Wednesday, December 29, 2010

Still Eating and Still Here!

Hello Whole Foods Blogging Friends! Sorry I haven't updated my blog in quite sometime.... Life has been busy! We are still eating in and eating good and loving it.... though I have to admit, it's starting to strain my budget a little. Christmas food shopping was a killer - our grocery budget was over $500 this last weeks, but everything was delicious!
Which brings me to a few things... I want to continue to feed our family awesome whole foods, but I need to start cutting a few financial corners. I would like to start the New Year with a better budget and more money to save for other things (retirement, vacations, etc...). So, I am in the process of finding new ways to save on our groceries, health and beauty items, pet foods, household cleaning items, etc.... I have done this before a couple of years ago when I had a huge stockpile! A friend came to visit me and ask me if I was a Mormon based on my stockpile I had amassed. We actually just finished off a few items from that stockpile that I set up more than three years ago.
So, I am hoping that I can find some balance with our budget,eating and living to be honest. So, continue with me whenever you get the chance and I will see where it takes us! Until next time! Oh and here is a picture of my homecooked (from raw with soaking, boiling and baking) Country Ham that I fixed for 25 to enjoy! I used a wonderful recipe from when we lived in England in 2004 - worth the two days of cooking and prep!

Wednesday, October 20, 2010

On a Plateau of sorts....

Yes, even eating whole foods, I find myself on a plateau of sorts. Sigh.... I think sometimes I get so busy with other daily chores, that I stop making time to find new recipes and make new and interesting meals. As soon as I logged into my blog - I felt sooo much better! Just scrolling through and looking at the pictures renewing my motivation and inspired me a little!
We have been eating well and eating in - though one night a couple of weeks ago, we ate out and boy was it expensive and not sooo filling! We chose the Golden Rule for some BBQ that I don't quite have the skills to make. It was good - but none of family really enjoyed it and walked away with that wonderfully satisfied feeling. Instead, we kind of felt grossed out by the fried stuff (onion rings and fries) and kind of let down by the salads and buffalo wings... The BBQ was great - but not as tasty as the wonderful meat I have in my freezer - just saying ;)
Some of you may wonder what I am feeding Thalia. Sometimes I mash up whatever we are eating and offer it to her - but other times I serve her organic pre-made baby food. I go by the same rule as I do our food - no preservatives, additives, or things we can't pronounce. So - she gets the chunkier vegetables, fruits and meats. She is still nursing, so she gets a belly full of Momma's milk first thing before the day even starts - LOL! If nothing else, by putting whole, natural foods on our table - I am instilling good eating habits for them and that is priceless!! Just ask my salad eating 4 year old that asked for a salad specifically the other night with dinner! And you know what - I don't miss the junk toys that come with the Happy (Hell) Meals! Until next time...

Thursday, September 23, 2010

Straight From The Source!!


Greeting my readers and followers! Sorry I have yet again been MIA from even weekly updates :( I have been busy, but somewhat productive!
Today, I went out to the Amish Country Pantry to get some more milk, butter, cheese and eggs. I got the first three items on my list, but they were out of eggs. So I asked if there was somewhere I could get them locally from a farm. The sweet Amish girl (young woman) picked up her land-line phone and called someone else to inquire about eggs for me. Well, it turned out that the farm had some available and I could pick them shortly! YAY for farm fresh eggs! So, I drove the mile down the road and picked them up from the farm. A sweet Mennonite girl hopped out of the tractor after I pulled up and had 2 dozen in hand for me - straight from the source! They weren't still warm - but still, I was able to buy them straight from the farm for $2 a dozen - a bargain at double the price in my opinion. And yes she accepted this silly woman's check for $4 - LOL!
I really wanted to take some pictures of their farm, but I didn't have my camera on me and I am sure I would look like an absolute city girl/tourist and a moron.... But they had a nice farm to include an entire pen of deer that they raise for breeding purposes and to repopulate parks as needed (I am sure this is a business venture). But she did stress to me that they did not raise those for fresh venison. I was a country girl that loved to hunt deer growing up, but I guess it would be like eating a pet, she even said so....
Anyway - yay for farm fresh eggs - not factory eggs laid by hens that don't even have a square foot of space :( Plus they are great tasting eggs and there is nothing like eating delicious, local, whole foods!
Until next time!

