Guest guest Posted October 19, 2004 Report Share Posted October 19, 2004 I was re-reading NAPD a few weeks ago, and I came across the section where Price talks about preparing one healthy meal a day for children suffering from tooth decay. He mentions that he gave them rolls made daily with freshly ground whole wheat flour. That always gave me the impression that the rolls were not sour leavened. Am I wrong? I find it frustrating that there is so little information on the food preparation techniques Price used. As I was thinking about the whether the bread was sour leavened or not I thought that maybe that wasn't so important since the children continued to consume highly refined foods for two-thirds of the day and still maintain their tooth decay in check with one nutritious meal. As I reflected on that I then began to think that maybe Enig has the right idea eating her Newman O's cookies, cocoa etc. every now and then. Sure eating a traditional diet the majority of the time is the best way to preserve your health, but we also need to enjoy food and stop thinking about it as a scientific experiment. I thought that the NY Times article that Heidi recently posted was excellent in that respect. Esentially the message was: the more you obsess over food (like we Americans do) the more it can hurt you. That's why I think I dislike the polemical tone of NT sometimes. It's sort of a downer. Sometimes I find myself going to my Biba Caggiano trattoria recipes cookbook because she (like most Italians) is so excited and upbeat about good food. Her positive attitude just pours across the pages and makes you just want to cook (and eat) up a storm. Isn't that what food is all about? A special moment to share with friends and family? It's hard to find the balance between trying to eat properly and becoming a fanatic over it. And the massive amounts of contradictory information don't help. Even the so-called " experts " don't agree. OK. I've got that off my chest now. Dawn Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 19, 2004 Report Share Posted October 19, 2004 " " also, i have to say that getting rid of television helps tremendously in every department, but especially in food advertising. (all advertising, a ctually!) " " Amen to that....I got rid of mine last July, and I haven't missed it in the least. I do live alone, so some music helps keep me company! I can't believe it when I watch it now, actually it's hard to watch anymore.....I've been watching the Cardinals play at a friends house and I can't hardly take all the stupid, mindless commercials. They must think we are all just stupid. And it's easy to be a food nazi when you live alone....but it definitely isolates you. I don't have a speck of anything " bad " in my home. When friends come over, they look in my fridge and my cabinets and appear confused, then they just shake their heads......I LOVE my food, I'd eat this way anyway, now ! Katja, you sound like a pretty neat person! I'm getting ready to start homesteading on my 27 acres in western Illinois in the spring, and I would LOVE to spend some time with you on your farm....I'm sure I could learn ALOT Any room for an " intern " ? :-) -- -- Steve Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 19, 2004 Report Share Posted October 19, 2004 " " as long as you don't smoke and aren't allergic to cats. " " DEFINITELY don't smoke (...are you serious?), and I LOVE cats....so I think we are a match ! , and I could sure use the education....I love to cook, hate televisions,love to garden, hate mean people, and love things slow and simple! How many acres do you have, and (approx.) where are you in Vermont?....I've kinda fallen for your state ever since I fell in love with a quirky little band from Burlington.....are you anywhere near the site of that big " festival " in Coventry? I've seen alot of pictures recently from some websites of the concertgoers....and Vermont looks like a BEAUTIFUL place, ALOT of rain in August made the festival grounds a MESS though.... With 70-80,000 people, it's hard to avoid! I understood that during the weekend, they had a vendor area of the local farmers' organic produce, and honey, etc., for sale......I was just curious! :-) Everyone who I heard from that went, thought Vermont was a beautiful place and enjoyed their time there! -- -- Steve Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 19, 2004 Report Share Posted October 19, 2004 uh...i didn't read all that, but i think this is what you mean: i'm a total food nazi. we make almost no compromises in our home. but i also teach nutritional classes, and in that case, there's a sliding scale. you have to meet the person where they are, and if that means just making things a little better, well, that's better than they were. there's a learning curve, and people have to move along it in a manner they can accept. however, there does come some point at which compromising is no longer acceptable. the christians have a great line about this - about that when i was a baby, i was fed only milk but now i'm an adult and -- well, you get the point. at some point you need to just recognize that you're an adult, and that oreos are NOT your right (or your child's right!) that said, we eat insanely richly. we eat such good food it's ridiculous. i think it's absurd to act all dour about what you're NOT eating when you ARE eating such wonderful delicious stuff. i really think that if you are feeling dour about what you're eating, you're either still addicted or you're doing it wrong. there's no reason not to have delicious tasty great things, no matter what you like. you like pie? i can make a healthy pie. i can even make you completely healthy brownies. of course they're not for every day, mostly cause the traditionally fermented chocolate is quite costly - though i like that it's costly. when people complain about that, i always tell them that it's appropriate