Tag Archives: nutrition

Eating Healthy Food Is Not A Choice

Eating Healthy Food Is Not A Choice | AmandaNaturally.comThis is an issue that has been really bothering me lately. It makes me so frustrated and angry that I literally feel like I’m going to cry!

When did we all choose to forget that our body rebuilds its tissues from nutrients found in food?

On average most of the tissues in our body turn over every 3 months, with some (like the cells of the digestive lining) turning over in as short a time span as 3 days! That’s a pretty incredible feat. And it’s a known, scientific fact. Our cells have a short (this is relative, and depends on the cell) lifespan, and when they die, they are replaced by new versions. So, how does our body make new cells? From building blocks. And where does it get those building blocks?

Pharmaceuticals! 

Ha! Kidding. 

Now obviously there’s a time and a place for pharmaceutical intervention, but that’s not the topic of this post. Our bodies get the building blocks we need to regenerate tissues on a daily basis, from the food we put in it. What does this mean?

Eating healthy food is not a choice. It is an obligation we have to ourselves.

Let’s take surgery for example. 

When you are in need of surgery (which is an incredible medical advancement btw!) there’s a major trauma to your entire body. Yes it saves lives, but in the process it is pretty damaging. Miraculously, your body has the ability to regenerate the tissue that was damaged. At risk of sounding repetitive, where does it get the building blocks to regenerate this tissue from? Food. A few specific nutrients required include:

  • fat and cholesterol
    • crucial for cell membranes
    • fat from whole, minimally processed sources such as avocado, coconut, olive, grass-fed/pastured animals and eggs, fish, some nuts/seeds
    • cholesterol is only found in animal products
  • animo acids
    • building blocks for new tissue
    • the complete protein spectrum, in the ideal ratios for us, are only found in animal products
  • omega-3 fats
    • potent anti-inflammatory action and an important component of cell membranes
    • highest in seafood, also found to a lesser extent in pastured eggs and grass-fed beef
    • NOTE: omega-3’s from plants (flax, chia, nuts etc.) are not the kind of omega-3 we need. They contain ALA, which we can only convert at max 2-3% (if you’re optimally healthy) to the omega-3’s we need (DHA and EPA)
  • glycine:
    • specific amino acid required for building the scaffolding that all tissues are built on (see post on bone broth for more info)
    • only found in the connective tissue and organs of animals
  • vitamin c
    • critical for connective tissue regeneration
    • yes it’s found in fruit (not juice!), but it’s found in way higher amounts in vegetables
    • beef liver blows an apple out of the water for vitamin C content by the way…
  • Vitamin D 
    • critical for immune modulation
    • exposure to the sun (without sunscreen on)
    • also high in pastured pork fat and cold water, oily fish like sardines
  • B complex vitamins
    • required for all cells to utilize fuel in order to function
    • ubiquitous, but found in highest concentrations in liver
  • folate
    • critical for detoxification, which is likely required do to the massive hit of drugs your body experienced during surgery
    • highest in leafy greens and chicken livers
    • NOTE: folate is the food source, folic acid is a synthetic version found in supplements and is not the same thing. In fact, in some cases folic acid can cause more damage than it heals

This is by no means an exhaustive list, in fact I barely skimmed the surface in order to keep this post from becoming a novel. But the point is evident. Nutrients are required to recover from surgery. Where do these nutrients come from? Our food. Plain and simple.

So if we were to take this extreme example and extrapolate to every day life, wouldn’t the same principles apply? Our digestive lining is constantly regenerating – we need nutrients to create new cells and tissues. What about our joints? With constant demand placed on them, especially if you move a lot, you need to provide them with the nutrients for efficient regeneration, otherwise they’re going to tell you they’re not happy! What about post-pregnancy? Heck that’s practically a surgery, and in many cases it is, but is any emphasis placed on food? No! I coached a dear friend through the delivery of her son about a year ago, and it was criminal the “food” they gave her after. What about the brain? I find that is a hard concept for people to wrap their heads around, but guys, the brain is just an organ. We know food impacts your heart and your arteries, so why can’t it impact your brain? Unfortunately symptoms of the brain simply manifest without pain, and instead as mood disorders, behavioural issues, seizures, brain fog and autism spectrum. So what is one thing we can do to help the brain? Give it the nutrients it needs.

