Kaiser Insurance Acupuncture Coverage
Acupuncture

Kaiser Insurance: What Conditions are Covered for Acupuncture Treatment?

Kaiser Insurance Acupuncture CoveragePhoto: Tanja Heffner

Kaiser Insurance on Acupuncture

You may have seen that Kaiser has taken over Group Health here in Washington. In their June 5, 2017 “Kaiser Permanente Washington Pre-Authorization Requirements” document, they outline the conditions for which they have determined acupuncture treatment medically necessary. Any non-Medicare patient with Kaiser insurance coverage seeking over eight visits will have to meet the following criteria:

Conditions Covered

  • Arthritis, chronic
  • Dysmenorrhea (i.e. menstrual cramps)
  • Fibromyalgia (must incl. established, documented diagnosis of fibromyalgia)
  • Headaches, chronic
  • Myofascial pain, chronic, e.g.
    • cervicalgia
    • headaches, muscular-tension type
    • lumbago
    • neck and back pain, chronic
    • plantar fasciitis
    • thoracic outlet syndrome (TOS)
  • Nausea/vomiting due to pregnancy or chemotherapy
  • Neuropathic pain, chronic
  • “Other medical medical conditions that have responded to an initial course of acupuncture with expectation of continued functional improvement.”
  • Pain (chronic) due to cancer
  • Pain flares “when acupuncture has provided clinical improvement in the past.”

Other Requirements

The condition has to result in functional limitation, i.e. you’re not able to do what you used to be able to do in your daily living, present daily, and persist beyond the typical time frame for untreated recovery. You’ll also need to document your baseline “measurable functional limitations” and show progress over treatment.

Is this list conclusive?

Of course not. 🙂 It’s subject to change, and is only a guideline. Each plan is different as well in the specifics of coverage and number of visits allowed.

Need Help?

Are you new to Kaiser insurance and would like Melissa to verify your acupuncture benefits prior to treatment? Feel free to reach out; she’d be happy to help you.

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Healing Spices to Boost Health and Beat Disease
Book Review, Chinese Herbs & Supplements, Self-Care

Healing Spices: How to Use Spices to Boost Health and Beat Disease

Healing Spices to Boost Health and Beat Disease

Food is our first medicine

Ever wonder why they serve ginger with sushi? Not only does ginger warm the belly–a good balance for all that cold, raw fish about to go into the stomach–but it also helps prevent toxicity (in this case, seafood toxicity). Helpful, right? Knowing that before you head to the sushi restaurant might even be more helpful!

Healing spices

Spices are a universal gift to our health, as they taste great and are easy to obtain. Chinese medicine makes use of a number of them; meanwhile Western medicine continues to deepen their understanding of the vast benefits that come with choosing the right herb/spice for one’s constitution and condition.

A few years ago a book came out highlighting the hidden benefits of your spice rack, “Healing Spices: How to Use 50 Everyday and Exotic Spices to Boost Health and Beat Disease.” It’s quite beautiful and a nice addition to Paul Pitchford’s excellent book on nutrition and Chinese medicine, “Healing with Whole Foods.” Even better, the book is even available through the public library.

Get to know your herbs and spices

See below for a starter list of spices and their studied effects within Western medicine, as cited and published on Huffington Post. In Chinese medicine, we use a few of these regularly for additional health benefits; for these medicinals I’ve included the Chinese medicine name below the English.

Disclaimer

As always, food is medicine; too much of one thing isn’t always a good thing. Before you start changing your diet, be sure to discuss your plan with a healthcare professional to avoid herb-drug interactions or other unwanted side effects.

