Kind: captions Language: en hey everyone welcome back to the gut check series i am particularly excited about today's episode we are joined by chef and zoe ambassador dan churchill dan's a super cool guy he's a founder of charlie street which is a farm to table fast casual restaurant in new york city nolita and additionally he actually has been putting recipes online to help improve your health your life and your overall kind of bodily and mental performance today's uh conversation is going to be focused on food and nutrition specifically this idea like how we can easily create something that everyone enjoys that actually is good for our health specifically our gut health and that recipe is going to be his famous sweet and sour eggplant so uh dan uh tell us what you got in front of you yeah mate thanks so much for having me uh so today guys we've got to like honestly the way i'm looking at this is we've got a classic stir fry dish um with a bunch of vegetables accompanied by a paste or a marinade you guys can create together i'm gonna put put that on some wonderful just uh you know brown rice so to make it simple it's uh it's it's it's super tasty sweet and sour eggplant but we're just going to break it down to a way that is just shows you how simple cooking with vegetables truly is and hopefully get people in improving some of their plant power points each week you know what i mean yeah well let's get started what are what are the ingredients you have in front of you so here we have eggplant we got some i call this a capsicum mate but we i know a lot of people would refer to this as a pepper uh we've got some red onions lemon garlic ginger some chili flakes tomato paste and also some olive oil along with some just a classic ap flour here and so i think the best way to kind of get this into fruition is you always start in my uh i was brought up a lot with southeast asian cooking as well mate and a lot of the the way you do your basic um stir fry is you start with your ginger your garlic and also you have some onion too so the first thing we're going to really do mate and how's your mortar and pestle down oh you cook as well mate so do you do you work with a mortar and pestle at all i i i do uh you know i i've had a mortar pistol since i went to medical school that thing's got had a lot of has a lot of use for it i i i can tell you i never ground a single pill right mortar pestle is what the pharmacist uses sure right like it's on the leg it's like like on the logo of some pharmacies but actually it's seen plenty of of garlic now by the way you know we're we're here talking about gut health right so yes uh that when we eat food we think about our mouth which is where all the flavor explosions occur we think about our stomach which is where you know we fill up our stomach and then we most people just kind of assume that you know whatever happens is kind of a black box of nutrition but what we now know is that while our bodies absorb a ton of these um nutrients like vitamins and and minerals and things like that the real value of of food actually are in these bioactives and the fiber uh and the bioactives get into our bloodstream and they also go down to our lower gut which is filled with healthy gut bacteria 39 39 trillion healthy gut bacteria and i'll tell you some amazing things as you're as you're working is that garlic which is the first thing you um mention in ginger they both actually help to right size the good bacteria growing in our gut and by right sizing the good gut bacteria the good bacteria does us a big favor so i i say our gut bacteria we we shelter our good bacteria in our gut and our colon we give them room and board so we give them a space to live and then we feed them and they pay us back all right they pay their rent by releasing metabolites called short chain fatty acids to get into our bloodstream and for garlic and ginger both do this uh it lowers our cholesterol and actually lowers inflammation in our body so just the two ingredients that you like started with out of the gate already good for our gut that's all we want mate it's exactly what we want feed the gutter there's health healthy dietary fiber build up uh obviously those short chain fatty acids made you by the way do you have a favorite sugar chain fatty acid i i've got one um he's got like i call him the thor of short chain legendary so so they can make it you know they could make a uh they could make a uh they have online gamers looking for the fake the most powerful short chain fatty acid but butyrate by the way i studied urate in the lab and it turns out the butyrate not only lowers inflammation um but it also signals to your blood vessels so you have a better circulation as well and i remember when we were first looking at butyrate it actually is a powerful way to cut off the blood supply to cancer so you can starve a tumor in the lab with butyrate alone so just think about like the untapped potential of gut health it's crazy it is crazy and i think about recipes that we've been doing for forever right i think we always start with onion and garlic in pretty much all our major recipes so the fact that you're highlighting here that a lot of these dietary fiber benefits in just the first two ingredients just shows how powerful plants truly are and a lot of time unfortunately like when we go to these processed foods they don't incorporate some of these whole based ingredients and so i think that's what you and i are super reliant on is trying to find ways like you you talk about a lot of disease like we're trying to find ways to make eating more plants so much more accessible so and not in a way that's too uh you