for it to be costly! it's a SPECIAL thing! go back and read little house on the prairie (even by then their nutrition wasn't so great, but they make a good example) where it talks about saving up their sugar to make a cake for a special occasion. so that's fine, ya know? it doesn't mean you don't eat tremendous, delicious food every single day though. no-compromise doesn't mean no-fun, and should *not* be marketed that way! -katja At 07:10 AM 10/19/2004, you wrote: >I was re-reading NAPD a few weeks ago, and I came across the section >where Price talks about preparing one healthy meal a day for children >suffering from tooth decay. He mentions that he gave them rolls made >daily with freshly ground whole wheat flour. That always gave me the >impression that the rolls were not sour leavened. Am I wrong? I find >it frustrating that there is so little information on the food >preparation techniques Price used. As I was thinking about the >whether the bread was sour leavened or not I thought that maybe that >wasn't so important since the children continued to consume highly >refined foods for two-thirds of the day and still maintain their tooth >decay in check with one nutritious meal. As I reflected on that I >then began to think that maybe Enig has the right idea eating her >Newman O's cookies, cocoa etc. every now and then. Sure eating a >traditional diet the majority of the time is the best way to preserve >your health, but we also need to enjoy food and stop thinking about it >as a scientific experiment. I thought that the NY Times article that >Heidi recently posted was excellent in that respect. Esentially >the message was: the more you obsess over food (like we Americans do) >the more it can hurt you. That's why I think I dislike the polemical >tone of NT sometimes. It's sort of a downer. Sometimes I find myself >going to my Biba Caggiano trattoria recipes cookbook because she (like >most Italians) is so excited and upbeat about good food. Her positive >attitude just pours across the pages and makes you just want to cook >(and eat) up a storm. Isn't that what food is all about? A special >moment to share with friends and family? It's hard to find the >balance between trying to eat properly and becoming a fanatic over it. > And the massive amounts of contradictory information don't help. >Even the so-called " experts " don't agree. > >OK. I've got that off my chest now. >Dawn > > > > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 19, 2004 Report Share Posted October 19, 2004 The NYT article Heidi found reminds me of a book I've read called " The Fat Fallacy. " It's about French vs. American attitudes toward food and why the French are thinner than Americans. To put it in a nutshell, Americans tend to eat junky, fake food all day long, and pig out on low-fat or low-carb or whatever magic food doesn't make you fat this week. The French are more likely to eat only at mealtimes, really enjoy cooking and eating, eat rich, natural foods, and then STOP eating. The idea of cooking and eating for pleasure, without worrying much about health, really appeals to me. I think this is how it should be. If we all lived in lovely little organic farming villages, surrounded by fresh, natural foods, and traditional methods of cooking and preserving were second nature, we wouldn't have to dwell on health aspects and " shouldn'ts. " We could just take what was there and make it taste good. But alas, most of us live surrounded by junk food and bombarded with advertising for it on a daily basis. To protect our health in this kind of environment, we have to be constantly on guard, constantly saying no to things. > i'm a total food nazi. we make almost no compromises in our home. Being a " total food nazi " in your own home is one way of creating an environment where the bad stuff just isn't there and you don't think about it. You can relax and eat for pleasure within that controlled environment. Not as nice as having a whole village, but hey ... > > that said, we eat insanely richly. we eat such good food it's ridiculous. i > think it's absurd to act all dour about what you're NOT eating when you ARE > eating such wonderful delicious stuff. i really think that if you are > feeling dour about what you're eating, you're either still addicted or > you're doing it wrong. Right. Just because a " food " exists, doesn't mean you're deprived because you're not eating it. We are so lucky today because we get food from all over the world so easily - we have variety that was unheard of just a few hundred years ago. > go back and read little house on the prairie (even by then their > nutrition wasn't so great, but they make a good example) where it talks > about saving up their sugar to make a cake for a special occasion. Yes, a big part of our problem today is that foods that should be rare treats are so readily available and cheap. I can cross the street and buy a big cake every day if I want to. But I'd RATHER spend hours making a cake from scratch once or twice a year. The time spent, and the care taken with the ingredients, underscores the specialness of it. It's more " French, " if you like, to spend all day making a wonderful cake. It's more " American " to get a junky one, ready-made, once a week. To people who've grown up and formed eating habits in this bad-food environment, eating healthy may mean saying no to everything they're used to, and maybe addicted to. It feels like deprivation - it IS deprivation, until you learn to like the good stuff. Aven Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 19, 2004 Report Share Posted October 19, 2004 I agree with you Dawn. Although I greatly admire people such as Katja who can eat so purely, I am just not one of them. I get neurotic as all get out once i put it in my head i can't have anything (and it's not just food). It is just my nature to rebel against rules (although i doubt Katja would call