Tag Archives: sugar cleanse

Sugar-Free, That’s Me!

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About two years ago, I was facing a whole lot of craziness that included moving, chasing a toddler, pregnancy with my second child, buying our first home, finishing up with Tucson Food Day, running Lilly’s Table and dealing with some totally frustrating health ailments. There was not a lot I felt I could do to really get myself out of the drama that was then my life. I was just in survival mode.

After the birth of my little guy, I started to come out from that dizzying cloud and realized there were certainly some strategies that would help me dust off the madness. I am a wee bit obsessed with food, so I started to notice some things happening in my diet that made me less than excited. Since I was breastfeeding, I was eating a ton (for those unaware, you need more calories when breastfeeding than while pregnant) and had little interest in any type of severe cleanse or diet, but as I considered the ‘treats’ that were so common in my house I found myself wanting to let go of the golden sweet caramelized handcuffs sugar seemed to have on me and my loved ones.

I have never really been drawn to traditional ‘diets’, but if I find myself feeling a bit too reliant on anything that isn’t packed with nutrients (such as coffee, alcohol, meat, dairy, and more) I often take an extended break. I recently read the most lovely book Gratitude Works! and at one point he talks about how many religions include fasting in their rituals and how eliminating something for a period of time gives you more opportunity to reflect and feel gratitude towards it. If you LOVE sugar, taking a break is a great way to make desserts, treats and any sweetness that much more enjoyable.

I could certainly tell you all of the terrible things about sugar, but let’s just agree, it is not that great for you. Kind of terrible, in fact. But, really, with all of the research out there comparing it to other white addictive substances and how it is in just about every processed food, the best way to really dive in, to truly understand your own personal story about the sweet stuff and investigate it for yourself, is to simply: TAKE A SUGAR BREAK!

This is what happened to my family and I. When we stopped the sugar madness, we started to notice how much was present in every other thing we consumed. We were aware of how the evenings, the midday slump and even the rush out the door seemed much easier with sugar. But without our sweet buddy running through our bodies, we started to notice that we did not crash and burn as quickly. Also, my husband and I became annoyingly aware of how often we were bribing our child into the behavior we desired with promises of sugar. We weren’t daily offenders, but it happened more often than we wanted to be bribing at all, must less with sugar. And our eyes were widened to how often other people gifted sugar to our child– usually people we barely knew. It is so deeply engrained in our culture.

All in all, giving up sugar raised our awareness and we realized how much we were relying on it, rather than enjoying it as a treat. After the first initial days we were figuring out other ways to enjoy food. And all sorts of goodness happened:

Food tasted better!
We could even taste the natural sweetness of veggies.
We ate more at home.
We saved money (we sort of had an out of control ice cream shop habit at the time!)
We figured out different ways to end our evenings without dessert or wine.
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My body started to heal.
We dropped a few pounds and felt a bit slimmer.
My typical low-blood sugar crashes vanished.
We re-strategized the sugar bribes for our kiddos.
Stress was less. It still existed, but it was less overwhelming.

I wrote this post in the midst of that past cleanse, if you are curious about how we were feeling at the time.

Sugar, as it so often does, found its way back into our lives. What can I say, the sweet stuff brings smiles & joy that we manage to justify despite all of the good stuff in the list above that happens when it isn’t part of our daily diet.

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I am always happiest when the treats of sugar are simply that… a rare, precious occasional treat. If you were covered head to toe in diamonds would you really appreciate another? In order to get to that state again, my family knows we have to take another sugar vacation. When it is ever present in your diet, you are more likely to NEED it- (yup, just like a drug) rather than ENJOY and treasure it- like the treat it actually is. We are looking forward to taking another break. This time we are joining a greater group effort and signing up for the Winter Community Dump that will include community support and knowledge from nutritionist Sara Bradford of Nourish Real Food and much more.

I recently wrote a list of Top Five reasons to go sugar-free, another Top Five reasons to sign up for Sara’s 10-day Winter Community Dump and another Top Five reasons to do her 8-week Winter Community Dump. If you are on my mailing list, you already saw it. If you are not, sign up for my mailing list! In the meantime, here is a peak at that email for you!

Cook seasonally. Eat consciously sugar-free. Live well,

Chef Lilly

Day 50: Sugar Free Challenge and Peaches n’ Cream

photo-140For this 50th day of blogging, I am most excited to tell you about the Sugar Challenge my family and I have taken on for the last three weeks. Here I posted about the first day of the challenge, but I have yet to tell you why and what we are doing.