Herb/Spice

Looks Like

Potential Health Benefits*

Allspice

Healing Spices: Allspice
  • may help combat prostate cancer
Healing Spices: Cinnamon
  • lowers LDL (“bad”) cholesterol
  • reduces proliferation of leukemia and lymphoma cancer cells
  • may help to alleviate tremors and poor mobility in Parkinson’s disease
Healing Spices: Nutmeg
  • relieves symptoms of depression

Oregano

oregano-321037_640
  • high in antioxidants
  • essential oil of oregano was found to kill drug-resistant strains of Staphylococcus aureus

Pepper, Black

胡椒 (Hu Jiao)

  • manganese and copper content supports metabolism and maintain bone health
  • peperine was found to halt, and even reverse, fatty liver disease in mice

Rosemary

Healing Spices: Rosemary
  • carnosic acid content protects retinas from degeneration (may help to prevent or halt age-related macular degeneration)

Sage

Healing Spices: Sage
  • may increase cognitive performance in Alzheimer’s disease
Healing Spices: Turmeric
  • reduces tenderness and swelling in arthritic joints

* Studies cited on Huffington Post article, “8 Herbs And Spices That Fight Off Disease.” A reminder: The information presented on this web site is not intended to take the place of your personal physician’s advice and is not intended to diagnose, treat, cure or prevent any disease.

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Chinese Herbs & Supplements

Chinese herbal remedy ‘just as effective as methotrexate against arthritis’ (Study, Medical News Today)

Lei Gong Teng (“Thunder God Vine”) and rheumatoid arthritis

Earlier this month came the exciting news that Chinese herb Lei Gong Teng (Tripterygium wilfordii Hook F) was found in study to be ‘just as effective as methotrexate against arthritis'” (Medical News Today). The study followed 204 patients and was published in the Annals of the Rheumatic Diseases this April.

Tripterygium hypoglaucum BotGardBln07122011B

Study conclusions

In treating active rheumatoid arthritis (RA), researchers found Tripterygium wilfordii Hook F (TwHF) monotherapy was no less effective than methotrexate (MTX) monotherapy; however, combined therapy was almost 25% more effective in relieving both tenderness/swelling of joints and improvement in other areas than either treatment alone. A follow-up study will need to be conducted for long-term assessment.

Thunder God Vine’s safety

Herbs can be powerful and exceptionally helpful with proper diagnosis and monitoring. It’s with this caution I mention Lei Gong Teng is an effective herb at the right dose and for the right patient–not for everyone. What does this mean? Go see your herbalist before you try this one!

Thunder God Vine is contraindicated in pregnancy, and considered toxic within Chinese medicine. Side effects can include gastrointestinal symptoms (e.g. vomiting, diarrhea), skin reactions, and missed menses. Caution is also advised for patients with compromised immune systems or osteoporosis. (Natural Medicines Comprehensive Database, Thunder God Vine).

RA Treatment

Western medicine generally recommends NSAIDs, drugs and steroids for the treatment of rheumatoid arthritis; but there’s quite a few more treatment options out there:

    • Chinese medicine

In Chinese medicine, rheumatoid arthritis has different diagnoses whether it is in the acute or remission phase. Treatment, therefore, will differ depending on the stage of the disease. Traditionally, we combine acupuncture with herbal medicine, qigong and moxa (as appropriate) to treat the pain while clearing any excess, such as cold-type fluid retention, and tonifying underlying deficiency. For more on Chinese medicine’s approach, see, “Rheumatoid Arthritis and its Treatment with Chinese Medicine.”

    • Supplements

According to Natural Medicines Comprehensive Database, which queries clinical studies to find their information, the following natural medicines are considered “possibly effective” for the treatment of RA:

        • borage
        • bovine cartilage
        • cat’s claw
        • fish oil
        • glucosamine sulfate
        • superoxide dismutase
        • thunder god vine
        • vitamin D
        • vitamin E

Does this mean you should start taking these? No. 🙂 You know what I’m going to say already–go see your East Asian Medicine Practitioner, see a specialist. I mention these only to let you know there may be more options available to you than you were aware. (Beyond NMCD’s list, you might also be interested to read about UltraInfamX’s effect on swollen joints and C-reactive protein by Metagenics.)

    • Other holistic practices

Beyond Chinese medicine, there is also Naturopathy and Ayurveda (among other things!), both of which have their own unique system of diagnosis and treatment. For more information on Naturopathy and RA, see: Arthritis; for more on Ayurveda, see: The efficacy of Ayurvedic treatment for rheumatoid arthritis.

Are you starting to feel inspired yet? Go to it! Make an appointment today!

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Dairy-Free Milk for Tea Lovers
Self-Care

7 Steps to Dairy-Free Milk for Black-Tea Lovers

Dairy-Free Milk for Tea Lovers

Dairy-Free Milk for a Black Tea-Loving Kapha Vata Body Type

Whew! That’s a mouthful!