know we don't want people to feel like oh it's too hard it's too you know it's too this is to that just by simply adding those first two ingredients you're already doing wins you're retreating already already ahead of the game i just saw you stir in some tomato paste right yeah so just to bring you guys as we were talking about the legendary in this awesome mortar and pestle we have ginger and garlic as you saw a little bit of olive oil to help lubricate also has some great great polyphenols in there as well but we'll talk about that later we have some mint and some basil all right so we essentially have a nice herbaceous savoury note along with those garlic which is a profound amount of umami tomato paste also has a lot of umami in it as well and making sure you get a good one is is pretty essential now when it comes to sweet and sour you've got a lot of the sour coming from the acidic ingredients but to get the sweet we need some natural not refined but natural sugars that's where we use a nice little maple syrup and you don't have to go overboard with it you'll also notice if you caramelize onions to the point where you're doing a nice uh nice heated moderate temperature you will not have it burn which is a bad problem but also you actually get a sweeter tone so you won't need to add as much sugar to your ingredients and when i say sugar i mean even just whole place whole food based sugar because you get a nice sweet effect anyway so you br you bring it that's why they call them sweet onions right i mean like exactly uh vidalia's bermuda onions they're particularly good um you know the the thing that's really amazing is that when you um watching you cook i'm already salivating because i know what's in that mortar and pestle is going to taste really good but i'll tell you things that um i'm also looking at putting on my scientists and food as medicine hat i have a colleague in canada where they produce a lot of maple syrup uh and in canada they have like 50 100 different kinds of maple syrup lots of growers and just like wine where the trees grow can make a difference to terroir actually makes a difference the species of the tree of the maple tree makes a difference and they they actually compared side by side different types of maple syrups to find the maple syrup that has the most anti-angiogenic cancer starving properties um which i when i saw that i was like it's so amazing that we can actually compare foods to find the best kind like tomatoes um what kind of tomato paste did you want to use you said you got to find a good one i'd love to know yeah so honestly i i don't make it too hard but you got some really good brands and the best brands are honestly from italy in my opinion just because i love the the soil that i know that the tomatoes are grown in but i don't want people to go too hectic on that i think honestly just get a nice organic one organic is generally tough like you know you you would trust that compared to your classic uh juice tomato paste it's you know from the store in that in that sense but if you really want to go out there and find like any any anything from italy is always got a really nice volcanic soil and as you said earlier it all starts at the soil farmers as much as we should be championing and more they can only do so much with what they have and that's the soil and the climatic conditions those ingredients are grown in so you know you touched on a really good point there is like we love you and i love talking a lot wine for a number of reasons you've got the benefits of reservation all these kind of things we talk about with uh you know longevity but when it comes to like it's really interesting we talk about antioxidants and i don't want to shift too much here but we're talking about the flavor profile and the i guess the the components within uh say red wine compared to say a coffee bean so there's there's there's i guess wine notes and they are all related to receptors and they're related to their respective polyphenol compounds now we always talk about with web with wine oh this this smells like the sea this you get all these notes right now a master smelly yeah has done such a wonderful job and is tremendous i don't know how they can do it but to let you guys know how amazing antioxidant rich like why we say cacao is such a rich antioxidant and obviously the same with our coffee beans while we i recommend having black coffee is because it is has four times the amount of profile it has 800 flavor notes and those flavor notes are respectfully with antioxidants so like and that goes down to again where the where they're grown and the same with like tomatoes obviously if you if you're grown in a situation where the compound of the soil is not in its best state the top sale is terrible it's not getting enough vitamin d it's not getting enough water it's not nutrient rich therefore the tomatoes or whatever's grown there is going to have insufficient amount of the same benefit obviously the flow-on effect just continues so i'd only go on tangent for too long no no actually what you're talking about is really important you're you're talking about this whole profile spectrum and you know as a chef you your uh talent is to bring out the flavors but actually in our bodies our bodies also have receptors beyond our taste buds and our uh and our olfactory or smell organ and all those receptors are deep in our body deep in our gut the more you actually stimulate those receptors inside the body the more your body's defense systems we got five health defense systems angiogenesis stem cells microbiome dna which is what antioxidants work on and immunity the more diversity