This past year, I have had an internal debate about whether I am addicted to sugar or not. Stress, pregnancy, and some health frustrations all pointed in the direction of my needing to eliminate sugar, but deep inside my inner brat screamed “I wanna COOKIE!”

I noticed I wasn’t alone in demanding sugar treats. Most of us in the family, spent the evenings looking for a sweet way to end the day: a bit of chocolate, ice cream, the occasional cookie. At the start of the day, drizzling on honey or maple syrup, whipping up scones, buying pastries or pouring a bowl of sweet granola was common around here. Nut Butter & Jam sandwiches were also quite popular- anytime of day.

Starting with asking Lulu and Xerxes, we agreed we could do it! We would give up sugar. But, adding merely three years old Juliette to the mix was a bit more of a question. The more I considered the possibility the more I realized how much we relied on sugar to get all of us including her, through the day. “Get in the car and we can go get ice cream.” “Please be quiet and you can have this cookie”. UGH! What if we didn’t have sugar to even offer her? At the very least we would have to figure something else out. Right?!

So, I had a chit-chat with Juliette a few days before we started the challenge and we discussed what contained sugar, what did not and why we needed a break. I still wondered the best strategy for those times when she is offered candy. Man, people love giving kids candy! And I am totally not talking about strange creepy men pulling over in vans. Rather, I am talking about her dance teacher or the super cute nice guys at the liquor store who are so charmed by her patience as I search through Argentine wines. Considering the teeny-tiny lollipop they all love giving her, I was fine discussing with her that they do have sugar in them, but still letting her have them since it was a gift from a nice person. The last thing I need to do is give her some crazy disfunction where sugar becomes the forbidden fruit that she has to devour in hysteria. Growing up in a semi-hippie style, I have seen this happen and it ain’t pretty. A casual lollipop sends the message that this is a real rarity and not a daily treat. And most importantly, Mama doesn’t eat them or give them to her. Only nice random *trusted* people do. UGH. Oh- the challenges of raising children… in this sugar obsessed family society we live in.

Overall, we all seem to be doing well with the challenge. If anything, Juliette’s 1-2 times per week lollipop may put her in the category of cheating less than the adults who, I swear, are even more exposed to sugar outside the home. I just found out about how Lulu  (aka Sharon, my fabulous Mother-in-Law) cheated a bit with a bite of brownie as she wrote in her blog. Of course, she says nice things about me, so I forgive. And Xerxes also seems to bump into the challenge more frequently than Juliette and I do. Although, I did eat a few dried apricots recently at a friend’s house. They were damn good. I can’t wait to get back to eating those.

The other challenge of the challenge was finding a challenge that we could actually swallow. (Challenging sentence, eh? Oh, this is out of control. I’ll stop.)

There was one big and popular sugar challenge that has a slight Palio twist to it, but they appeared to allow a few non-sugar sweeteners such as Xylitol and Stevia. I don’t eat those really normally, we are more into honey & maple syrup as sweeteners, but my focus for this challenge was to really say good-bye to sweetness for awhile, including the arguably natural ones.

The popular challenge also said no fruit. I completely understand giving up juice and dried fruit as they have been processed and no longer contain the fiber or juice that aid in digesting them, but giving up fresh, nutrient packed whole fruit seemed silly to me. Especially for a toddler and nursing mother. Lulu and I found other challenges and decided to mix the best of all of them into our own challenge that we would do as a family for six weeks. We saw them ranging from 21 days to 8 weeks, which made 6 weeks seem rational.

Here are the basics:

No More: 
Sugar or processed syrups
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Honey
Agave Nectar
Natural or scary artificial sweeteners
Dried Fruit
Juice

Okay, in moderation:
Whole Fruit
Alcohol
Frozen Fruit & berries

Fresh fruit has been getting us through the tough days when our inner voice whines for sweetness. For the photo above, we simply whipped cream with a splash of almond extract and piled it high with sliced Colorado peaches. Delight.

After writing this post, Juliette, Xerxes, and I went to a birthday party. The Mom, a dear friend makes beautiful healthy cuisine and knows how to splurge to make a gorgeous dessert. We couldn’t resist and had to eat the Lemon Cake. It was heavenly, because let’s face it, when sugar is given a dose of time and love it can be out of this world. It did taste incredibly sweet, but if I had to cheat, it would only be with something so lovely and divine. Today is exactly half way through. I am looking forward to getting back on track with the challenge. Honestly, today’s experience made me aware that maybe as a family we could collectively give up sugar within these walls, but still make cookies for a friend who needs cheering up or enjoy a treat that is given to celebrate a year of living!

We shall see where this challenge takes us. So far so good!

Cheers,

Lilly