Wanna Eat Well But Don’t Wanna Cook? Look No Further.
As far as I’m concerned, art is meant to be hung on walls, not digested. That’s why I spent the last ten years working as a professional photographer and not a chef. I had been quite happily avoiding kitchens my entire life…until I was diagnosed with MS. That’s when I learned that my recovery was hinging in large part on my ability to eat a really clean, healthy diet. And apparently, McDonald’s did not have food to grow a healthier me on their menu. Nor did most places. So, as fate would have it, I was forced into the kitchen. And with that unexpected twist actually came some appreciation for cooking.
But still, I’m busy, and I don’t always have time to cook. And yet I’m not willing to stray from my diet, because I’ve made a commitment and I realize that my life quite literally depends on it.
So what’s a busy girl with a chronic illness to do?
Well during the last two and a half years I’ve discovered some yummy staples and snacks and substitutes for now-illegal-for-me food that don’t require much prep time and keep me satiated. Most importantly, they keep me away from the harmful foods that would slow or sabotage my healing. Ideally, of course, everything I eat will be as fresh as possible – fresh chicken, turkey and fish, fresh spices, fresh veggies, and very little carbs like rice pasta or bread. The general rule of thumb for eating healthy is that the less “packaged” it is the better. If you simply don’t have the time or money or energy or inclination to eat fresh all the time, keep in mind when purchasing packaged foods that ingredient lists should be short, easy to pronounce, and contain things that are recognizable as real foods. I almost never go to regular supermarkets, and when I do, I skip the entire middle of the store and stick to the periphery where the fruits and veggies and meats can be found. All that said, some of the options below are not necessarily the most ideal, but they’re good ones to keep you on the right track and especially to transition onto this diet. I realize that it’s not enough to just know what NOT to eat (that’s a long, long list and I’ll be publishing it to this site soon). You need to know what TO eat. So here’s a few of my greatest hits and favorite basics. Most of these items can be found in a health food store or sometimes in the health aisles of supermarkets. I am also a big fan of Trader Joe’s and if you are lucky enough to have one within a reasonable distance from you, go at once!
One more thing – by changing your diet you are beginning to sculpt the internal landscape in which health can take hold. You are getting to the root of infection and inflammation, which are at the root of all diseases, by no longer ingesting foods that are toxic, and replacing them with foods that are whole, nutrient-rich, and detoxifying. Let this be your inspiration as you enter the unknown. I can assure you, having been on this diet for 2 1/2 years, that what once seemed daunting and downright impossible (living without pasta?! what?!) is now so natural and normal I cannot imagine that I ever ate any other way.
Sunshine Burgers (original): Get ‘em in the health food store. They are made of cooked brown rice, ground raw sunflower seeds, carrots, herbs and sea salt. You can heat them on the skillet or in the toaster oven in under ten minutes. They’re especially yummy with unsweetened apple sauce (health food store or Trader Joe’s) or unsweetened organic ketchup (health food store). They’re yum! They’re filling! They’re a great solution for a quick meal.
Ground Turkey: (Organic, or at least grain-fed certified humane, no antibiotics): This is tougher to find – some health food stores carry it, I get it from a gourmet food place in my town. I throw the whole thing in a pan, season it with sea salt and garlic powder and pepper, and just eat it as plain ol’ ground turkey. It’s quick, filling, and scrum-didlee-umptous.
Chicken Breast: Bell & Evans makes fully-cooked grilled chicken breasts that are raised without antibiotics or preservatives. They come in a box in the freezer section of your health food store or supermarket. They’re yummy and make a very quick and easy dinner entree – ten minutes to heat and it’s on your plate. You can also get organic raw chicken breast at your health food store or some supermarkets, which is the more ideal option because it’s fresh and not frozen. Raw chicken takes a bit longer to prepare, but you can be sitting down with your meal in under a half hour. And, you can season it however you want and it generally tastes better than the frozen version. I’ll be sharing some of my favorite recipes for chicken in the future.
Unsweetened Almond Milk (original or vanilla) by Blue Diamond or Pacific Foods: Get it in the health food store or health aisle of your supermarket, or Trader Joe’s. If you only make one change, swap out your regular milk for this. Unsweetened almond milk is the healthiest milk you can drink – it wins above soy milk, rice milk, hemp milk, and DEFINITELY cow’s milk, which is the devil’s drink (but that’s for another post). It also tastes really good! You can sweeten it with Stevia drops (more about that below) or add Hemp Protein powder and Green powder to it for a yummy breakfast shake (more about that below too).