Wednesday, September 8, 2010

Milk and Cookies Anyone??


First - greetings! I am sorry it has taken me sooo long to get a new post written :( I have had a lot going on and it's been all I can do to get the cooking done and meet my other obligations. So I have decide to update one saved sentence at time - LOL!
Sweets have been one of my down falls for most of my life - LOL! It's not until I hit my 30's did the my sweet tooth start to catch up with me. You have heard me rail against high fructose corn syrup and this is not another rant against it, though I did see another MANIPULATIVE tv ad the other day......
Most everyone has made cookies before - it's a right of passage in the kitchen whether you are a child, baker, Mom, Dad, etc... But how about really good all natural cookies?? Homemade is better than store bought in terms of knowing what is going in your cookies. But what about knowing what is going into the ingredients that is going into your cookies?? LOL - if you don't care, don't bother to read further, it's no big deal. But I do have a good recipe at the end ;)
Instead of white granulated (over processed) sugar, I use either raw sugar (the coarse variety) or evaporated cane juice (organic cane sugar). ECJ had us going one time when we were reading a recipe! We couldn't figure out what exotic ingredient it was - LOL! It was sugar cane, but not the white processed stuff! I use also organic brown sugar, whole wheat flour, grass fed chicken eggs, real grass fed cow butter instead of margarine, organic chocolate chips, organic rolled oats and coconut oil instead of shortening. The end result - a delicious chocolate chip oatmeal cookie that is good for you! Well, good for you in terms of not using preprocessed or artificial and good for your sweet tooth soul! These are awesome cookies and paired with a glass of cold fresh low pasteurized, non homogenized milk and you have a delicious "traditional" (for the last century or so) snack! It's not full of vegetables kind of good for you - but it's an enjoyable good for that allows you to feel good about what you and your family are eating. Below is the recipe:

1/2 cup of organic evaporated cane juice
1/2 cup of organic brown sugar
1/4 cup of sweet cream butter
1/4 of coconut oil (a little more if you find your mix is too dry)
1/2 teaspoon of baking soda
1/2 teaspoon ground cinnamon
1/2 teaspoon of vanilla
1/4 teaspoon salt
1 egg
1 1/2 cup of natural rolled oats
1 cup of whole wheat flour
1 cup of organic chocolate chips or raisins

Heat oven to 375, drop cookies 2 inches apart on an ungreased cookie sheet. Bake for 10-13 minutes or until done. You can bake longer for crisper cookies or less for chewy.

Enjoy!

Tuesday, August 31, 2010

I promise to update my blog!

I have been a little busy with a few projects (one of them pictured below)! But rest assured, we are still eating whole foods, cooking at home and I am still taking notes and pictures! So look for an update soon!

Sunday, August 22, 2010

I am Baaaaaaacccckkkk!


Hello All! I am back after a week long trip that took me to Idaho to visit my lovely Mother in Law and then on to Seattle, WA to visit my Sister in Law and her husband and boys. It was a great trip and I am pleased to report that I only ate out 4 (four) times!! That was once in the airport between Denver and Boise, twice in Boise and once in Seattle. Not tooo bad!
I visited an awesome Co-Op in Boise! http://www.boisecoop.com/ I loved it! If we had a super nice Co-Op like that close to us - it would be on! Yes, we do have Whole Foods in Nashville, but there is so much to be said about clever Co-Op. In Seattle - well you couldn't swing a cat without hitting a natural foods, whole foods, co-op or organic store! It was awesome! I shopped at a PCC Natural Market and it was a great experience too! http://www.pccnaturalmarkets.com/ The folks at these stores are super nice and so are the customers!
I have been reading more in Nina Planck's Book - Real Food http://www.ninaplanck.com/books.html I am learning so much about why margarine is so bad (trans fat) and why real fats (beef, coconut, olive oil) are so good for you! I am truly enjoying our Whole Foods Journey thus far! Hopefully this week, I can get back into the kitchen and try some new recipes and get back to my yogurt and bread making. I did cook for my MIL and SIL this past week (which seemed to work for everyone) and I felt so much better than what I do when I normally travel! Hooray for home cooking!!

