Thursday, September 29, 2011

The Challenges of Mixing a New Eating Style With Those Who Don't Understand Why We Do It

I cannot say how many times I have been asked why we changed our diet so much recently.  I have fielded the usual, "But what is left to eat?" and, "How do you get calcium without milk?" and my favorite, "Why don't you like meat and milk now?"  Ah, how simple life must seem from the other side of this conversation.

The reasons why I, personally, have chosen to change my own diet are:


  1. I felt called to make major changes through prayer.  I just feel like God is encouraging me to treat my body more like the temple it was when he blessed me with it.
  2. I was sick and tired of being sick and tired all the time.
  3. I want to be alive and capable of participating in the lives of my four daughters and each and every grandchild they give to me and my husband some day.  This reason makes me cry every time at the thought of my daughters not having me at their weddings or when their babies are born or when they just need a hug only a mom can give.  I have friends who have lost moms, and it scares me that it could happen to my girls if I do not get healthier.
  4. Over the past ten years or so, I have felt like I was living in a fat suit; I was the same person on the inside, for the most part, and the outside looked completely foreign to me.
  5. I met a truly wonderful woman and friend that taught me how to exercise my body to benefit my health, and I knew that I was not following through completely by also exercising my will power and choice to eat better.
  6. Research.  Start reading and watching for yourself, and you will want to make changes, too.  Start with Food, Inc., The Engine 2 Diet, and Fat, Sick, and Nearly Dead.  Netflix is teeming with food documentaries that will make you want to stand up for food regulations that make sense and supporting organic farms.
  7. I have always done my best to support my local economy by choosing to shop in stores that are locally owned and operated.  While I do still shop at Trader Joes and Whole Foods, I also shop at farmers markets and actual farms.  The meat we do buy is all locally-raised, grass-fed, and free of antibiotics and hormones.  Thanks, Whole Foods, for educating us about our choices in this department.
  8. When I was in college, I paid a lot more attention to my food, and it showed.  I made loads of food from scratch, used whole wheat flower, and drank tons of water.  I felt better then, and I am feeling that well and even better now.
  9. Dairy makes me physically ill.  Why would I continue to ingest something that gives me terrible stomach cramps and severe constipation?  That sounds like torture to me.
  10. I have not given up meat completely, but I have cut way back on it.  We have meat in our meals, on average, twice per week now.

As for getting enough nutrients, fruits and vegetables are filled with them.  Just a quick perusal through The Engine 2 Diet will show one the lengthy list of vitamins and minerals found in vegetables and fruits.  One of the best things any person can eat is kale.  We love it!!  Kale is packed with protein, fiber, potassium, calcium, vitamins galore, and even more.

While my mom may still call a lot of what we eat "Rabbit food," it does not change our attitude.  We, as a family, are committed to eating healthier, remaining active, and choosing Earth-conscious products and services in our home.  While I realize that not everyone will understand, at first, why we eat the way we do, I hope that they will take the time to ask me why and really listen to the answer before calling us crazy or "Tree-hugging hippies," or something else.  We are just doing what we think is best for our family and its food difficulties.

Friday, September 23, 2011

Tightening the Budget

Living in an apartment with my husband, four children, and fat, orange tabby cat was never a possibility that crossed my mind, but that is exactly what we are doing right now.  It is far from ideal, and we are planning to move in December.  The hard part: we have to tighten our budget even further.

Now, I find myself sorting through vegan cookbooks and canning cookbooks, looking for ways to save us more in the next few months by planning ahead now.  So far, I have realized the following:


  • Buy long-grain, brown rice in bulk at the organic market
  • Buy all our beans in the bulk section at Whole Foods or the organic market
  • Look for great farmer's markets and buy fruits and veggies in bulk to can
  • Make homemade vegetable stock
  • Take one day per week to bake and store beans and rice, together or seperately
  • Bake bread from scratch (in an oven or a bread machine)


I know there have to be more things to help tighten an already tight budget when eating organic and all-natural foods, so I am on a quest.  We have a small enough budget shortfall to overcome by mid-November, and I plan to do everything I can to see that we make it.

