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Coconut Banana Bread (vegan)

Coconut Banana Bread (vegan)

Vegan Coconut Banana Bread Recipe

Rudra Manohara

Rudra Manohara

Yoga Farm Staff

Rudra Manohara is a Yoga Farm chef, course instructor, staff member and teacher of Classical Hatha Yoga. He is professionally trained and has over 15 years experience in both the culinary arts and massage bodywork therapy, as well as a background in theatre and dance.  View Profile >

Ingredients:

  • 4 1/2 cups whole-wheat pastry flour or unbleached all-purpose flour
  • 2 tsp baking powder
  • 2 tsp baking soda
  • 1 tsp cinnamon powder
  • 1/4 tsp freshly grated nutmeg
  • 1 tsp salt
  • 1 cup sucanat or brown sugar
  • 2 cups dried, unsweetened flaked coconut (1/2 cup reserved for topping)
  • 3 cups mashed ripe bananas
  • 1/2 cup coconut oil, melted and slightly cooled
  • 1 1/2 cups coconut milk
  • 1 Tbsp vanilla
  • 1 1/2 cups semi-sweet or bitter chocolate chips *optional*

Directions:

1. Preheat the oven to 325 degrees Fahrenheit. Lightly grease a 9″ x 13″ baking pan or Pyrex dish.
2. Whisk together in a large bowl the flour, baking powder, baking soda, cinnamon powder, nutmeg, salt, brown sugar and 1 1/2 cups of dried coconut.
3. Combine in a separate bowl the mashed bananas, melted coconut oil, coconut milk and vanilla.
4, Mix together the prepared dry and wet ingredients, just until combined (do not overmix). Gently fold in the chocolate chips, if using.
5. Pour batter into prepared pan. Sprinkle remaining 1/2 cup of dried coconut on top.
6. Place on middle rack of oven and bake for about 1 hour, or until golden brown on top and toothpick inserted in middle comes out clean.
7. Let cool at least 1 hour before slicing and enjoy!
A close-up shot of some fresh baked vegan coconut banana bread.
This vegan coconut banana bread makes a delectable and healthy treat!

Considerations

Below are some tips on how to optimize this recipe for the best taste and effect on health and well-being.

Chocolate Chips

This ingredient can be omitted based on your personal preference. For a healthier option, use dark chocolate chips or low sugar chocolate chips.
 If chocolate may be aggravating to your Ayurvedic constitution (dosha), or if you are allergic, you can experiment with carob chips as an alternative.

Banana Ripeness

For banana bread, the perfect banana is one that is mostly yellow with several brown spots. If it has any green on it, even on the stem, wait a day or two. Mushy, slightly over-ripe bananas can work great especially if you don’t want to eat them raw
Three ripe bananas on a table.
Soft, ripe bananas with brown spots are best for making vegan coconut banana bread.

Ayurvedic Considerations

Ayurveda is a sister science of Yoga that specializes in customizing diet based your constitution (dosha). We recommend learning more about your dosha through an Ayurveda class, a consultation with an Ayurvedic practitioner or an online dosha quiz.
Vata
For Vata dosha, which tends to be more dry and active, bread with yeast can be aggravating as they have a lot of air element. This Banana Bread may be less aggravating since it is moist and rich and has no yeast. To further its pacifying effects on Vata, we recommend slathering on some ghee (clarified butter) or coconut oil if you are vegan. Eating it while it’s still warm and soft will also help pacify Vata.
Pitta-Vata
If you have Pitta and Vata tendencies, it is especially recommended to skip the chocolate ingredient, as it can be overstimulating, heating and drying.
Pitta
Pitta is the dosha that is hot and sharp. If you are predominately Pitta dosha, leave the chocolate chips out as it can be too heating. The moist, whole grains and coconut milk/flakes in the bread will already pacify Pitta. You can also use a little ghee or coconut oil, but don’t go overboard as too much oil can aggravate Pitta. Let the bread cool down a little longer before eating.
Kapha
Kapha dosha tends to be heavy, moist and stable. This heavy, moist and dense banana bread might not be the best option for Kapha Dosha. If you do decide to try it, don’t go overboard – start with a small piece, and skip the extra ghee or coconut oil.
Kapha individuals should favor dry and light grains over heavy and moist ones. If you are Kapha and you must try this banana bread, try toasting a thin piece until crispy and garnish with teaspoon of ground flax, pumpkin and/or sunflower seeds on top and a pinch of cinnamon.
Ayurvedic ingredients in a cup: cocnut flakes, herbs, coriander, and turmeric.
Adding ayurvedic spices to your food can aid with healthy digestion.