Thursday, August 12, 2010

Local Meat Rocks!!




Have you ever taken a loooonnnngggg road trip and felt awful at the end? Imagine how much traveling your food does just to make it to your dinner table? How many folks have handle your chicken, vegetables, steaks, or fruits? Granted most of us wash our meats and veggies before we eat them - but they likely are kind of tired by the time they end up on fork!
I am not going to go into the horrors of chicken, beef or pork factory farms - you can look that up yourself. It really depends on who you want to believe and many folks end up vegetarians once they start really researching everything. But that's not my point - being a vegetarian or vegan has it's own issues and I am not a subject matter expert. I do know that meat is good for you though - it has tons of amino acids, fatty acids, and the good vitamins that our bodies and brains need. However, I really don't want to eat meat that has not been treated well, fed animal by products, hormones, antibiotics, and trucked thousands of miles. So, I have started buying my meat, eggs, milks, butter and chicken locally! It is more expensive? Yes, but so is eating out!
I purchased some sirloins from a vendor at the Clarksville Farmers Market one Saturday and they were awesome! More than what I would pay at the grocery store, but much better cooked on our grill! We loved Persimmon Creek Farms beef sooo much, that we ordered the family pack (pic above is of two NY strips from family pack) and have placed a deposit for a 1/4 of a steer cut in bulk! This should be enough beef to holds us for a year! Oh and did I mention that it was delicious?? Check them out at http://www.persimmoncreekfarms.com/

Saturday, August 7, 2010

Red Fish, Blue Fish, Good Fish!




Are you a fish eater?? I never was growing up unless you want to count the square fish I ate in the cafeteria in elementary school, but even then I avoided it like the plague! But what if my parents would have fed this really picky eater wholesome, delicious fish - primarily salmon? Would my eyes be better? Would I be smarter? Would I have better overall health?
Research suggest the consumption of salmon, which contains omega-3 fatty acids, is an important part of our diet that we have strayed from in our evolution as homosapiens. So what are the benefits of omega-3's? It can decrease platelet aggregation, preventing excessive blood clotting. Reduce inflammation throughout your body. Lower the amount of lipids (fats such as "bad" cholesterol and triglycerides) circulating in the bloodstream. Reduce the risk of becoming obese and improve the body's ability to respond to insulin by stimulating the secretion of leptin, a hormone that helps regulate food intake, body weight and metabolism, and is expressed primarily by adipocytes (fat cells). So overall, omega-3's help reduce depression, help prevent heart disease, obesity, and type 2 diabetes!
So, why is this super food not flying onto our dinner tables and helping everyone's overall health? Because fish takes work! It's not cheap for a good piece of wild salmon (the kind that is best for us), it's not simple to cook (ie: the good stuff is not microwaved), and most Americans that do not eat fish are spoiled and picky. However, even I am learning to really love fish! I have purchased some frozen marinated salmon from Sam's Club before and while it's delicious, I am trying to lean towards whole un-preprocessed foods . So I purchased some salmon yesterday from the commissary that was caught from the wild, then I marinated it myself and pan grilled it. It was delicious! Matthew liked it and he is pretty picky himself about fish and fishy kind of dinners. Aidan loved it - she is a good eater and eats pretty much whatever I put on the table. And of course Thalia will benefit from it in so many ways! I think as apart of our whole foods lifestyle change, we are def going to be putting more fish into diets and other foods that are high in omega-3's. I sprinkle flax seed meal on our breakfast every morning and I do try to take a fish oil supplement - but it's also pretty cool to eat it at its source! It's a feel good brain food and I need all of that I can get!
So - give good delicious fish a try! It's how our ancestors grew such lovely, healthy, large functioning brains! Plus our brain is a large percent of fat and it needs good for you fats to continue to grow and work properly! So outsmart your body and enjoy some salmon!

Wednesday, August 4, 2010

Say CHEESE!!


