Switching the pantry out, and eating closer to nature.
Posted by shari | Under Chemicals, Children's health, Eating organic, GE / GMO Foods, Illness/immunity, Junk foods, Making healthier choices, Water, recipes Saturday May 9, 2009My nutritional philosophy is, “If it has a label, don’t eat it.”
That said, I realize that’s not always realistic for all of us all of the time. We like to have convenience foods to help us deal with our time crunches, and that’s OK. But I recommend that you read the labels. Choose packaged foods made with real-food ingredients over those with factory-created components.
Be a smart consumer and look for things that are going to help your body thrive. When you pick something up, ask yourself the question: “Is this something my great grandmother would have eaten?” If the answer is “no,” you should probably put it back. Things like frozen blueberries or canned black beans can still be good for you, as long as they don’t contain a bunch of unhealthy and unnecessary ingredients.
STOCKING A HEALTHY PANTRY
Now that you know what to avoid, go to your cabinets, refrigerator, and freezer and toss out any foods that contain the ingredients on the avoid list.
Here’s a list of foods that you can replace in your pantry with healthier foods.
· Refined White Sugar – replace with stevia, agave nectar, honey, brown rice syrup, or Rapadura Whole Cane Organic Unrefined Sugar
· Margarine – replace with organic real butter
· Table Salt – replace with natural Celtic Sea Salt
· Skippy, Jif or other Peanut Butter – replace with natural peanut butter with only two ingredients: peanuts and salt.
· Canned veggies/fruit – eat fresh fruits and veggies
· Soft drinks – good clean water, sparkling water, herbal teas
· Pasta – replace with brown rice pasta, quinoa pasta, or whole wheat pasta if your not sensitive to gluten or wheat.
· White Flour – replace with 100% whole wheat flour, or whole wheat pastry flour or other non-gluten flours.
· White Bread – replace with a good 100% whole grain bread. The ingredient list should be short with only a few ingredients such as whole wheat flour, yeast, honey, salt.
· Crackers – replace with whole grain crackers – try Ak-Mak, Mary’s Gone Crackers, or Back to Nature Harvest Whole Wheats
· Breakfast Cereals – Go with a whole grain one, look for short ingredient lists.
Written by Dee McCaffrey, CDC
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