"I'd rather spend my time in the kitchen than in a hospital room."



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This has become my standard, go-to answer when people shake their heads at how much time I dedicate to seeking out quality ingredients and cooking from scratch. Initially, I was referring to Stealthy Dad's mini-stroke last year, when we needed to switch to a reduced-sodium diet with lots of fiber and "good" fats to help bring down his blood pressure. Since then I have learned so much more about how our food affects our health.


The first thing I noticed, when cutting back on sodium, was that better quality ingredients needed less seasoning to begin with. As I spent more time reading and learning about food, I discovered that organic produce is higher in vitamins and minerals than "conventional" fruits and vegetables. When cattle graze in a pasture like nature intended, instead of fed grains in a feedlot, beef and milk are more nutrient-dense. The same goes for the eggs of chickens running around in a yard eating bugs as opposed to the "factory farm" eggs from the grocery store. Pork raised the "old fashioned way" tastes better and is better for you than grocery store/ "factory farm" pork. Finding organic produce and animal products raised the way my great-grandparents did takes more time than a trip to the grocery store but is really worth it with respect to food value and taste.

Milk is a special consideration. Did you know that use of the artificial hormone, recombinant bovine somatotropin (rbST), given to cattle to increase milk production, has been linked to breast cancer? While it has now been banned in Canada, Japan, the European Union and Australia, the FDA approves its use in the United States. To mitigate consumer concerns, it is actually illegal in many states to label a brand of milk as NOT containing the hormone. To find a brand of milk that did not contain trace amounts of this artificial hormone, I had to directly contact dairies to ask if they accepted milk from farmers who used it on their cattle. Treating cows with this hormone also leads to mastitis, which is treated with antibiotics, which gets into milk in trace amounts... If raw milk sales were legal in Iowa I would purchase milk right from a farm so I could see the condition of the cattle for myself. Healthier cows make better milk.

We've known since the 70's about the health risks associated with artificial food colours, nitrates, monosodium glutamate, and other food additives. I've been avoiding these chemicals for years, and cooking from scratch made it easier. While my trained eye can pick "monosodium glutamate" from a long ingredients list on a can of soup, if I make it myself I know exactly what it contains.

The most tedious task is avoiding genetically modified foods. Glyphosate ("RoundUp") has been linked to health issues including birth defects, endocrine disruption, and cancer. A common application of genetic engineering is "RoundUp Readiness," which makes the target plant immune to glyphosate so it can be applied to (theoretically) kill off only the weeds. The target plants absorb the glyphosate and residual amounts contaminate food. There is also concern that inserting genes from one organism to another increases the risks of allergic reactions and that our bodies cannot process new and unusual proteins. Genetically modified foods are not labelled in the United States;  I try to completely avoid soy, canola, and corn products unless they are labelled "organic" because the vast majority of these crops are genetically modified.

You can see how it can be time consuming to cook from scratch, using quality ingredients not always available at our grocery store, while avoiding certain chemicals and genetically modified foods. I see it as part of a treatment plan for a particular condition (high blood pressure) while looking after the general wellbeing of all of us and trying to avoid known carcinogens for the sake of our children. Maybe I am just a crazy-lady who needs a tin-foil hat for her birthday. I'll say it again:

"I'd rather spend my time in the kitchen than in a hospital room."




They are growing up, but will always be my babies.


I shared this post with these link-ups where bloggers share their ideas and natural food recipes: Monday Mania,  Homestead Barn Hop,  Fat TuesdayTraditional Tuesdays,  Real Food Wednesday,  Healthy2Day Wednesdays,  Thriving Thursdays and Fight Back! Friday.

10 comments:

  1. Did you know that Eli Lilly owns the rights to rBGT to put in our milk and then uses it to treat cancer? Definitely going to share this!

    http://www.responsibletechnology.org/gmo-dangers/gm-hormones-in-dairy/Is-Eli-Lilly-Milking-Cancer-by-Promoting-and-Treating-It-October-2009

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    1. Awe, geez. That one slipped past me. Thank you for the link. Remember when there were "Susan B Komen" lids on yogurt containing both rBGT and aspartame?

      Do you know that Bayer and Monsanto both have pharmaceutical and pesticide divisions? Conflict-o-Interest?

      I really had to cap this post off. I didn't go into Monsanto's aspartame, which I avoid due to migraines, or how GMO foods have been linked to various autoimmune problems from allergies to MS. I left out how high fructose corn syrup and aspartame have both been linked to obesity. Another day...

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  2. I agree with you, and no, you're not crazy! Great post!

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  3. This is a great post. I love the picture of your background. Is that your home town? I've been to Iowa before and it looks very similar. Is that where you are? I'm your newest follower and thanks so much for linking up at Thriving on Thursdays.

    Anne xx

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    1. Thank you! The photo is from Page County, IA, which is in the southwest corner of the state. That's where we hang our hats. My husband and I were driving down a country road and had to pull over to watch a crazy storm blowing in. This particular storm did some considerable damage once it reached Omaha.

      (My "hometown" is in Ontario, Canada but my husband's from the area and I've been kicking around for a while now.)

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  4. Raw milk sales might be illegal, but that doesn't mean there aren't sales happening. Just sayin. ;)

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    1. We're within a few miles of Missouri and forty minutes of Nebraska. This too, shall happen...

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  5. I agree with you! Thanks for linking up to Healthy 2Day Wednesday and come back next week to see if you were featured!

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  6. If I knew then what I know now, I would have fed my kids differently. I have cooked from scratch for years, but not always with the best ingredients. I have tried desperately hard to instruct/teach my boys about healthy eating. I think the doctors, pharmaceutical companies and prepackaged food industries must all be in together to make as much money as possible.
    There are ways to get good food without filling them full of artificial ingredients and cancer causing chemicals. We did it for hundreds of years before technology came around.
    ...soap box! sorry :-)

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    1. This is THE place for that soap box... Hop on up. Really, I don't mind. Part of me wants so hard to believe that there is no collusion among the pharmaceutical, big food, and other chemical companies. Maybe it is a coincidence that the same companies will produce both carcinogens and cancer treatments. Maybe the billions of dollars that the makers of GMO corn seed and the companies that use them spend on government lobbies has nothing to do with trying to push unhealthy foods into American bellies.

      (Maybe the fact that RoundUp kills honeybees and therefore prevents open pollination has nothing to do with forcing the farmers who used to save seeds to buy seeds from the company that makes RoundUp.)

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