Cheese is delicious!! I have had the benefit of living and visiting a few different countries in which cheese was an art form. The French know their cheese, as do the Italians, Germans, and Austrians just to name a few! Some of the best cheese I have tasted lately is not of commercial, industrial or foreign origin, but straight out of Kentucky!!
When I went up to JD Country Dairy in Russeville, KY at the first of the week, I purchased some cheese they had in their store. It was by Kenny's Farmhouse Cheeses and it's delicious! Even my sweet husband whose pallet is by far the pickiest, loves the Asiago. And yes we have had some of the best Asiago cheese in Asiago, Italy! It's not the exact same, but it's pretty darn good. (The fresh Asiago cheeses we had truly melted in your mouth and were divine!) We have also tried the aged white cheddar, garden herb Havarti, and aged Gouda.
One of the best things about Kenny's Farmhouse Cheeses is that it is made with fresh raw milk! From their site: "Because the milk is so fresh, pasteurizing is not necessary. The heat and the cheese-making process preserve naturally beneficial enzymes in the milk, aiding digestion of lactose and absorption of calcium. Just as important, raw milk cheese has a much richer depth of flavor. " http://www.kennysfarmhousecheese.com/
Why is cheese so good for you? It is full of calcium, proteins, vitamins, minerals and good fat (the kind that helps your cholesterol). Plus if you eat full fat cheese - real cheese not the stuff that is a single in a plastic envelope, it helps keep your appetite at bay. Plus, it also helps with bone health, dental health and hypertension! Just don't fall for that low fat or fat free cheese - it tends to lack the good stuff that helps you feel fuller and better. I know low fat and fat free is the "in thing", I have even fallen into it in the past as well. But sometimes you need to eat fat to lose fat - but that's a totally different post! Until next time....

Tuesday, August 3, 2010

We ate out today....


First off - "Happy World Breastfeeding Week" (insert bells and whistles here)!!! Take a moment to celebrate the most perfect and nutritionally complete baby food in the world! It comes in pre-measured, pre-warmed, pre-sterilized form with lots of great antibodies, amino acids, vitamins, Love and much more!
We were in Nashville today during lunch, so we decided to eat out. Sometimes it's just not feasible to take an entire meal on the go. We are not anti-eating out, but we used to spend about $150 a week in addition to groceries! That's a significant and embarrassing amount of money to spend on fast, sub-standard and not so good food.So for us eating out once a week or every other week is a huge change!
We do try to to make good choices when we do eat out - we love Panera Bread! They make a lot of of their own breads and it's pretty tasty. I do try to stay away from their soups - granted they are delicious, but they come in a bag and I am sure filled with preservatives! So, for Matthew it was a Chicken Cesare and myself a Sierra Turkey. It was yummy and I love their chippies - potatoes, sea salt and sunflower oil - nice and simple.
We have decided to start buying our beef locally through Persimmon Creek Farms out of Cunningham. They were at the Clarksville Farmers Market one Saturday and I purchased two of their sirloins - they were delicious! I grilled them slowly and they came out soooo tender. Granted they are not the cheapest meats in the world - but at least they are not trucked 1,500 miles to our table. Plus they do not use hormones, antibiotics or animal by-products in feed. They are grass and hay feed and supplemented with natural grains. I placed a family order with them for delivery on Thursday - I can't wait to get some delicious local beef!
Later, when I finish the book I am reading (Real Food by Nina Planck http://www.ninaplanck.com/books.html), I will highlight a few of her points regarding industrial/factory meats to include beef, pork and poultry - it may change your mind on what is really in your cart! Until next time....

Monday, August 2, 2010

Success!!


