What’s the Hardest Part of Healthy Eating?
January 21st, 2011
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by Janice Collett · Filed Under: Food/Nutrition/Cleansing · Healthy Living Beyond Fifty
What’s the hardest part of healthy eating? Fixing the food! That’s what.
- Do you know what’s healthy?
- If you’re eating whole food, real food, someone is fixing it.
Maybe YOU do know what’s healthy, but it’s obvious that many Americans are not eating healthy. Diabetes, and obesity in the U.S, so someone out there is not eating healthy whole food.
Before we get going you should know that many of my ideas about healthy eating come from Michael Pollan (The Omnivore’s Dilemma, et al) and Dr. Mercola’s newsletter (www.drmercola.com).
We’ve heard this same old advice so many times we no longer take it seriously. So, for the purpose of this article we’ll zero in on just a few ideas that seem to me, pivotal points for eating well in today’s fast-food culture.
- Eat vegetables and whole foods
- Not too much sugar, and really watch the fructose
- Eat breakfast, but be careful of what you’re eating.
Michael Pollan is famous for the “eat real food” phrase. He doesn’t consider anything in a package, especially if it has a label with “health claims,” ”real food.” (This doesn’t count produce with those little sticky labels on their sides.)
Real food is close to how it grows in nature. Part of your diet should include raw foods, fruits and vegetables in hand or in salads. You don’t have to make a big deal over this. I’m not saying we should eat everythng raw, although there are those who recommend raw for a healing diet. Carrot and celery sticks for lunches and dinner. Cucumber slices, radishes. When I grew up we had carrot and celery sticks every night with dinner. My mother’s habit food.
It does mean, though, that most of what we eat for dinner/lunch will have to be cooked by someone.
This is America’s soft underbelly–why we’re vulnerable and unhealthy. We’ve gotten out of the habit of preparing meals. Noone’s cooking. Meals are something we throw, already processed, into the microwave to heat. This is our problem.
There has to be someone in the family willing to prepare meals. Without that person you’ll eat processed food from which most of the nutrition has been leached and to which preservatives and sugar have been added for palatability. Much food value has been removed. Is that why processed foods have nutrition labels…
That’s the family discussion you’ll have to have. Who will be major domo food-preparer/organizer?
Get a crock pot. I use mine several times a week. Weekly grocery shopping centers around one meal I prepare in quanity on the weekend. It’s enough food to go for a few meals so get a big crock pot. They’re around $20-30. Make soups, stews, spaghetti. Teach the kids to make soup. Cook a chicken and vegetables in the crock. Serve as is one meal, add canned tomatoes and Italian seasoning and serve over pasta for a second meal, and then make soup with what’s left. That’s the idea.
You’ll save money on groceries. With commodity prices rising you’ll want to buy in bulk anyway, whenever you can.
Share some of your ideas with the group here. We’re a creative bunch, but we often don’t plan ahead. If you’re not looking ahead you’re going to get caught when food prices really rise…
P.S. Don’t tell me you don’t have time to prepare food. When food prices rise high enough, you’ll begin to notice, and you’ll have to start fixing your food. Start thinking about it now.











