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Archive for the ‘Processed Foods’ Category

After the kids went to bed tonight, I tossed together some almond flour berry muffins.  The recipe is from Elana Amsterdam’s (of Elana’s Pantry) wonderful paleo book, The Gluten-Free Almond Flour Cookbook.  I doubled and modified her delicious Chocolate Chip Banana Cake recipe to omit the honey, and used frozen mixed berries instead of chocolate chips.

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Banana-Berry Muffins

INGREDIENTSMuffin Close up

  • 3 c. blanched almond flour
  • 1/2 t. sea salt
  • 1 t. baking soda
  • 1/4 c. coconut oil, melted
  • 3 large eggs
  • 1 T. vanilla extract
  • 1 c. frozen mixed berries
  • 1/2 c. (about 1-2) ripe bananas, mashed

DIRECTIONS

  1. Preheat the oven to 350 degrees.  Arrange silicone muffin liners on a baking sheet.
  2. In a large bowl, combine the almond flour, sea salt, and baking soda.
  3. In a medium bowl, whisk together the liquid coconut oil, eggs, bananas, and vanilla extract.
  4. Stir the wet ingredients into the almond flour mixture until thoroughly combined.
  5. Fold in the mixed berries and fill each muffin liner about 2/3 full.
  6. Bake for 20-25 minutes, or until a toothpick inserted into a muffin comes out clean.

After I was done making the kids’ lunches, I made mine.  I had some leftover celery sticks that didn’t fit in their lunches, so I put them in a container to take to work.  I decided I wanted some ranch dressing to dip it in.  While humming Rubber Ducky, I pondered my day and set about gathering ingredients.

Mid-hum, I realized that I’d assembled these ingredients, mindlessly and effortlessly, within seconds:

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Without a recipe, without looking anything up in a book, just … experience, in my fingertips.  Holy cow.  I think I might be getting the hang of this real food thing.  Within another couple of minutes, I had this:

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A few whips later and I had my celery dip:

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So Monday started out being a full-on pain in the ass, but after leaving work and as the evening wore on, I had a pretty awesome Monday.

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Cottage #2 at Hilltop Cottages Resort

Last week my family and I had a lovely vacation at this little cottage we rented for the week.  Our friends Steve and Lisa have been going to Hilltop for many years and contacted us when a cottage opened up for the same week in June that they always go.  We reserved it immediately.  So not only did we have a great vacation, we also got to spend lots of time with our best friends.

There are ten cottages at Hilltop.  Cottage #2 is small, functional, spotless, and welcoming, with a well-equipped kitchen.  Four rooms and a screen porch with a gorgeous view of the lake.

Richard and I planned the menu together and brought all of our groceries up in coolers that we stashed in the boat.

Four kayaks were available to take out on the lake anytime we liked, no charge.  Same with the paddleboats.  We also hauled along our beat-up aluminum fishing boat and docked it there for free, so we could just untether it and go fishing at the drop of a hat.  There were two duck families that camped out on the lake shore.  One Mama Mallard had ten babies, and the other had eleven.  They’d eat the bread right out of your hand, and sometimes the baby ducks would miss their target and you’d feel their raspy little bill close on and scrape along your finger.  It was so darned cute.  Then of course each cottage came with its own chipmunk who would hop right up in your hand and eat the peanut right there.  It was like we lived in a northwoods version of a Disney movie for a week.

The kids were constantly down at the lake (Abby with her life jacket on!) playing on the shoreline, finding snail shells, going out in the paddleboat, and just generally being kids in the sunshine.

Jess and I went out on the kayaks early one morning and observed the loons with their baby, and listened to their calls carrying across the still, peaceful lake.

All four of us went fishing almost daily and caught lots of little bluegills.  Richard and Jess cleaned them out in the clean and spacious fishhouse.

In between, there was lots of family time, some shopping in town (with a very happy Jessica spending her saved-up allowance), time with Lisa, mini-golf, horseback riding, and general all-around goofiness.