YAY! My second batch of yogurt came out pretty decent - not quite as thick as I would like, but awesome on muesli! I think I will leave it in for the full 10 hours instead of 9 and see if that thickens it up a little. Plus I know that I can strain it to make it thicker - but all of this will take more practice, trial and error. The above picture is my homemade yogurt on muesli and frozen blueberries - yum!!
My first batch of sprouted grain bread came out great! I didn't start it until later in the evening, so my sweet husband generously stayed up to get it out of the maker for me (while playing the xBox - LOL!) He brought up a piece with butter to me in bed and it was better than I thought it would be!! It's a heavier bread, more for eating with something not so much for sandwich, but delicious. I got the recipe from another blog http://cookeatthink.blogspot.com and here it is below:
ingredients::
1 cup sprouted grains (I used a mix which included organic wheat, rye, barley, triticale, oats, spelt, kamut, quinoa, sesame, millet and amaranth)
about 1 c milk (see note in directions*)
1/2 c + 3 Tbsp water (tweaked)
3 c whole wheat flour (I used 2 cups wheat and 1 cup oatmeal flour)
2 Tbsp organic brown sugar (can also use honey, agave, etc.)
2 Tbsp softened butter
1 Tbsp softened coconut oil (you could also just use more butter)
2 tsp salt
2 1/2 tsp yeast>>optional...2Tbsp vital wheat gluten
directions::
Blend sprouted grains in a food processor until they are a course meal. Measure 1 cup of the ground grains into a large cup measure. Leaving the grains in the cup, pour fresh room temp milk over the grains to the 1 cup mark* (This compensates for liquid present in fresh sprouted grains). Place this mix into the bread machine pan. Measure the 1/2 cup + 3 Tbsp room temp water and add that into the bread machine also. Add the rest of the ingredients into the machine pan in the order your bread machine recommends. Select the wheat cycle and light crust.
It turned out great!! I have another batch in the machine right now and I added the gluten and substituted 1 cup of whole wheat flour with buckwheat flour. I am hoping it will turn out nicely again. Last night's loaf "grew and popped" as Matthew said, so it's a little flat in the middle - see below (it is a half eaten loaf though). I am curious to see how this second loaf will turn out.
I used my dehydrated sprouted grains with this loaf and added some water to rehydrate them. Sounds a little redundant, but this way my sprouts will keep longer. One of us had to get up at 2 am to shut the dehydrator off since we were cheap and didn't order one with a shut off timer. So, we are going to get an appliance timer through Amazon for it. Having a dehydrator nice - it makes awesome beef jerky as well!
So - the bread was a WIN, the yogurt PASSED, the sprouts were a GO. Now, if I just had a bigger kitchen with even more storage I could get all kinds of things started - LOL! Until next time .....

Sunday, August 1, 2010

First Time Yogurt Fail....


Well, I guess I didn't mix the starter grains correctly, because I am a first time yogurt making fail! No worries, when we went to the commissary today, I got some Greek Yogurt that I am using as a starter this time. If this one comes out good, I will share the recipe and process. I am not saying what I made was bad - but it wasn't as tasty as what I am used to.
You may be wondering what has brought me to start eating Whole/Real Foods at this stage in my life. I am tired of being physically tired and overweight because of my horrible diet. I am overweight - however, I gained a glorious amount of weight when I was pregnant with Thalia thinking I would drop all of it the day after I had her because I breastfeed. I think I lost 12 lbs and the rest has stayed on for a bit. I did go back to Weight Watchers for a couple of weeks - but I just can't really cope with the processed foods and low fat stuff that is recommended. But I knew our family was just not eating the best foods possible. So I started reading about whole/real foods eating. Thus far we feel so much better! We don't suffer from the indigestion as we did, we feel better, sleep better, have more energy and enjoy what we eat without feeling like crap afterward.
I am trying different things and I am enjoying the cooking! It does take a lot of time to cook/prepare three meals a day. I have a lovely sized kitchen, but right now, I wish I had a bigger one! The dishwasher is always running - that happens when you don't eat out and when you don't eat food from a box. Our grocery bill has doubled - but we are eating good foods and eating them all! I thought it would be boring eating the same stuff - but we don't really, we try to mix it up a bit and go from there. We feel more filled and satisfied and not always hungry and starving. There are so many benefits to changing what we eat and our lifestyle!
Well, I will add pics and more updates tomorrow. Right now I have a bread maker, yogurt maker and dehydrator going. I am dehydrating my sprouts (to make flour with later), making a loaf of sprouted grain bread, and giving my Greek yogurt another try. I have plenty of milk, so I can always try it again if this go is full of "fail sauce" again - LOL! Until next time!

