Saturday, September 24, 2011

On the Mend

Monday night last week, I was lying in bed reading, on the edge of dozing off to sleep.  The phone rang, as it seems to do when I am on the edge of sleep.  I was sure it was my husband.  He had gone out to an open mic to do a bit of stand-up, and he usually calls to tell me he's coming home.  I slowly climbed out of bed and ran for the phone before it went to voicemail.  It was my husband!  In a frantic voice he told me that I needed to come pick him up, "I think my ankle is broken!  I need to go to the emergency room!"

So I hopped in the car, not knowing what happened (I was really worried he had been hit by a car or fell down the stairs or something - how does one break their ankle at an open mic, i wondered), and drive the short distance to pick him up.  As I neared the corner to pick him up, I called him and he told me that his friend already had him in the car and I needed to meet them at the ER.  So I drove back up to our local ER and met them there.  We got him in to a wheel-chair and started our hour wait to get into see a doctor.  During this wait, I found out he decided to race a friend of his in a "5 house dash."  As he was about to cross the finish line, he heard a thwaap! and headed face-first for the ground.  He threw his right palm in front of him to catch his fall and also scraped up his right elbow and left knee.

After X-rays were taken, we found out that he hadn't broken any bones (thank goodness), but unfortunately, he had ruptured his achilles tendon.  They put a fiberglass splint on his leg, washed up his elbow and knee and sent him home.  By the next Tuesday (this week), he was in and out of surgery, and on his way to a steady recovery.  He now has a cast on and is hobbling around on crutches.

There are a few redeeming factors about this sad state of affairs.

1.) He has been eating Paleo for the last 2.5 months and has lost over 30 lbs.  (It is quite difficult to weigh yourself when you have crutches and a cast and you can't put your weight on your casted leg, but I actually think he's lost more like 35 lbs. by now.)  This is a good thing because it is less weight for him to carry around as he's crutching.  It's also great because, as he is losing weight, his body is in a healing mode and that should speed up his recovery time.  Paleo food is also void of grains, legumes, and seed oils, which can cause chronic inflammation.  Some inflammation is good when you need it to heal your body, but chronic inflammation is just not helpful and can cause or worsen auto-immune diseases, such as Rheumatoid Arthritis.  As he's healing, my husband needs all of the inflammation his body is making to go right where he needs it!

2.) Because he's been losing weight so easily and comfortably (we are NEVER hungry on a paleo diet) he is in a very positive mood, which I think will help keep him sane, me sane (have to help him with almost everything he wants to do - from cooking to showers), and I think if he's in a good mood it may lower his stress levels and help him heal faster.

Beef Bone Broth Simmering on the stove


3.) I made Beef Bone Broth!  You can check out the recipe/video here.  After browning the beef knuckles and mirepoix (carrots, celery, and onion) in the oven, throw them all in a big soup pot with some cold, filtered water and some red wine.  The acid in the wine leaches the calcium from the bones into the broth along with the collagen.  When the collagen enters your body and moves through your digestive system, it goes through unharmed.  It goes into the blood stream and finds places where the collagen is needed (a busted achilles tendon, perhaps?) and repairs it.  For more info on that check out Deep Nutrition.

Hopefully my hubby will be healed up in no time!

Monday, September 12, 2011

Dodging Bullets

I am 29.  I am 5'7".  I am over weight.  Starting at almost 215 lbs., I needed a change.  I felt tired all the time.  I had high cholesterol:  late last year when I gave blood, my cholesterol was 243 (total cholesterol).  I had pretty consistent moderate acne from the time I was about 12 years old.  I had exercise induced asthma, so I didn't like to work out hard, in fear that it might flare up.  I wasn't fitting into my clothes.  

Makin' my flexitarian Beet Chips.  March 26, 2011

But I love food.  So of course I'm fat, right?!  Everyone knows that if you eat too much good, tasty food, you're gonna gain weight.  And if you're lazy or you don't like to sweat it out at the gym, well, those pounds aren't going to lose themselves! 

