21 Steps to Improve Your Diet + 11 Foods to Quit Eating

I just read the book Deep Nutrition: Why Your Genes Need Traditional Food by Dr. Cate Shanahan and, wow, even as a very healthy person, I’ve found areas to improve for our food choices.

This is not a long review of the book, though I suggest you read it, but rather an extremely helpful list she included at the back of the book.

I can’t even begin to explain how important nutrition is for our bodies, and it’s vital for our kids. What we feed them now is what their bodies use as building blocks for create new tissue in order to grow. Would you rather them build a body from non-nutritive fast food composed of highly processed fats, sugars, and unnatural chemicals, or from wholesome food, minimally processed and full of everything the body needs to grow strong?

So that would be a loaded question, yes, but seriously, nutrition is something I don’t take lightly, and will never be able to just laugh it off when someone says “I shouldn’t be eating this, but….”. Yeah, just don’t eat it then!

I’m sure this will generate many mixed responses, but please, consider how maybe giving yourself and your kids better food will help your entire family live a happier, more healthful life.

And now on to the list. I credit one of my favorite authors, athlete, and podcaster, Ben Greenfield, for the list he has in his excellent post on Dr. Cate’s book, Deep Nutrition: Why Your Genes Need Traditional Food.

21 Steps for a Better Diet

1. Drink more milk.

Best choice: raw, organic, whole.

Next best: whole, organic.

If lactose intolerant, choose yoghurt. Do not buy low-fat or fat-free dairy.

2. Buy sugar-free peanut and nut butters, the kind with the oil on top (all that oil is typically absorbed by sugar molecules in brand-name peanut butters).

Avoid those that use palm oil, they tend not to taste very good.

3. Buy sprouted grain bread instead of whole wheat or white.

Popular brands are Ezekiel and Alvarado Street Bakery. These are usually sold in the refrigerated or freezer section because they are preservative-free and need to be refrigerated. Many are wheat-free as well.

4. Instead of boxed cereals or instant oatmeal, eat toast with butter, sugar- free peanut butter, or poached eggs for breakfast instead.

5. Use fresh, seasonal vegetables instead of frozen whenever possible.

Season with salt and add generous amounts of butter and your kids will love them. Steam vegetables (like broccoli, asparagus, carrots, and cauli- flower) instead of boiling, which leaches vitamins and minerals.

6. Buy Bubbies or other brand lacto-fermented pickles and sauerkraut and use as condiments/side dishes instead of chips or cookies at lunch.

Save the juice when the jar is empty for salad dressing and to use as a starter for making your own sauerkraut.

7. Never use margarine or low-fat, low-cholesterol “spreads.”

Buy organic butter from pastured animals. Popular brands are Organic Valley and Horizon.

8. Choose healthy oils (see table listing of Good Fats and Bad on page 173 of Deep Nutrition).

9. Make your own salad dressing.

Even easier, pour olive oil then balsamic vinegar over your salad (pouring the oil before the vinegar helps it stick
better). Use a ratio of approximately 2:1 oil to vinegar. For extra flavor fast, add 1 Tbsp of the juice in the Bubbies pickle or sauerkraut jars.

10. Boil a dozen eggs to keep on hand for a quick lunch.

11. Eat large salads three to five times a week.

Don’t bother with iceberg lettuce. For variety, experiment with other greens, including radish leaves, arugula, beet greens, or whatever looks particularly fresh. Add celery, carrots, sprouts, capers, pine nuts, sunflower seeds.

12. Use fresh herbs often.

Add basil to salads with tomatoes; add parsley to hamburger; add garlic to butter for vegetables; rosemary to chicken; mint to beef stews or fatty roasts; ginger to stir-fries.

13. Instead of canned tuna, buy salmon or mackerel with bones in.

Mix with olive-oil based mayonnaise or small amounts of regular mayo and mus- tard to use for lunch as a replacement for nitrate-laden sandwich meats.

14. Eat liver once a week.

15. Eat soups made with bone stock once or twice a week.

16. Use bone stock rather than water as the base for making rice, mashed potatoes, noodle dishes, etc.

17. For variety, substitute beets or turnips for baked potatoes.

18. For light desserts that give a sweet finish to your meal, drink Kombucha or wine.

19. Use bone-in chicken, turkey, and red meats whenever possible.

20. When eating boneless cuts of beef, like fillet, serve with bone-stock gravy (also known as demi-glace).

21. Buy fatty cuts of meat, like New York strip, and sear the fat on the grill before cooking to enhance flavor.

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11 Foods to Stop Eating

1. Vegetable oil

2. Added sugar and honey (to tea, coffee, etc.)

3. Soda

4. Juice, except fresh squeezed. (Why not just eat the fruit? It’s got more fiber and more antioxidants!)

5. Energy bars and “health” bars

6. Boxed cereals

7. Fried fast foods

8. Powdered “proteins,” and powdered milk (note from Ben: I only support organic, cold-processed protein powders. Most protein powder out there is complete crap, so this rules applies about 99% of the time).

