Her reply was
immediate. “It’s like pulling teeth
sometimes,” Diabetes educator and nutritionist, Celia Chu-Diep said. I had just asked her how difficult it is for
Diabetes patients to follow at least some of the suggestions Diabetes nutritionists recommend: to
initially attend Diabetes education classes; to attend support group meetings; to
become committed to seeking and eating very different kinds of meals. “It’s not easy for them.” Celia talked about how individuals either just want a pill and do not want to change their eating habits. Others do want to change, but find the journey to better nutrition quite confusing and overwhelming. There's a lot of misinformation out there. Also, any food we eat that we don't cook ourselves, always contains hidden sugars. Individuals who travel or have a busy schedule often reach for what is convenient. Convenient foods most often will have hidden sugars too. While traveling in New York, it wasn’t easy for me. Even that day, walking up
Madison Avenue on Manhattan’s upper east side to Mount Sinai, there were many
temptations. A string of restaurants and
fast-food shops line the streets on either side of the hospital.
Busy day at Mount Sinai Hospital |
Luckily, on that day, there was a mini farmer’s
market across the street from the main entrance to Mount Sinai. I stopped to have a hand-picked bean salad and
a handful of raspberries from a local farm. Of course there was the temptation of the apple crisp bowls being sold at the next table. I could even see the brown sugar crystals coating the apples. I told myself, "okay, if I want more 'sweetness,' just buy another basket of raspberries." And I did. Raspberries
are high in fiber and low in carbohydrates, which makes them a low glycemic
index food, (meaning it is absorbed slowly in the body so you don’t have a
sudden jerky sugar high. Sugar "jerks" like that are cumulative. You may not immediately see or feel how one sugar high affects the body, but years later, it all catches up and complications begin to rapidly appear. By then, it's too late). Had I eaten
the apple crisp, I would have experienced a quick “high” and then a sudden
low. Learning to have a conversation with yourself before you choose something to eat that is not from your kitchen is always a good idea.
Information outside of Celia's office at Mount Sinai (IMA stands for "Internal Medicine Associates" |
This adventure –
visiting Mount Sinai – took place a little over a week ago. I visited Celia at Mount Sinai Hospital
because I’d been wanting to get a glimpse of Diabetes education in various
parts of the country. And in Celia’s
work, she observes that her Mexican, Puerto Rican, African American, Asian
patients all have a hard time avoiding the cultural pressure of eating foods
like pan dulce, polvorones, coconut cakes, fried bananas, in addition to fatty
meats. And even when they do, one visit
to a restaurant may ruin any attempt to eat “healthier” because of all the hidden
sugars they use to prepare food. And
again, I could relate to what she was saying.
This past year, due to the pressures of my work, which demanded an
unusual amount of restaurant dinner and lunch meetings, I succumbed to losing
what I thought was a sure footing in healthy eating. Instead, the hidden sugars in restaurant food
had me craving more and more unhealthy foods – a chemically induced rabbit hole
that was very difficult to escape. Although it was a difficult few months, it taught me a lot about the nutritional challenges in our U.S. society.
This is why I
always first tell friends who ask me questions about Diabetes and what to
eat: Be kind to yourself. As Celia pointed out: “It’s not easy,” mainly because you have a
huge “food industrial complex” (a goliath) always there hoping you’ll devour it
and get sucked back into the vortex.
Take one step at a time and see eating healthy as an adventure—not something
continually restrictive.