I could go on and on, and I probably should because this seems to be something we have forgotten, but I’ll stop. People look at me like I’m crazy and roll their eyes when I have a food answer to every health question. But in reality, it’s pretty darn simple. Ann Wigmore said it best:

“The food you eat can be either the safest and most powerful form of medicine or the slowest form of poison.”

And trust me when I tell you, the way we’re eating right now is poisoning us. Every new generation of kids that are born are sicker and sicker. Anyone who has school-aged children will know that every year more and more foods are banned from school due to the astronomical number of life-threatening food allergies. There’s a school near us that has had to ban peanuts, tree nuts, seeds, fish and mustard due to the anaphylactic allergies. Babies are coming to see us on zantac because their digestive tracts are malfunctioning. Eczema and asthma run rampant. Behavioural issues, autism and ADHD diagnoses are getting out of control – even when corrected for higher rates of diagnosis and broader diagnostic criteria. It is assumed that everyone over the age of 60 must be on some kind of drug for blood pressure, diabetes, cholesterol etc. Gall bladders are being taken out left, right and centre. Fertility issues are getting worse. Approximately 20% of North Americans suffer from an autoimmune condition. Insomnia, depression and anxiety are among the highest medicated conditions these days. No one has any answers, and the one-symptom, one-drug approach is literally killing people. What the heck is going on?

We have forgotten that our bodies need nutrients to survive. Instead of focusing on nutrient value, we focus on reducing the time, energy and cost involved in preparing real food. As a result, our bodies are falling apart. We ignore the warning signs early in life and push through, often suppressing symptoms with drugs, until the body reaches a breaking point. Now a simple change towards healthy food isn’t enough, and extreme health interventions are required to bring people back to normal. 

You might think I’m being a little extreme, but every week we see dozens of people whose bodies are falling apart. Kidney failure from being on diabetes drugs for too many years. Osteoporosis from chronic antacid use (whose labelled use is for a max of 4-6 weeks, not decades). Third and fourth autoimmune conditions popping up in one individual, after improper management of the first and second. Regression at 18 months old to not speaking or making eye contact, which no explanation for the cause. School-aged children having no control over their bodies. Arthritis onsetting as early as 20. It’s heart-breaking. And so much of it is preventable.

The saddest part is we’re not just harming ourselves. We are experiencing this breaking point later in life, but our children are being born with it. This has to stop.

Yes it’s tough to change your diet. Yes cookies, cake, cereal, granola bars and bread are delicious. Yes it’s easier to turn a blind eye and hope for the best. You want to know what’s not easy? Chronic, debilitating pain. Autoimmune conditions that keep you house-bound. Seeing a child covered head-to-toe in eczema, crying with severe abdominal pain, or not able to say “I love you” anymore. Watching a loved one die of cancer or cardiovascular disease. It’s those challenges that make eating healthy a breeze.

Eating healthy food is not a choice. It is an obligation we have to ourselves. It is an obligation we have to our children, our children’s children and to the future of the human race.

 

Borrowed from Melissa Ramos at www.sexyfoodtherapy.com
Borrowed from Melissa Ramos at www.sexyfoodtherapy.com

Sweet Potato Sliders

Sweet Potato Sliders | AmandaNaturally.comParties and social gatherings are more difficult for those of us who avoid specific foods for health reasons. It becomes significantly easier when you host, or if you are attending a pot luck, because you know that you will at least be able to eat what you make! The key is bringing something that not only you can eat, but that most of the other guests will enjoy as well. I can tell you from personal experience, when dealing with food allergies, you become way less picky about the things you can eat! I constantly have to remind my husband that while the biscuits I make are good, they are no way identical to gluten-filled ones (although he somehow still can’t see the difference!). So my goal is to make things that are delicious for everyone, not just those of us who have adapted to gluten/grain-free versions!

Case in point, these Sweet Potato Sliders. This recipe is designed to be a jumping off point, so you can adapt it to whatever foods you have on hand. My favourite way to make them is by topping with pulled meat, but there are lots of other ways to utilize them. Here are some suggestions:

  • pulled pork + guacamole + salsa (my fav)
  • small piece of grilled/flaked salmon + mango chutney
  • yogurt (if tolerated) + curry chicken + cilantro
  • mini beef patty + caramelized onions
  • bacon + lettuce + cherry tomato
  • pepperoni + tomato sauce + basil
  • smoked salmon + capers
  • keep it meat-free by topping with baba ganoush, hummus (if tolerated), guac, cheese, salsa etc.