 

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Tonight I volunteered at a PTO-hosted event at Jessica’s elementary school.  I got to chatting with one of the other volunteers and discovered she, too, was in the process of turning her family’s path towards real whole foods.  It was a thoroughly enjoyable conversation (although I might have talked her ear off – I’m nothing if not enthusiastic about the subject).  She asked a few of the questions that I usually get (I posted about them here and here), and one of her most pressing ones was How?  It’s a really good question, and it deserves a thorough answer.

In January 2012, after watching Fat, Sick, and Nearly Dead, Richard and I were inspired to juice fast.  It was a radical idea for me but the more I thought about it, the more it made sense.  One big obstacle for us was the cost of juicing.  It seemed exorbitant and wasteful to juice all these veggies and fruits and throw half of them (the pulp) away.  However, we were convinced of the benefits, so we did the math.  We justified the cost by what we’d be saving, which was my lunch expense every day, and eating out at restaurants once or twice a week.

Another obstacle was coffee.  I wanted to quit caffeine before we started the juice fast.  I knew I would go through both physical and mental withdrawal symptoms, and I didn’t want to have the joint misery of caffeine withdrawal and fasting for the first time ever.  Two weeks before we started our fast, I gave up coffee and all drinks containing caffeine.  I still allowed myself watered-down Minute Maid Lemonade at lunch or during the day.  Boy, was I right in doing that step first.  It was miserable.  I had a terrible caffeine headache for two solid days, and about a week of mental slowness and fog.  I made stupid mistakes.  I was weary to my bones.  My terribly stressed little adrenal glands, which had been working overtime with every sip of coffee and caffeinated soda, were finally getting a break.  During the second week of caffeine abstention I finally started coming out of my fog.  My mental clarity returned, and so did my energy.  It was a relief not to have to figure out where to stop for coffee every day or budget in the time on my morning commute.  By the end of the second week through current day, I have pretty much unlimited energy from when I get up in the morning to late at night, and I no longer have that mid-afternoon energy slump.

Once I was off caffeine, I ordered a juicer from Amazon.  I bought a fairly cheap centrifugal juicer, the Hamilton Beach Big Mouth.  We decided to start our fast on a Friday night.  The night before we started, Richard and I bought carrots, celery, apples, kale, tomatoes, pineapples, oranges, grapefruits, ginger root, limes, lemons, and probably some other fruits and vegetables.  We didn’t buy organic because we thought we couldn’t afford it.  That Friday night we juiced fruits and veggies.  We had no idea what combinations would taste good together so we tried all kinds of juices.  Most were drinkable.  Over the next four days, three to four  times a day, we juiced.  Some combinations were great.  Some were very bad (celery and kale?  Fuggedabadit.)  No solid foods, just juice and water.  At mealtimes we made a meal for the kids and then made our juice.  Every time we made juice, we’d write down what went into it and what the cost of each item was, and tally it up.  We came in well under budget.

During those four days, I played more in the kitchen than I had in the last few years combined.  I was wracking my brain for what to make for the kids that would be whole, real food.  Scrambled eggs, microwaved potatoes, cut up veggies, plain yogurt.  I made Annie’s organic macaroni and cheese; I knew it was processed but our pantry was still cluttered with those foods, and I felt pressured to get dinner on the table.  One night I made chicken cut up and sauteed with potatoes and broccoli and added eggs at the very end.  I worked with what I knew and at night I read, read, read.  I Googled for real food recipes, whole food recipes, organic food recipes, and came upon some really great sites like http://100daysofrealfood.com, http://deliciouslyorganic.net, and http://thehealthyfoodie.com.  In my searches I stumbled on the idea of raw food, so I Googled raw food recipes, why is raw food good for you, and dozens of other questions.  At night while I Googled, I watched documentaries on Netflix, like Food Matters, Food Inc., and The Future of Food.  The more I learned about this hidden industrial food system, the more I wanted to learn how to get the hell out of it.  Reading blogs (like this one, I hope) gave me the practical how-to and tools I needed to actually do it.

