked.
    Laboratory studies recently conducted at the University of Munich, Germany, help explain why garlic may be such a potent remedy against the common cold. In these studies, garlic was found to significantly reduce the activity of a chemical mediator of inflammation called nuclear transcription factor (NF) kappa-B.

    NF kappa-B is itself activated as part of the immune system's inflammatory response to invading organisms and damaged tissue. So, anything that sets off an inflammatory response (e.g. allergenic foods, a cold or other infection, physical trauma, excessive exercise, excessive consumption of foods containing high levels of omega-6 fatty acids-such as meat, corn or safflower oil) can trigger a surge in NF kappa-B, which in turn not only promotes inflammation but sets up ideal conditions for viruses, including HIV, to replicate. In the blood samples tested in these German studies, unfertilized garlic caused a 25% drop in NF kappa-B activity, while sulfur-fertilized garlic lowered NF kappa-B activity by a very robust 41%!

    Garlic and Onions Protective against Many Cancers

    Making garlic and onions a staple in your healthy way of eating may greatly lower your risk of several common cancers, suggests a large data set of case-control studies from Southern European populations (Galeone C, Pelucchi C et al, American Journal of Clinical Nutrition).

    Study participants consuming the most garlic had a 39% reduced risk for cancer of the oral cavity and pharynx, 57% reduced risk for esophageal cancer, 26% reduced risk for colorectal cancer, 44% reduced risk for laryngeal cancer, 10% reduced risk for breast cancer, 22% reduced risk for ovarian cancer, 19% reduced risk for prostate cancer, and 31% reduced risk for renal cell cancer, compared to those eating the least garlic. Similarly, those eating the most onions showed an 84% reduced risk for cancer of the oral cavity and pharynx, 88% reduced risk for esophageal cancer, 56% reduced risk for colorectal cancer, 83% reduced risk for laryngeal cancer, 25% reduced risk for breast cancer, 73% reduced risk for ovarian cancer, 71% reduced risk for prostate cancer, and 38% reduced risk for renal cell cancer, compared to those eating the least onions.
    Potent, Even Against Drug-Resistant Strains of Bacteria

    Results of two studies suggest that garlic is a potent antibiotic, even against strains that have become resistant to many drugs. One study conducted at the University of California Irvine Medical Center and published in the December 2003 issue of Nutrition showed that garlic juice, even when diluted up to 1:128 of the original juice, demonstrates significant antibacterial activity against a spectrum of pathogens including antibiotic-resistant strains such as methicillin- and ciprofloxacin-resistant staphylococci, vancomycin-resistant enterococci, and ciprofloxacin-resistant Pseudomonas aeruginosa. A second study found that garlic was able to inhibit methicillin-resistant Staphylococcus aureus (MSRA) from human patients that was injected into laboratory animals.(MSRA is one of the antibiotic resistant bacteria whose incidence has risen dramatically in recent years in hospitals.)

    Promotes Optimal Health
    The organosulfur compound found in garlic called ajoene may also be useful in the treatment of skin cancer. In a study published in the July 2003 Archives of Dermatological Research, researchers applied ajoene topically to the tumors of patients with either nodular or superficial basal cell carcinoma, and in 17 of the 21 patients, the tumors shrunk significantly. Lab tests of the tumors before and after the application of ajoene revealed a significant decrease in Bcl-2, an apoptosis-suppressing protein. (Apoptosis is the self-destruct sequence used by the body to eliminate cancerous cells.)

    Other studies have shown that as few as two or more servings of garlic a week may help protect against colon cancer. Substances found in garlic, such as allicin, have been shown to not only protect colon cells from the toxic effects of cancer-causing chemicals, but also to stop the growth of cancer cells once they develop. While more research is needed to confirm, recent animal research has also suggested that garlic may confer protection against the development of stomach cancer through its potential ability to decrease H.pylori-induced gastritits.

    Cooking garlic with meat appears to reduce the production of carcinogenic (cancer-causing) chemicals that can occur in meat as a result of cooking methods, such as grilling, that expose meat to high temperatures.
    Research presented at the American Association for Cancer Research's Frontiers in Cancer Prevention Research meeting in Baltimore, MD, suggests that the phytonutrient responsible for garlic's pungency may help prevent cancer by inhibiting the effects of one such carcinogen called PhIP.

    A cancer-causing heterocyclic amine, PhIP is thought to be one reason for the increased incidence of breast cancer among women who eat large quantities of meat because it is rapidly transformed into DNA-damaging compounds.

    Diallyl sulphide (DAS), an organosulfur compound that gives garlic its unique flavor, has been shown to inhibit the transformation of PhIP into carcinogens. DAS blocks this transformation by decreasing the production of the liver enzymes (the Phase I enzymes CYP1A1, CYP1A2 and CYP1B1) that transform PhIP into activated DNA-damaging compounds.