Seasonal Considerations

Ayurveda also considers different diets and lifestyles for each season in order to align with the body’s natural needs.
Summer
Ayurveda emphasizes cooling ingredients such as yogurt, cucumber, fresh fruit and salad to balance excess heat in the body.
Autumn
In Autumn, it is recommended to eat grounding, sweet foods such as squash and use warming spices like cinnamon or clove.
Winter
In winter, the body needs a balance between sweet, sour, salty, pungent, bitter, and astringent tastes in the form of warm, hardy stews to keep the body warm, blood flowing and clear mucous.
Spring
Spring time is a time for detoxification and light, pungent, bitter and astringent foods such as sprouts or lemons are encouraged.
When to Eat this Banana Bread
We recommend this banana bread for late autumn or early winter because of its balance of warming spices and grounding wholesome ingredients. We recommend late autumn and not early because it is a better time for a detoxifying kitcheri cleanse to prepare the body for the transition of seasons. It would not be an ideal food for springtime when the body is trying to get rid of excess toxins and weight built up during the winter. It can be a cooling dessert in the summer time if served room temperature and eaten in moderation.
If you are interested in learning more about healthy diet and nutrition, check out our cooking and detox courses at the Yoga Farm.

10 Reasons to Take a Permaculture Design Course

10 Reasons to Take a Permaculture Design Course

10 Reasons to Take a

Permaculture Design Course

Permaculture is a creative and artful way of designing our lives, where wastes become resources, productivity and yields increase, work is minimized, people and nature are preserved – all by thoughtful planning and a respectful approach to life.  Thus embraced, we create an environment where all may thrive for untold generations.”

– Bill Wilson

Every single person on this planet can benefit from learning about permaculture and applying it in their lives and communities. Permaculture practitioners are greatly needed in the world today because they are directly solving global issues such as social inequity, soil infertility, climate change, water and food shortages.  

A Permaculture Design Certification (PDC) course is a wonderful way to train how to be a practitioner of permaculture. A PDC is designed for students to deepen their your learning and to gain practical skills. It is a 72-hour or longer training that provides an internationally recognized certificate.

Spencer teaches with students standing nearby observing in the sunlight

Summer 2023 garden at the Sivananda Yoga Farm.

Any PDC will offer a formalized educational opportunity and an internationally recognized certificate. Below are 10 reasons to take a PDC in general. After that, there are 5 things that set the PDC offered at the Yoga Farm apart from other courses.

1. It helps you become an effective designer to solve real-world problems

Permaculture Design Courses offer a simple yet effective model for design. They offer a structure and method to fall back on when designing to address the challenges of our time. For example, this video series shows how permaculture designers have addressed challenges such as water shortage.

2. It will change the way you see the world

PDC students learn how to read social systems and landscapes in ways that see challenges as opportunities. Students learn how to assess hydrology, landforms, climate, sun exposure and more, which will help them determine the parameters for effective sustainable design.

3. It will give you practical knowledge and experience

A permaculture design certification is like a kickstart on the permaculture path. It goes deep into permaculture design methods. It is also a great life experience and can also serve as a good resume builder.

A PDC student observes a flower in our permaculture garden.

A PDC student observes a flower in the Yoga Farm’s permaculture garden.

4. It can enrich your career path

There are so many aspects of permaculture that can be persued. The permaculture career path is like a tree,  with each branch presenting opportunities for income and right livelihood. 

