Tag: cornell

  • Rebecca Robbins

    Rebecca Robbins

    Rebecca Robins wears many titles: Entrepreneur, yoga instructor, raw foodie, published author, and, oh also, Cornell Ph.D. student (Dept. of Communication, Agriculture & Life Sciences). I met Rebecca two years ago at a GreenStar class that she taught on raw foods. She seemed to radiate energy and warmth. It was a good endorsement for eating raw food, and I promptly went out and bought a fabric bag to make my own raw nut milks. Later, as I got to know her better through other avenues, I learned that ‘raw food chef/teacher’ was not even her main act. With a recently published book (Sleep for Success), and a newly started business as a sleep consultant and speaker, Rebecca is undoubtedly busy, yet always comes across with a friendly warm smile and upbeat demeanor. I recently caught up with Rebecca to ask her some questions and see what she is up to now:

    1. How long have you lived in Ithaca, and what brought you to the area?
    In August 2005 I moved into Balch Hall on North campus to become a freshman at Cornell’s Hotel School, and here I am nearly 10 years later. Although I have been here for a long time, let’s be honest I spent my undergraduate years between the libraries and lecture halls at Cornell, and the bars in Collegetown. Now as a graduate student I’ve reached an entirely new appreciation for Ithaca. I sit in the townie section at Hockey Games and live in Fall Creek. I adore the state parks that surround Ithaca (Buttermilk Falls is my all time favorite for hiking, Sunset Park for just that – sunsets) and now I go to the Ale House for beer and music instead of Dunbar’s. Never thought this day would come, but I also speak up when the undergraduates complain about Ithaca. It’s gorgeous (gorges too) and full of good food, culture, and interesting people.

    2. You wear many a hat (Ph.D. student, raw foodie, yoga instructor, author), how do you have the energy for all these endeavors? Is it the raw foods? Sleep habits? What motivates you?
    That is very kind, and yes good sleep is absolutely my secret. I’m not talking about lounging around and wasting the day, but as my long time mentor, colleague, and past professor Dr. Mass and I describe our work: we are talking about power sleep for peak performance. Getting adequate sleep, between 7 and 8 hours on average for adults and 9 for teens, is the best way to reach your dreams whatever they may be.