I was very frustrated.  It came to a point where I felt like I was addicted to food.  I couldn't control my weight and I felt guilty and was extremely hard on myself.  I knew I couldn't fix it with a diet.  I've been on and off and on and off of low-fat diets for pretty much as long as I can remember.  Calorie restriction really worked, but here's the rub: the second you go back to your normal life, you gain it back (sometimes you gain more).  It was a terrible feeling.  I couldn't think of what to do.  

Another angle of the old me.  Not a pretty picture.    April 10, 2011

I researched food addiction on google and complained to my mom on the phone.  Being the child of 2 weight-watchers "lifers" I knew what was expected of me if I wanted to lose weight, but it wasn't working.  I had read Michael Pollan's "In Defense of Food" and was so ready to get healthy and as he says, "Eat Food.  Not too much.  Mostly Vegetables."  So I dug in a little deeper.  I got into the "Meatless Mondays" and crawled through "The Omnivore's Dilemma" (great book, just a bit of a long read for me).  I ate healthy whole wheat bread and focused on adding whole grains and beans to my meals.  I ate a ton of veggies.  I cut way back on my meat consumption.

And nothing happened.  Sure, I felt like I was eating more cleanly - focusing on "from scratch" meals and avoiding some of the aisles of the grocery store.  Then I looked into becoming a "Flexitarian."  It made so much sense.  I could eat mostly veggies and pasta and beans and grains and cheese and I could eat meat when I was in the mood.  I bought cook books and tried out some delicious recipes, but I still wasn't really having much of an improvement on my health.  

The old me: March 2nd, 2011


Then one day, while randomly listening to a new podcast I stumbled across on Stitcher Radio, Underground Wellness, I heard Chris Kresser talk about how grains and legumes and processed food wasn't very good for you.  I was in disbelief.  I'd heard that people with Celiac disease couldn't eat wheat, but normal people are fine, right?!  Wrong.  Many people with a more mild sensitivity to gluten don't even know they are gluten sensitive!  

It was the first time I had ever heard of paleo, and I was curious to hear more.  I started to listen to "Everyday Paleo" and "Latest in Paleo."  I couldn't get enough of this idea that was blowing my mind. ITS NOT FAT, MAKING US FAT!  ITS JUNK CARBOHYDRATES, SUGAR, AND SEED OILS!  We are not broken by default.  Medicine should be our last option, not our first!  Nutrition is so important!

It has now been 2 months since I began my primal lifestyle.  While reading "The Primal Blueprint," I eased into my new eating during my vacation to San Francisco and Yosemite.  At first it was weird; almost too easy.  Sure I wasn't perfect, but it was totally do-able.  I basically just focused on only eating meat, veggies, fruit, nuts, and some dairy.  

I can't even explain how great I feel.  The first month I dropped 10 lbs!  After that the weight isn't falling off nearly as quickly (I'm sure it is because I probably consume a bit too much dairy and fruit - both will raise your blood sugar much more than you realize), but I feel amazing.  There are times when I will go out for a walk and decide to do a quick sprint.  Just for fun.  And sure, when I slow down after my sprint, I have to catch my breath, but I don't have my asthma any more.  My face is clearer than it was when I was 12.  I'm not starving all the time, thinking about food every minute of the day, like I used to do.  I'm ok if I have to go a few extra hours without a meal.  I sleep more soundly and wake up to no alarm clock.  

I know I still have a way to go in my efforts to lose weight.  But I'll tell you one thing, I really don't think I'll be going back to the Standard American Diet anytime soon.  I feel healthy.  And I LOVE eating grass-fed steaks, pastured eggs, whole organic milk, fresh organic fruits and veggies and so much more.  

A delicious Primal Meal: Romain Lettuce with Chimay Cheese, Rotisserie Chicken, Crispy Bacon, and Beef Liver Pate.


My father is a non-insulin dependent diabetic.  Both of his parents had diabetes.  I knew, without going to a fortune teller, what my future would hold if I couldn't turn my health around.  

I feel like I've actually dodged a bullet.  After 1 more month living the primal lifestyle, I'll probably go in for a doctor's appointment and have my blood drawn and see where my numbers are at and hopefully confirm my suspicion:  I am getting healthier, I am dodging the bullet of diabetes, and I am adding years to my life.  