Many PDC graduates end up working in environmental restoration, community projects, organic farms or homesteads. People who already have jobs can benefit from applying their permaculture knowledge to increase efficiency and find more meaning in their work.

5. Provides a constructive outlet for creative passions

Permaculture designs are not only functional; they are beautiful. Whether you are designing a community garden or sustainable home, there is lots of room for creativity and aesthetics in any permaculture design.

6. It teaches you how to foster positive relationships with communities and the natural world

As Jono Neiger sums up in his book The Permaculture Promise, “Permaculture is about rebuilding much needed relationships with the people, land and systems that support us.” Permaculture is all about positive relationship. A PDC teaches you how to live in positive interactions with nature and fellow humans in your life.

Permaculture is about rebuilding much needed relationships with the people, land and systems that support us.”

– Jono Neiger

7. You will meet people who have similar interests

Most students who end up taking a PDC are there because they are interested in and passionate about similar interests such as organic gardening, community resilience, nature connectedness, environmental activism, alternative economies, experiential education… the list goes on. Taking a PDC is a great way to meet like-minded individuals and build your network of changemakers.

Students have fun in the permaculture garden at the Yoga Farm.
Students have fun in the permaculture garden at the Yoga Farm.

8. It is fun

Permaculture Design Courses are packed full of engaging learning activities and interactions that are both stimulating and nourishing to our sense of awe and wonder.

9. It is inspiring

In the course content you learn a lot about people and projects that are doing really, really inspiring work. Many students leave PDCs feeling motivated with a renewed sense of purpose in life.

10. The world needs more permaculture designers!

A PDC shows you ways to leave the earth better than you found it, and that is something that the world really needs right now.

A permaculture designer tends to the garden.
A permaculture designer tends to the garden.

5 Reasons to Take the Yoga Farm PDC

Permaculture design courses at the Sivananda Ashram Yoga Farm in the beautiful countryside of Grass Valley, California are life-changing. Our PDC offers a synthensis between Yoga life and Permaculture that is truly powerful and inspiring.

1. Classical yoga from an ancient lineage

There are many PDCs that offer Yoga classes as part of their program, but there are few that offer full immersion in Yoga life and classical Yoga teachings. Students in our PDCs get to partake in daily Hatha Yoga classes, meditation, kirtan chanting, and spiritual lectures in the peaceful Ashram environment.

Yoga helps you build stress resilience and inner peace, which leads to outer peace. Yoga and Permaculture work in harmony to support us in the journey towards inner and outer resilience.

Yoga classes are an integral part of the permaculture design course.
Daily Yoga Classes are an integral part of our Permaculture Design Course.

Two delicious, organic, vegetarian meals are served daily. The Ashram diet is Sattvic, or pure, which means that the food is prepared using only high-quality ingredients meant to awaken and calm the body and mind.

The meals are also prepared using Ayurvedic herbs and spices. Ayurveda is a sister science of Yoga which addresses healthy living, diet and herbal medicine. Vegan and gluten free options are also offered, along with an Ayurvedic tea served at each meal for digestion and a happy belly 🙂

3. Hands-on experience

Not all PDCs offer hands-on experience. At the Yoga Farm, PDC students get to learn outdoors in nature. The instructors teach outside on our grounds which include a garden, orchards and lavender fields.

4. Taught by experienced practitioners

Lydia Neilsen and Spencer Nielsen teach the Permaculture Design Course at the Sivananda Ashram Yoga Farm. They are both seasoned teachers and practitioners at the Regenerative Design Institute, a renowned permaculture education center in California. Lydia has over 20 years and Spencer has over 10 years of experience in permaculture design.

5. Pristine natural environment and close by attractions

The Sivananda Ashram Yoga Farm is situated in a Blue Oak Woodland, which is a beautiful ecosystem in the rolling foothills of the Sierra Nevada mountain range. Nearby to the Ashram are a multitude of popular hiking and swimming spots, such as the Yuba River and Beale Falls (A.K.A. Fairy Falls). The Yoga Farm is only one hour from the California capital of Sacramento and just two hours from the majestic Lake Tahoe.

