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12 Steps to Whole Foods

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Starting Your Morning Off Right<br />

2. Each morning, at least half an hour before eating or drinking anything else, add 1 tsp. of the sole<br />

solution <strong>to</strong> a glass of water and drink it. Your body will receive the energetic vibration pattern for 24<br />

hours.<br />

Breakfast<br />

What your mother always <strong>to</strong>ld you is true: breakfast is the most important meal of the day. Another truism is<br />

the saying <strong>to</strong> eat breakfast like a king, lunch like a queen, and dinner like a pauper. (Letting your body rest at<br />

night from digestion is critically important for the health of your digestive tract, which needs a break just like<br />

your muscles and brain and eyes obviously do.)<br />

And the more live or raw foods you can eat for breakfast, the higher and more sustained your energy will be<br />

throughout the day. Half an hour or so after drinking sole (salt water), have a bowl of granola with a scoop of<br />

sprouted seeds added—a highly nutritious breakfast for athletes, men with higher caloric needs, and anyone<br />

suffering from constipation. If you choose <strong>to</strong> eat cold cereal, choose whole-grain options such as Shredded<br />

Wheat, Grape Nuts, or Kashi.<br />

Another hot meal that is filling, satisfying, and very alkaline is hot millet porridge with a bit of maple syrup<br />

and coconut oil or butter. Add a big spoonful of soaked (sprouted) alfalfa seeds for live enzymes and high<br />

nutrition. (See the recipe for * You can also use coconut milk instead of coconut cream concentrate, for a<br />

thinner glaze. I like <strong>to</strong> use the rest of the can of coconut milk the next morning, with any lef<strong>to</strong>ver orange juice<br />

and agave mixed in, poured on millet porridge (recipe below). on page 108.)<br />

If you don’t have time <strong>to</strong> sit down and eat, have a Hot Pink Breakfast Smoothie (page 285), a delicious all-raw<br />

breakfast that you can take in the car, in a quart jar with a straw, <strong>to</strong> drink on the way <strong>to</strong> work or school.<br />

Another of my favorite breakfasts is Breakfast Pudding (page 296), which has live, sprouted nutrition but is<br />

also filling, slightly sweet, and delicious.<br />

For weekends and holidays, you can replace your processed breakfast food with more nutritious, whole-grain<br />

alternatives. We especially love Pumpkin-Oatmeal Waffles (page 292) <strong>to</strong>pped with applesauce and a little<br />

maple syrup. And we make Sprouted-Buckwheat Blueberry Pancakes (Gluten Free) (page 290) with Berry<br />

Sauce (page 313) a few times a month.<br />

What Is the 1, 2, 3 Rating System in the Recipes?<br />

The recipes in this chapter are rated 1, 2, or 3.<br />

Recipes rated 1 are whole grain (and naturally sweetened, where applicable) and are a great transition for<br />

anyone coming from a diet high in refined foods. They are much more nutritious than anything using refined<br />

flours or sugars.<br />

Recipes rated 2 are even more nutritious, because they are made with the highly alkaline grain millet or the<br />

high-protein grain quinoa, or they have lots of raw vegetable ingredients—or they use soaked, sprouted, or<br />

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

© Copyright Robyn Openshaw

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