Saturday, July 31, 2010

Homemade Yogurt!


We eat a lot of yogurt in our home and it is delicious! It's full of wonderful good for you fat and probiotics. Matthew and I love Greek Yogurt - Aidan prefers the Horizon Organic Yogurt in a Tube (not exactly completely whole foods but not filled with artificial stuff). So at about $1.25 for 6 ounces of yogurt times 2 a day for myself and sometimes 2 a day for Matthew, that adds up quickly! So, I decided to invest less than $30 on a yogurt maker from Amazon and get the starter grains for Greek and Bulgarian yogurt. Well - it's incubating and I am hoping it will turn out good! The above picture is my yogurt maker in action!
I am learning a lot more about the benefits of milk in one's diet. Even if you are lactose intolerant, you can benefit from yogurt and cheeses - especially homemade or made with raw milk products. Right now our family is drinking some delicious low pasteurized, non homogenized milk from JD Country Dairy out of KY. It's a little on the spendy side - about $9 for a gallon - but OMG!! It's sooooo worth it! Shake it up to mix the cream in and you have a wonderfully tasty delicious glass of milk. Even my non-milk drinking husband loves it! I stocked up yesterday at the Amish Country Pantry - 2 1/2 gallons so I could make plenty of yogurt after I get my serial culture up and running (when you make yogurt with a starter, you reserve a little of it to the side to produce other batches with - thus a serial culture). I will go more in depth about the great benefits of WHOLE, FULL FAT milk and even raw milk in a later post. I am reading about it now and it's pretty interesting. But one tidbit - a mammals milk - breast milk, bovine, goats milk is the most complete form of milk! It has all of the nutrients, ingredients, vitamins and everything one needs. Even though I breast feed for many reasons, I am learning what the HUGE benefits for a baby really are - brain development, gut development, antibodies, the list goes on!
Oh and a word about my sprouting grains - I have rinsed them and I am leaving them to sit for 24-36 while they sprout. Check out the pic of my new wide mouth sprout straining lids! So much easier than cheese cloth held on with an extra small hair scrunchy - LOL!

Friday, July 30, 2010

Wait With Me....

While my barley, rye and wheat berries sprout! What are these odd berries I am talking about?? Well, I am still learning about them myself, but the sprouts of certain grains, beans, nuts and seeds are very nutritious. Sprouting not only neutralizes phytic acid, which blocks the absorption of many important minerals, but it increases the vitamin content. Here is a great source of information about sprouts and other whole/real foods http://www.thenourishinggourmet.com/2008/03/nourishing-practices-soaking-grains-2.html
I have never in my life had sprouts.... it's sad, but very true. But all of that is about to change! I am going about sprouts in a kind of non-green'ish food way by making into something a carb-addict can appreciate - bread!! I am sprouting barley, rye and wheat berries to make into ground flour for homemade bread. I am still researching my recipes, but I still have a bit of time since it takes about two and half days to get the desired length on my sprouts (1/8-1/4 inch).
Thus far, I have rinsed my grain berries (the rye and wheat berries were purchased from Whole Foods and the barley from the Amish Country Pantry). Now, they are soaking for 24 hours. I will then drain and rinse them and then allow them to sit in the jar without watering for 24-36 hours. From there I will rinse and put some of them in the food processor for bread making and the other portion in the dehydrator to use for later flour grinding.
Until they are ready, here is a rather boring picture of my grains soaking.... It will be a few days until I can have something of edible substance to show - (hopefully) delicious bread! Also a shout out to my friend Annette for hooking me up with a bread machine - hopefully it can handle what I will be putting in it!
Want to know how to sprout your own grains, beans and seeds?? I used this link for the info http://www.ehow.com/how_4620081_sprouted-wheat-flour-diastatic-malt.html I also picked up some new sprouting lids today! I will feature them in my next picture of my sprouts - I know you can't wait!! Until next time....

Thursday, July 29, 2010

High Fructose Corn Syrup


Ingredients:

CONCORD GRAPE JUICE, HIGH FRUCTOSE CORN SYRUP, CORN SYRUP, FRUIT PECTIN, CITRIC ACID, SODIUM CITRATE.