them rules). I have found my own health vastly, vastly improved eating a mostly good diet, with some splurges here and there. And the longer i stick to this way of eating, the fewer and far in between those splurges are. I have a history of eating disorders and it's no secret that my current nutritional obsessions are just the latest incarnation of that. I am on a healing path physically and mentally with food, and i find the NT diet best fits that path, because it is closest to 'normal'. But it also means there is no room in my psyche to be a purist -- at least right now. Whenever i hear the term " food police " i cringe bc i have tendencies to be that way, and yet here i am almost 40 pound overweight! I think people must shake their heads at me. Food is such a gift, such pleasure, such fun and such an adventure. I think the Italian attitude can't be beat in that way. You are lucky that as you go deeper into the NT way of eating that you an access that attitude so readily. Here in the US it is like the Crusades or something. I'll never forget having my last TDay ruined by the woman next to me spouting off about vegetarianism and how anyone who was educated wouldn't eat meat. I chose not to get it into it with her, but nevertheless found the whole scenario sadly typical of the American food consciousness. Elaine > >> I was re-reading NAPD a few weeks ago, and I came across the section >> where Price talks about preparing one healthy meal a day for children >> suffering from tooth decay. He mentions that he gave them rolls made >> daily with freshly ground whole wheat flour. That always gave me the >> impression that the rolls were not sour leavened. Am I wrong? I find >> it frustrating that there is so little information on the food >> preparation techniques Price used. As I was thinking about the >> whether the bread was sour leavened or not I thought that maybe that >> wasn't so important since the children continued to consume highly >> refined foods for two-thirds of the day and still maintain their tooth >> decay in check with one nutritious meal. As I reflected on that I >> then began to think that maybe Enig has the right idea eating her >> Newman O's cookies, cocoa etc. every now and then. Sure eating a >> traditional diet the majority of the time is the best way to preserve >> your health, but we also need to enjoy food and stop thinking about it >> as a scientific experiment. I thought that the NY Times article that >> Heidi recently posted was excellent in that respect. Esentially >> the message was: the more you obsess over food (like we Americans do) >> the more it can hurt you. That's why I think I dislike the polemical >> tone of NT sometimes. It's sort of a downer. Sometimes I find myself >> going to my Biba Caggiano trattoria recipes cookbook because she (like >> most Italians) is so excited and upbeat about good food. Her positive >> attitude just pours across the pages and makes you just want to cook >> (and eat) up a storm. Isn't that what food is all about? A special >> moment to share with friends and family? It's hard to find the >> balance between trying to eat properly and becoming a fanatic over it. >> And the massive amounts of contradictory information don't help. >> Even the so-called " experts " don't agree. >> >> OK. I've got that off my chest now. >> Dawn >> >> >> >> >> >> >> Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 19, 2004 Report Share Posted October 19, 2004 At 12:49 PM 10/19/2004, you wrote: > > i'm a total food nazi. we make almost no compromises in our home. > >Being a " total food nazi " in your own home is one >way of creating an environment where the bad >stuff just isn't there and you don't think about it. >You can relax and eat for pleasure within that >controlled environment. Not as nice as having a >whole village, but hey ... aven - i totally agree with all you said. and it's true - being a food nazi actually means never having to think about it! we don't eat out, and we don't eat at other people's houses. we only buy good stuff and presto! i just don't have to ever think about it - i can just enjoy cooking. and our friends don't mind eating here instead, cause our food is so great! (also, because of celiac, we're easily able to explain away that we don't eat at their houses without outright saying " your food sucks and i wouldn't eat it anyway! " ) also, i have to say that getting rid of television helps tremendously in every department, but especially in food advertising. (all advertising, a ctually!) -katja Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 19, 2004 Report Share Posted October 19, 2004 >. Sometimes I find myself >going to my Biba Caggiano trattoria recipes cookbook because she (like >most Italians) is so excited and upbeat about good food. Her positive >attitude just pours across the pages and makes you just want to cook >(and eat) up a storm. Isn't that what food is all about? A special >moment to share with friends and family? It's hard to find the >balance between trying to eat properly and becoming a fanatic over it. >And the massive amounts of contradictory information don't help. >Even the so-called " experts " don't agree. That is one reason I like Nourishing Traditions ... yeah, it's polemic at times but the basic idea is *tradition*. Those old Italian women cooked what they cooked ... they got the recipes down pat over time and inherited them. I don't think all the food was good for them. Not all the food in our house is good for us either! I HAVE to be a food Nazi about gluten, and I don't have the energy to be that obsessive about anything else. But after awhile you come up with traditions, and, well, that's your habit and it's what you eat and then you don't think much about it. I use coconut oil for frying now instead of canola, not a big deal and it tastes better. I ferment my beer instead of buying it. etc. etc. By now those are just