Brown Rice: Trader Joe’s makes a blessed organic brown rice that comes pre-cooked and frozen and can be heated to perfection in under ten minutes. The packaging says it can be microwaved, but since that would be blasphemously bad for the food and me, I use a good ol’ fashioned pot on the stove top. I buy many, many packages, stuff them in my freezer, and have near-instant brown rice whenever the urge should strike. Now if you’re not fortunate enough to have a Trader Joe’s nearby (even if it’s an hour away it’s worth the trip once in a while!) you can make a large batch of brown rice, freeze it, and grab it whenever you want to re-heat quickly and easily. Brown rice is a staple. I couldn’t live without it but I generally don’t have the time to spend 45 minutes cooking it.
Brown Rice Snaps: You can get ‘em in the health food store. They’re made by Edward & Sons and come in var
ious flavors. I like the vegetable kind. They’re great crackers to dip in hummus, baba ghanoush, guacamole, or, one of my favorite snacks that really fill me up – rice snaps with almond butter (see below), sprinkled with Stevia and cinnamon. Yum! Make sure to stick to the vegetable, plain, toasted onion or sesame flavors, the other ones are not legal.
Almond Butter: Brad’s Organic, Marantha, or Trader Joes brand. Get it in the health food store or Trader Joe’s. (Stay away from cashew and peanut butters, which contain mold, and soy butters.) It’s an excellent way to satiate yourself between meals or as a dessert.
Stevia: Okay so sugar is out. And by sugar, I mean honey, agave, all artificial sweeteners like Splenda, Aspartame, all that. But you can use Stevia and the good news it that
they’ve recently made it taste better. You can find it in the supplement aisle of the health food store. I use the liquid kind to sweeten my teas, my cream of buckwheat (see below), and my almond milk. It’s an acquired taste but I really like it. It won’t give you the warm heavenly rush throughout your entire body that sugar provides (once you’re off sugar for a while you’ll notice this rush in a way you never could have before) but it also won’t spike your blood sugar, thus keeping your body functioning optimally. You can also buy the powder kind to sprinkle on almond butter and crackers, or anything else you should fancy. I carry a bottle of Stevia around with me in my bag so I’m not tempted to sweeten my tea with anything else when I grab a cup on the go.
Hemp Protein: Made by Living Harvest. You can get it online, I get mine from amazon.com. It’s great to use for a morning shake with Macro Greens (also from amazon.com), which is a nutrient-rich super food supplement that is essential if you aren’t getting a lot of green veggies in your diet.
Cream of Buckwheat: By Pocono. Get it at the health food store. It takes about 12-15 minutes to make and with a few drops of stevia and some cinnamon, maybe a drop of butter, it’s a delicious hot breakfast cereal that’s totally legal and totally yummy.
Roasted Turkey Luncheon Meat: By Applegate Farms. You can find it pre-packaged in the health food store, Trader Joe’s, and select supermarkets as well. It’s antibiotic-free turkey, no nitrites, and very good. I sometimes just roll up a few slices and snack on it, or else I make a sandwich with Rudolph’s bread (see below).
Rudolph’s Rye Breads: You can find it in the health food store. It’s yeast, wheat, dairy and sugar free and somehow still decent. But don’t overdo it with the bread – you should max out at two slices a day at the most. However, when I began the diet I was eating more than this as I transitioned from my previous carb-aholic self.
Brown Rice Pasta: Your health food store will definitely have some but Trader Joe’s has my favorite kind. You can make this in about ten minutes and it will fill you up, but keep this in mind – a bowl full will still spike your blood sugar and slow the progress of your healing. And, it really doesn’t have any nutritional value in it – it’s like brown rice stripped of the good stuff. It’s a great transitional food to this diet – I ate a ton of it when I started out – but now I eat it very rarely, preferring grains that are much more nutrient-dense like millet. Millet rules! More on that below. Use it to transition but ease up on it as quickly as possible.
Millet & Quinoa: Both of these are totally legal grains that you can make in about twenty minutes and sub quite nicely for brown rice. It’s important to rotate your grains, so you should get in the habit of eating all three of these. Quinoa is good but millet owns my heart in a way that quinoa never could. It’s a little more filling and heavy and it’s sorta like a blank canvas, waiting for whatever seasoning should inspire me in the moment. It’s delish.
Avocados: I like Haas best and you can get them in any supermarket but they’re cheaper at Trader Joe’s (they should be paying me for all this publicity, I really am in love with that store). Avocados win my vote for the most amazing fruit ever. Avocado slices are so yum on their own with a sprinkle of sea salt, or in a salad, or mashed up with some fresh lime juice and salt as gaucamole for dipping with brown rice crackers. Avocado, avocado, I long for thee avocado.