    In addition, DAS signals the genes responsible for producing two protective antioxidant enzymes, (glutathione-S-transferase (GST) and superoxide dismutase (SOD), which help protect the body against harmful compounds such as those produced from PhIP. These findings suggest that making garlic, onion, chives and other Allium vegetables, all of which contain DAS, a staple part of your Healthiest Way of Eating may help in preventing breast cancer induced by PhIP in well-done meats. And enjoying these DAS-rich foods may help protect the men you love as well: Consumption of Allium vegetables has also been associated with a reduced risk of prostate cancer.

    Good intakes of vitamin C and selenium, with which fresh garlic is well-endowed, are also associated with a reduced risk of colon cancer, making garlic a smart addition to any colon cancer prevention plan.
    Cardiovascular disease is a well-known side-effect of diabetes, but garlic may provide some protection. When diabetic laboratory animals were given garlic extract for an 8-week period, the hyperreactivity of their blood vessels to noradrenaline (a vasoconstrictive hormone) and acetylcholine (a compound involved in nerve transmission) was significantly lessened. According to the researchers, their results suggest that garlic may help prevent the development of abnormal vascular contraction seen in diabetics.

    Promotes Weight Control
    The most potent active constituent in garlic, allicin, has been shown to not only lower blood pressure, insulin and triglycerides in laboratory animals fed a fructose (sugar)-rich diet, but also to prevent weight gain, according to a study published in the American Journal of Hypertension. In this study, animals who developed high insulin levels, high blood pressure, and high triglycerides were given either allicin or served as a control. Despite the fact that all of the animals consumed the same amount of food, weight rose in the control group but not in animals who were being supplemented with allicin. In those groups, body weight remained stable or declined slightly when allicin was given. The researchers concluded that allicin may be of practical value for weight control.

    Protection against Asbestos
    Asbestos, a well-known carcinogen, is thought to cause cell mutations by generating reactive oxygen species (free radicals) and depleting one of the body's most important internally produced antioxidants, glutathione. Garlic contains numerous sulfur compounds and glutathione precursors that act as antioxidants and also demonstrate anti-carcinogenic properties. In a laboratory study published in Toxicology Letters, garlic extract, when administered along with asbestos, so significantly reduced DNA mutations in human blood lymphocytes (a type of immune cell), that the researchers concluded: "garlic extract may be an efficient, physiologically tolerable quencher of asbestos-induced genotoxcity."
  • You can also microwave it or bake it...I've done both and they both work well.
  • Meriller
    Meriller Posts: 55 Member
    I halve my squash, scoop out the seeds, then spritz a cookie sheet with olive oil. Then I place each half face down on the sheet and bake at 350 for 30-45 mins depending on the size of the squash. It's gorgeous under stirfry!
  • Fitness_Chick
    Fitness_Chick Posts: 6,648 Member
    Thanks all for the tips...my apologies for not responding back sooner...I have such trouble finding threads again as there are so many new ones started...I seem to lose the ones I've read previously and want to check back on.

    Thanks Shore for explaining how to save threads in our blogs.....started doing that and great idea!
    Hopefully it will help me keep up better keep up with topics of interest.

    Thanks again to all that shared tips on how to prepare and cook the squash.:drinker:
  • shorerider
    shorerider Posts: 3,817 Member
    I halve my squash, scoop out the seeds, then spritz a cookie sheet with olive oil. Then I place each half face down on the sheet and bake at 350 for 30-45 mins depending on the size of the squash. It's gorgeous under stirfry!

    I got some of that Spray Olive Oil and can't wait to try it. I'm hoping it's just as good as the regular stuff.
  • arewethereyet
    arewethereyet Posts: 18,702 Member
    I halve my squash, scoop out the seeds, then spritz a cookie sheet with olive oil. Then I place each half face down on the sheet and bake at 350 for 30-45 mins depending on the size of the squash. It's gorgeous under stirfry!

    I got some of that Spray Olive Oil and can't wait to try it. I'm hoping it's just as good as the regular stuff.

    shore, I bought a pump bottle at william sonoma. you put your own OVEE in it and pump it up, you then can spray it without the chemicals in the PAM and stuff.

    I use it to spray OVEOO on my salad, pans, I even spray my grilled cheese! YUM:bigsmile:
  • shorerider
    shorerider Posts: 3,817 Member
    Oh, I thought you meant the Pam stuff. I got that and it's ok. Doesn't really taste like Olive Oil though but it's ok. I love olive oil but the calories!
This discussion has been closed.