The easiest way to change your diet is to change your environment. You can’t eat what’s not around you. If you got transported to Sub-Saharan Africa to live with Maasai, it doesn’t matter if you think you NEED a certain food. You will have dramatically changed your eating habits after a week in this environment. In the same way if you are trying to change an eating habit at home its best to change what you have to eat in your home environment.
Make a commitment to eat real food
This means only having real food in your environment. Over the years I’ve developed a pretty solid healthy shopping and cooking system that’s made eating healthy simple. I’m thinking about it because I just got back from a couple days in Florida and I haven’t been shopping in a while. My fridge is empty of pretty much everything. And my shelves are bare. And it’s a lot easier to eat real foods if that’s all that’s there when I fill my shelves up again.
This means only having real food in your environment. Over the years I’ve developed a pretty solid healthy shopping and cooking system that’s made eating healthy simple. I’m thinking about it because I just got back from a couple days in Florida and I haven’t been shopping in a while. My fridge is empty of pretty much everything. And my shelves are bare. And it’s a lot easier to eat real foods if that’s all that’s there when I fill my shelves up again.
Start by buying one week of groceries at a time and improve
on it each week until you are streamlined and love what you eat. Continue to tweak for optimal health,
efficiency and cost. Rinse Repeat.
Start by making a list of what guidelines are solid as far
as real/healthy foods go. Realizing that spending a little more money buying
quality food now as insurance against the cost of sick days and declining
health later is an intelligent tradeoff.
So what are these healthy foods?
So what are these healthy foods?
Here’s the guide from Mark Sissons book ‘Primal Living.’
From all the reading and research I’ve done it’s one of the best and simplest
guides I’ve found.
The Pyramid for effortless weight loss, vibrant health, and
maximum longevity.
This helps to develop criteria of healthy options.
Herbs, spices and extracts:
K, find herbs we think are healthy, probably spices like cumin and
anything leafy.
Sensible indulgences: Grab a single bar of 85% organic dark
chocolate and a bottle of wine for the week.
Supplements: Omega 3, Vitamin D, an anti-oxidant blend, good
multi-vitamin and a probiotic to maintain healthy gut bacteria. Done.
Get a small quantity of ‘Moderation’ foods
Fruits: A couple apples, a couple bags of different frozen
berries for smoothies, and a thing of cherries. Perfect. Just enough to satisfy
a sweet tooth. Not enough to gorge ourselves on glucose throughout the week.
High fat Dairy: Some aged cheese won’t be too bad - lets add
a little of that to the morning omelet and see how we feel. Kerry gold grass fed butter is a must. Put non-salted
in your coffee and salted on everything that’s warm including your tongue. You really want to stay away from things like
2% or skim milk.
Starchy Tubers, Quinoa, Wild rice: Stay away from this when
not exercising but sense I’m lifting some weights, biking, running and playing
hockey throughout the week I’m going to grab some yams and spaghetti squash and
sprinkle it with pink Himalayan or Celtic sea salt and soak it in butter before
or after a physical activity. Toss um in the cart.
Nuts: Mm mm. How many
macadamia nuts can I afford? This many. Cashews? Almonds? What other nuts do I
like - add them to the cart. As for nut butter - Peanut butter is bad for you,
don’t do it. Almond butter is goooood. I probably eat too much. There is almond
butter sold in packets by ‘Justine’ that are absolutely delicious. They have
honey, maple syrup, chocolate and even vanilla ones. Not sure if that’s the
best thing for you with the added sugar but it’s too delicious to pass up and
it’s still a far cry from McDonald’s. A
couple of these a week spread on my apples can’t hurt.
Healthy Fats: Kerry gold Grass fed butter. Coconut oil.
Domestic First cold pressed olive oil. Check.
Vegetables: What am I going to do to consume the vegetables?