In Barbara
Kingsolver’s book, Animal, Vegetable, Miracle: a Year of Food Life, she
writes how the food industry “made piles of corn and soybeans into
high-fructose corn syrup, hydrogenated oils, and thousands of other starch- or
oil-based chemicals. Cattle and chickens
were brought in off the pasture into intensely crowded and mechanized CAFOS
(concentrated animal feeding operations) where corn – which is no part of a
cow’s natural diet, by the way – could be turned cheaply and quickly into
animal flesh. All these different
products, in turn, rolled on down the new industrial food pipeline to be
processed into the soft drinks, burgers, and other cheap foods on which our
nation now largely runs—or sits on its bottom, as the case may be . . . "
"Certainly, we still have regional specialties, but the Carolina barbecue will
almost certainly have California tomatoes in its sauce (maybe also
Nebraska-fattened feedlot hogs), and the Louisiana gumbo is just as likely to
contain Indonesian farmed shrimp. If
either of these shows up on a fast-food menu with lots of added fats or HFCS,
we seem unable either to discern or resist
the corruption. We have yet to
come up with a strong set of generalized norms, passed down through families,
for savoring and sensibly consuming what our land and climate give us. We have, instead, a string of fad diets
convulsing our bookstores and bellies, one after another, at the scale of the
national bestseller. Nine out of ten
nutritionists (unofficial survey) view this as evidence that we have entirely
lost our marbles. A more optimistic view
might be this: these sets of mandates
captivate us because we’re looking hard for a food culture of our own. A profit driven food industry has exploded
and nutritionally bankrupted our caloric supply . . . Can we find or make up a
set of rituals, recipes, ethics, and buying habits that will let us love our
food and eat it too? Some signs point to
“yes.” Better food—more local, more
healthy, more sensible—is a powerful new topic . . . It reaches from the
epicurean quarters of Slow Food convivial to the matter-of-fact Surgeon
General’s Office; from Farm Aid concerts to school lunch programs. From the rural routes to the inner cities, we
are staring at our plates and wondering where that’s been. For the first time since our nation’s food
was ubiquitously local, the point of origin now matters again to some
consumers. We’re increasingly wary of an
industry that puts stuff in our dinner we can’t identify as animal, vegetable,
mineral, or what." (13 – 17)
Kingsolver's memoir of her own experiment (eating only what she grows and cooks) is a fascinating story, and inspiring. For the past few
years, I’ve grown vegetables (chard, kale, tomatoes, chiles, broccoli) in my
backyard and have had great luck in harvesting/freezing and also cooking and
freezing dishes so my garden serves me year-round. Celia was telling me that New Yorkers (and not just middle class New Yorkers-- she was talking to me about New Yorkers living in the Projects) are coming together to build community gardens wherever there is space: on the roof, on balconies, and where there was a parking lot, now there may be a vegetable garden. It's exciting to hear this news.
For me, in the past
two months, I’ve gone a step further.
I’m on, what I call, a “food adventure”—avoiding all meats, dairy (it
was difficult to say “no” to greek yogurt and many kinds of cheese), and grains
(but I was already gluten free), and cooking mainly greens. You may
be thinking: well, what is left to
eat? And what is left has been indeed
the amazing adventure, because once you're in "the plant world," the choices are endless. I had no idea, such a rich world awaited me. I’ve decided to
follow what’s called a “whole foods
plant-based diet.” I eat a lot of beans,
lentils, vegetables, soy, fruits (mainly berries), and nuts (primarily almonds, walnuts, pepitas, some pistachios). Coconut and olive oil are basic cooking staples (and coconut oil works well in smoothies and in the making of delicious sauces). Ginger, garlic, and all kinds of spices (cumin, turmeric, etc.) are also wondrous additions to recipes.
pinto frijoles |
A "whole foods plant based diet" has helped me recover from the difficult semester I had (all that restaurant food I had been eating). My glucose numbers have lowered and remained stable and
I’m feeling good! I also feel like a
Xicana radical food activist, my own healing agent, using food to improve my
well being. Some of the research I’ve
read explains that a "whole foods, plant-based diet" improves cardiovascular well being. And that is important to me because
cardiovascular complications are most common with those of us who have
Diabetes. Most individuals with Diabetes
die from stroke, hardening of the arteries, heart attacks, and they also suffer from neuropathy (another cardiovascular complication). My experiment is to
follow this “whole foods plant based diet” adventure for about six months and
then I plan to go to my doctor to check (by getting a complete blood panel) and see if and how my experiment has affected my
cardiovascular system. I’ll definitely keep you posted. I'm not the only one on a food adventure! There are other Xicanas having
exciting food journeys.
