Off the grocery store I went and I picked up a tub of sour cream. Darigold, whom I have always thought of as a good brand, well respected had around 12 ingredients in their tub of sour cream. That really is par for the course with most sour creams and yogurts. However I kept reading tubs and came across Daisy sour cream, I feel like the angels sang when I read the label, don't laugh, ya know what it said? "Grade A Cultered Cream" WooHoo! Food I found food! Not that sour cream is all that healthy for you but come on if you are going to have it wouldn't you rather have cream than chemicals? It is now like an Easter egg hunt for me. Find things my family likes to eat, all with ingredients I can pronoun and find the one with the fewest ingredients. Yougurt is another one, Greek God yogurt with a little agave and cinnamon in it is to die for. No, I am not supposed to have dairy, it makes my sinuses swell but I tried it, I am in love, and I won't eat it often but man it is worth it!
I have slowly cut nasty chemicals out of my family's diet one by one. Sucralose is my #1 most hated artificial sweetener and come hell or high water it is not coming in my house. Drastic I know but for one its aftertaste is the most nasty flavor. As if that wasn't enough to stop me sucralose starts out as sugar and they process it so much and add chlorine to it. Many "health foods" have sucralose in it. Many weight loss supplements have it too. Matter of fact here is what one weight loss place says about sucralose..."Sucralose is a sweetener made from table sugar (sucrose) by chlorinating it in three positions on the molecule." They even said it, it is chlorinated sugar...no thanks.
I have also targeted high fructose corn syrup. Many things wrong with it too. The ratio of sucrose and fructose has been altered so it is much harder for our bodies to digest and process. Not to mention a random study was done of 20 high fructose corn syrup manufacturers and 9 out of the 20 came back with detectable amounts of mercury in them. I guess it happens during one of the three ways they use to make it "high" fructose corn syrup instead of regular corn syrup. Which of course is natural. This I am finding is MUCH harder to cut out of our diet. The one die hard bad habit in our family is cereal...and yes I love it so do my kids and my husband. I just told my kids tonight that whatever cereal we have that has it in it they better enjoy because they won't get it anymore. I will let them have it once in a while on special occasions but really it has no nutritional value. It should be used as a treat and not a meal. So slowly but surely we plug away at being a healthier house. And really it all boils down to eat food. So that is the effort I am making, would my great grandma know that this is food? If she would, chances are it probably is.
I, too, usually only buy Daisy sour cream. Costco also sells a "natural" Darigold sour cream tub (3 pounds)that has 2 ingredients...grade A cultured cream and enzymes.
ReplyDeleteFor yogurt, I like Nancy's brand (I tried Greek yogurt once and didn't like it, but maybe it was the brand - haven't tried Greek Gods). Here are the ingredients for Nancy's vanilla: skim milk, nonfat dry milk, organic agave sweetener, natural vanilla flavor, L. acidophilus, S. thermophilus, L. bulgaricus, L. casei, L. rhamnosus, B. bifidum cultures. SO everything at the end (though your grandma wouldn't know what it is) is supposed to be good for you. Unless, I'm mistaken, there are only 2 or 3 cultures in Yoplait and most other yogurts...even the ones labeled as "probiotic". Nancy's beats them all (and does not use any genetically modified ingredients).
I haven't looked for sucralose in foods before. Now, I'll be on the look out for it. I already avoid hydrogenated anything and have started looking at the high fructose stuff.
It is nice that you live on a farm and vegetables are plentiful. Have you considered starting a CSA? I considered joining one a couple of months ago...but the pick up location was too far away. And I have the space (and a few garden beds) to do a lot of growing myself, so I'm wanting to do that this summer...and maybe make some covered boxes for fall/winter. And maybe a greenhouse to do gardening all year round. That may be a bit too ambitious for me though. I've got a lot going on already.
We haven't started a CSA and won't only because we don't offer much variety. We have an organic farm right across the street that does a CSA. They are certified Organic and he is a local guy that went to school with Bob's brother. www.chinookfarms.com I believe is their website.
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