I’ll Steam a bunch at once and mix with bacon to eat throughout the week. Add them
to the batch of Shepard pie I can eat throughout the week. And get some to grind
up in a blender with the frozen berries and almond milk and drink like a
smoothie - Lots of Kale. Something cruciferous; Brussels sprouts, broccoli,
cabbage. Some ginger and beats. Anything else that catches my eye with dark color
that I could blend and consume for nutrition. Shepard's pie stuff; onion, carrots,
garlic, celery? cauliflower, cabbage. And some stuff to steam - Kale, weird
long onion looking thing, Spanish, more kale, collard greens, assorted beats.
Meat. Fish. Fowl. Eggs.
Grab 1.5 lbs ground beef and .75 lbs spicy sausage with
.75lbs regular sausage for the shepherd’s pie or some other combination of
delicious meat. Trying to keep it grass-fed or local when we can. Grab some
frozen cold water Alaskan wild caught salmon to toss in the freezer and saute
in butter and coconut oil with herbs and water and the lid on. Eat that once
each week. Grab a pack of how ever much
chicken I think I might put on a chicken salad that week. And buy a couple
cartons of Cage free organic eggs. Experiment with different kinds until the
ones with the darkest yolks are found. Gonna want some delicious bacon with them
eggs. Let’s go grab the stuff from the
butcher or make sure to get some that doesn’t have added sugar and looks like
the pigs went to a good school, with nice caregivers and got a good education.
How about beverages.
Almond milk. Coconut milk. As long as it’s not soy milk. Are delicious
and not bad for you. These replace the skim milk rather nicely. Fill the rest
of the gap with some other delicious health promoting drinks like Kombucha, tea,
or coconut water - enough for about 2 that week. Quench the thirst during the
times water just isn’t cutting it.
So now how do I set up my week?
I don’t want to spend a big chunk of time cooking each meal
so let’s make sure we have some meal options that I can cook once, last awhile
and reheat easily. That night or the next day I’ll try and make a large batch
of Paleo Shepard’s pie to eat and save throughout the week. I’ll try and boil however
many eggs I think I’ll eat with salads or as a snack throughout the week.
Probably around 6.
For breakfast I’ll have 3 eggs and 4 strips of thick juicy
bacon. Or ill have an omelet. Or ill skip breakfast and have bullet proofcoffee blended with salt free grass fed butter and some coconut oil and
practice burning ketones like the cave men would do.
For lunch I'll heat up my shepherd’s pie on the stove with
some butter and chase it down with chocolate almond milk. I know I could
probably find an even healthier option but the combination is too delicious to pass
up.
If it’s a day of high activity I might have a green smoothie
on the side with added nutrients. Or ill
make a yam or spaghetti squash for extra carbohydrates.
If I’ve been inactive I’ll just cook my 3 chicken breasts
and add as much of one as I want to my salad saving the rest for later in the
week.
Ill snack throughout the day on the nuts and fruit when I’m
hungry. For dinner, depending on how hungry I am or what my timeframe is like I’ll
sauté shepherd’s pie in coconut oil or steam some vegetables and eat them with
butter. Or both. Every now and then
after dinner I’ll have a bit of 75-85% cocoa organic chocolate bar and I’ll
feel fantastic about all of it.
My weeks just go by this way
Tweaking the minor ingredients as I read more books and learn more information. Adding and taking things away depending on what kind of results I desire and what my current preferences for food are. Every once and awhile Ill slip big and pound some pizza or ice cream and Ill regret it for the next 3 hours to a day and a half and I won’t sleep well that night. Reinforcing the healthy choices and making it easier to stick to life sustainable nutrition in the future. The healthier I eat the easier it becomes to eat healthy and the more I notice the effects when I don’t. The habits reinforce themselves and soon eating healthy becomes automatic.
Tweaking the minor ingredients as I read more books and learn more information. Adding and taking things away depending on what kind of results I desire and what my current preferences for food are. Every once and awhile Ill slip big and pound some pizza or ice cream and Ill regret it for the next 3 hours to a day and a half and I won’t sleep well that night. Reinforcing the healthy choices and making it easier to stick to life sustainable nutrition in the future. The healthier I eat the easier it becomes to eat healthy and the more I notice the effects when I don’t. The habits reinforce themselves and soon eating healthy becomes automatic.
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