It seems like a small part of the story, but those four days of juice fasting allowed us to take a break from the overwhelming task of having to decide what to eat, and to focus on what we wanted to do about food for the rest of our lives.  It allowed quiet and clarity to break through the noise and nutrition-fact clutter accumulated from a lifetime of deceptive food marketing.  For the first time in decades, perhaps ever, we had time and opportunity to listen to what our bodies were communicating to us.  Our bodies had a lot more to say than “I’m hungry”.  During that period is when I came to appreciate water for the miracle that it is, and to enjoy drinking it.  I craved salads and scrambled eggs and blueberries.

Four days into our juice fast, we both felt our bodies were telling us it was time to introduce food back in.  We started slowly, with juices for both breakfast and lunch and a green salad for dinner.  While I was still reading recipes and learning about food, we pretty much stuck to salads because it was easy.  We ate green salads with veggies for dinner (with occasional organic chicken) for over a month while we figured out what our new menu would look like.  Slowly we introduced lentils, quinoa, farro, raw nuts, seeds, and many other heretofore unfamiliar cooking foods into our diet.  We bought organic when we could afford it and non-organic when finances were tight.  There wasn’t a big dramatic pantry clean-out; we used up what was in the cupboard and simply replaced it with organic.

After reading about the damaging neurological effects of MSG and other excitotoxins such as yeast extracts, I got rid of the bouillions in the cupboard.  After researching Genetically Modified crops (GM, or GMO), we cut out all non-organic soy and corn products.  After reading about the alarming effects of soy (read about it here on Heather’s excellently researched and referenced post), we cut out almost all soy products.  After seeing documentaries cataloguing the hidden costs of transportation on our health, environment, and small farmers, I sought out local produce, dairy, and meats.  After reading The Omnivore’s Dilemma by Michael Pollan, I questioned the living conditions in which that “organic free-range chicken” was actually raised.  I stopped being content with buying a clear conscience and sought the truth behind the labeling.

These changes in our family didn’t happen overnight, even though it seems to people that we just flipped a switch in January.  It’s involved a lot of reading, watching documentaries, and being willing to look at how animals become food.  The move toward industrial farming has changed our food system dramatically over the last 50 years, as well as deliberately created a distance between people and the source of their food.  For our family, it was simply time to eliminate that distance and start making conscious and informed food choices.  Our lives depend on it.  Thanks for listening.

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These are the last five of the ten questions I posted as my biggest hitters when people ask me about food.

6.  How did you find this information about food, like what to eat and what not to eat?

We have streaming-only Netflix for $8/month, and Hulu Plus through a Roku for $8/month.  There are lots of great documentaries on food, bees, and just about anything else you could want to see a documentary about.  Here is a list of the food documentaries we have watched in the last couple of months:

  • Food, Inc.
  • Food Matters
  • Forks Over Knives
  • The Future of Food
  • Fat, Sick, and Nearly Dead
  • Fresh
  • King Corn
  • Ingredients
  • Get Vegucated!

I also read.  In the last few months I’ve read the following food-related non-fiction books:

  • Fair Food (Hesterman)
  • Fed Up!  (Wu)
  • The World According to Monsanto (Robin)
  • Turn Here Sweet Corn:  Organic Farming Works (Diffley)
  • The Omnivore’s Dilemma  (Pollan)
  • Food for Life  (Barnard)

I regularly read blogs that have great recipes with real food and/or offer information while referencing their sources.  Here are a few of my favorites:

Every one of these sources of information leads you to another source.  It’s a pretty “organic” process.  Ha ha.

7.  Really?  You only drink water?

Yes.  I have lots of opinions about this.  I’m sort of a pain in the ass that way.