Permaculture education is a profound life-changing endeavor that offers a plethora of opportunities for service of Mother Earth and all of her creatures. Yoga supports us in bettering ourselves and serving the world in positive ways.

Together, Yoga and Permaculture are both transformative practices which are utilized for benefit of all beings. We hope you will soon experience that transformation for yourself.

Whether you choose to take a PDC at the Yoga Farm or with another institution, we hope you will deepen your permaculture learning journey. 

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An Interview with Permaculture Teacher Spencer Nielsen

An Interview with Permaculture Teacher Spencer Nielsen

An Interview With Spencer Nielsen, Teacher of the Permaculture Design Certification Course

 
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It was a brisk spring morning during an Ayurvedic Agroforestry course taught by Spencer Nielsen at the Sivananda Yoga Farm. A dozen or so students huddled around the greenhouse, which bolstered beds full of large chard and kale greens.

Spencer had a station set up with a variety of native and medicinal herb seeds sprawled on a table. Next to the table rested a wheelbarrow full of a dark, rich looking compost. Spencer explained to the students that “In the biodynamic tradition, essentially what they use to start seeds is plant-based compost. They mix in various materials such as soil, vermiculite, and popped mica, which adds a little bit of minerals and retains moisture. They also add waste products such used coconut husks to add organic matter.”

Spencer teaches with students standing nearby observing in the sunlight
Spencer teaching at the Yoga Farm during an Ayurvedic Agroforestry Retreat.

Spencer was very knowledgeable on the subject, and guided the class in preparing a nutrient rich preparation for medicinal and native herb starts. The students continued to mix compost and prepare several seeds for planting, such as Holy Basil, Calendula, and California Poppy. The sprouted seeds eventually that ended up growing in the greenhouse and some were transplanted into the fruit and nut orchards.

Permaculture Design Course

After the course we had a chance to catch up with Spencer to ask about the upcoming Permaculture Design Certification (PDC) course.  If you haven’t heard of a PDC before, it’s a comprehensive 72-hour certification that trains one to be an ecological landscaper.

Like a Yoga Teacher Training, a PDC can be very life transforming. It completely changes the way one observes and interacts with the world, such as how to design one’s life based on patterns in nature. It teaches the student practical skills and knowledge on how to regenerate the earth, build community, and grow food. It is a great opportunity for someone who wants to make a difference in the world in the realms of sustainability or social and environmental action.

Check out a video we made from segments of our brief interview with Spencer below, as well as a full transcribed version underneath. Om Namah Sivaya!

Can you tell us more about the PDC you are teaching?

In 2019 we’re going to be teacher a two-week permaculture design course. One week will be in April and the second week will be in June. Being offered here at the Sivananda Yoga Farm will be a really rare opportunity to dive deep into classical Yoga and permaculture at the same time. There’s a lot of permaculture courses that will share yoga practice, but in this course we will have the opportunity to participate in a full yogic lifestyle. The regular rhythm at the Ashram includes Satsang, Yoga practice, and yogic foods. Between those, we will be mixing in permaculture content in the classroom and on the farm. The farm includes orchards, organic vegetable garden, and some other pieces that have existed at the Yoga farm for quite some time, such as a greenhouse system and a photovoltaic system (solar panels).

Being offered here at the Sivananda Yoga Farm will be a really rare opportunity to dive deep into classical Yoga and permaculture at the same time.

What makes the Permaculture Design Course at the Yoga Farm special or unique?

Because of the context at the Yoga Farm, as well as my own passions, we will be integrating teachings of Yoga and Ayurveda into the course content. We will explore various systems through elemental perspectives of Ayurveda: Earth, Water, Fire, Air and Ether. We will look at how the teachings of Ayurveda fit in to permaculture, and how they are appropriate to individuals’ constitutions as well as landscapes. We will also touch on Yoga philosophy as well as sister sciences of Yoga such as Vastu (which is like a Vedic version of Feng Shui) and Jyotish (Vedic Astrology) in order to deepen a whole systems perspective.