Me and my cubby hubby pre-primal: June 26, 2011


P.S.  My hubby has been eating primal for only about a month and a half and has lost 25 lbs.!  This is such a gift we are giving ourselves and each other.  It is a gift of health, and a longer life together.  :)

Hopefully I'll have some great "in-progress" pictures soon.  

Thursday, September 1, 2011

Pickled Radishes - Lacto-fermented (Probiotic) & Paleo!

Perhaps you have a bushel full of radishes that you have plucked from the soil in your garden.  Or you may have gone a bit overboard just bought a bit too many radishes at the farmers market.  Either way, I have a suggestion for your consumption of said radishes:  Pickled Radishes!

[I do like very thinly sliced raw radishes on my salads and such, but most of the time raw radishes are a bit too "hot" for my palate.  So, of course, you can eat them raw, if that's your thing.  You can roast them up with other veggies in the oven.  You can also sauté them in some butter/ghee, salt and pepper.  Cooking them, in general, gives them a much more smooth, mild flavor.  Sautéed Radishes are one of my FAVORITE ways the eat a radish, second only to pickled.]

Pickles - Pickles - Pickles

You've probably had many different kinds of pickles in your life.  There's dill pickles, gherkins, bread and butter pickles.  I'm guessing you've probably also had other non-cucumber pickled items: sauerkraut, kimchi, pickled garlic, pickled watermelon rinds, hot Mexican-style pickled carrots, and many others.  Have you had pickled radishes before?

When radishes are pickled, the flavor becomes mild, smooth and almost buttery.  It still tastes like a pickle, but like no other pickle you've ever had.

Grass-fed grilled sirloin steak with pickled radishes, carrots, Romain and red-leaf lettuce, black olives, and 5 Cheese Garlic Spread from River Valley Kitchens
Pickling radishes (this recipe at least) uses Lacto-fermentation.  Feel free to check out the Wikipedia site for it here.  Basically,  you use water and salt.  No vinegar.  For Dill Pickles you would also add fresh dill, garlic, and pickling spices.  You can check out Sandor Katz's Book "Wild Fermentation" for a ton more info on all kinds of pickling.  (You can also google him, and there are a bunch of recipes on the web.)

Also, on a side note, pickled radishes are SO EASY!!!!  Oh my gosh.  You'll make them and literally be AMAZED at how low effort and quick these steps are.  Ready?

Start with a big bunch of radishes and a large mason jar with a regular 1 piece lid (not the kind that have a top and a seal, just one piece).  Wash and cut up your radishes into the size pieces you'd like your pickles to be in.  I like to do mine in bite size pieces.

Place your pickles in the bottom of your mason jar and cover with a thin layer of kosher salt.  I had about 3/4 of a quart jar full of radishes and used about 3 tablespoons of salt.  DO NOT ADD WATER YET!  Cover the top with cheese cloth and either tie a string around it or use a rubber band to make sure no bugs can get inside.

Wait 24 hours.  Take off the cheese cloth, and fill the entire jar to the tippy-ippy top.  If possible use filtered water, as chlorine may not allow your lacto-fermentation to do its thing correctly.  Place your metal lid on the top and screw it on, but not too tight.  Flip the jar upside down on your counter, on top of a rag or old towel.  SLOWLY and CAREFULLY open the lid until you see a little water come up around the edges of the jar.  This means that you have made a seal.

Don't touch this for a week.  Put a sign up if you need to, but just leave it alone and keep it out of direct sunlight.  After a week, BEFORE PICKING IT UP, screw the lid back on - then flip it right side up and take the lid off.  The odor may be quite foreign to you, but I'm telling you, these little bites of love will leave you craving more when they are all gone.

DO NOT PUT YOUR FINGERS OR USED UTENSILS IN THE JAR.  Don't do it.  There may be bacteria on those items and could ruin your pickles.  Use a CLEAN spoon and spoon your pickled radishes out into smaller mason jars (with their juice - if you need more liquid to have these jars full up to the top, add more filtered water) and then seal them up.  Stick them in the fridge and they should last up to (and maybe beyond) 6 months.  Enjoy!