06.03.2015 Views

12 Steps to Whole Foods

You also want an ePaper? Increase the reach of your titles

YUMPU automatically turns print PDFs into web optimized ePapers that Google loves.

Making Salad the Star<br />

carbonation that robs your red blood cells of oxygen, chemicals your body cannot digest or eliminate, and<br />

either 10 tsp. of sugar per can, and/or NutraSweet, and/or caffeine. Pork is considered “unclean” by various<br />

religions for good reasons: pigs have no sweat glands or lymph system, and their cooked juices have a<br />

chemical composition eerily similar <strong>to</strong> urine. Pork takes the human body three days or even weeks <strong>to</strong><br />

completely digest, and we humans are built <strong>to</strong> digest our food in a day or less; otherwise it becomes putrefied<br />

and <strong>to</strong>xic in our long digestive tract.<br />

You would be wise <strong>to</strong> make a short list of foods you simply never <strong>to</strong>uch. People always say that “balance is the<br />

key.” While that’s a good saying that applies <strong>to</strong> many things, you’d agree that common sense dictates that “just<br />

a little” arsenic in one’s diet doesn’t equate <strong>to</strong> “balance.” Neither does getting “just a little” dose of poisons like<br />

MSG, aspartame (NutraSweet), and nitrates/nitrites—even if you do choose <strong>to</strong> indulge in a little white flour,<br />

white sugar, meat, or cheese occasionally.<br />

What Salad Greens Should I Buy?<br />

With green smoothies, we are able <strong>to</strong> easily use cruciferous greens, the heavy-textured ones with a peppery,<br />

slightly bitter, or savory flavors (like kale, collards, mustard, radish, and turnip greens), along with milder<br />

tasting spinach and chard. With salads, you can save a bit of those heavier greens out of your green smoothie <strong>to</strong><br />

add denser texture, if you want, but here we mostly concentrate on lettuces.<br />

Primary Greens—with a Mild Flavor<br />

NOTE: Iceberg lettuce isn’t included because it contains little nutrition and I never use it.<br />

Romaine (crunchy)<br />

Red leaf and green leaf lettuces (available year 'round)<br />

Butterhead/Bos<strong>to</strong>n/Bibb lettuce (delicate texture and buttery taste)<br />

Spinach<br />

Mache (mild flavored, grows in the winter)<br />

Mesclun or Spring Greens (a mixture of salad greens grown and/or packaged <strong>to</strong>gether)<br />

Secondary Greens—<strong>to</strong> Mix in<strong>to</strong> a Salad Made with One of the Primary Greens<br />

Watercress (peppery flavor)<br />

Arugula (mustard-like flavor)<br />

Dandelion greens (can be bitter—harvest these weeds away from roadways)<br />

Radicchio (shred it long and thin)<br />

Escarole (mildly bitter)<br />

Baby chicory / frisée / curly endive (curly leafed)<br />

Belgian endive (bitter)<br />

Cabbages (red, green, savoy—have a coarse, crunchy texture)<br />

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

© Copyright Robyn Openshaw

Hooray! Your file is uploaded and ready to be published.

Saved successfully!

Ooh no, something went wrong!