Clean Your Kitchen: How To Trash the Toxins in
Your Pantry
by
Daisy
Luther
The
Organic Prepper
Recently
by Daisy Luther: Five
Reasons Why I’ll Never Get a Flu Shot
My kitchen
is about 95% clean. No, I’m not talking about the standards
of hygiene or the crud that tries to take up residence in the grout
– I’m talking about the contents of my pantry and refrigerator.
I’ve
worked hard to banish GMOs, pesticides and chemical additives from
the premises. With the proliferation of “dirty” food-like
substances that fill the grocery stores, it’s been a challenge
to build a clean long-term food supply, especially on a tight budget.
Let’s
talk about clean food. This is the food that we are naturally intended
to eat, food that our bodies can process and turn into energy and
muscle – nutrients we can use to provide us with glowing health
– fuel that doesn’t make us fat.
Dirty food,
on the other hand, is loaded with things that your body was not
designed to process: chemical additives to change the color or texture,
preservatives to inhibit mold and kill off bacteria, modified genes,
altered sugars and neurotoxins. The lists of ingredients on processed
foods read more like a chemistry textbook than a compilation of
edible items.
A huge portion
of the items available at your local Piggly Wiggly or Shop-n-Save
just aren’t fit to eat anymore. Our society is becoming dumber
by the day, as they kill off brain cells, literally kill them,
with the neurotoxins present in a bag of Doritos and a Diet Coke.
People are becoming fatter as they chow down on items loaded with
High Fructose Corn Syrup only to become hungry again a scant amount
of time later as their bodies desperately seek satiation, since
HFCS doesn’t trigger the production of insulin and leptin
(the hormones that make you feel full).
I began thinking
about the transformation of my kitchen last night, when I was chatting
with a friend about getting rid of the GMOs that had been stubbornly
resisting eviction. (If you’re a friend of mine, you know
that eventually, some portion of a conversation will make its way
onto the website – so, thanks, dude, for the inspiration!)
Through the course of the discussion, I pinpointed the turning point
that helped me clean things up, once and for all.
Six months
ago, I felt pretty good about the clean and healthy foods stored
up in my pantry. While the contents of my cupboards were probably
healthier than those of many North Americans, there were still a
lot of sneaky culprits lurking there.
I discovered
this when I did a “Scratch
Challenge.” For one month, back in November, I made absolutely
everything from scratch. So, no seasoning mixes, no crackers, no
tortillas – nothing that came ready to eat. If I purchased
an item, it was a single ingredient, not a ready-made component.
Initially I thought the exercise would be a piece of cake. After
all, I baked healthy goodies for Rosie’s lunch box a couple
of times per week. I didn’t use any of the “just add
hamburger” boxed meals. I already cooked from scratch!
My eyes became
opened as quickly as
Day 1, when I was scrounging around the kitchen looking for
breakfast. My usual breakfast of peanut butter on either toast or
crackers, along with a piece of fruit, wasn’t going to happen,
because a) I hadn’t made bread and b) the crackers weren’t
from scratch. I ended up cobbling together a big bowl of scrambled
eggs with assorted veggies, eaten, toastless, out of a bowl.
Over the course
of the experiment, of course, things improved. I made bread, soft
tortillas, nacho chips, salsa, pizza sauce, noodles, and many more
items that I had formerly grabbed right from the cupboard. I realized
that even in a fairly clean kitchen, there lurked a fair amount
of potential GMO and chemical bombs.
I challenge
you to clean your own kitchen. You will be amazed at the increase
in your health if you can kick the dirty foods out and nourish your
body with pure, clean food. You can feel confident that the supplies
you have stored will see you through whatever circumstances arrive
in the future when you build your food stockpile for nutritious
ingredients instead of toxins in a deceptively cheerful box.
Spend
one week cooking from scratch.
You don’t
have to do this for an entire month – just one week will highlight
for you the places where you are using “food” instead
of “ingredients” to make your meals. Use only single
ingredients for one week: flour, rice, oats, organic milk and yogurt,
grass-fed meat, organic fruits and vegetables, and basic pantry
supplies (yeast, baking soda, etc.) Include your kids in the process
of making homemade pretzels, baking cookies and creating gourmet
oatmeal flavors like maple syrup apple pecan. (If they’re
included in the preparations, it helps to lessen the complaining
if they are craving foods that are more familiar.) You may be just
as surprised as I am when you discover that you have more of a reliance
on packaged items than you thought.
Buy your
dry items in bulk.
I recently
made a large purchase of organic grains and sugar for our family.