habits, not obsessions. But if I go out and buy a Diet Coke and fries while I'm on the road ... well, it'll taste kinda bad and I'll probably wish I had gotten something else, but it's really not going to seriously impact my health. And if I'm invited to someone else's house for dinner, I'll share the food as much as I can, because you are right, family and friends are a big deal! Heidi Jean Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 19, 2004 Report Share Posted October 19, 2004 At 02:12 PM 10/19/2004, you wrote: > > Katja, you sound like a pretty neat person! I'm getting ready to start >homesteading on my 27 acres in western Illinois in the spring, and I would >LOVE to spend some time with you on your farm....I'm sure I could learn >ALOT >Any room for an " intern " ? :-) > > >-- >-- >Steve absolutely! we have a huge house and plenty of guest rooms, as long as you don't smoke and aren't allergic to cats. if you do smoke, you can come out and quit, and if you're allergic to cats i can work with you on that herbally homesteading is the coolest thing ever, really. i think what we're doing is a little too large to officially qualify as homesteading, but that's alright. also, we have a great email list around here that you and others might like - it's VermontHomesteaders and it's for vermont homesteaders and vermonters or homesteaders at heart. it's pretty low traffic. definitely watch for walter's posts - he rocks. and hee! thanks! -katja Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 20, 2004 Report Share Posted October 20, 2004 FWIW, a few years ago the psychobabble folks coined a term to describe the eating disorder in which one must always eat " correctly " : orthorexia. As a reformed vegan, I know how blinded and inflexible a person can get by particular ideas about " what IS right " . I remember feeling so angry that nothing " out there " in restaurants was " acceptable " to me to eat, and then the light began to dawn that perhaps _I_ was the one on the wrong path... Now, as a deliberate " anti-orthorexia antidote " (to keep us from taking this all so deadly seriously), we occasionally " allow " certain " unacceptable " foods, like corndogs, just for " balance " , and no guilt allowed... :-) I remember a post (probably here, a year or two ago?) about an alternate explanation of the French " paradox " . The idea was the health benefits of their diet come not from _what_ they eat, but rather _how_ they eat: slowly, with family and friends. It was something about the metabolic processes were different when food is eaten slowly over time, rather than in a rush, in your car... quote from my ds, 7: " Mom, this meal is so healthy it's making me sick! " ....and another: " Mom, is this glutton-free bread? " Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 20, 2004 Report Share Posted October 20, 2004 At 07:11 PM 10/19/2004, you wrote: > >FWIW, a few years ago the psychobabble folks coined a term to describe the >eating disorder in which one must always eat " correctly " : orthorexia. As a >reformed vegan, I know how blinded and inflexible a person can get by >particular ideas about " what IS right " . I remember feeling so angry that >nothing " out there " in restaurants was " acceptable " to me to eat, and then >the light began to dawn that perhaps _I_ was the one on the wrong path... > >Now, as a deliberate " anti-orthorexia antidote " (to keep us from taking this >all so deadly seriously), we occasionally " allow " certain " unacceptable " >foods, like corndogs, just for " balance " , and no guilt allowed... :-) well, ok. if that makes you feel better. do whatcha gotta do, ya know? -katja Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 20, 2004 Report Share Posted October 20, 2004 Oh, I totally agree! We never watch television, just rented movies. I would love to say that we never watch anything - just read books, but it wouldn't be true. But I just love living without commercials invading my home. My daughter often comes home from somewhere else wanting something because they were watching TV. And now - coming up on Christmas time - it just gets awful. Maybe I should keep her at home until Christmas! I hate the news, too, and I don't think children should be exposed to it. Aven > also, i have to say that getting rid of television helps tremendously in > every department, but especially in food advertising. (all advertising, actually!) > > -katja Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 20, 2004 Report Share Posted October 20, 2004 > > I remember a post (probably here, a year or two ago?) about an alternate > explanation of the French " paradox " . The idea was the health benefits of > their diet come not from _what_ they eat, but rather _how_ they eat: slowly, > with family and friends. It was something about the metabolic processes > were different when food is eaten slowly over time, rather than in a rush, > in your car... " The Fat Fallacy " talks about that - the French taking meals in many courses, slowly, with a lot of conversation. Sounds wonderful, but I don't see how it could work unless you have a cook. Aven > > > quote from my ds, 7: " Mom, this meal is so healthy it's making me sick! " > ...and another: " Mom, is this glutton-free bread? " Cute. > > > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 20, 2004 Report Share Posted October 20, 2004 > I agree with you Dawn. Although I greatly admire people such as Katja who > can eat so purely, I am just not one of them. I get neurotic as all get out > once i put it in my head i can't have anything (and it's not just food). That's exactly what I'm talking about Elaine. I really don't think it's healthy to totally exclude certain types of food, like exquisite Neapolitan pizza (which is leavened for 24 hours, uses only the finest buffalo milk mozzarella, the freshest tomatoes, fresh-picked basil, and sinfully delicious olive oil) just