I’ve loved tea for years. I drink all sorts – Green, Oolong, and Black. I must admit I haven’t quite accepted Rooibos into my tea-happiness extravaganza; but I don’t feel so bad, since it’s not actually “tea” in the Camellia Sinensis sense of the word. Now, something I love more than tea, is the sacred beverage that is black tea with milk. Oh, the creamy, lovely, warm aromatic experience of the perfect beverage!

Cutting down inflammation by cutting out dairy

“So, what’s the problem?” you might ask. Dairy (otherwise known as half of the equation). Tea without milk, is just tea. No magic. No transformational experience, just tea. So for the many individuals who find cutting out dairy significantly improves their arthritis, psoriasis, irritable bowel, chronic sinus congestion, acne, allergies, etc–this means they have to take magical-makings into their own hands!

If you haven’t guessed already, I am in this boat with the many others. I have spent the last few years working on this magical-making conundrum. For anyone in this predicament, there are two obvious options:

(1) Use what (already) readily exists, such as oat milk, soy milk, rice milk, hemp milk, sunflower seed milk, coconut milk, almond milk, nut-milk blends, rice-milk with nut-milk blends, etc.

(2) Make whatever you want.

Finding a good alternative

Of course, I started with what is easy to buy first. And really, I’ve bought almost all of them. (I’ve avoided sunflower seed milk just because I find the taste very overwhelming usually.) Overall, I found for tea, soy milk* seems ideal; but there are simply too many reasons not to drink it (see end of post). Rice milk’s taste didn’t compete with my tea; but overall it’s a thin milk, and high in sugar (10 g/cup). I drank this the most, and found over time I gained weight and felt a little bloated. Coconut milk and hemp milk I put in the hard to digest category and distracting taste. Store-bought nut milks I also found to have too strong a taste for my tea. Fed up with all the packaging I was going through buying these, and uninterested in all the ‘other’ ingredients that come with prepackaged milks, I decided to try making my own milk. But what to make?

At first, I tried making individual nut milks — almond, macadamia, and cashew. Then, I tried doing blends between them. Then I tried adding in rice; then I tried rice alone. The plus side of making nut milks, is that you can use the left over ‘meat’ for making flours. The down side is that nuts are typically harder to digest than many other foods. After a few weeks, I noticed my symptoms weren’t exactly improving, and I was even wondering if my inflammation was getting worse.

Ayurvedic guidelines

At this point, I was starting to get fed up, and remembered a email I had gotten from a colleague on Ayurvedic dietary therapy. Whereas Chinese medicine generally looks a food’s temperature and the organs it affects and how, Ayurveda works with what they call “doshas,” or mind-body types, of which they are three: Vata, Pitta, and Kapha. (If you’d like to know what type you are, I invite you to take an online quiz over on Deepak Chopra’s website.) Well, I took the quiz myself and found my body type was practically equal parts Vata to equal parts Kapha. Guess what? They’re like two ends on a spectrum–Vata runs dry, and ‘windy’; Kapha runs oily and heavy on mucus. Starting to get the sense that their dietary needs would be polar opposite? You betcha!

Looking up the foods for these two types, I ruled out nuts and white/brown rice. So, then I tried basmati rice milk. The bloating was a little better, but ultimately I decided I still had to find something else. In talking to my sister, she mentioned in passing seed milk might be the answer. Knowing sunflower seed milk was out of the question for my palate – I decided to bite the bullet and try pumpkin seed milk. I had read about it online at some point and thought it sounded too fancy, too flavorful or too whatever, and blew it off. But at this point, after months and months of experimentation, I was ready to try it!

The pros of pumpkin seed milk

Guess what? It’s delicious! It’s easy on my belly. Its flavor is not overwhelming. It doesn’t break up in my milk. And… being high in zinc, pumpkin seeds can help support progesterone release. (Did you know pumpkin seeds are also used in ‘seed cycling’ to help balance hormones?) Sugar content is very low (1.8 g/cup). Pumpkin seeds are high in iron (63% of your daily value/1 c) and very high in magnesium (191% of your DV/1 c ). They provide a good source of protein and healthy fat… and help you feel like things in the world are groovy (hello, L-tryptophan and glutamate!). Perhaps you’re starting to understand why I feel so elated about having found this miracle milk?