8.  How do you get your kids to eat all those veggies?

This one’s pretty simple.  Richard or I make one dinner, and that’s what’s for dinner.  I tell them if they don’t like it, there are apples and carrots in the fridge.  Go nuts.  Sometimes they choose the apples and carrots, but not very often.  They almost always eat some of everything, and if they really don’t like it they might go for a carrot after dinner.  We only allow dessert (ice cream) on Tuesday and Friday nights, so we save ourselves the trouble of repeating the mantra ”Eat your veggies if you want dessert!”  No bargaining.  I don’t care how much they do or don’t eat on Tuesday and Friday nights.  They get their dessert regardless.  It takes a lot of stress out of the equation.  Kids aren’t going to starve themselves.  If they know there aren’t going to be chicken nuggets or macaroni and cheese featured on the regular menu, they’re not going to hold out and go hungry waiting for those things.

Plus, our kids ROCK.

9.  Monsanto?

BAD.  Very bad.  Very scary.  I get a little tongue-tied on this one because it’s so big.  I’m not going to write about it because others have done it better.  I’m pretty sure Monsanto information is in all of the documentaries and books I listed above.  Just google “Monsanto GMO” and you’ll be reading for hours.  ‘Nuff said.

10.  How do you find time for all this stuff?

Usually between 8:30 pm and 11:00 pm, after the kids are in bed.  I also read a book while eating my lunch at work, or sometimes read blogs on my phone.  Richard and I are fortunate enough to be able to have a “date night” every Friday night, and we’ll usually do some grocery shopping and/or check out a new food source.  When the farmers markets start up we’ll be taking the kids to them every weekend and there’s always lots of information there.

So that’s pretty much it.  What do you think?

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In this post I’ll tackle the first five of the ten questions I posted as my biggest hitters when people ask me about food.

1.  You’ve lost a lot of weight.  How did you do it?

Richard and I made the decision to cut processed foods and chemical additives out of our lifestyle, and eat only whole, organic foods.  This means organic produce, legumes and grains, as well as humanely raised and pastured meats and eggs,  We drink plain water, and occasionally Richard has an herbal tea.  We eat dairy, but much less than we used to.  We try to keep dairy consumption to under 15% of our diet.  We do have “junk food” occasionally, such as whole wheat bread and whole wheat cookies, but only if we make them.  At this point, I’m usually getting an unbelieving, slightly horrified stare.

2.  How did you get started on this kick?

After about six months of seeing the documentary Fat, Sick and Nearly Dead available on Netflix, I finally watched it.  It was an eye-opener.  It is about a guy from Australia who was feeling sick, and fat, and unhealthy, and decided to go on a juice fast for 60 days.  It chronicles his journey through the 60 days from fat and sick to healthy and bright-eyed.  The message made sense, deep inside me.  It’s such a simple concept:  What you eat MATTERS.  I urged Richard to watch it.  After he watched it, we decided to juice fast for a week.  We made it four days, and in that time we had reevaluated our entire food lifestyle.  We finally got clarity, and joined forces to steer our family toward decades of good health and mental vibrancy, and away from decades of steady, incremental decline in health.

3.  Did you start doing this to lose weight?

We initially started our juice fast to kick-start our weight loss, but by the end of four days we had gained a vision of a food lifestyle that didn’t include counting calories or fat grams.  It was so much simpler than that.  Eat lots of plants.  Eat local, humanely raised meat, where you know the conditions the animals live in.  Eat dairy in the same manner.  We are finding as we embrace plants more, we eat less meat, and less dairy, naturally.

4.  Organic’s so expensive.  Do you really think it’s worth it?

I think this question usually assumes an apples-to-apples comparison.  It’s not quite that simple, at least it wasn’t for us.

