stephbg: I made this! (Default)
[personal profile] stephbg
150g--count them--of cream cheese with chives. I'm pretty sure I shouldn't have done that, so a hangover is in my future.

Date: 2008-03-31 12:11 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] babalon-93.livejournal.com
I have a really nice organic food shop that has carob buttons for $9.95 a kilo--I think you were wrong earlier when you said you can't binge on carob :) I am having huge trouble finding dairy free carob though. Lots of dairy free chocolate, but no carob. I do have carob powder though--I was thinking of trying to make me some kind of carob chocolate crackles as a (poor) substitute.

I haven't identified the baddies as yet, but I am a step closer now in that I am 100% convinced that I am reacting to *something* I just haven't been able to do a controlled enough trial yet to work out exactly what that something is. I have a horrible suspicion that I am sensitive to *all* of the three, with different symptoms for each. I am pretty sure it is salycilates causing the restless legs (and arms) and that seems to be at a pretty low dose, but I need to 'get clean' again and do a very tightly controlled trial (involving me planning out exactly what I am going to eat on the trial before hand--because once I start and feel like crap I can't be trusted). I haven't actually been well again since I started that first trial, so I am going to need to go cold turkey again for a month or so, I really get sucked into the 'a tiny bit won't hurt you' and the 'you already feel like crap now so you may as well eat something you enjoy cause what is the difference' traps. But at the moment I seem to have an inhumanly low tolerance to these things so a little bit is hurting me quite a lot.

Date: 2008-03-31 01:48 pm (UTC)
From: [identity profile] stephbg.livejournal.com
I'm in a similar place, and have had reactions to all three groups. I find it's a very slippery slope if I start to be bad. I can go very quickly from being able to have 0-2 Marie biscuits to not being able to stop after a dozen, and then the next time half a pack...

I find a couple of celery sticks seem to help clear things up a bit. Clears the palette and seems to have an anti-inflammatory and tummy-settling effect. And there's the dose of righteousness that goes with every stick :-)

I had a failed experiment on the weekend - I tried a Radox bath full of mineral salts and herbs and felt distinctly off afterwards - swollen throat, feverish, woozy, *wrong*. I normally use plain bicarb but got lazy (it was waaaay over in the kitchen) and used it as an excuse for a trial. I think someone needs discipline!

If you've got time I'd be interested in hearing more about your progress.

*hugs*

Date: 2008-04-01 12:30 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] huckle.livejournal.com
Whats the other food group apart from salicylates and amines?
I got the Fed Up book out of the library. Is this the diet that you are following (the Failsafe diet)?
I have been avoiding dairy and wheat/gluten, since these were pretty much absent in Thailand. So far I've worked out that dairy=foggy head, bad temper, fatigue. Wheat/gluten= bloated 'mummy tummy'.
I'm now interested in giving the full diet a go. It sounds really hard as every single one of the foods I really like is full of amines.

Date: 2008-04-01 12:46 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] stephbg.livejournal.com
Third group is glutamates. There was a new edition of The Failsafe Cookbook last year. I also recommend Friendly Food.

And sadly, foods you like are most likely to be the ones that are bad for you!

Date: 2008-04-01 10:26 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] huckle.livejournal.com
Thanks for the tip off re the book, it is in my local library so I will have a look at that one, too.
I have always felt very suspicious of the 'if you really like it, it must be bad for you' theory.
Anyways, I will be joining you on the failsafe diet, for as long as I can stand it and for as long as my somewhat feeble self discipline holds out.

Date: 2008-04-01 10:43 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] stephbg.livejournal.com
Welcome to the beige universe! There's an overwhelming amount of advice out there, but these are a few tips I've found most useful:

* Concentrate, list and buy all the foods you *can* eat. Looking at the forbidden fruit list will drive you crazy.

* Purge or at least partition the fridge, freezer and pantry.

The biggest advantage I've found is that there are so few key ingredients I've usually got all the makings for any given safe recipe.

The attractiveness part I think is specific to glutamates ("flavour") and possibly amines. I believe it from experience - if I fall off the wagon a little bit, it's very difficut to stop. Just like an alcoholic - no such thing as "just one drink".

Profile

stephbg: I made this! (Default)
stephbg

June 2023

S M T W T F S
    123
45 678910
11121314151617
18192021222324
252627282930 

Most Popular Tags

Style Credit

Expand Cut Tags

No cut tags
Page generated Jun. 6th, 2025 01:18 pm
Powered by Dreamwidth Studios