Monday, February 13, 2012

Granola I Can Eat!

TheePirateWrench shared her candida friendly granola recipe and I made a batch yesterday afternoon.
It went like this:

• 4 cups rolled oats
• 1/2 cup organic virgin coconut oil
• 1 tsp. alcohol-free vanilla extract
• Desired spices/salt (I put in a few good dashes of cloves, about five good dashes of cinnamon, and one dash of sea salt)
• Stevia to taste (I put in two really good dashes)
• 1 cup of nuts (I used 1/2 cup chopped almonds & 1/2 cup sunflower seeds)

Mix everything except the nuts in a bowl. Transfer mixture to a 9x13 baking dish, and bake for 15 minutes at 350 degrees. Stir in nuts, and bake for another 15 minutes. Allow to cool, then transfer to an air-tight container.


I picked up the ingredients at WF and cut the recipe in half since it was a first try. For nute I went with sliced almonds and chopped walnuts.  We did have some nuts added back to the diet this week since he and I both were struggling with protein.  Also, we were given the green light on greek yogurt, which is AWESOME.

The granola turned out well.  You can taste the Stevia, but it's something I think we're both going to have to get used to.  I've been using Truvia, which has a much more sugar like taste and texture, but it's only part Stevia and part fruit-derived sweetener, which is a no for now.  We just did cinnamon and nutmeg, no cloves. I was very pleasantly surprised. It's not the same as my beloved sugar-laden store bought granola, but this will suffice.  I think using maple syrup would be a good sweetener.  Also, it will be perfect when we have fruit back.

Definitely a win for long-term solutions.

Food Week 2

The first week was all new and shiny and filled with cheerleaders: "You can do this!!!" but now I'm tired of boring food. And salad. And no dessert.  :(
I know I've been doing great- I'm feeling better, I'm not craving constant sugar, and the physical side effects have gone away.
Week two was getting into the routine of eggs and some other carb-ish substitute, salad for lunch and a concoction for dinner: turkey chili, stuffed bell peppers, vegetable soup.  My husband is awesome because he makes the great meals that I come home to. Unfortunately for him, he's having a harder time than I am.  Apparently his pre-workout supps had sugar. As well as the Stevia substitute we were using. Whoops.  So it has really drawn this out for him, and made it much more challenging than it should have been.
So I'm tired of healthy foods, but we're really working for variation. For some who already eat broadly, that may not be so challenging.  But for this meat and potatoes girl, it's pretty lame.
Week 2 was easier physically, but harder mentally. Sticking with it when it isn't new isn't as much fun, but I know there's a lot more variation to be had.  We'll see what I can come up with...

Thursday, February 9, 2012

Lemonade Weekend!

Day 7-9 we had this mix of maple syrup and fresh squeezed lemons, that we could alternate with maple syrup and 100% cranberry juice.  It was 3/4 cup juice, 1/4 cup syrup and then fill the bottle with water- probably something like 36oz.
That sweetness was heavenly.
The first few days really weren't that bad. I'll admit that it was kind of nice not eating some version of veggie egg scramble for breakfast and a salad for lunch.
Gross TMI alert: Dude, how many days can stuff keep coming out of your body when you're not eating? My answer: three.  OMG ew.
I was definitely surprised to learn how my body works, though.
I couldn't hack day 3.  Okay, maybe I could, but I caved to peer pressure when someone else started eating the night before and then convinced me I needed a salad when I got hungry at 2pm on day 3.
So that was as far as I went.  I definitely think it was a good thing for me.  Some of the meds I take for my migraines wreak total havoc on my digestive system and I'm sure they had something to do with everything getting so out of whack.
At least we're over that hurdle.

Time Outline

This is a five week journey that looks something like this:
Days 1-6: Eat greens/ poultry or fish/ brown rice or quinoa/ eggs with greens representing 2/3 of your diet.
Days 7-8: Same as above, eliminate animal meat
Days 9-11: "Lemonade days"
Days 12-13: Greens/ grains/ eggs, no meat
Days 14-22: Greens/ grains/ eggs/ meat
Days 23-35: Same as above, one piece of fruit per day.
"approved" protein shakes throughout, as needed.

Probably the most important part of the detox is the supplements. We take a handful of supplements to support the process, as well as organ support supplements specific to our needs and testing.

I know this isn't for everyone and sounds kinda crazy, but it's the right thing for us.  With my lifelong sugar addiction, it's a move in the direction of living a balanced and healthy life.  I've tried no sugar for thirty days a few years ago, but it wasn't enough.  We're really hoping to incorporate many pieces of this into our diet long-term.  With each positive change and effort we've made over the years, we've come out making better choices and notching our health up one more bar every time.  Hopefully I get a few notches out of this one. ;)

Wednesday, February 1, 2012

Food week 1

While I'm not technically through the first week, today is day 7.
I'm doing a helluva lot better than my counterpart- poor guy.  That definitely wasn't the case in the beginning, though.
Within 24 hours, my body started rejecting anything that wasn't sugar.  I could feel it, and knew I was eating good food- but couldn't keep it down.  I'm really amazed at the control of sugar over the body.
I started on Thursday and struggled through Friday.  Saturday K went to work, so I was home alone. All day.  In a house that still has ginger cookies on the shelf and mixed nuts and cinnamon rolls in the outside fridge.
AND I DID IT!!!! I cut up veggies in the morning, snacked on them when I was sad, and drank a few protein shakes to try to ease the cravings.  
I have no idea where the self control came from, but it was obviously not there the week before when the girl scout cookies mysteriously landed on my desk.  :/
So now I'm eating disgusting food, daily, and telling myself it's good for me (gag) and choking it down.  I do feel better about myself and it's much easier just fighting psychology over the physical pain.
After seeing what "other" people are going through bc they don't want to give up their pre-workout shake with sugar in it that's drawing this whole thing out, I don't want to be there.  And someone has to be level-headed here.

How the caffeine is doing

It was easier in the beginning because I was so motivated. Yay me! I'm awesome!  But then that faded, and now I miss coffee.  A lot.
In the mornings I'm warming hot water with a few leaves of peppermint off my plant just to make myself feel better.
I still want to cry at 2pm.  Going to have to work on that.
I really think it's half psychological and half addiction.  There's really a lot to be said for your brain clinging dearly to habits.
Watch out in the afternoons- I'm ridiculously crabby and it's all I can do not to curl up under my desk with Snickers and Diet Coke, clinging for dear life.

Tuesday, January 24, 2012

Goodbye, Caffeine

Knowing what's coming, I'm trying to make it a little easier on myself by cutting out caffeine in advance of everything else that's leaving the daily diet.
I drink a cup of black coffee every morning before getting ready for work. Except Starbucks Fridays, as mentioned previously. If I have an afternoon carb crash, I usually just have some tea.  And sometimes (okay, usually) there's caffeine at lunch.
Last semester when I overworked/ schooled, there was a lot more caffeine involved.
So this past weekend, I had 1/4 cup black coffee Sat and Sun. Monday I had a Starbucks decaf bc I had a free grande that was going to expire in two weeks.  I had an ugly carb crash yesterday afternoon that lead to a lingering headache that was still there this morning (Tues). So I had a couple sips of K's decaf and was out the door feeling better.
We'll see how tomorrow goes without coffee again, as I'm feeling much better this afternoon.
t-minus a day and a half.