because it's made with white flour. Sure, I'm not going to eat it on a regular basis, but it would be downright miserable going out with a group of friends and being the only one not eating it. OK. Now if you have Celiac like Katja or Heidi I can totally see not eating it, but otherwise I think it's truly a sin to miss out on one of life's special treats. It > is just my nature to rebel against rules (although i doubt Katja would call > them rules). I have found my own health vastly, vastly improved eating a > mostly good diet, with some splurges here and there. And the longer i stick > to this way of eating, the fewer and far in between those splurges are. I feel the same. I really don't have urges to eat pasta or Italian bread, and I too feel great eating a natural diet. What I was talking about (and I think Katja may have misunderstood this) was obsessing over food. See, I don't think it's healthy to be so zealous over what you eat. I can see why Katja would want to closely watch what she and her family eat since they have a serious health issue with gluten, but I don't think there is any reason to let it stop you from eating at a friend's house. Perhaps if you explain that you have dietary restrictions and tell them what you CAN eat, they'll prepare a nice meal you'll enjoy. Sure, maybe the eggs won't be pastured and the vegetables won't be organic and there won't be a lacto-fermented beverage or vegetable, but I don't think that's such a big deal for ONE meal. I > have a history of eating disorders and it's no secret that my current > nutritional obsessions are just the latest incarnation of that. I am on a > healing path physically and mentally with food, and i find the NT diet best > fits that path, because it is closest to 'normal'. But it also means there > is no room in my psyche to be a purist -- at least right now. Whenever i > hear the term " food police " i cringe bc i have tendencies to be that way, > and yet here i am almost 40 pound overweight! I think people must shake > their heads at me. Food is such a gift, such pleasure, such fun and such an > adventure. I think the Italian attitude can't be beat in that way. That's why I thought the Times article was right on the mark. It makes us reflect on how we view food AND life for that matter. Americans could learn a lot from the French, Spanish, Greeks and Italians. They celebrate food. It's not supposed to be a battle of you against the food. Sure they have some unhealthy eating habits too, but fortunately they still have a great basic attitude towards eating. You are > lucky that as you go deeper into the NT way of eating that you an access > that attitude so readily. Here in the US it is like the Crusades or > something. I'll never forget having my last TDay ruined by the woman next to > me spouting off about vegetarianism and how anyone who was educated wouldn't > eat meat. I chose not to get it into it with her, but nevertheless found the > whole scenario sadly typical of the American food consciousness. I reall hope that changes. But, unfortunately, I see that miserable way of looking at food coming across the Atlantic. I think food manias grow as you are inundated with junk foods. However, we need to fight against processed, unhealthy eating in a calm, rational, HAPPY way without turning into zealots. Dawn > > > >> I was re-reading NAPD a few weeks ago, and I came across the section > >> where Price talks about preparing one healthy meal a day for children > >> suffering from tooth decay. He mentions that he gave them rolls made > >> daily with freshly ground whole wheat flour. That always gave me the > >> impression that the rolls were not sour leavened. Am I wrong? I find > >> it frustrating that there is so little information on the food > >> preparation techniques Price used. As I was thinking about the > >> whether the bread was sour leavened or not I thought that maybe that > >> wasn't so important since the children continued to consume highly > >> refined foods for two-thirds of the day and still maintain their tooth > >> decay in check with one nutritious meal. As I reflected on that I > >> then began to think that maybe Enig has the right idea eating her > >> Newman O's cookies, cocoa etc. every now and then. Sure eating a > >> traditional diet the majority of the time is the best way to preserve > >> your health, but we also need to enjoy food and stop thinking about it > >> as a scientific experiment. I thought that the NY Times article that > >> Heidi recently posted was excellent in that respect. Esentially > >> the message was: the more you obsess over food (like we Americans do) > >> the more it can hurt you. That's why I think I dislike the polemical > >> tone of NT sometimes. It's sort of a downer. Sometimes I find myself > >> going to my Biba Caggiano trattoria recipes cookbook because she (like > >> most Italians) is so excited and upbeat about good food. Her positive > >> attitude just pours across the pages and makes you just want to cook > >> (and eat) up a storm. Isn't that what food is all about? A special > >> moment to share with friends and family? It's hard to find the > >> balance between trying to eat properly and becoming a fanatic over it. > >> And the massive amounts of contradictory information don't help. > >> Even the so-called " experts " don't agree. > >> > >> OK. I've got that off my chest now. > >> Dawn > >> > >> > >> > >> > >> > >> > >> Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 20, 2004 Report Share Posted October 20, 2004 >>>exquisite Neapolitan pizza (which is leavened for 24 hours, uses only the finest buffalo milk mozzarella, the freshest tomatoes, fresh-picked basil, and sinfully delicious olive oil)<<< Droooooooooooolllllll........ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 20, 2004 Report Share Posted October 20, 2004 Hi , > > FWIW, a few years ago the psychobabble folks coined a term to describe the > eating disorder in which one must always eat " correctly " : orthorexia. As a > reformed vegan, I know how blinded and inflexible a person can get by > particular ideas about " what IS right " . I remember feeling so angry that > nothing " out there " in restaurants was " acceptable " to me to eat, and then > the light began to dawn that perhaps _I_ was the one on the wrong path... You're describing me! I used to get anxious about eating at a restaurant or with friends or even my family until I realized I needed to RELAX! > > Now, as a deliberate " anti-orthorexia antidote " (to keep us from taking this > all so deadly seriously), we occasionally " allow " certain " unacceptable " > foods, like corndogs, just for " balance " , and no guilt allowed... :-) That's exactly what I'd like to do except with homemade pizza and raviolis. I used to always make my husband those two things. I started making them again over the past few months, but I would sit there watching him eat it while I ate the " correct " foods (I feel silly admitting that). Now we compromise, and I make a smaller portion of pizza or raviolis (which I actually eat ) along with some " healthier " stuff. > > I remember a post (probably here, a year or two ago?) about an alternate > explanation of the French " paradox " . The idea was the health benefits of > their diet come not from _what_ they eat, but rather _how_ they eat: slowly, > with family and friends. It was something about the metabolic processes > were different when food is eaten slowly over time, rather than in a rush, > in your car... That's the way it is in Italy too. You have to see the love and affection my husband's aunts put into making Christmas and Easter dinners. Not everything is up to WAPD standards, but hey we're celebrating a holiday, right? At Christmas time the whole family (between 15 and 20 people .... sometimes more) eats for three days straight together (the 26th is a holiday here). It's truly a banquet, and I really love it. I wish people would go back to that in the States. Another quick example of the Italian eating mentality is that the waiter will NOT bring you the check until you ask for it. You can sit there for three hours and they WILL NOT bring the check over. It's your right as the customer to decide when you're finished with your meal. > > > quote from my ds, 7: " Mom, this meal is so healthy it's making me sick! " > ...and another: " Mom, is this glutton-free bread? " Thanks for bringing a lighter note to the conversation . Those quotes made me laugh. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 20, 2004 Report Share Posted October 20, 2004 > > --- In , " CF Beaver " <fletcher@w...> wrote: > > > > I remember a post (probably here, a year or two ago?) about an alternate > > explanation of the French " paradox " . The idea was the health benefits of > > their diet come not from _what_ they eat, but rather _how_ they eat: slowly, > > with family and friends. It was something about the metabolic processes > > were different when food is eaten slowly over time, rather than in a rush, > > in your car... > > " The Fat Fallacy " talks about that - the French taking meals in many > courses, slowly, with a lot of conversation. Sounds wonderful, but > I don't see how it could work unless you have a cook. > Aven I do lots of prep on the weekends and then freeze some stuff. I work full time at home as a translator, take care of my one-year-old and house and help my brother with his website and have no relatives near by and somehow I manage (although it can be exhausting). You just have to manage your time wisely and prepare simple things I think. I think eating slowly in a relaxed atmosphere is key, even though I certainly don't achieve it all of the time.. My fondest memories as a kid are the family meals we had together. My Dad was big on making us eat breakfast and dinner together. Dawn Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 20, 2004 Report Share Posted October 20, 2004 All I have to say is " Yaaay CJ! " > I like being a 'food snob' but I don't ever want to > become a 'food nazi'. I'm sure those that are do not > feel limited, which is why they can live like that. > But I would. (And I want to stress, I'm only talking > about mysefl here - not criticising or making > assumptions about anyone else. ) You see, I was starting to live like that, and I was becoming miserable. > > I don't want to be so obsessed with feeding my child > that I don't have as much time to spend with him (and > no, I am not saying you all neglect your children - or > that you cannot do both. Again, But even the way I am > it seems all I think and talk and read about is food - > I " m starting to not like what I see) . I was doing the same thing. It seemed my days were filled with reading and talking about food or, even worse, trying to find all of the OK foods to eat. I felt bad about eating biodynamic yogurt because it was pasteurized! > > Food is important, but I don't want it running my > life I don't want to make my decisions based on food. > I don't want to refuse to eat with famiy and friends, > (It's bad enough that I have only seen them for just a > few hours in 8 years!) never go out to dinner because > the food might not be 'pure or perfect'. I want to > keep alive my cultural and family traditions - even > the food ones. I want to make my grandmother's canoli > and ravioli, not a 'version' of them. I totally agree. I'd rather have real ravioli and pizza a few times a year than a " soaked " or " sourdough " strange version more often. Some things are just meant to be eaten in their original version. > And I love to travel - next to my famiy it's my great > joy. I would never want to miss out on all I've seen > and done because I don't know what kind of food they > would have there or because late at night on the way > home from the airport the only place to get food