Before we started on this new lifestyle I went out for lunch at work everyday; subs, chinese, pizza, local restaurants, etc.  When we grocery shopped we’d always buy a couple of frozen pizzas for my mom to feed the kids when Richard and I went on our Friday date nights.  Abby likes crackers so into the grocery cart they’d go, as well as tortilla chips, goldfish crackers, fruit snacks, and always some sort of candy.  We’d also get some fresh produce (half of which usually went bad before we used it), 3 gallons of milk for the week, pre-shredded cheese (more expensive than a block of cheese), canned vegetables, and processed breakfast cereals.  Tortillas made it easy to have a build-your-own-taco night.  Richard and my Friday night date nights always included a dinner out.

So, now we compare that to our usual activities and purchases.  I bring a lunch everyday at work, and it’s usually a green salad or leftovers from the dinner the night before.  Today it was two organic small red potatoes to heat in the microwave at work, with a little pastured butter, organic sour cream, and finished with pink sea salt and pepper.  I brought an organic orange, an organic apple, a small container of raw walnuts, and my two juice bottles for the day.  So that’s the sort of thing I do for lunches now.  It doesn’t cost me anything but leftovers or produce on hand.

When we go out on date nights, we eat at home first.  We have our family meal of good whole foods, and leave afterwards to go do something fun like visit a book store, or see a movie, or scout out new organic grocery sources in the area that maybe we’ve heard about but never visited.  We spend a lot less money and have just as great a connecting evening together as we ever did before, and our kids aren’t eating the frozen pizzas.

Crackers, bread, goldfish crackers, fruit snacks, tortillas, pre-shredded cheese etc. are all processed foods and don’t get into our cart anymore.

All of these changes together have made ample room (and room to spare) in our budget for organic produce, and to obtain meat and dairy from local and sustainability-minded land stewards.  This year we joined our first CSA (Community Supported Agriculture) farm and are looking forward to forging more relationships in the concious-eating community.

As for the organic products themselves, and what benefits they offer:  I think it’s worth it if for no other reason than to detox your body in the intial stages of this change.  I felt like I had been deluging my body with chemicals, unhealthily-raised meat, processed foods, and so many other terrible foods, that I needed to detox all the pesticides and junk that had built up over the decades.  We still juice veggies and fruit for two of our meals, which we consider a medicine.  The nutrition we get from the juices helps our cells work optimally to process the food we consume.  I also think that organic is especially important for kids, because the ratio of what they eat compared to their body size is much different than that of an adult.  They also can’t process toxins as efficiently as an adult because they’re physically smaller and less developed.  I realize that being certified USDA Organic does not erase the problems created by that very certification, but even factory farms that are certified organic are more sustainable than non-organic.

5.  So, what IS ok to eat?

I love this question, because then I get to talk about all the wonderful things we are eating now.  Changing to this food lifestyle is a bounty; it in no way feels like any deprivation such as you might experience on a typical restriction diet.  I feel like we have the best food we’ve ever eaten, every single day.  These days, going out to eat is the almost unavoidable result of obligation (usually work or family related), resulting in a struggle to find something to eat, and it’s frustrating and irritating to be spending more money on less nutritional quality.  Dissatisfying in every way, except the time spent with good company.  Given the choice between big-farm organic or small-farm local non-certified organic, but who take their role as stewards of land, animal integrity, and sustainable agriculture seriously, I’d take the non-organic local product any day of the week.

I know this post is a little rambly, but I’m still figuring out what makes sense for me and my family, and putting it into publishable-quality form isn’t my goal.  It’s to try to convey our sense of purpose, and our struggles, in a way that might resonate with you.

Let me know what you think; leave me a comment.  If you’re on this food train, why and how?  If you’re not, what do you think about that?  Where are you on the spectrum of interest in this lifestyle?  Or are you just overwhelmed and enjoy reading about it but know you’d never find the iron will it would take to change all of these things at once?  Just curious.  Let’s have a dialogue.