The cost of organic flour, wheat, cornmeal, sugar
and oats can be very prohibitive if your budget is tight like mine.
By purchasing these items in 25-50 pound bags and storing them properly,
I saved about 30% off the price of grocery store purchased items,
even when I tack on the price of shipping. As well, I have made
great inroads towards a well-balanced, nutritious one year food
supply for my family.
Plant
a garden.
Whether you
have a few acres, a suburban back yard, a patio or a windowsill,
begin now to take steps towards self-sufficiency. No, you can’t
grow enough food on a balcony to feed your family of 4 for a year,
but you can cultivate some organic foods that aid in cutting your
grocery bill while learning more about self-sufficiency. You can
sprout seeds and grow herbs year round in a sunny window. You can,
at the least, supplement your purchased groceries with a taste of
nature brought forth by you. In my 1/10 acre city lot last year,
I grew enough beans and tomatoes that we are still enjoying them
in January. What’s more, I didn’t have to purchase produce
from the store for 3 months straight – all of our veggie needs
were met in our own back yard.
Start
searching for sources of real food near you.
The next best
option to your own garden is making friends with a local farmer
at the market – you can purchase many things in bushels at
a much better price than the 1 pint baskets. When I lived in the
city, I was fortunate to make friends with a nice older farmer,
originally from Italy. Not only did I get a lot of great tips for
my own garden, after a while, he began to bring me bushel baskets
of ”seconds” for canning at a greatly reduced price.
To make matters even better, he allowed me to go and pick my own
“high-labor” foods like peas and berries. This allowed
him to charge me far less, since he didn’t have to pay pickers,
and allowed me to learn a great deal about growing those items.
Don’t stop with produce though – find someone who raises
cattle and chickens. Check out for yourself the conditions the animals
are raised in, see what they’re fed and make a deal for purchasing
in quantity. You will be amazed at the difference between grass
fed, organic beef vs. feedlot grocery store beef. When you buy a
quarter of a cow, you pay an average price – this means you’ll
pay a bit more for lesser cuts that end up as ground beef or stewing
beef, but you’ll pay far less for prime cuts like steaks and
roasts. Free range chicken and eggs are also far tastier and healthier
than their factory-farmed counterparts. When you buy direct from
the farm you can confirm for yourself that your version of free
range and the farmer’s version coincide.
Learn
to preserve food.
I live in a
tiny Northern town. The price of organic produce is sometimes double
or triple the price of conventional fruits and vegetables. I combat
this by purchasing organic items that are near their expiration
dates and preserving them immediately. I also preserve the bounty
from my garden and bushel baskets purchased from local organic farmers.
I can,
pickle, freeze and dehydrate these foods to consume throughout the
year. One
fantastic benefit to canning is that you can put up entire meals
in a jar, creating your own healthy convenience foods with nary
a chemical in sight. While canning is initially time consuming,
you’re putting away numerous meals simultaneously, saving
time in the long run. This is especially handy for those busy days
that would have once sent you to the closest drive-through, desperately
seeking sustenance while in between piano lessons and soccer practice.
Know
what to look out for.
Over 85% of
soy and corn in North America is GMO. That means that if an item
is not labeled “organic” and contains one of those ingredients
(in its many different disguises) that you are consuming somebody’s
science experiment. The
corn industry, in particular, is incredibly deceptive about
sneaking in its toxic yield under different names. As well, neurotoxic
“seasonings” made from MSG like to masquerade under
seemingly harmless aliases. Check out The
Ingredients You Should Not Have in Your Pantry for more items
to avoid. Spend some time looking up the more scientific-sounding
ingredients on the labels in your pantry. Compile a list of items
you no longer want to bring home and keep that in your wallet to
cross-reference against the labels at the grocery store when you
shop.
What are you
waiting for?
The sooner
you take steps to exclude the FDA-approved
poisons from your lifestyle, the sooner you can begin to see the
health benefits. Clean foods can…
- Help you
to maintain a healthy body weight
- Increase
energy
- Drop your
risk for many different afflictions, including obesity, diabetes,
cancer and heart disease
- Improve
your immune system
- Aid in managing
childhood “behavioral issues” like ADHD, ODD, and
other acronyms short for “medicate kids into little zombies”
There really
is no end to the benefits of cleaning up your kitchen and your food
storage. What do you have to lose, besides disease, illness and
fat?
Reprinted
from The Organic
Prepper.
January
18, 2013
Daisy Luther writes daily tips, strategies and prepping ideas
at The
Organic Prepper and Girls
Gone North.
Copyright
© 2013 The
Organic Prepper
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