we eat especially when plant-based foods you know they talk about i think tim spector talks about eating 30 plants a week the more diversity we eat we're built for diversity we are not built to eat the same thing i mean if you really think about it if you had to eat the same dish in a dog bowl every single day it would be incredibly boring and that's why i love the fact that chefs and doctors who are in food and medicine can kind of join forces uh uh and plants eating plants not boring it lights up your health uh and there it is food is good for the biology so talk about what's in that pan and what did you do yeah exactly i love the fact you are you brought the fact that your your job is to help provide the research and get the message out there my job is to make it more approachable and exciting and tasty for people to actually adhere to what you're talking about so here we have just some eggplant searing off in the pan i do this beforehand to get a nice little golden color now this has been in here for about a total of five minutes all right medium-high heat i'm using extra virgin olive oil people say you shouldn't cook with high heat extra virgin olive oil if you get a good quality extra virgin olive oil i'm saying one that hasn't got anything that's uh remotely i would just say um if it's the trusted brand and you probably pay a little bit more for it but you use less it's got less of those compounds that will become carcinogenic at a high heat at a smoking point so yes you can work with extra virgin oil at a high heat now i'm just coloring those so now we're going to do is remove these from the pan and then i'm going to add in our onion and color that as well so get a nice little caramelization on that but i loved how you brought up plant-based diversity and obviously as you note and this is in your research we talk about the fact that obviously increasing at plant diversity just by simply eating a more diversity range of plants is the key right so for example i look at i look at food in colors so my job is to find ways to people eat more color right so i always say if you're always having greens make sure you get some reds if you're always having yellows get some eggplant color i would say it's probably a or a deep purple but the idea behind this and we know this through studies the colors are associated with pigmentation those pigmentations are related to those fighting chemicals right absolutely and you know by the way eggplant is one of my favorite uh foods most people don't know that you can actually get about five percent of the fiber which is good for gut health from an eggplant so five percent doesn't sound like a lot but actually every little bit counts especially when it's packaged in something really really tasty now uh most uh the time when you cook with eggplant you you don't peel all the skin off you cook it with the skin right that's part of the joy of eating eggplants that purple skin has a natural dye called anthocyanin and those anthocyanins reduce inflammation they've been studied they improve vascular health they help your blood vessels stay healthier and they improve your immunity as well it's the same purple color that's in a purple potato and a blueberry and so here's another way to get some of that dye that natural healthy dye right into your bloodstream and right down to your gut and helps your gut bacteria and i love anthocyanin it's a it's such a wonderful thing for us like it really is and the other thing to that is like i look at that's why i think one of easy ways as a consumer looking going how do i know if i'm getting enough of the dietary fiber from eggplant or just in general like the pretty sure it's 28 to 28 grams of fiber is the minimum recommendation for ideal you recommend this daily impact now personally i think it should be more than that but let's just start by getting to that point because we know that too many people do not sufficiently get dietary fiber if we look at dietary fiber and i'm only work i'm only saying this is based on people like yourselves work right so this is something that you could probably speak highly to but dietary fiber is alone a key indicator of how you know insufficient or deficiency is showing how much chronic disease is occurring as a result so simply by eating more plants and by each plant including dietary fiber the more of these we get the higher dietary fiber we get and ultimately that alone will demonstrate a reduction in some of these truly lifestyle related chronic diseases that we can be reducing right and by the way that dietary fiber also reduces uh obesity and specifically it prevents you from growing what they call visceral fat so the versatile fat you know like when most people want to lose weight it's a tire around your belly uh you know the beer gut but actually the visceral fats the really dangerous of this packed like underwear in a suitcase around your organs deep in your body that's the stuff that'll kill you so you could be a skinny person have a ton of this visceral fat and the more fiber you eat the gut bacteria makes these short chain fatty acids um and by the way diversity is also part of the gut bacteria so one way we measure health of your microbiome is not actually necessarily counting every single bacteria it's really just seeing how rich and diverse it is we want diverse neighborhoods you're in new york city you want to have this rich potpourri of different cultures and different peoples and every you know different colors i mean you know it's a rainbow right you live in a city that's what we want in our gut to we want diversity and eating diverse foods and with fiber encourages gut diversity