Celebrity Holiday Fare
by Claire Gottlieb
October 11, 2003
Trendy celebrities and trendy food
go together like holidays and sparkling trees. Within the
celebrity-filled universe known as the media, eating plenty
of vegetables is the trendiest trend. And, according to the
latest nutrition research, it also may be the healthiest.
Even before Frankenstein's monster picked up his first
movie contract or endorsement deal, he was a vegetarian (for
reasons best known by Mary Wollstonecraft Shelley, his
creator).
Meanwhile, well-known actor Woody Harrelson, a fan of
raw, vegetarian foods, professes that his devotion to
uncooked veggies only reached firm ground when he became
convinced they could and would taste fantastic. The
tastiness of the recipes we've included with our inspection
of the rarefied world of celebrity food prove that the
celebrity predilection for these dishes keeps taste buds
happy.
For Love of Pie
When preparing your holiday fare this season, taking tips
from the dietary habits and favored dishes of celebrities
may perk up your lunches and dinners. Healthy dishes can be
delicious!
As Woody Harrelson points out in his foreword to Living
Cuisine (Avery/Penguin) by Renee Loux Underkoffler, he
became a fan of raw vegetables when he was convinced that
they could be made into delicious dishes.
"Though I wasn't raw at the time, I knew enough to know
that raw food and its emphasis on enzymes being the life
force of the food is the way to go for optimum health and
energy. Still, you can talk theory all you want; if the
taste isn't there, color me a cooked-food junkie."
Eating dishes cooked by Ms. Underkoffler left him and
Gabriel Cousens (a health book writer) speechless.
"We were struck dumb by our taste buds...the coup de
grace was one of Renee's coconut cream pies, which, I
confess, almost brought Gabriel and me to blows over the
last piece." Other celebrities also find Ms. Underkoffler's
food preparation skills to be superb. Alicia Silverstone
raves, "I love Renee....Her food reflects that spirit,
opening the senses to everything around you-it's incredibly
rich and delicious and full of health and restorative
energy. Her food is medicine." (But it doesn't taste like
it!)
Birth of a Charitable Idea
Meanwhile other celebrities have taken their food act to
a whole new level. Consider how Paul Newman's holiday habits
led to his food adventures.
The story on Mr. Newman starts with salad dressing and
Christmas. He and his friend, author A.E. Hotchner,
originally created home made dressing and bestowed wine
bottles of the stuff on family and friends for Christmas
presents. Consequently, every holiday season Mr. Newman and
his immediate family indulged in Christmas caroling and
salad dressing giving. The demand for the dressing grew
every successive holiday season until Mr. Newman and Mr.
Hotchner decided to go commercial: Sell the dressing and
make it available to shoppers throughout North America. The
profits go to charity, and Mr. Newman bestowed about a
million dollars to worthy causes in the first year.
In the early 80s, the Newman's Own brand started out with
its Oil & Vinegar Dressing. Today they offer salad
dressings, pasta sauces, salsas, popcorn, lemonade and other
sauces. According to Mr. Newman, the two principles that
rule the company are an insistence on top-quality products
without artificial ingredients or preservatives and the
donation of all after-tax profits from the sale of the
products to educational and charitable organizations, both
in the United States and foreign countries where the
products are sold. Over $125 million worth have been donated
since 1982.
In 1986, Mr. Newman founded The Hole In The Wall Gang
Camp, along with Ursula Gwynne and A.E. Hotchner, with funds
from Newman's Own and other donations. The camp, located in
Connecticut, is for children with serious disease. (Newman
recipes are available at the website: www.newmansown.com.)
Whether the latest celebrity trend wends its way to raw
food or cooked creations, you can safely count on the fact
that celebrity heads will rest easy tonight (and yours can,
too!) knowing that they've eaten food that's both in fashion
and healthy. Leo Tolstoy, the celebrated Russian novelist,
once pointed out, "Vegetarianism serves as a criterion by
which we know that the pursuit of moral perfection on the
part of man is genuine and sincere."
When you try it for yourself, you'll find that serving
mostly vegetarian meals may also offer evidence of a sincere
devotion to better health and happier holidays.
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