9. Salad dressings made with any kind of vegetable oil, including canola

10. Low-fat products, including milk, cheese, salad dressings, cookies, and other baked goods

11. Snacks and desserts – especially if you want to lose weight

Want to know the reasoning behind these recommendations? Check out her book and let me know what you think.

I understand this is a touchy subject, but as some know, I am “deeply” passionate about the food that I put in my body and my family’s. I’ve felt the difference when I changed, and I hope you will do the same. If not for yourself, for your growing kids. I know this girl, as well as all children, deserve it.

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9 thoughts on “21 Steps to Improve Your Diet + 11 Foods to Quit Eating”

  1. Thank you for this! Your post had great tips. I make about 90% of Gabi’s food and I normally cook dinner every night, so I totally get where you’re coming from. And I also do like to indulge every so often. Moderation, right??!! Can you share a typical day of what Avery eats or any recipes you’d like to share? Is there a spot on you blog for that that you can direct me to? bon appetit!

    1. So glad you enjoyed the post! It’s so rare to find others that mostly cook their food at home as opposed to going out all the time, so glad to hear that too! And of course, when you’re doing it right like that, you have more room for a little treat to yourself. That said, I’m to the point where I won’t enjoy it if it’s something I know is not that good for me. Luckily, just plain peanut butter and a banana with overnight oats and yogurt is a wonderful treat to me!

      There is a recipe page on my blog, right on the tabs at the top. Or click here. I rarely follow a recipe exactly as laid out, as I’m sure you do the same since you cook a lot too. Just use what’s on hand. Slow-cooking and steaming are know as some of the best cooking methods that retain most nutrients, so the majority of my cooking revolves around that. Nothing glamorous, but tastes good and we all love that it’s so nourishing.

      I love the idea of sharing a typical day of what Avery (and therefore our family) eats in a typical day, and think I’ll turn it into a post soon. Stay tuned and you’ll see it eventually! Wish you continued success in cooking, which looks much better than my one-pot meals, and talk again soon!

      1. Can’t wait for the ‘day in the life of Going_family’! And as soon as I clicked to send my comment I thought I should explore your blog a bit more and sure enough I would’ve found the recipes page. Thanks for your time! Cheers!

        1. Explore away, and never hesitate to ask any questions. Might take me a while, but I’ll get back to anyone who takes the time and cares such as yourself. The ‘day in the life’ will be a very summarized version with mainly just eats, but if it turns out well, I might have to do more in the future.

  2. I had such a great weekend I’m going to over look this post and all the “bad” stuff I eat! Not guilting me today R.C.!!!!!!

  3. oh yes thank you for this! My wife is a wonderful cook who is very health conscious, but you beat her by a square mile. Just one question, you have first on the top list “drink more milk” then below in the foods not to eat “milk”. Clarification needed. I love milk and try to push it on the kids more, but again, the wife is anti and says milk is a food and not a drink and cows milk is not really good for uh.. humans. Any links on that issue would be wonderful, if you had a spare minute (ha ha). Thanks again.

    1. I’m happy to give my thoughts to anyone who seriously cares to listen. The lists are more detailed than just drink milk on the first and then don’t drink milk on the second list.

      If you look below number 1 on the first list, it says raw, organic milk is best followed by whole, organic. And the second list specifies keeping away from low-fat dairy, including milk, due to how much processing takes place to remove fat from a whole food source.

      I don’t have a specific link, it’s all in the book I mentioned, Deep Nutrition, and highly recommend reading it if you can. I agree with your wife for the most part, I’ve shifted my thinking to cow’s milk is meant to raise a giant cow, therefore the energy within milk will usually be more than humans need. So I consider goat’s milk a little better since a full grown goat is similar in weight to an adult. All of that said, cow’s milk has been with us for many years, and just like most food nowadays, I feel the highly processed forms of once whole foods is the biggest problem.

      Again, I’m not a doctor, just have read a lot on various subjects and have formed my own opinion. A simple Google search on “why low fat milk is bad” should yield plenty of reading material, and Ben Greenfield, the nutritionist and personal trainer/top level athlete I linked to in the post, has a lot of useful info I enjoy.

      Best of luck on making some good changes. Feel free to ask more if you don’t find what you’re looking for elsewhere.

      1. Thanks a lot for your time. I hadnt thought about that, that its not the cows milk which is bad but the processing. In total agreement that processed foods are worse. Thanks also for info on the “dangers” of low fat dairy. I will read up on that one. I would like to try to get to the bottom of this milk “issue”. Thanks again.

        1. No problem, I hope I was at least a little helpful. Always enjoy going on about this stuff to anyone who will listen.

          The whole dairy thing is fairly new to me, but the more I read, the more it makes sense. Especially how we’ve been taught to think saturated fat is so bad, but when it comes from nature, how can that be so? It’s there for a reason, and much better than something created outside of nature. Anyway, I’m going on again. Best of luck and hope to hear back on what you find!

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