as well matt you hit on the head oh this is like re this is why i love the fact that i get to speak to someone like you about this because you know for me it's like my as we said earlier my job is to find ways to get people excited to eat more of this right whether it's showcasing how fun cooking is and tossing the pan or seeing the beautiful colors you see inside the pan now and just to bring you guys up to speed yeah all we've done is we seared our eggplant one side each for about three to four minutes i've then added our red onion and our peppers to the pan that's just doing its thing right now now as that softens i'm then going to add that paste that we made earlier into the pan and along with our eggplant stir that together and that's going to be how simple our stir-fry is so when you break this down to steps and if you're in your own home or in your apartment or whatever it is all you've done is you've created a paste which you can make in bulk and then set aside to be used throughout the week and then you've essentially heated vegetables and olive oil added your paste and then cooked off some rice which you can also reheat for later on as well and you have that available for you and if you if you cook it if you if you cook it in bulk how do you store it do you just put in a jar and cover it up in the fridge yeah great great question so like i put it if i'm working with the the marinade the marinade will keep for at least a week if you have it in this tight sealed jar all right so put that in your fridge make sure it's in in the fridge with a tight seal jar um with the rice nice make sure it cools down with the lid off first so it doesn't get any extra heat to generate bacteria and then once it cools down outside you can then put it in your fridge uh and that will then be able to keep for some time so like i would make sometimes on a busy week i know i've got a lot of shoots or the teams you know needs me on a line or whatever i would uh i would probably cook enough grains like barley uh rice or even whole grain pasta for you know five days and it would just be easy for me to go home and reheat some veggies use one of my sauces and then i've got you know my meal done pretty simply i love the fact you mentioned barley because you can serve this sweet and sour eggplant on rice and barley any kind of whole grain um barley by the way has been studied in a really amazing way the uh an italian group made pasta out of barley whole barley whole grain wow and they fed it in their lab to mice that were actually having problems with their circulation and they found that actually if you eat barley if they feed them the mice barley they will actually start to regenerate their organs from the inside out so barley is all great and that probably also involves gut health so again what would that be associated with then what would be the component of the barley that would help the regeneration of those organs yeah well you know among different bioactives is beta d glucan which is the same uh soluble fiber it's a fiber good for the gut um it's also the same also in mushrooms so it's found in barley as well in high concentrations i bet that i bet that is a spoonful of umami you got there thank you mommy right there that's it i love how you touched on that as well it's like part of my job is again to find flavor and i love to educate people on the component of flavor in general so you've got you're sweet you're sour you're salty you're bitter and then this other beautiful savory paste uh savory no um so uh everyone listening in if you're gonna be cooking at home it's like i often find people don't have a season they're like they make something to a recipe or you know they don't um they think something's done and a lot of this comes down to education and trial and error to be honest but what i would say is like salt's a good thing we do need it getting a good quality salt is fantastic for everything from you know obviously our hydration uh obviously the balance of osmosis as well like you don't be having too much salty foods and a lot of that comes from obviously noting how many processed snacks and things you are having because there's a tremendous amount of salt in that but when you when you're seasoning your food you order you don't want to taste the salt salt's job is to bring out the flavor now the simple way to think about this is you have salt oh sorry you've got moisture and you've got flavor when you season with salt salt's job scientifically is to bring out the moisture so if we take add salt and we have moisture and flavor and we add salt to bring out the moisture we're left with flavor concentrated flavor which is what its job is the problem is do we add too much salt and particularly early on the cooking process i'll tell you that in a second it gets too salty and we taste salt and like oh it's too salty that's when you've gone too far now two notes when you are seasoning you want to do that at the end reason being is through to the natural instincts of evaporation you lose moisture and when you lose moisture along with adding salt it's a double it just double down on the amount of salt you're adding in the purpose of it so add salt to the end all right you never want to taste the salt you just want to taste an egg like a tomatoes extra sexy flavor and then so here's the way of tasting it so you taste it but it's kind of there but i think it needs more add some salt okay oh i taste it but it's not sticking around for too long okay so if it's not sticking around for too long you need the flavor profile of acid all right so the job of say a lemon is that you don't necessarily want to taste lemon