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12 Steps to Whole Foods

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Making Salad the Star<br />

So, we’re focusing again this month on a change that will move you closer from the typical American diet of<br />

11 grams of fiber <strong>to</strong> the typical chimpanzee diet of 300 grams of fiber! Some studies suggest that ancient man<br />

ate 150 grams of fiber daily. We won’t get as far as the chimps or even ancient people, but this step—along<br />

with your green smoothie—will put you in the <strong>to</strong>p 1% of Americans for having a healthy diet! (That’s assuming<br />

the remainder of your diet isn’t burgers, fries, and candy bars, of course.) How many other areas in your life are<br />

you in the <strong>to</strong>p 1%? And you’re only on Step 2!<br />

With these recipes, I’ve endeavored <strong>to</strong> help you explore the incredible variety of vegetables that are available<br />

in your local market—vegetables you may not have eaten before. I believe the key <strong>to</strong> making a salad every<br />

night a habit for life is <strong>to</strong> have a wide reper<strong>to</strong>ire of food-combining choices. If you change it up, it never gets<br />

boring!<br />

Make a big salad the central part of your meal—the “main dish,” if you will. You can have whatever else you<br />

like for dinner—keep your “comfort foods” on the menu if you want <strong>to</strong>—but begin <strong>to</strong> make the mental shift <strong>to</strong><br />

a mostly raw vegetable dish as the biggest thing on your plate. After a while, you won’t want <strong>to</strong> go back <strong>to</strong> the<br />

way you felt before you began eating dinners featuring a big salad.<br />

My family enjoys a tradition of going out every Saturday night <strong>to</strong> our favorite salad bar restaurant. My children<br />

pile up a huge plate of raw greens and colorful veggies, and I always compliment the child with the most<br />

colorful plate. They tend <strong>to</strong> compete with each other <strong>to</strong> impress Mom with their choices! Most of the other kids<br />

at the restaurant choose mostly cubed ham, cheese, and Jell-O as they go through the salad bar. Occasionally<br />

you see a child with peas or corn on the plate: these are the least nutritious of all vegetables, especially canned.<br />

On several occasions, I have seen parents pointing <strong>to</strong> my kids’ plates and whispering <strong>to</strong> their children.<br />

My children (clockwise from left) Emma, Tennyson, Kincade, and Mary Elizabeth making<br />

people stare because of how many veggies they eat.<br />

54 <strong>12</strong> <strong>Steps</strong> <strong>to</strong> <strong>Whole</strong> <strong>Foods</strong><br />

© Copyright Robyn Openshaw

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