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Since we started this new food lifestyle in January I’ve gotten this question a LOT.  Here is a list of the other questions I’ve gotten, a LOT:

  1. You’ve lost a lot of weight.  How did you do it?
  2. How did you get started on this kick?
  3. Did you start doing this to lose weight?
  4. Organic’s so expensive.  Do you really think it’s worth it?
  5. So, what IS ok to eat?
  6. How did you find this information about food, like what to eat and what not to eat?
  7. Really?  You only drink water?
  8. How do you get your kids to eat all those veggies?
  9. Monsanto?
  10. How do you find time for all this stuff?

I want to start answering these questions.  Tomorrow’s post will tackle 1-5.

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I used to hate drinking water.  I had even read some snippet somewhere that drinking water with a meal made it harder to digest food.  Well then I had to drink something with meals!  I’d also heard several vague things about diet soda being worse for you because it tricked your body into making insulin to fight sugar that wasn’t there.  And aspartame was in it, and if you just google “aspartame side effects” you’ll have plenty to read until you’re dead.  So what did that leave?  Well, real soda.  The HFCS in it also had some sort of negative effect on your body’s processing of the sugar, but it had to be better than the diet stuff, right?  And if I could find the soda made with real sugar, well, that was just about a health food!  For the record, fruit juices were junk that I scoffed at because it was just pure sugar.  Milk was great at home with meals, but felt weird in public, a non-octogenarian grown-up getting a milk.  Pretty rare if I ordered that.

Plus, water tasted weird.  It didn’t leave my tongue feeling somehow “cleaner” from the carbonation.  Water just kind of slicked over everything in my mouth and then I could still taste the food I was eating.  Soda, on the other hand, bubbled along over the tongue and left it tasting sweet and ready for the next bite.  Cleansing one’s palate with Coke, if you will.

So how did I go from being that person up there, in those two paragraphs, to a person who drinks strictly water?  Well, because there’s nothing else real to drink.  And water tastes better to me now.  It complements the foods I eat because I am eating real foods, whole foods, unprocessed foods.  There are no chemicals or strange slight residues left in my mouth by what I’m eating, that I feel I need a “cleanser” between bites.

So how about tea? I hear someone asking.  Coffee, surely there’s nothing wrong with coffee, only about a billion people drink it every day!  And everyone needs a beer or a glass of wine or something to relax at the end of the week, right?

Tea tastes like tea and gives me an immediate headache.  Coffee puts me up on the ceiling and keeps me there, talking non-stop, for a couple of hours, then I slam to the ground and have a headache.  Alcohol has always immediately given me a dull headache, then switches on my in-skin sprinkler system full blast.  I sweat like a pig would sweat if they sweated.  My skin feels hot to the touch and my cheeks look like I might be just barely surviving a small heart attack, right here, right now.  Is your left arm hurting yet, Muriel?  Can you tell me where we are right now, what day it is?  This is not the way to spend a fun Friday night.

All that said, my theory in a nutshell is this:  I think non-water beverages are popular because people are uncomfortable with tasting their food.  They are uncomfortable with tasting their food because their body knows it’s unhealthy for them and drinking a distraction helps ease that discomfort in the mammal brain.  Water doesn’t disguise bad flavors or too much salt or greasy mouth-feel.  It simply draws attention to flavors, textures, etc.  So if you’re eating stuff that has unpleasant aspects to it, water isn’t going to be your drink of choice.

Any thoughts on this?  Do you drink straight, unflavored water?  Do you drink water with meals?  If not, why not?

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Today I went out for lunch with some coworkers.  We went to a small, comfortable, local family restaurant.  In my old food lifestyle, I very much enjoyed getting their tuna salad wrap, or their huge grilled chicken cobb salad for lunch.  Today I was at a loss what to get.  The tuna salad has regular mayo in it, which I’m assuming consists of the ingredients listed below (Hellman’s and Best Foods brand mayonnaise ingredients):

Soybean oil, whole eggs, vinegar, water, egg yolks, salt, sugar, lemon juice, natural flavors, calcium disodium EDTA (used to protect quality).