Red Chard: This is one of my favorites. You can get organic red chard in the produce aisle of your health food store, or if you can’t find it there, you can get the non-organic in the supermarket. Pick up some garlic too and a lemon – I like to buy pre-peeled fresh garlic because it saves me time. Wash the chard very well and cut it in two inch width chunks. Cut the garlic cloves in half and throw a whole bunch on the skillet with olive oil. Heat them first, then add the chard, cook until it wilts, then squeeze the juice of half a lemon and sprinkle some sea salt and you have a quick, ridiculously delicious and very healthy green.
Nuts: Pecans, walnuts, almonds, brazil nuts, whoo hoo! Nuts rule. Stay away from cashews and peanuts because they have mold on them, but the rest, go crazy!
They are an excellent, nutrient-rich, filling snack.
Condiments: Get your mayo from Whole Foods or Trader Joe’s. Salt should be sea salt only, the best kinds are Celtic sea salt or pink sea salt. For soy sauce, the only legal option is Braggs Amino Acids, which is unfermented soy sauce. I don’t love this stuff but I know people who swear by it. You can get ketchup unsweetened in the health food store. Try Annie’s Natural Salad Dressings but only these kinds – garden style, organic green garlic, or Goddess dressing on occasion because it’s so good. For vinegar use Apple Cider Vinegar (raw and unfiltered) by Spectrum or Bragg’s.
Butter: Use Horizon organic butter in moderation or Earth Balance, which is a soy-based butter. I’m allergic to milk and butter so I use Earth Balance, even though I don’t take in any soy in my diet other than this. Every now and then you need to compromise or trade off, and I’m simply not willing to give up the butter taste, so I’ve chosen the lesser of the two evils.
Another thing to consider – you can always go to a high-end deli or gourmet shop or restaurant and pick up some already-prepared chicken or fish for the next day or two. Chances are it won’t be antibiotic free, which is less than ideal, but it will keep you on your healthy eating trajectory away from processed foods. Whole foods are always a better option than processed foods. So keep that in mind and do the best you can.
Have you tried any of these foods? What do you like? When you consider the possibility of starting on this diet, what feels like your biggest challenge? If energy or mobility are issues for you, do you have a loved one that can help? Do the food options described above seem like something you can reasonably prepare for yourself? Do you believe you have the willpower and determination to maintain a diet like this? Tell me what’s coming up for you.
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I love this entry, it’s very interesting. It’s good to know what I *could* eat instead of what I *shouldn’t*. And just so you know, I’ve heard tell of a soy-free earth balance, that HeatherEatsAlmondButter.com recommends….not that I’ve seen it on any local shelves.
I had never heard about the mold on peanuts or cashews- I eat a lot of peanuts and cashews!- where can I find out more?
hi brady! so happy you found this useful. there is a soy-free Earth Balance but i don’t mention it because it’s made largely of canola and safflower oil which are advertised as heart-healthy oils but actually are not good for you (canola oil has been specifically linked to cancer). it’s got a red color scheme as opposed to the tan/brown scheme of the soy kind and says soy-free on the front. regarding peanuts and cashews, i knew about the mold on peanuts for a long time but just found out about cashews last year – that was a tough one to give up, i love them! what do you want to know more about? if you tell me specifically i can direct you or post more about what you’re looking for.
Hi –
I have MS, too, and I just found out 2 years ago. I am young (32) and and I also have been working on developing better eating habits! I actually went to school for holistic health counseling, and though I do not practice, I leaned so much that I can incorporate into my life! Anyway, a friend posted a link to your post on facebook, and I wanted to reach out and say ‘awesome!” I use almost everything you list above, and I love it all! I am also allergic to wheat and oats (i think food allergies are common in people with MS) and so I pay particular attention to what I can and cannot eat! And I don’t miss pasta either… I substitute polenta for almost any pasta dish, and I have to say, I think it’s actually better!
Take care and be well!
Jill
thanks so much for your feedback jill, i appreciate you taking the time. be well!
Earth Balance now has a soy-free variety.
Hi:
My husband has MS. he is 55. I have Polio, Allergies (big time)Osteoporosis, Retinitis Pigmentosa, so I am hard of hearing and legally blind. April of 2007 when Ann Boroch came out with her book My husband and I both went on the diet she suggested in her book. We are going on our third year on the diet this April. I have so many questions but don’t know where to get the answers. My husband is doing great! He is walking very well but seems to be at a stand still. Ann said it took her four years to reverse the disease. My husband has had MS for 23 years. My hopes are high for him and I will not give up, but how do you keep his hopes high? He gets so discouraged wanting to walk better, longer, stronger.
As for myself. Since I can’t walk, I am assuming that is why my progress is so slow. I still have Osteoporosis, allergies, etc. Makes me feel that I am not following the diet correctly. I don’t eat anything from the do not eat list but still, I want more energy than I have. I also have high hopes of my vision getting better- am I a dreamer? I guess I am feeling the pressure of being in my 60′s wondering if it is too late for me and so on.