you want to taste the flavor profile for the entirety of when you're enjoying it to your mouth so if it's if it's uh if it's not there at the start you add more salt if you need to stick around for longer add in some lemon juice some red wine vinegar some rice wine vinegar anything acidic in nature even tomatoes already have acid in them and umami that's why whenever you add a tomato based sauce to a dish you get packed full of flavor for the umami and also the acid as well i i i love how you're talking about this uh in terms of blending different flavors to bring out something that is more than the individual parts and if you think about the colors you mentioned colored earlier so tomatoes red lemon is yellow you bring those two things together you get orange right and another is orange and and each color brings down something different from the other one now lemons actually the lemon juice is got a lot of vitamin c it's got um citric acid all the all these things that are uh really good for you man that look that like that that i'm sure that lights up the flavor lemon lemon zest also is good because there's something called limonene in the zest and and if you're gonna use skin this is the reason to buy organic because it's really difficult to actually wash pesticides off of skin and there's still lots of value in the skin like the eggplant skin or the lemon skin that's correct if you are going shopping and people ask well i can't buy organic i can't afford it and that's like that's totally fine let's let's look to when you when you're purchasing you know your food let's let's think about the things you're going to eat the skin on and try and focus your attention organically towards those all right let's limit to those things as well and just become more understanding of where a lot of the fiber is just underneath the skin so like no you're getting your bang for your buck on that the hardest thing as we know is telling people this is going to by eating these things now it's going to help them you know 5 10 15 20 years down the track but some people like i'm not motivated by that that's totally fine uh but yeah i guess that's the one of the ways you just like look you're gonna save millions of dollars on your medical bills simply by having this so in the short term yes in the long term it's much better well you know the the immediate motivator is what you've got in your left hand there in that pan that is something that i cannot wait to try myself mate i gotta get you i can't believe i missed you new york i'm gonna get you in this kitchen so you can smell it next time you're down here i also want to see what what else are you hiding in that kitchen that i should be looking at we've got a lot of meals and a lot of fun and games here and now i'm inspired as as you and i chatted off camera i've got to go find some very very special things to go uh you know have in my space so just as i finish this off i've got this beautiful soft eggplant up here i can put some more sauce on and that's uh honestly you've got this is delicious and one of the best things about eggplant is just how it holds is such a beautiful centipede dish right i just i absolutely love it so yeah my buddies uh show that can you show that to us yeah man i'm just gonna take a look at that it's uh it is wow that looks like now see that that would be an awesome lunch or dinner and you're saying that you can make enough so you can actually uh do it up again the next day and if if for whatever reason eggplant's not your thing that sauce you made could be used for other vegetables that you could heat up cook up much in the same way in order to be able to create something really amazing and if you're not if you're not a vegetarian or a vegan you could probably use that sauce for other proteins as well by the way you could probably use tofu with that as well 100 i love the fact that you did touch on the like the versatility here and you know in the other day i don't want people following recipes feeling they have to follow the recipe i want people to be inspired to know okay knowing that i'm making something i love it's also good for you based on some of the stuff i've seen so if you go to the store and say they're out of eggplants because there's an eggplant just everyone loves eggplant cool think about how you can take the same principles that we've done today and swap with something else simply tossing the pan same with making a sauce for anything and everybody watching this you know something i want to call out is uh chef dan didn't use any more space or any more tools than almost anybody has in their own kitchen even if you've got a little galley kitchen and a tiny little apartment you know in a city someplace um you can actually knock this uh baby out well listen this look meal looks delicious i cannot wait to try the recipe and you're going to share the recipe with us and this has been a great conversation about everyone's favorite topic i mean who doesn't talk about food so i hope everybody watching this gets that recipe tries it at home and feels more energized to incorporate plants lots of plants lots of flavor lots of bioactives to be able to really stimulate and help our gut health and by the way our gut is connected to our immunity so if our gut is healthy our immune system is healthy and if there's one thing we learned in the last 18 months it's just how important it is for us to have good strong immunity so with that i want to thank uh you dan um and uh can't wait to try that and uh look forward to sharing with the world thanks dr mate pleasure and uh looking forward to having you and taste this meal directly with me absolutely