I have a problem with everything that’s bolded.  The soybeans are GMO; genetically modified foods have been proven to cause problems with infertility and organ damage, as well as diabetes and obesity.  The whole eggs and egg yolks are from GMO-corn-fed factory farm chickens.  The salt is iodized table salt that has been processed to remove all of its nutrients, and actually has to pull minerals from your body’s stores to process it.  The sugar is refined.  The lemon juice is reconstituted from the lowest quality non-produce-section, non-organic lemon juice.  Natural flavors is code for MSG.  Calcium disodium EDTA I had to look up, because that’s certainly not in my cupboard.

“Calcium disodium ethylene diamine tetraacetate is the calcium salt of disodium ethylene diamine tetraacetate more commonly known as EDTA, which is a polyamino carboxylic acid that is produced synthetically from ethylenediamine, formaldehyde and sodium cyanide. It produces a colourless, water-soluble solid that is used in many products as a chelating agent, emulsifying salt, anti-oxidant, preservative, stabiliser, and as a sequestrant.

(source: http://www.foodditive.com/additive/calcium-disodium-ethylene-diamine-tetraacetate-edta)

Holy SHIT.  Why would I want to put THAT into my body??  That’s just the mayonnaise.  JUST THE MAYONNAISE.  Then we could talk about the canned tuna in water (also full of MSG), and the tortilla with its refined white flour and preservatives.

I turned down the cobb salad because even though I could order it without grilled chicken (pumped full of antibiotics, fed a diet of government-subsidized GMO corn at factory farms and kept in tiny cages unable to stand up fully for their entire lives, then processed at a centralized meat processing center manned by exploited immigrants in unsafe conditions), eggs (from similar chickens), bacon (from factory farm pigs fed a diet of government-subsidized GMO corn, etc. then cured using nitrites and several kinds of excitotoxins aka MSG), or dressing (a chemical soup of preservatives, pesticide-laden herbs, highly processed government-subsidized GMO corn syrup and thickeners, and several kinds of excitotoxins aka MSG).  I’d be left with non-organic greens grown in nutrient-deficient soil 2,000 miles away and laden with pesticide residues and possible e-coli contamination from the manure put on the lettuce fields, which comes from feedlot cattle (meant to eat grass because they’re ruminants) fattened and sick with a gut full of e-coli from eating government-subsidized GMO corn) and a few slices of non-organic avocado, and a weak little non-organic orangish tomato from 1,000 miles away.

These were my choices.  Seriously.  Our food system is so very broken.  Food is not just AVAILABLE;  it is aggressively and deliberately MARKETED based on whatever the food producer pays the marketer to emphasize; fat content, calorie content, flavor, appearance, status, ideology, personal vanity, shelf price.  Food is not marketed on what truly matters about it: the nutrition your body can use from it.  The source and conditions it is created in.  What the true costs of the food are, not just the final shelf price.  Where it comes from, how and how far it’s transported, how it’s processed, the effects all of these elements have on the final product set in front of you.  The information the majority of people use to make food choices is a chaotic jumble of disconnected “facts” that have nothing to do with the actual nutrition of the food being consumed.  There’s a very good reason for that, which is if the curtain was drawn back on where our food originates, most people wouldn’t BUY that food.  They’d demand, with their voices and dollars, real food with real nutrition, as local and fresh as possible, without chemicals, without processing, without unsustainable animal-rearing practices void of basic life ethics and rife with horrific abuse worthy of a post-apocolyptic blockbuster movie.

I ended up ordering a portabella mushroom on a plain no-butter toasted kaiser roll with tomato, lettuce, and onion.  It came with kettle chips.  It was expensive, and I didn’t eat most of it.  But it did make me think, and it inspired me to write, and to add my voice to the rising tide of voices that are slowly but surely being heard.  Pulling back the veil that is drawn carefully over our food system is necessary.  It is a very large windmill, and we are all riding very small donkeys.  But maybe the agility is just what we need.  Giddyap!

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