So, without further ado, I bring you a dairy-free option for all you black-tea loving Kapha Vata body types (and everyone else):

Pumpkin Seed Milk Recipe

Prep List

  • Room temperature water for soaking, just enough to cover the seeds
  • A blender
  • 1 c pumpkin seeds
  • 1 medjool date, pitted
  • Near-boiling water, enough to cover amount of seeds using (maybe about a 1 c here?)
  • 3 dropperfuls of vanilla extract (about 2.5 tsp)
  • 4 c or so of room temperature water
  • 1 nut milk bag, or other very fine straining device (At first I tried a cheaper one before the one featured to the right, and even a reusable produce bag. I found paying the few extra bucks made a big difference!)

Step One

Austrian pumpkin seeds

Soak seeds overnight in filtered water. Then, rinse.

These beautiful dark green seeds are Austrian pumpkin seeds. They produce a milk that is slightly green, and that has a very clean, fresh taste. They also cost about 3x that of Chinese pumpkin seeds (!). The Chinese seeds’ milk is a bit lighter in color; but its flavor, to my palate, is quite smoky. (My partner calls it “earthy.”) Either way, the difference is… notable!

Step Two

Covering seeds with near-boiling water

Add seeds and date to blender; cover with near boiling water. Blend.

 

Step Three

Pouring water over spitting pumpkin seed milk.

When it seems like it’s going to spit/splatter, quickly add more water, and the vanilla extract.

The hot water I’ve found helps the seeds blend better. And, the less water at first, the creamier the blending of the seeds. However, there comes a point when there isn’t enough liquid for the solid. At this point, the blender sounds like it’s about to choke. Quickly, I pour about a cup of water through the top at this point, just enough to get it to keep going.

After this additional water has blended well into the milk, you can add more water until you reach the top of blending capacity. (For my blender that’s about 3 c.) By this point, you might have been blending for about a good minute to a minute and a half. Continue blending until you don’t see any more particles in the milk.

Step Four

Unfiltered pumpkin seed milk

Pour off unfiltered milk, and give the blender a quick rinse; prepare nut milk bag.

I usually pour off the unfiltered milk divided about equally between two containers at this point; because I only want the blender half full at most. This way, I can fit almost both my hands in the blender as the same time as the milk I’m filtering. Why do this? To contain the mess, I say! (See next step.) To prepare the nut milk bag, just roll it over the lip of the blender. If I don’t have to take photos, I would normally only put the bag in about half way – so that the top of the bag stays dry and clean (i.e. less mess).

 

Step Five

Filtering pumpkin seed milk

Pour in (half the) milk; and milk the bag!

When I was four, a woman brought a goat to my preschool. I can’t remember if she milked the goat, and we just tried drinking it, or if she actually let some four year old yank on this poor thing’s lady parts. Either way, when I milk the bag, I feel like I’m a loving farmer. 🙂 You can’t just squeeze down and expect it to shoot out the end…. The most effective way I’ve found is to start by squeezing down from the top, and when my right hand gets to the bottom, I squeeze my left hand down towards it. In turn, most of the milk comes out from the middle of the bag (not the bottom). Hence, being able to fit both hands into the blender can make things a lot less messy.

Step Six

Filtered pumpkin seed milk

Pour out filtered milk into serving container; remove pulp from bag. Reload!

Here you’ll see I rinsed the original container used on the left so I could pour the now filtered milk back into it (saving dishes). The chunky stuff in the bowl is the pumpkin seed meat left over after filtering.

 

Step Seven

Operation dairy-free milk complete!

Repeat. Add remaining water.

All the pulp is discarded there in the bowl from one cup of seeds; both containers now contain filtered milk. Because my blender only hold so much, I find I usually add a cup of water at this last stage to the already filtered milk (now about 5 c total).

 

Yay, you’re done!!!

Here’s what the milk looks like against the white fridge (sorry, no color correct).

Austrian pumpkin seed milk

What about my tea?

Here’s me steeping Assam tea for two minutes.