A teacher helps a student in a yoga class

Daily Yoga Classes are an integral part of our Permaculture Design Course.

Can you tell us about the teachers of the course?

The teachers will be myself (Spencer Nielsen) and Lydia Neilsen. We’ve been teaching and working together for about a decade. We both teach permaculture design courses at the Regenerative Design Institute in Bolinas, California. We both do design work for clients, we both work with edible, medicinal and habitat plants a lot. We are really excited to bring this course forward to you.

Can you tell us more about the daily schedule during the course?

The design course content will take up a large chunk of the day. Every morning and evening there is Satsang, which includes meditation, chanting and spiritual teachings or lecture. There is also a daily 2-hour Classical Yoga class, including Pranayama or breathing exercises. There will be two organic vegetarian meals included each day.

For more information, please visit our Permaculture Design Certification (PDC) course page. We hope to welcome you to the Sivananda Yoga Farm soon, where you can learn how to build inner and outer resilience through Yoga and Permaculture.

Ananda Mayi’s Teriyaki Tofu Cakes

Ananda Mayi’s Teriyaki Tofu Cakes

Ananda Mayi’s Teriyaki Tofu Cakes   (Serves 4)
  • 1lbs. block extra-firm Tofu, coarsely crumbled
  • 1 cup of cooked Quinoa
  • 1/2 cup cooked Oats
  • 1/2 cup Carrot, finely chopped
  • 2 Tbsp ground Flax and/or Chia seeds
  • 2 Tbsp Sunflower Oil
  • Salt and Black Pepper, to taste
Preheat oven to 400 degrees Fahrenheit.
Place all ingredients in a large bowl and thoroughly combine and mix together.
Shape a 1/4 cup of mixture into a ball and then slightly press into a flat patty about 1 inch thick. Place on a lightly oiled baking sheet and bake 10-15 min. Serve with teriyaki sauce.
Teriyaki sauce
  • 4 Tbsp Soy Sauce, such as Tamari, or Bragg’s Liquid Aminos
  • 2 Tbsp Sucanat (raw sugar)
  • 1 Tbsp Arrowroot or Cornstarch dissolved in 3 Tbsp of cold water
Place soy sauce and sucanat (or unrefined sugar equivalent) in a saucepan over medium heat and stir until sugar dissolves, then add starch mixture and stir over heat until slightly thickened.
Swami Vishnudevananda Asana Gallery

Swami Vishnudevananda Asana Gallery

Swami Vishnudevananda Asana Photos

Swami Vishnudevananda was made the Hatha Yoga Professor at the age of 18 upon arriving at the Sivananda Ashram in Rishikesh, India.

He said that all of his past life knowledge of hatha yoga came back to him when Swami Sivananda initiated him and touched his third eye.

Enjoy these Swami Vishnudevananda asana photos of Swamiji as a young man in India performing asanas basic, intermediate, and advanced.

Savasana – Corpse Pose

Swami Vishnu lying in Corpse Pose

 

 

Sun Salutations

 

Headstand Cycle

Headstand, legs apart, Lotus Headstand, Scorpion

 

Shoulderstand Cycle

Shoulderstand variations, Plough, Knees to Ears, Wheel, One leg up, Lotus Fish

 

Sitting Forward Bend Cycle

Legs apart, one leg lotus, butterfly, ankle twist, frog’s pose, shooting bow, foot behind the head

 

Backbending Cycle

Cobra, King Cobra, Full Locust, Full Bow, Diamond, Pigeon

 

Twisting and Sitting Postures

Half spinal twist, Full spinal twist, Vajrasana, Padmasana

 

Balancing Postures

Crow, Side Crow, Peacock, Handstand, Tiptoe, Cock pose, One knee one foot pose

 

Standing Postures

Standing forward bend, Triangle, Twisting triangle, Head to foot pose, Nataraj Dancer pose

 

Savasana – Corpse Pose