Monday, September 12, 2011

100% Organic Whole Wheat, Dairy-Free Bread

My husband bought me a beautiful Cuisanart bread machine early this year for making gluten-free bread.  While I am still on the hunt for a perfect GF bread recipe, I did come across one that is pretty easy.  It still leaves a lot to be desired in the actual mixing and heaviness departments, but it's working for now.  That process made me consider baking bread for the entire family, and so I began looking for great 100% whole wheat bread machine recipes.

Thanks to a dear friend, I had a starting point.  The recipe she gave me was wonderful, but I have been tweaking it a bit to fit into my non-dairy life.  So, here is my take on the perfect 100% whole wheat, dairy-free bread:



1½ c. + 2 T warm water
2 T extra virgin olive oil (EVOO)
4½ c. 100% organic, unbromated whole wheat flour
2 t sea salt
⅓ c. packed organic brown cane sugar
1½ T dry non-dairy milk alternative
2 t organic vital wheat gluten
2¼ t organic active dry yeast

Place the warm water and EVOO in the bread pan with the paddle attached.
In a medium mixing bowl, combine the flour, sea salt, brown cane sugar, non-dairy milk alternative, and the vital wheat gluten.  Use a wire whisk to break up the brown sugar and ensure proper mixing of all ingredients.
Carefully pour the dry ingredients into the bread pan, and make a well in the center.  Place the yeast in the well, and set your bread machine to the 2-lb. Whole Wheat setting.  Choose your crust lightness level, and decide if you would like to add mix-ins into your bread.  I like to add 1 t roasted, ground flax seed and a few squirts of organic clover honey.  Experiment and see what you like in yours.

Note: for those not sensitive to milk, cut the flour to 4¼ cups and use 3 T of dry milk.  The rest remains the same.  

Wednesday, September 7, 2011

A Beginning of Sorts

My food journey began years ago, after giving birth to my third daughter.  I had watched the scale steadily increase as I moved to another state far from home, dipped my feet into graduate school in my secondary field, got married, and started having children.  What a journey it has been, and, boy, what I have learned along the way.

In the beginning, I read a lot about whole grains and how much better they were for us than our processed, white-flour-and-chemicals starches.  So, I switched our family of four over to whole grain everything.  That was when it became abundantly clear that my husband was having some sort of a reaction to something in our diet.  After some painful skin outbreaks and severe gastric issues, a simple blood test revealed that he had Celiac Disease.

My reaction was, "What the heck is that?"  When the doctor explained that it was an intolerance to wheat gluten that included wheat, oats, barely, and rye (mostly due to wheat contamination in the case of the three latter grains), I thought she was kidding.  One can actually be allergic to wheat?  How on earth would we be able to function without gluten?  After investing in a few well-reviewed books and a generous gift of several different kinds of flour from one of my students (I'm a private music lesson teacher), we began to understand just how different things were going to be in our house.

Over the course of the next five years or so, we began to implement healthier eating habits: more fresh vegetables, more fresh fruit, cooking from scratch even more so than before, sticking to only whole grains, limiting sweets and other junk foods.  While shopping for gluten-free (GF) foods and flours at our local co-op, I decided to grab some organic fruits for my girls' lunches one day, and that was one of the best decisions I have made, to date.  Our ride toward an organic, earth-friendly family was gaining steam!

After the birth of my fourth daughter, three years ago, I was determined to get my body and lifestyle healthier.  That's when I met one of the most amazing and influential women I have ever had the pleasure of knowing.  Her name is Val, and she was my personal trainer for 1.5 years at my gym in Minnesota.  Thanks to her tutelage, I gained some muscle tone and lost a lot of inches.  Something was still missing, though, as I was only able to lose twenty pounds in that 1.5-year period.  I was frustrated, but I was not going to let it stop me.  In fact, I worked out that much more; yet, my weight stayed the same.

"What gives?" I thought.