Assam tea steeping

This is what my black tea looks like when I’ve just poured milk in.

Black tea with dairy-free milk

This is after 30 seconds.

Dairy-free no-curdle milk for my black tea!

What about storage?

As for any remainder goop in my storage containers, in the bottom I find a thin layer of what is like cream (0.5 cm?). There can be more or less depending on the process.

Pumpkin seed milk storage
Pumpkin seed milk 'cream'

Close-up of the ‘cream.’

A bottle lasts for a good week in the fridge. Another note: You’ll find the milk can thicken up over the next day or two, so typically I’ll add a little more water as needed. The milk doesn’t separate in the fridge; though I generally give it a swirl before pouring (not really sure why I do that).

Alright, folks–that’s all she wrote! These are just my experiences, I’d love to know what’s worked for you! Drop a comment, send me an email —

Wishing you well,
Melissa.

*MORE ON SOY MILK
While the pros are pretty clear — you can find soy milk in most places these days, non-competing taste in tea, usually won’t break up on you — the cons are just too great:

In Chinese medicine, soy is seen as a cooling food; and for anyone who has a tendency towards weaker digestion, fatigue, or poor appetite, cooling foods are something that ought to be avoided as much as possible. (You can find a further explanation on temperature in my earlier blog, “Medicinal Herbs Not All the Same“.) As a result, I’ve found that soy over time seems to slow and clog my digestion a bit. (Not ideal!)

Beyond any personal reasons, let’s not forget GMOs. Scientific American in 2011 quoted “genetically modified soy may be present in as much as 70 percent of all food products found in U.S. supermarkets,” with “90 percent of the U.S. soybean crop… grown using genetically modified (GM) seeds sold by Monsanto.” Even if we buy organic, we’re still exposed to more soy than we’d probably ever like to admit was the case (hello, soy lecithin!).

Lastly, we can’t forget phytoestrogens come with their own list of pros and cons.

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Allergies & Sensitivities, Digestive, Self-Care, Uncategorized

Dairy-Free Milk for a Black Tea-Loving Kapha Vata Body Type

Dairy-Free Milk for Tea LoversWhew! That’s a mouthful!

I’ve loved tea for years. I drink all sorts – Green, Oolong, and Black. I must admit I haven’t quite accepted Rooibos into my tea-happiness extravaganza; but I don’t feel so bad, since it’s not actually “tea” in the Camellia Sinensis sense of the word. Now, something I love more than tea, is the sacred beverage that is black tea with milk. Oh, the creamy, lovely, warm aromatic experience of the perfect beverage!

“So, what’s the problem?” you might ask. Dairy (otherwise known as half of the equation). Tea without milk, is just tea. No magic. No transformational experience, just tea. So for the many individuals who find cutting out dairy significantly improves their arthritis, psoriasis, irritable bowel, chronic sinus congestion, acne, allergies, etc–this means they have to take magical-makings into their own hands!

If you haven’t guessed already, I am in this boat with the many others. I have spent the last few years working on this magical-making conundrum. For anyone in this predicament, there are two obvious options:

(1) Use what (already) readily exists, such as oat milk, soy milk, rice milk, hemp milk, sunflower seed milk, coconut milk, almond milk, nut-milk blends, rice-milk with nut-milk blends, etc.

(2) Make whatever you want.

Of course, I started with what is easy to buy first. And really, I’ve bought almost all of them. (I’ve avoided sunflower seed milk just because I find the taste very overwhelming usually.) Overall, I found for tea, soy milk* seems ideal; but there are simply too many reasons not to drink it (see end of post). Rice milk’s taste didn’t compete with my tea; but overall it’s a thin milk, and high in sugar (10 g/cup). I drank this the most, and found over time I gained weight and felt a little bloated. Coconut milk and hemp milk I put in the hard to digest category and distracting taste. Store-bought nut milks I also found to have too strong a taste for my tea. Fed up with all the packaging I was going through buying these, and uninterested in all the ‘other’ ingredients that come with prepackaged milks, I decided to try making my own milk. But what to make?