might > be McDs. Or when I'm there, miss part of the > experience because I " m too busy worrying about where > to get 'the right' food' - part of the experience is > eating what they eat. That's so true. When I visit my relatives in Basilicata (Southern Italy) there is no way I'm going to turn down their homemade pasta because it's not on my OK list. Imagine, I did once turn down my husband's aunt's homemade fettuccine. I felt so bad about doing it and will never do it again. > > I'm here, so obviously I care a great deal about > healthy food. I do what I can, what fits into my life > and every day add a little more - then choose not to > let the rest stress me. Otherwise, what kind of life > would it be for me or my family? And there are no > guarantees in life, no matter how well we eat. > Whatever life I have, I want to enjoy it my way, or > what is it worth? > > CJ You basically summed up in a nutshell what my original post was about. Yeah, it's great to eat well, but you can't let it consume your life. And there are no guarantees. Look at Adele . Dawn Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 20, 2004 Report Share Posted October 20, 2004 > NAPD and food obsession > > > > >I was re-reading NAPD a few weeks ago, and I came across the section >where Price talks about preparing one healthy meal a day for children >suffering from tooth decay. He mentions that he gave them rolls made >daily with freshly ground whole wheat flour. That always gave me the >impression that the rolls were not sour leavened. Am I wrong? I find >it frustrating that there is so little information on the food >preparation techniques Price used. As I was thinking about the >whether the bread was sour leavened or not I thought that maybe that >wasn't so important since the children continued to consume highly >refined foods for two-thirds of the day and still maintain their tooth >decay in check with one nutritious meal. As I reflected on that I >then began to think that maybe Enig has the right idea eating her >Newman O's cookies, cocoa etc. every now and then. Sure eating a >traditional diet the majority of the time is the best way to preserve >your health, but we also need to enjoy food and stop thinking about it >as a scientific experiment. I thought that the NY Times article that >Heidi recently posted was excellent in that respect. Esentially >the message was: the more you obsess over food (like we Americans do) >the more it can hurt you. That's why I think I dislike the polemical >tone of NT sometimes. It's sort of a downer. HI Dawn, Every now and then someone on this board (usually a newbie) brings up the issue of obsessing over food. Since you are reading NAPD, you will probably notice that Price's primitive groups " obsessed* over food, in that they spent a great deal of time and effort procuring the " right " foods for themselves and for their offspring. I didn't read the article Heidi posted, but what I was told about it by someone who did read it that it wasn't necessarily saying Americans are food obsessed and the French aren't, but that we are " obsessed " in different ways. Having been to France, I must say they certainly seemed food obsessed, at least in the fact that their culture largely revolves around food. They obsess more over the taste and the social aspects perhaps, as opposed to Americans who obsess over calories or the like. However, getting back to Price's primitives, remember that several of those groups had ***PRE-CONCEPTION*** DIETS FOR BOTH THE GIRLS AND THE BOYS!!! I mean, imagine the average American diet-soda, low-fat, junk-food eating teen or 20-something couple (including the *man*)actually giving the first thought to what they should eat *before* conception (much less after). I think *that* qualifies as food *obsession* in a good way. After all, it was their food " obsession " that enabled them to produce generation after generation of healthy children, and it is our LACK of obsessing in an appropriate way that has largely led us to be a nation of physical, mental (and according to Price - spiritual) degenerates. Price's primitives also spent a great deal of effort procuring the right foods and preparing them. I'd wager they spent MUCH more time thinking about and/or preparing nourishing foods than the average American does. So, those of us who do give food a great deal of thought are in excellent company :-) I think each one of us has to decide for ourselves what type of compromises we make, if any. I used to compromise a LOT more when I first started out, now my compromises are fewer and far in between for the most part. That works for ME, but I really don't have an opinion on what others choose to do. I think any amount of nutrient-dense traditional foods in a person's diet can only help. Suze Fisher Lapdog Design, Inc. Web Design & Development http://members.bellatlantic.net/~vze3shjg Weston A. Price Foundation Chapter Leader, Mid Coast Maine http://www.westonaprice.org ---------------------------- “The diet-heart idea (the idea that saturated fats and cholesterol cause heart disease) is the greatest scientific deception of our times.” -- Mann, MD, former Professor of Medicine and Biochemistry at Vanderbilt University, Tennessee; heart disease researcher. The International Network of Cholesterol Skeptics <http://www.thincs.org> ---------------------------- Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 20, 2004 Report Share Posted October 20, 2004 CJ wrote: >I would never want to miss out on all I've seen and done because I don't know what kind of food they would have there or because late at night on the way home from the airport the only place to get food might be McDs. Great post CJ. I think you are so right! I tend to cringe when it looks as if we'll have to eat out. I worry about what to order that could be a tiny weeny bit healthy, and I tend not to enjoy the meal because, of course, it