    3. By mid-March it is getting pretty dreary here in Ithaca. Any advice to how to stay energized and healthy?
    Get enough sleep! Are you surprised? Ha! In all seriousness, adequate sleep is the fastest way to feeling great, and kicking off spring with healthy habits. Start tonight and go to bed 15 minutes earlier, shut
    off your computer an hour before this slightly new bedtime and do some reading. Take a warm bath before bed, and keep subtracting 15 minutes from your bedtime until you’re finding you can power  through the entire day.
    However, if you put these tips into play in your life and still find yourself dragging, particularly in the afternoon, you’re not alone. Despite the best laid plans to practice good sleep habits, or good sleep ‘hygiene,’ most people find themselves a little bit more tired than usual during the winter. This is because the lack of sunlight, which is the best way our bodies can adjust to our surroundings. Therefore, during the particularly dark months I definitely recommend investing in a light therapy device. These devices were originally intended for people suffering from seasonal affective disorder (SAD), but are good for all of us in the winter months! These devices emit blue daylight spectrum light, and sitting in front of the device without staring at it anymore than you would the sun, but keeping it at a 45 degree angle can help get the blue light your body needs to stay energized through the winter.
    4. Do you feel you have too many ideas but not enough time? (What’s your crazy/interesting/fun new idea or interest that has popped into your head this week?) Or do you feel able to focus well on the things you have juggling at the moment? 
    As a business major in my undergrad years, I learned of entrepreneurs who can have one or two ideas that can take off in their lifetime. I like to think about academic work in the research sense – coming up with study ideas, collaborating with colleagues, pilot testing the idea, collecting data (responses, feedback, perceptions) and then implementing these ideas – is very entrepreneurial. It’s like you can have a million different ideas take hold over the course of your career!
    Right now one of my mentors and I are very focused on companies as potential sources of healthy behaviors. What if we went to work and it motivated us to be healthier? If we can script conversations so that people talk about the healthy things they do instead of the unhealthy (eating too much at lunch, being exhausted).
    6. About the raw food: When did you get into the raw food lifestyle and how much do you practice it? 
    Cooking is one of my passions, and particularly making food for my friends and family that not only tastes good but is also good for us. I have been known to bake brownies with black beans, and carrot cake without icing but with ‘cashew’ cream.
    While I was living in San Francisco I learned ‘raw’ food cooking. I know what you’e thinking. Raw? Cooking? Sounds like a paradox, but we do have evidence that exposing some foods to high temperatures can be linked to the denaturation of enzymes and nutrients, and even the emergence of carcinogens. A raw diet is first and foremost focused on consuming a fruit and vegetable rich diet, but in fun and creative ways. The raw tradition argues that blending food into smoothies or soups can have a similar effect as ‘cooking’ but retain more nutrients, and similarly the combination of olive oil and lemon juice can advance the breakdown of food, allowing it be easier to digest, without removing nutrients.
    All that being said, I do fundamentally believe in balance, so while I do not adhere strictly 100% to a raw diet, I do make an effort for about 70% of my diet to be raw, because health at the end of the day is about balance.
    7. Raw food cuisine can be pretty diverse and surprisingly rich and indulgent, but can be pretty time-intensive to prepare. When eating raw, are you a gourmet chef, or are you the salad-and-handful-of-nuts type?
    Yes, my office can attest to my green salads! About once every three evenings I will make a bunch of salads for dinner (more than I could eat that night), usually a cauliflower dish, kale salad, and sprouted bean salad. I love shredded carrots, roasted almonds, and avocado, so usually some combination of those ingredients. Then, I will eat what I prepared for the following couple days. Breakfast is usually a kale smoothie, or if I’m in a hurry, a banana with peanut butter on top.
    One other hallmark of my eating habits is that I rarely will sit down for an entire meal. Usually dinner is the only sit down meal. I have a stand-up desk in my office, and will usually have two small meals instead of a big lunch during the day, often while standing unless my friends at work are eating.
    8. Is there much of a raw food culture/community here in Ithaca? (It would seem like a good town for such a community, but I haven’t heard much about it myself).
    I couldn’t agree more! Certainly hope to change that! When I am able (usually in the summertime) I teach a class on Raw Food Fundamentals at GreenStar Cooperative. But it is funny as you mention, one might think Ithaca would be a perfect place. GreenStar is a great resource. Many of their salads in the deli are raw, and they carry a TON of delicious raw products.
    9. What’s your fav restaurant in town? Where is the best place for a raw food gourmand?
    Eating in restaurants is almost never guaranteed raw. My first rule for nutrition is and always has been balance, so when I’m cooking, I try for as many raw meals as possible: green smoothies, kale salad,
    butternut squash soup. But in restaurants sometimes all bets are off because first and foremost I believe in balance. For instance, I love the salads at Moosewood, and adore their tahini vinaigrette. Is it
    raw? Not sure, but life is short. Why not have your salad and dressing too?
    10. Can you share your favorite (easy’ish) raw food recipe with the readers?
    Raw can sound intimidating, or too strict. One tip I give people trying to start out is to buy way more leafy green vegetables at the grocery store the next time they shop. Whatever you like: kale, swiss chard, dandelion greens, and buy two or three extra bunches (that is, if you’re already a regular kale shopper), also an avocado, lemon, and any nuts of your choosing (cashew, sunflower, or almond).
    Try a raw kale salad:
    • Bowl of greens
    • 1 lemon
    • 1 tbsp. Olive Oil
    • Sprinkle of salt
    • Sprinkle of pepper
    • Nuts

    Rinse your greens, and de-vein (pull leaves away from stem, discard stem), and then rip apart the greens. Juice the lemon over the greens in a medium bowl. Add the oil, salt, and pepper. Now, ‘massage’ the greens, by working the dressing into the leaves. Your salad may turn a beautiful color of bright green. This is where raw cooking becomes fun! Then top with your favorite nuts. This salad can be eaten in large quantities; even one bunch of greens can reduce in volume down to be a good portion for dinner. Enjoy!

    11. How long have you been teaching yoga?
    My practice began (of all places) in Doha, Qatar while I was living for a short time after college. There was a great studio that I tried with a friend and I got hooked. It’s a great way to stay centered, sweat, and have fun. Three years ago I got certified to teach. It keeps me honest and gets me on my mat.
    12. Can you share the details of your yoga class? Where and when? Can anyone try one of your classes if interested?
    My yoga class is Friday during the lunch hour  (12-1 p.m.) at Teagle Hall and open to all Cornell fitness club and wellness members. Day passes are available for purchase. More information can be found in the Cornell fitness website (fitness.cornell.edu).
    13. What is your next act/chapter?
    Continuing my mission to help individuals, organizations, and communities get healthier. Right now I am looking for a University at which to do more research and teaching, but as a professor. Stay tuned!
    Thanks, Rebecca, for the update! Readers, keep your eyes open for the Raw Food Fundamentals course and other raw food courses offered at GreenStar.
  • How'd You Like Them Apples

    How'd You Like Them Apples

    This time of year you can spend each weekend at a different u-pick apple orchard, but if you are serious about your apples then stop by the Cornell Apple Orchards for a tasting of unique Cornell-bred apples. Though the orchards are off limits for picking, their roadside store offers an abundance of fruits and cider as well as a selection of honey products, maple candies, Cornell Dairy treats, and locally-made cheeses. The Cornell Orchards is a collection of orchards, vineyards, and fruit farms managed by the Department of Horticulture. While the orchards are split into a variety of locations and their research facility is in Geneva, the Cornell Orchard shop site includes the storage and packing facilities, a cider press, and a research lab, and is surrounded by 37 acres of fruit plantings.