At first, I tried making individual nut milks — almond, macadamia, and cashew. Then, I tried doing blends between them. Then I tried adding in rice; then I tried rice alone. The plus side of making nut milks, is that you can use the left over ‘meat’ for making flours. The down side is that nuts are typically harder to digest than many other foods. After a few weeks, I noticed my symptoms weren’t exactly improving, and I was even wondering if my inflammation was getting worse.

At this point, I was starting to get fed up, and remembered a email I had gotten from a colleague on Ayurvedic dietary therapy. Whereas Chinese medicine generally looks a food’s temperature and the organs it affects and how, Ayurveda works with what they call “doshas,” or mind-body types, of which they are three: Vata, Pitta, and Kapha. (If you’d like to know what type you are, I invite you to take an online quiz over on Deepak Chopra’s website.) Well, I took the quiz myself and found my body type was practically equal parts Vata to equal parts Kapha. Guess what? They’re like two ends on a spectrum–Vata runs dry, and ‘windy’; Kapha runs oily and heavy on mucus. Starting to get the sense that their dietary needs would be polar opposite? You betcha!

Looking up the foods for these two types, I ruled out nuts and white/brown rice. So, then I tried basmati rice milk. The bloating was a little better, but ultimately I decided I still had to find something else. In talking to my sister, she mentioned in passing seed milk might be the answer. Knowing sunflower seed milk was out of the question for my palate – I decided to bite the bullet and try pumpkin seed milk. I had read about it online at some point and thought it sounded too fancy, too flavorful or too whatever, and blew it off. But at this point, after months and months of experimentation, I was ready to try it!

Guess what? It’s delicious! It’s easy on my belly. Its flavor is not overwhelming. It doesn’t break up in my milk. And… being high in zinc, pumpkin seeds can help support progesterone release. (Did you know pumpkin seeds are also used in ‘seed cycling’ to help balance hormones?) Sugar content is very low (1.8 g/cup). Pumpkin seeds are high in iron (63% of your daily value/1 c) and very high in magnesium (191% of your DV/1 c ). They provide a good source of protein and healthy fat… and help you feel like things in the world are groovy (hello, L-tryptophan and glutamate!). Perhaps you’re starting to understand why I feel so elated about having found this miracle milk?

So, without further ado, I bring you a dairy-free option for all you black-tea loving Kapha Vata body types (and everyone else):

Pumpkin Seed Milk Recipe

Nutrition Facts (Serving Size 1 cup)

Calculated by caloriecount.about.com:

pumpkin seed milk nutrition facts

Prep List

Dairy-Free Milk for Tea Lovers

Here’s a close up of the nut milk bag I’ve been using. Previously, I had tried a cheaper one and even my reusable produce bag. But… I found paying the few extra bucks made a big difference.

Here’s a close up of the nut milk bag I’ve been using lately. I’ve also tried a cheaper version and even just my reusable produce bag–but it pays to buy the finer bag, especially if you’re going to be doing this once/week.

Room temperature water for soaking, just enough to cover the seeds

A blender

1 c pumpkin seeds

1 medjool date, pitted

Near-boiling water, enough to cover amount of seeds using (maybe about a 1 c here?)

3 dropperfuls of vanilla extract (about 2.5 tsp)

4 c or so of room temperature water

1 nut milk bag, or other very fine straining device

Step One: Soak seeds overnight in filtered water. Then, rinse.

These beautiful dark green seeds are Austrian pumpkin seeds. They produce a milk that is slightly green, and that has a very clean, fresh taste. They also cost about 3x that of Chinese pumpkin seeds (!). The Chinese seeds’ milk is a bit lighter in color; but its flavor, to my palate, is quite smoky. (My partner calls it “earthy.”) Either way, the difference is… notable!
Austrian pumpkin seeds

Happy Austrian Pumpkin Seeds!

Step Two: Add seeds and date to blender; cover with near boiling water. Blend.

Covering seeds with near-boiling water

Step Three: When it seems like it’s going to spit/splatter, quickly add more water, and the vanilla extract.

The hot water I’ve found helps the seeds blend better. And, the less water at first, the creamier the blending of the seeds. However, there comes a point when there isn’t enough liquid for the solid. At this point, the blender sounds like it’s about to choke. Quickly, I pour about a cup of water through the top at this point, just enough to get it to keep going.