That was when Val began really asking about my diet.  She told me that weight loss is more like 75% diet and 25% activity/exercise.  I began paying more attention to my diet, counted calories, cut out diet soda and candy, and tried to limit eating out.  That seemed to help a bit, but it just was not enough to kick-start my weight loss again.  Enter the ever-present Murphy: my husband lost his job, got a new one, and we were going to move back to the East Coast.  While I was excited, I was also steeling myself for the coming months of living as a single parent to four young girls without much of a support network, far away from my family.

The stress of our situation and the reality of doing absolutely everything for myself, the girls, the cat, and the house we had on the market hit me in unexpected ways on a weekly basis.  I was not able to go to the gym the entire summer last year, because I just could not manage to get enough sleep, dress and feed all the girls, eat a healthy breakfast, clean the whole house until it was showing-ready, and get to the gym before the kids room closed.  Once our showings slowed and school was back in session, I was back in the gym as often as possible.  I am still quite proud of the fact that I managed to lose another ten pounds while under a tremendous amount of pressure.

After I coordinated with parents of students, friends, and my husband's family, I was able to schedule a moving date for just before Christmas in 2010.  Once the girls, the cat, and I arrived and settled into our new home in Mayland, I think the full brunt of my year alone finally sank into my body and mind.  I was exhausted and had nearly-constant migraines for the first three months of living here.  The only other time I can remember feeling so awful was just after giving birth to my youngest daughter, thanks to the sciatica I suffered with both of my last pregnancies combined with migraines with the last pregnancy.  I knew my emotions and pain were driving me to eat more, but I did not have the fortitude to fight it at that time.

Desperate to be rid of my head pain, I scheduled an appointment with a family practitioner.  I could barely function when I met my new doctor, and she quickly jumped to the task of getting me pain-free.  While I was frustrated that she was not looking for the source of my pain, at that time, I was so very grateful to be pain-free again.  At this point, I had gone back up fifteen pounds in the three months since we moved.  To say that I was down would be a massive understatement; I was devastated.  All that work down the drain in three short months.  Sigh.

Once the devastation passed, I got angry at myself for allowing the weight gain to happen again, and I began to research a diet (in the eat-it-every-day-of-your-life way and not the I-just-want-a-quick-fix-for-now way) rich in earth-friendly, easy-to-recognize, available ingredients.  I was done with being fat and sick, and I wanted to make some changes for the health and well-being of my entire family.  That was when I just stopped shopping at local grocery stores completely.  My stores of choice had become Trader Joe's and Moms Organic Market.  After my dear friend Kelly turned me onto Whole Foods, being an organic mom herself, we had even more options.  Without her help and guidance, I would have been a bit lost.  Thanks, Kelly!

In the beginning, I blew our weekly budget for groceries every week, but as I replaced the old, processed food with new, organic, all-natural food, our budget returned to normal.  We have been eating all-natural and organic for several months now, and I am finally getting the hang of keeping our grocery spending in line with our targeted budget amount.  I still blow it on occasion but not by much.

My family and I have seen such wonderful changes from changing our diet that we continue to seek out new opportunities to improve our health even more.  The more research I do, the more I am convinced that becoming a vegetarian or vegan is the healthiest choice.  I just do not know if I can ever completely give up meat. Dairy was easy, because I have been getting increasingly lactose-intolerant over the past five years.  One of the most delightful surprises in my new diet came from organic soy milk and almond milk.  For years, I thought the taste of  Silk was the norm.  Then, I met the Whole Foods organic soy milk.  Wow, what a difference!  Oh, the love I have gained for organic vanilla almond milk, too.  I have to ration myself to one glass per day, or I would gladly down the entire half-gallon carton in one day.

As of today, I have lost twenty pounds since late June.  Not too shabby, I would say.  In addition, my doctor was able to cut out my migraine medicine and prescribe an asthma preventative.  Now that I am breathing well, eating well, and exercising three to five days per week, I am feeling fantastic!  I am entirely too excited for the months to come and the additional changes we will see in our whole family.  I may even have a go at a vegan diet for a few weeks to see how it makes me feel. We have already committed to becoming more flexitarian, so I am hoping it will not be too difficult to finish the transition to completely meat-free.