Two other Xicana
food activists who are also professors: Catriona R. Esquibel and Luz Calvo, have a
cooking club you can join.
Professors Luz Calvo and Catriona R. Esquibel |
They have
“The Decolonial Cooking Club” on Facebook and they also have a website: decolonizeyourdiet.org
On their
website, they write:
“As U.S.-born
Latinos/as, we have much to learn from the way our ancestors ate. Eating our ancestral foods can help us
prevent and treat the diseases that result from adopting the Standard American
Diet. The central tenet of our project
is “La comida es medicina” [Food is medicine]. As Chicana professors, we have
seen firsthand the effects of the Standard American Diet on our bodies and on
the health of our family, our students, and our community. U.S.-born Latina/o communities are facing a
health crisis, most notably with Diabetes but also with heart disease and many
cancers. It is difficult to fight for
our people and our culture if we are sick and sluggish. We believe that it is time to reclaim our
cultural inheritance and wean our bodies from sugary drinks, fast food, and
donuts. Cooking a pot of beans from
scratch is a micro-revolutionary act that honors our ancestors and the
generations to come.”
Every so often,
I’ll be posting recipes and updates. (Here’s one below.) Querida La
Bloga reader: I am sending each and every one of you healing energies and good
wishes that you may think about your own food adventures and what that might
look like!
Avocados have excellent nutrients, high fiber, and really good fat! |
This recipe is
by Rachael Campbell:
Title: Avocado Kale Chili Salad (Vegan and Gluten
Free)
Description: Kale is a form of cabbage. It is full of antioxidants, anti inflammatory
nutrients and cancer preventive nutrients.
It is very high in iron, vitamin C, B complex groups of vitamins, and
calcium. Kale contains sulforaphane
particularly when chopped or minced. It
also has a chemical which boosts DNA repair to cells.
Enjoy every bite
of this healthy and nutritious salad:
Ingredients:
Salad
n
1
bunch kale (Tuscan kale or curly leafed scots kale) stems removed
n
1 ½
avocados chopped
n
½
red onion small thinly sliced
n
½
cucumber thinly sliced
n
red
chili sliced to taste
n
coriander
to taste
Dressing
--1 avocado
--6 teaspoons
lemon juice
--6 teaspoons
lime juice
--1/4 teaspoon
mustard powder
--1/4 teaspoon
cayenne pepper
--coriander to
taste
--salt and
pepper to taste
--flaked almonds
(for Garnish)
--red chili
sliced (for Garnish)
Preparation:
Salad
- Remove stem from kale, wash and chop coarsely, place
into mixing bowl
- Grind or RUB a bit of salt and pepper into kale and let it sit for
about 10 minutes to enhance flavor
- Add chopped avocado, red onion, cucumber, red chilies, and
coriander. Toss gently through
salad
Dressing:
- Place ingredients into a blender (or, for those with a
vitamix machine, use your vitamix) and blend on high speed for about a minute
- Toss dressing gently through salad
- Garnish with flaked almonds, red chili sliced, salt and
pepper to taste
i'm thinking how one's epicureanism needs to make room for a big helping of stoicism and flexible pragmatism. pero así es, ¿no?
ReplyDeletewonderful, Amelia! So sorry to have missed you in NY. Being totally gluten free, I too must navigate the dietary jungle of the city, and I applaud you!
ReplyDeletetry this new cafe run by Maestro Don Manuel Rufino, beautiful healing foods and people in New York https://www.facebook.com/junglecafenyc?fref=ts
ReplyDeleteWonderful post! I am home and eating healthy again! I feel wonderful and am losing weight again. 5 pounds so far. I will make my doctor's appointment and get the diabetes test as you suggested. Also, I am gluten free. It is hard since everything seems to have gluten. But, I feel so much better and do not crave food; I am naturally hungry. Theresa from UMKC
ReplyDelete