 

Sweet Potato Sliders
A delicious appetizer at a dinner party, great for a pot luck and a perfect game day snack! Grain-free, dairy-free and oh so yummy!
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Prep Time
10 min
Cook Time
45 min
Total Time
55 min
Prep Time
10 min
Cook Time
45 min
Total Time
55 min
Ingredients
  1. 2-4 skinny sweet potatoes
  2. 2 tbsp fat of choice, melted (coconut oil, lard, olive oil)
  3. sea salt
Instructions
  1. Preheat oven to 350.
  2. Slice sweet potatoes into even slices, about ¼ inch thick.
  3. Toss slices in a bowl with melted fat of choice and sea salt.
  4. Lay slices on a baking sheet, leaving some space in between.
  5. Bake for 20-25 minutes.
  6. Flip and continue baking for another 15-25 minutes until cooked through.
Amanda Naturally http://www.amandanaturally.com/
Sweet Potato Sliders | AmandaNaturally.com

Sweet Potato Fries

Sweet Potato Fries | AmandaNaturally.comOne of my goals with this blog is to present simple, nourishing food. To show anyone who may stumble across this little piece of the blogosphere that it is easy to make food that tastes amazing, is budget-friendly, and is healing to your body, whether you are the picture of health, or dealing with a serious health crisis.

Today’s post, my friends, does not get any simpler than that. I present you with: 

Sweet Potato Fries!

Making a good batch of sweet potato fries is an awesome skill to have. Sweet potatoes are very inexpensive and are on EWG’s Clean 15 list – so they are not a priority to be bought organic.

Here are the 2 most important things to remember when making sweet potato fries:

1. Use a liberal amount of fat. I beg of you – stop being afraid of fat! Fat is such an important part of the human diet – especially for women. The fat phobic nutrition era that we are slowly crawling out of, is based on cherry-picked and misinterpreted science and professional opinion. Just make sure you use a good quality fat! If you want to keep it vegan, use coconut or avocado oil. But trust me when I tell you that duck fat is hands down the best fat to use in this recipe, followed closely by lard. As long as the animal was raised properly, animal fat is not only not dangerous for you, but incredibly healthy!

  

2. Leave space between the fries. If you bunch them too close together, the steam that comes off the fries during the baking process makes them soggy and you don’t get that crispy outside layer that you’re going for. You’re better off using an extra baking sheet, than squishing all of the fries close together!

 

If you do those 2 things, you’re good to go. From there, feel free to get creative with spices like chili and cumin. Or keep it classic with sea salt. Looking for a dip? I love mixing my homemade mayonnaise with a clean Sriracha sauce for a spicy dip.

Which ever way you go with these, you can rest easy knowing that they are truly healthy for you! On top of that, they are compliant with paleo, the autoimmune protocol, low fodmap (if you keep the portion very moderate) and plant-based diets. But most importantly, they’re awesome – especially when making burgers!

 

 

Sweet Potato Fries
Serves 4
Paleo, AIP, Vegan. Delicious and Nutritious. Perfect side dish for a grass-fed burger!
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Print
Prep Time
5 min
Cook Time
40 min
Total Time
45 min
Prep Time
5 min
Cook Time
40 min
Total Time
45 min
Ingredients
  1. 4 small sweet potatoes
  2. ¼ cup duck fat, melted (or lard, coconut oil, ghee)
  3. sea salt, liberally (or garlic sea salt, kelp sea salt)
Instructions
  1. Preheat oven to 375F.
  2. Slice sweet potatoes into fries.
  3. Toss in a bowl with melted fat and sea salt.
  4. Split evenly between 2 baking sheets. Leave space between every fry to prevent soggy fries.
  5. Bake for 40 minutes, flipping fries once.
Notes
  1. If your fries are particularly small, you might need less time. Or more time if they're wedges.
Add spices to take these up a notch! Try
  1. - cumin & chili powder
  2. - rosemary
  3. - cinnamon & coconut sugar
Amanda Naturally http://www.amandanaturally.com/

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