
Cooked Food Compromises: When Ultimatums Don't Cut It!
by Tera Warner
This
time of year more than any other is just downright tough for most Raw
Foodists. Even long time Raw Food enthusiasts get a bit
chilly around this time of year.
For those of you who have no problems with fruit and greens 4 seasons of the year, then more power to you!
For
the rest of you, however, we thought it might be helpful to let you
know where we stand on the subject of cooked food compromises.
After
3 years of working personally with clients, I am convinced that
ultimatums are a dead end road. As soon as we put a big "Forbidden
Foods" list in front of our faces, we end up with bingeing, guilt trips and food obsessions!
It is more harmful to continually put your
body through a raw food roller coaster, cold foodthan to find a happy
medium and stick to it. I've said in the past, I would prefer that 80%
of the population be 60% raw than 4% of the population be 100%.
The
goal, remember, is not putting a "Raw Foodist" stamp on your forehead
at the end of the day. We're engaged in the pursuit of health, high
energy living and ideally we're doing this in a way that takes environmental impact of our choices into
consideration as well.
So, if you're not willing to have
a hard-core Christmas, then here's what I recommend you take into
consideration. When restrictions are removed the urgency to indulge, or
overeat on "forbidden foods" vanishes.
One
of the ways I like to approach nutrition and eating is sensibly. I
don't believe that it requires an ability to decipher enzymatic,
anti-oxidant and amino acid vocabulary to be able to thrive. If that
was the case, we'd all be in trouble.
Whatever you're considering eating, just look at your body, look at the food on your plate and ask yourself:
"Does this make sense?"
Is the food something you could find easily in nature?
You may be able to find wheat, for example, in nature, but in its natural state it is very indigestible to humans.
Would it taste good if you just added heat?
If
you are going to eat cooked foods, then I highly recommend sticking to
the foods that make sense. A slice of grilled fish, a baked potato and
steamed broccoli makes a lot of sense to me. More sense than a "raw
pie" loaded with dates, avocado and almonds.
I've
felt much, much worse eaing complicated raw food recipes than I have
eating healthy, simple cooked food like steamed greens or a sweet
potato.
If
you need to add a bunch of spices and sauces for your food to be
attractive and digestible, then I would say leave it aside. Also, the
extra sauces and spices are in large part responsible for the desire to
overeat. These are the mechanisms of stimulation-addiction and the
kinds of things that send the floodgates open. There's only so much
baked sweet potato and steamed broccoli a person can eat. But start
smothering them in butter and cheese sauces and you have yourself a
whole other story.
Keep your cooked foods simple and sauce free. This will help you hold
in line your own limits and leave you feeling relatively well, even if
it is a meal of cooked food.
Avoiding
the sauces and spices will also help you to choose better foods. Beans,
legumes, pasta and most grains taste rather boring without salt and
sauces, so best avoid them.
Chances
are you'll aslo find that it's much easier to control your cooked food
consumption when you've removed your restrictions about it. When the
food is no longer "forbidden" obsession moves aside. You don't have
that lingering ultimatum telling you that "THIS, will be the LAST time
you EVER eat cooked food!"
So, summing up, then stick to these:
Vegetables
like broccoli, cauliflower, green beans and peas taste perfectly
scrumptious without doctoring them up with spices and sauces. In fact,
I find most vegetables tast quite nice steamed lightly. Sweet potatoes,
pumpkins and squashes of all kinds are super tasty, too! Also,
a simple piece of grilled fish or meat usually doesn't require anything
for it to be appetizing to most people. Just think of the foods you
could find in nature. Then, if you can add fire and keep the flavor
without having to add a bunch of sauces, I think you've hit a winner.
So, there it is.
If
ultimatums are not on your plate, then these are my top recommendations
for what to put there instead. Remember that the joys of being with
good people, celebrating life and all her sparkly pleasures is REALLY
good for your health. Make that your priority and the rest will fall in
place I'm sure of it.

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