After this additional water has blended well into the milk, you can add more water until you reach the top of blending capacity. (For my blender that’s about 3 c.) By this point, you might have been blending for about a good minute to a minute and a half. Continue blending until you don’t see any more particles in the milk.

Pouring water over spitting pumpkin seed milk.

Step Four: Pour off unfiltered milk, and give the blender a quick rinse; prepare nut milk bag.

I usually pour off the unfiltered milk divided about equally between two containers at this point; because I only want the blender half full at most. This way, I can fit almost both my hands in the blender as the same time as the milk I’m filtering. Why do this? To contain the mess, I say! (See next step.) To prepare the nut milk bag, just roll it over the lip of the blender. If I don’t have to take photos, I would normally only put the bag in about half way – so that the top of the bag stays dry and clean (i.e. less mess).

Unfiltered pumpkin seed milk

Step Five: Pour in (half the) milk; and milk the bag!

When I was four, a woman brought a goat to my preschool. I can’t remember if she milked the goat, and we just tried drinking it, or if she actually let some four year old yank on this poor thing’s lady parts. Either way, when I milk the bag, I feel like I’m a loving farmer. 🙂 You can’t just squeeze down and expect it to shoot out the end…. The most effective way I’ve found is to start by squeezing down from the top, and when my right hand gets to the bottom, I squeeze my left hand down towards it. In turn, most of the milk comes out from the middle of the bag (not the bottom). Hence, being able to fit both hands into the blender can make things a lot less messy.

Filtering pumpkin seed milk

Step Six: Pour out filtered milk into serving container; remove pulp from bag. Reload!

Here you’ll see I rinsed the original container used on the left so I could pour the now filtered milk back into it (saving dishes). The chunky stuff in the bowl is the pumpkin seed meat left over after filtering.

Filtered pumpkin seed milk

Step Seven: Repeat. Add remaining water.

All the pulp is discarded there in the bowl from one cup of seeds; both containers now contain filtered milk. Because my blender only hold so much, I find I usually add a cup of water at this last stage to the already filtered milk (now about 5 c total).

Operation dairy-free milk complete!

Yay, you’re done!!!

Here’s what the milk looks like against the white fridge (sorry, no color correct).

Austrian pumpkin seed milk

What about my tea?

Here’s me steeping Assam tea for two minutes.

Assam tea steeping

This is what my black tea looks like when I’ve just poured milk in.

Black tea with dairy-free milk

This is after 30 seconds.

Dairy-free no-curdle milk for my black tea!

What about storage?

As for any remainder goop in my storage containers, in the bottom I find a thin layer of what is like cream (5 cm?). There can be more or less depending on the process.

Pumpkin seed milk storage

Pumpkin seed milk 'cream'

Close-up of the ‘cream.’

A bottle lasts for a good week in the fridge. Another note: You’ll find the milk can thicken up over the next day or two, so typically I’ll add a little more water as needed. The milk doesn’t separate in the fridge; though I generally give it a swirl before pouring (not really sure why I do that).

Alright, folks–that’s all she wrote! These are just my experiences, I’d love to know what’s worked for you! Drop a comment, send me an email —

Wishing you well,
Melissa.

*MORE ON SOY MILK
While the pros are pretty clear — you can find soy milk in most places these days, non-competing taste in tea, usually won’t break up on you — the cons are just too great:

In Chinese medicine, soy is seen as a cooling food; and for anyone who has a tendency towards weaker digestion, fatigue, or poor appetite, cooling foods are something that ought to be avoided as much as possible. (You can find a further explanation on temperature in my earlier blog, “Medicinal Herbs Not All the Same“.) As a result, I’ve found that soy over time seems to slow and clog my digestion a bit. (Not ideal!)

Beyond any personal reasons, let’s not forget GMOs. Scientific American in 2011 quoted “genetically modified soy may be present in as much as 70 percent of all food products found in U.S. supermarkets,” with “90 percent of the U.S. soybean crop… grown using genetically modified (GM) seeds sold by Monsanto.” Even if we buy organic, we’re still exposed to more soy than we’d probably ever like to admit was the case (hello, soy lecithin!).

Lastly, we can’t forget phytoestrogens come with their own list of pros and cons.

Standard