Anonymous wrote:I prefer making bread, tortillas. I like to get flour from places that mill or grow their own grains. I love tofu, butlers soy curls. I avoid palm and coconut oil. Avoid all animal products. Prefer to rehydrate dried beans rather than use canned. I’ve made my own soy milk, but I prefer to buy Trader Joe’s or west soy, my homemade just doesn’t work when making homemade yogurt. I use date syrup instead of sugar.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I shop at Whole Foods, which eliminates some guesswork, because even though technically "bread" is a processed food, a sourdough boule from the WF bakery has fewer ingredients and is less processed than a sandwich loaf (from WF or elsewhere). The canned salmon is in PBA-free cans. The deli meats are often minimally nitrated, and I buy in moderation. Their packaged foods are usually not ultra-processed, just regular processed, so occasionaly I buy some.
No. The fight is with the humans who live with me. My spouse will go to any supermarket and buy whatever's on sale and looks good, without checking the ingredients, and the kids obviously eat all the snacks he brings home. He has high blood pressure and is prediabetic, and we just found out that our oldest is prediabetic as well (also he's UNDERweight). I don't understand how he doesn't care for his family's health better. Food changes are so easy to make if you have the money, and we definitely have the money.
Oh girl, I am fat and prediabetic and I’ve always shopped at Whole Foods. That won’t protect you lol.
Girl, then you are doing it wrong. I'm thin, fit, no health issues and shop only at Whole Foods too.
Yeah obviously, I am just saying food being from Whole Foods doesn’t protect you from overeating.
Also Whole Foods sells plenty of ultra processed food products that aren’t really food, too. There are plenty of fat unhealthy vegans.
Anonymous wrote:I do all my own baking as well. Try to find organic flour, or at least flour that isn’t “enriched.”
I don’t think making your own tofu is worth it. Plus the Japanese eat a ton of it and they love to 110.
If you’re cooking at home from scratch you’re 99% of the way there.
Anonymous wrote:Does anyone make their own peanut butter? I buy a very good natural peanut butter that is nothing but peanuts, but it comes in plastic jars which I’m not thrilled about. Considering making my own and wondering about that endeavor?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I shop at Whole Foods, which eliminates some guesswork, because even though technically "bread" is a processed food, a sourdough boule from the WF bakery has fewer ingredients and is less processed than a sandwich loaf (from WF or elsewhere). The canned salmon is in PBA-free cans. The deli meats are often minimally nitrated, and I buy in moderation. Their packaged foods are usually not ultra-processed, just regular processed, so occasionaly I buy some.
No. The fight is with the humans who live with me. My spouse will go to any supermarket and buy whatever's on sale and looks good, without checking the ingredients, and the kids obviously eat all the snacks he brings home. He has high blood pressure and is prediabetic, and we just found out that our oldest is prediabetic as well (also he's UNDERweight). I don't understand how he doesn't care for his family's health better. Food changes are so easy to make if you have the money, and we definitely have the money.
Oh girl, I am fat and prediabetic and I’ve always shopped at Whole Foods. That won’t protect you lol.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I shop at Whole Foods, which eliminates some guesswork, because even though technically "bread" is a processed food, a sourdough boule from the WF bakery has fewer ingredients and is less processed than a sandwich loaf (from WF or elsewhere). The canned salmon is in PBA-free cans. The deli meats are often minimally nitrated, and I buy in moderation. Their packaged foods are usually not ultra-processed, just regular processed, so occasionaly I buy some.
No. The fight is with the humans who live with me. My spouse will go to any supermarket and buy whatever's on sale and looks good, without checking the ingredients, and the kids obviously eat all the snacks he brings home. He has high blood pressure and is prediabetic, and we just found out that our oldest is prediabetic as well (also he's UNDERweight). I don't understand how he doesn't care for his family's health better. Food changes are so easy to make if you have the money, and we definitely have the money.
Oh girl, I am fat and prediabetic and I’ve always shopped at Whole Foods. That won’t protect you lol.
Girl, then you are doing it wrong. I'm thin, fit, no health issues and shop only at Whole Foods too.
Yeah obviously, I am just saying food being from Whole Foods doesn’t protect you from overeating.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I shop at Whole Foods, which eliminates some guesswork, because even though technically "bread" is a processed food, a sourdough boule from the WF bakery has fewer ingredients and is less processed than a sandwich loaf (from WF or elsewhere). The canned salmon is in PBA-free cans. The deli meats are often minimally nitrated, and I buy in moderation. Their packaged foods are usually not ultra-processed, just regular processed, so occasionaly I buy some.
No. The fight is with the humans who live with me. My spouse will go to any supermarket and buy whatever's on sale and looks good, without checking the ingredients, and the kids obviously eat all the snacks he brings home. He has high blood pressure and is prediabetic, and we just found out that our oldest is prediabetic as well (also he's UNDERweight). I don't understand how he doesn't care for his family's health better. Food changes are so easy to make if you have the money, and we definitely have the money.
Oh girl, I am fat and prediabetic and I’ve always shopped at Whole Foods. That won’t protect you lol.
Girl, then you are doing it wrong. I'm thin, fit, no health issues and shop only at Whole Foods too.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I shop at Whole Foods, which eliminates some guesswork, because even though technically "bread" is a processed food, a sourdough boule from the WF bakery has fewer ingredients and is less processed than a sandwich loaf (from WF or elsewhere). The canned salmon is in PBA-free cans. The deli meats are often minimally nitrated, and I buy in moderation. Their packaged foods are usually not ultra-processed, just regular processed, so occasionaly I buy some.
No. The fight is with the humans who live with me. My spouse will go to any supermarket and buy whatever's on sale and looks good, without checking the ingredients, and the kids obviously eat all the snacks he brings home. He has high blood pressure and is prediabetic, and we just found out that our oldest is prediabetic as well (also he's UNDERweight). I don't understand how he doesn't care for his family's health better. Food changes are so easy to make if you have the money, and we definitely have the money.
Oh girl, I am fat and prediabetic and I’ve always shopped at Whole Foods. That won’t protect you lol.
Anonymous wrote:I shop at Whole Foods, which eliminates some guesswork, because even though technically "bread" is a processed food, a sourdough boule from the WF bakery has fewer ingredients and is less processed than a sandwich loaf (from WF or elsewhere). The canned salmon is in PBA-free cans. The deli meats are often minimally nitrated, and I buy in moderation. Their packaged foods are usually not ultra-processed, just regular processed, so occasionaly I buy some.
No. The fight is with the humans who live with me. My spouse will go to any supermarket and buy whatever's on sale and looks good, without checking the ingredients, and the kids obviously eat all the snacks he brings home. He has high blood pressure and is prediabetic, and we just found out that our oldest is prediabetic as well (also he's UNDERweight). I don't understand how he doesn't care for his family's health better. Food changes are so easy to make if you have the money, and we definitely have the money.