Our funds are low, food is so high, just can’t keep up with everything. Know what I mean? My husband gets angry with me when I want to purchase organic eggs because of the price differences. The prices of all organic products in ND is double the cost of regular.
Thanks
hi shirley. thanks so much for taking the time to comment. i totally understand about the price of eating organic. it is expensive to be healthy in this country, a sad but true fact. when was the last time you had a session with ann? are you on any supplements? i know that diet alone is not enough – it’s essential to be taking the supplements (another expense though, yes). there was a period of about eight months where i didn’t have a session with ann and didn’t realize how off track i had gotten until my next appointment with her. she is always learning and changing and improving her craft – my suggestion is to make another appointment with her and go on her supplement regimen. she can also offer you key diet advice. oftentimes we end up in eating habits that seem like they’re ok because technically they’re on the diet, but they’re not good. she can help you with that.
you may also want to consider going to a complementary medicine center and getting on a bioidentical hormone replacement therapy regiment (BHRT). bioidentical hormone replacement is essential for women and men from 40s on. i highly suggest getting a copy of suzanne somers’ book Breakthrough – i think it could be helpful to both of you. there is a resource list in the back of the book for complementary medicine centers across the country.
as for your husband’s progress, yes, it can take several years to heal the body with many ups and downs and plateaus along the way. remember that it took many years to create that disease state in the first place. i don’t know the details of your husband’s situation, but if he is experiencing any progress at all, that’s cause for celebration. and if he is at a standstill, remember to explore some of the other healing modalities as well, and issues like food allergies, detoxification, and environmental toxicities that could potentially be slowing his progress (they’ll address all this at a complementary medicine center).
as for you being a dreamer, i think it would be fabulous if you were!
that’s the best way to get started on getting well!
*sigh* MS is so hard to deal with. I’vd been on the diet for almost 4 months now. I’ve been eating oatmeal, but I don’t think I should be. boo. Does anyone have a suggestion to sub for that? It was my only creamy food!
I had a small positive result 3 weeks after I started, and I’ve been going downhill ever since. In the last few days, I’ve had to go back to using my walker, which is obviously not fun. I just hate having these down times, since I don’t know when or if they’ll go away. (I know you all understand that feeling…) I need a cheerleading section with me at all times, telling me to keep going, not give up!!
Good luck everyone! Chin up! I can’t wait to see another positive result from my work, no matter how small. I hope it’s soon….
sally
hi sally. yes, unfortunately oatmeal’s off limits. try cream of buckwheat – it’s a little yellow box you can get in any health food store. they also make cream of brown rice or cream of quinoa. the brown rice is the best in my opinion.
as for the results you’re experiencing, the good news is that in my experience, it’s just a matter of trial and error to find what is working and what isn’t. the body does have a logic to it and there is a cause and effect working, even if you haven’t yet found it. my first question is have you had allergy testing? you may be eating something that doesn’t work for your body and it could be hindering your progress.
make sure to avoid all gluten, wheat, dairy, corn, sugar, and fermented products. just one of these in your diet could be preventing your healing.
are you taking supplements? this is key. it’s expensive but so worth it. are you working with ann boroch? if not, i highly, highly recommend a session with her. she will put you on a supplement regimen that will absolutely make an impact. her site is http://www.annboroch.com.
have you tried LDN?
are you nourishing yourself in the other areas of your life?
hope this is helpful.
warmly,
karen
Thank you so much, Karen, for the info! I’ll try the cream of brown rice soon. I am taking some good supplements (fish oil, vit. C, CoQ10, JuicePlus, and obviously some antifungals, etc.), and I REALLY wish I could see Ann, but I’m in NC, all the way on the east coast. It would be so difficult for me to get out there. I wish she still did her phone appointments, but I’ve been told that she doesn’t anymore. I have gleaned LOADS of inspiration from her book Healing MS, though. I keep it by my bed always for easy reference!
I’ll just keep plugging away and try to maintain patience!! Thank you!
sally
hi sally. i didn’t hear anything about ann no longer taking phone appointments. i’ll email her tonight and find out if that’s true. either way, i’ve been meaning to do a post on the supplement regimen i take so maybe i’ll do that for tomorrow or the day after, which should be helpful. i also suggest listening to my interview with Dr. Joseph Riggio, which addresses the psychological aspect of how we handle our illnesses. if you fill out the form on the top right where the red arrow is you can get access to that. i’ll let you know when i hear from ann.
all the best to you,
karen
hi sally. good news. i spoke to ann and she is still taking phone appointments and Skype appointments. so i definitely suggest you go for it!
Thanks, Karen!! I will certainly make an appointment with her!