never is as healthy as I would have liked. If I cheat and eat french fries I feel sick afterwards. The things I worry about are MSG, cheap junk oils, white flour in any bread or pasta, the use of microwaves, preservatives in salads and junk dressings...... and the list goes on...... What DO people order when eating out? and the K9's Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 20, 2004 Report Share Posted October 20, 2004 If I must eat out, I try to order " Atkins-style " selections. They usually contain less white bread/sugar than the regular choices. I used to to eat only salads at restaraunts, but then got worried about the soybean oils in the dressings which covered my non-organic green salad ! Basically, we eat out only when a family event or work event requires it. Not because we don't enjoy the socialization, but just because we don't like the crummy way we feel after eating out ! Rebekah Re: NAPD and food obsession CJ wrote: >I would never want to miss out on all I've seen and done because I don't know what kind of food they would have there or because late at night on the way home from the airport the only place to get food might be McDs. Great post CJ. I think you are so right! I tend to cringe when it looks as if we'll have to eat out. I worry about what to order that could be a tiny weeny bit healthy, and I tend not to enjoy the meal because, of course, it never is as healthy as I would have liked. If I cheat and eat french fries I feel sick afterwards. The things I worry about are MSG, cheap junk oils, white flour in any bread or pasta, the use of microwaves, preservatives in salads and junk dressings...... and the list goes on...... What DO people order when eating out? and the K9's Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 20, 2004 Report Share Posted October 20, 2004 At 03:28 PM 10/20/2004, you wrote: >If I must eat out, I try to order " Atkins-style " selections. They usually >contain less white bread/sugar than the regular choices. I used to to eat >only salads at restaraunts, but then got worried about the soybean oils in >the dressings which covered my non-organic green salad ! Basically, we >eat out only when a family event or work event requires it. Not because >we don't enjoy the socialization, but just because we don't like the >crummy way we feel after eating out ! > >Rebekah also, in urban areas, it's pretty easy to find upscale restaurants that serve grassfed meats and organic veggies. if you call ahead and talk to the chef when it's not busy (mid afternoon), usually you can do quite well. -katja Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 20, 2004 Report Share Posted October 20, 2004 Dawn wrote: > I totally agree. I'd rather have real ravioli and pizza a few times a > year than a " soaked " or " sourdough " strange version more often. Some > things are just meant to be eaten in their original version. I will usually try substituting healthier ingredients, and have successfully changed over numerous family favorites. However, if the end result doesn't taste good, I won't eat it, and I don't expect my family to either. Then an occasional indulgence is in order. :-D ~~ Jocelyne Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 21, 2004 Report Share Posted October 21, 2004 I went to a Japanese Hibachi place, and the menu bragged about how they cook only with vegetable oils. Yuck. I wonder if I could go there with a stick of butter ... Aven > > Great post CJ. I think you are so right! I tend to cringe when it looks as if we'll have to eat out. I worry about what to order that could be a tiny weeny bit healthy, and I tend not to enjoy the meal because, of course, it never is as healthy as I would have liked. If I cheat and eat french fries I feel sick afterwards. > > The things I worry about are MSG, cheap junk oils, white flour in any bread or pasta, the use of microwaves, preservatives in salads and junk dressings...... and the list goes on...... > > What DO people order when eating out? > > and the K9's > > Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted October 21, 2004 Report Share Posted October 21, 2004 --- Pugh <labradors@...> wrote: > The things I worry about are MSG, cheap junk oils, > white flour in any bread or pasta, the use of > microwaves, preservatives in salads and junk > dressings...... and the list goes on...... > > What DO people order when eating out? Hi I always choose a good quality restaurant. Where I live there is one, however, if I travel a little there are several! I always check that the meal I order is gluten free. I low carb and am dairy free as well as NT, and always make sure I order low carb and dairy free foods. When eating out, NT is third to those. However, in a good restaurant, I know the sauces are homemade from stocks that they make from bones on the premises. The food they use is good quality - no msg, no unnecessary sugar. I order whatever represents a slab of meat on a plate, in a sauce with some veg or salad on the side. Some examples: Starters: rare pepperd beef with truffle oil, parmesan and rocket (if I order anything with dairy, it is always fermented dairy) Parma ham and melon Chicken terrine with chutney (all homemade) Soup (gluten free, home made in the restaurant) Mains: Steak - grilled Steak with shallots and red wine sauce Chicken wrapped in parma ham with olive gravy Seabass grilled, served on ratatouille. I tend not to have dessert - n may get some cheese and I'll have a nibble on that. Failing that, I get an indian take out without the carby sides - at least it's gluten free, sugar free, and made with fresh ingredients! However it does make me bloat so I try not to do it often. Jo ___________________________________________________________ALL-NEW Messenger - all new features - even more fun! http://uk.messenger. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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