    Upon entering the shop you are overwhelmed by a deliciously sweet and crisp fragrance of apples. Baskets of apples are laid out inviting visitors to sample all the varieties. Don’t be shy – try one of each! Bags of apples and other fall produce – corn, plums, pears, gourds, and pumpkins – line the shop shelves. At the back of the store workers sort bins of apples that cascade from a conveyor belt emerging from the back storage area.

    The opening of the Cornell Apple Orchards is always a welcome fall treat, and I stopped in this past weekend. I was delighted to sample, among others, “Autumn Crisp,” a Cornell variety which is a cross between a Golden Delicious and a Monroe. Developed by Cornell (at the Geneva research station), it is the 63rd apple released from their breeding research station. It is juicy, crisp, and sweet, but not cloying. I loved it and bought a bag to take home.

    There is also cider to sample and sometimes pears to taste. Upon asking one of the store clerks/researchers I was treated to a behind-the-scenes glimpse of the back storage room. Crisp, cool, and fragrant with an even more intense sent of fresh apples, the store room was stacked floor to ceiling with giant crates of apple in all varieties.

    The Cornell Apple Orchards shop is open from mid-August through April. Hours change, so check the website. The shop (in Ithaca) is located at 709 Dryden Rd. (across from the Cornell Vet School).

  • Happy Birthday, Johnson Museum!

    Happy Birthday, Johnson Museum!

    This Friday evening the Johnson Museum celebrates its 40th anniversary as well as the opening of its five fall exhibits. A special lineup of artsy concert performances, music, and a reception get the festivities going and a and ’70s-themed dance party continues the revelry late into the night.

    Here is the evening’s schedule of events (as described on the Museum’s website):

    Opening Reception for the Fall Exhibits
    5:00–7:00 p.m.
    Throughout the Museum

    Performance by Michael Ashkin, Tim Feeney, and Annie Lewandowski
    7:00–8:00 p.m.
    Lynch Conference Room, Floor 6
    *Please arrive early, as elevator access will be restricted to avoid interrupting the performance.
    Depot/Centralia/Tiber features works filmed by Professor Michael Ashkin (CU Department of Art) at a decommissioned military depot in upstate New York, in a Central Pennsylvania mining town, and in Rome along the Tiber River. The improvised soundtrack is performed by Annie Lewandowski (lecturer, CU Department of Music) on piano/electronics and Tim Feeney (former lecturer, CU Department of Music) on percussion. This performance was made possible in part by the generous support of the Cornell Council for the Arts.

    Performance: Mother Mallard’s Portable Masterpiece Co.
    8:30–9:30 p.m.
    Lecture room, Floor 2L in the wing
    Mother Mallard returns to the Museum, where they have held performances since its opening 1973! Founded and directed by David Borden in 1969, Mother Mallard is the world’s first synthesizer ensemble. Their program will feature selections from Borden’s Earth Journeys, all variations on “Happy Birthday” and receiving their first performance tonight. Mother Mallard dedicates this performance to the memory of Tom Leavitt (1930–2010), founding director of the Johnson Museum.

    Performance: Cornell Avant Garde Ensemble
    9:30 p.m.
    Mallin Sculpture Court, Floor 2 (rain location: Appel Lobby)
    The Cornell Avant Garde Ensemble performs music inspired by Leo Villareal: Cosmos under the installation and the stars.

    ’70’s Dance Party
    10:00 p.m.–12:00 midnight
    Get up and get down with the best ’70s grooves, plus art, activities, and far-out fun. Can you dig it? Wear your sharpest ’70s threads and party hearty!

  • Soup Kitchen

    Soup Kitchen

    For my inaugural post (with actual content), I am excited to report on one of my favorite places for lunch: Temple of Zeus. This small cafe, tucked in the basement of Goldwin Smith Hall on the Arts Quad of Cornell University offers some of the freshest and tastiest soups I’ve tried. Each day Choklay, the chef, cooks up two delicious soups – ranging from heart-warming creamy parsnip to a more unusual delight such as spicy groundnut soup. All soups are vegetarian, and most days both a cream or milk-based soup and a non-milk (vegan) soup are offered. They are always freshly made, tasting homemade, wholesome, and scrumptious. To be sure, I have my favorites, but none will disappoint.

    The soups have developed somewhat of a devoted following, and you may notice some of the same faithful soup lovers on most days queuing up with their bowls in hand. The lines during the lunch hours are guaranteed to be long (and I hesitated to blog about Ithaca’s best soups…for fear the line with lengthen), but, dear reader, I would not be a good reporter if I failed to mention Temple of Zeus’ soups.

    The kitchen opens for serving at 11:00 am, and anyone in the know is savvy to the fact that you must be in the soup line before 12:45 pm if you have any realistic hopes of tasting that day’s soup. Another tip: bring your own bowl…you’ll get a little more. They also serve up sandwiches, coffee, baked goods, and other sundries. Check out Temple of Zeus’ website for their weekly soup menu, the recipes, and for cafe hours.