Evidently there is a commercial on TV by the corn growers touting that HFCS is ok.... in moderation. Well what is HFCS and how is it made? This is from http://www.sweetsurprise.com/ (the HFCS website) How is high fructose corn syrup made? The corn wet milling industry makes high fructose corn syrup from corn starch using a series of unit processes that include steeping corn to soften the hard kernel; physical separation of the kernel into its separate components—starch, corn hull, protein and oil; breakdown of the starch to glucose; use of enzymes to invert glucose to fructose; removal of impurities; and blending of glucose and fructose to make HFCS-42 and HFCS-55. Wow - that's all I can say, WOW!
Gosh, it's really hard to have HFCS in moderation when it's in most processed foods. If you go down the grocery store isle you will be amazed to see what all HFCS is in - yogurt, cereal, soda, bread, salad dressing, ketchup and many more processed foods! I have been trying to cut HFCS out of our diets for a few weeks. Why have fake stuff that has been truly bastardized from it's original form instead of sugar? Granted I really need to watch my sugar intake, because I like to intake more sugar than exercise.... but that's for a different post - LOL!
But I reckon if HFCS is not in something, then Red 40 is lurking and waiting to pounce on our poor children and wind them up like a top! Read the labels - you will be surprised! We are trying to go for the "we will buy it if it has less than 5 ingredients in it" kind of route. It's hard and especially with children that want stuff on the go, but it's possible!
Here is a link to a good article from the Mayo Clinic: http://www.mayoclinic.com/health/high-fructose-corn-syrup/AN01588 It outlines the health concerns and issues with HFCS interesting stuff. And to close out and get off my soap box here is a clever YouTube video about the stuff: http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BjppyTWuZJ0&feature=related
Until next time....

Wednesday, July 28, 2010

Change is good....

Especially in our diets. This is our Whole Food Journey were our family is going from processed and fast to REAL Foods with good nutrition! I don't know a lot of the statistics behind fast or processed foods - but I do know that refined sugar, high fructose corn syrup, food high in starch and other additives are not good for me or my family.
What I am learning is there are good fats in all kinds of food that I have discounted as making me "fat". Whole milk is good for you! Raw Milk is even better! Let me caveat that with if your Raw Milk comes from a trusted source, cows without hormones or antibiotics and that are grass feed, then it is should be considered safe. At the present I am purchasing non-homogenized, low pasteurized milk from JD Country Dairy out of Russelville, KY. This can purchased at Whole Foods and a Amish Country Pantry. It's a little spendy - but delicious!
This process is NOT an overnight process - it's baby steps to better health and good eating. I have thrown out everything that has HFCS, dyes, or words I cannot pronounce in it. It is a slow process - but really we don't need Ketchup with HFCS when we can have Organic Ketchup. Aidan uses ketchup as a meal sometimes when I am not looking as it is! Chocolate syrup for chocolate milk - it either has HFCS or Red 40..... So, Matthew found a recipe and we make our own! That way I can have my Mocha's instead of spending $4 at the coffee shop for something that has HFCS or refined sugar in it and we can use it for chocolate milk too! Recipe: Cocoa Powder, evaporated cane juice (unrefined cane sugar), water and vanilla and a pinch of salt! It's too easy and it has 5 known ingredients in it!
The title of my blog is "Our Whole Food Journey", but the web URL is "What is in your cart". Do you ever catch yourself looking in other carts when you are our shopping?? Do see some carts piled high with junk, processed foods, refined sugars, and no fresh stuff? How do you feel when you see these carts? I am attaching a picture of my grocery shop two weeks before I started doing more research and writing this blog. I am going to try to start taking pictures of what I shop for. This is more for me to see how my shopping is evolving and the changes we are making. If you will note in the picture - I do have Nesquick Chocolate milk syrup - this has since been thrown out - as it had Red 40 in it. There are a few other junky type things in there, but I am hoping to make those changes soon. Again - going Real/Whole foods needs to be process for some and not an overnight event. Until next time....