Fair warning: my current dietary habit can seem severe. This is not for people who thrive on being "foodies," nice preparation, everything this way and that, etc. This is for people who see cooking as a burden, but still want to lower costs, not have things suck, and keep things fairly healthy. I often envision my car dwelling life as being like a luxurious version of what I imagined soldiers or explorers did in previous centuries, to some extent. I'm not exactly living off the land but it's pretty frugal within the context of a modern industrial society.
I am currently experimenting with some dietary ideas from my Dad. Basically, the big idea is that wheat is bad for you for various reasons. I'm also opposed to corn and soy, as the inorganic stuff is GMOed to emit the pesticide BT, and soybeans are reputed to be endocrine disruptors anyways. I have a provisional belief that what works for us, depends on what worked for our specific ancestors, what they happened to eat. I think my ancestors probably ate a lot of dairy so that's what my diet is mostly based upon. That of course is not going to work for everybody.
Other health ideas: proteins and fats are good for you. Carbs not so much, I've reduced them quite a bit although I still think it's important to have some and I do eat 'em. Sugar, not that great for you, should be drastically reduced. Even fruit counts as sugar, and as carbs. I eat some, not tons.
I'm generally opposed to canned foods as can linings contain Bisphenol-A, an endocrine disruptor. It leeches into your food, especially fatty / oily foods. I usually won't buy olive oil that comes in plastic containers or cans for the same reason. Needs to be glass.
Moral ideas: I'd like to be a vegetarian or even a vegan, but when I do vegetarianism for a few days my brain falls apart. Even after much experimenting I haven't figured out exactly what the problem is. Liverwurst fixes the problem. I used to think the heme iron was responsible, but I've managed to go increasingly longer periods of time without the liverwurst iron input, instead eating small amounts of other meats. I've evolved towards a position of "meat minimalism". I can't seem to stop the killing if I want to maintain the quality of my life, until I find a solution. But I don't have to do as much damage. It's worth remembering that animals are still killed to grow food on most farms. Burrowing animals are killed when fields are tilled, fish are killed for fertilizer, billions of insects are killed by pesticides, deer that want to nibble on things are shot, etc. If you grow everything yourself or pay a lot of money to a local farmer whose practices you trust, you could get past these realities, but many of us don't have that kind of option or money.
So, the diet.
Cheese, especially cottage cheese now as it's cheaper. Cheese has a good protein and fat profile. Not cream cheese though, as it's almost entirely fat. It's cheap for a reason, it's not worth that much as food. Yogurt if I can get it cheap. I can actually make my own yogurt out of milk if I'm willing to cook, but I haven't done it in the field. I've done it with a simple plastic gallon thermos at my Mom's house. Whole milk has a good protein / fat / carb profile, and good bang for the buck, but I've been resisting it as I prefer cheese. Also cheese and yogurt are cultured foods, milk is not. This may make some difference for the health of the diet, but I don't know how this affects me personally.
Lettuce, tomatoes, oil, vinegar. I mix these with the cheese and make cheese salads. I eat this stuff all the friggin' time and it's hard for me to get bored of it.
Peas. That's a very recent discovery. They cost $1/lb. frozen and they don't suck. They provide carbs in a form that isn't as nasty for you as the grains, I wager. Seem to have some smoothing vegetable fiber effects to them. They count as a small amount of additional coolant for your cooler. I eat peas when my body feels it's overloaded on the fats and proteins, when I know I'm craving some carbs.
Peanuts and raisins. Yeah, raisins are sugar, but they're replacing all the cookies and candy and other junk I used to eat. It's less sugar. Good peanuts aren't cheap but they last a long time. Good raisins are cheap.
Bananas. They're cheap and I find I need the potassium, even if they count as sort of a sugar.
LIverwurst, or some other meat, whatever you find. I eat very little of this. Liverwurst has tons of iron and that's why I've preferred it. However I've also gotten sick of it. I don't buy the cheap stuff, as I only need at most 2 oz. / day to keep my brain running. Better stuff is $4..$7/lb.
I'm also feeding my dog. I don't believe in dog food, I say it's garbage. I used to feed him chicken gizzards, which are really high in protein and iron. However I've recently realized they're lacking in fat and calcium, so I might have been causing my dog some problems. I've now switched to sardines. They're high in protein, iron, and calcium, but there's no fat. Haven't quite resolved the fat issue. Bought some cheap expiring 73/23 grade hamburger the other week for him, but that option isn't available all the time. I've bought cheap olive oil for now, in a plastic bottle. It used to be easier to find cheap glass bottle sources, I've been having difficulty lately. The sardines are also canned, last ones I got were product of Morocco. Check your countries of origin carefully. DO NOT BUY ANYTHING FROM CHINA. YOU ARE ASKING FOR IT IF YOU DO. My dog has had some serious itching problems, presumed mange, but possibly nutritional deficiency or even an allergy. So we're ditching chicken gizzards for now and trying the sardine diet. The cure is better than the disease at this point; I'll reintroduce gizzards after he's cured and see how he does.
I only got the food stamps recently and don't have a good sense yet of how sustainable my choices are. I think we might come close to fitting it within the allotted $190/mo though. We tend to score food in other way at times, like my dog finding a street pizza. I don't tend to deprive him of that stuff, as I'm taking the mange and nutritional deficiency theories more seriously than the allergy theory.
That's it. In summary: cheddar cheese, cottage cheese, lettuce, tomato, olive oil, vinegar, peas, peanuts, raisins, bananas, and liverwurst for me. Sardines, expiring fatty meats, olive oil, and trash can / ground scores for the dog.
I do have cooking gear. It has been cold the pats 3 weeks, discouraging me from doing it. When I do cook, I make bean chili and will probably hard boil an entire flat of eggs at once. Egg whites have pretty good brain revival value, they might reduce the amount of meat yet again. Egg whites also partly block the absorption of B12 from the egg yolks, so I will be eating the yolks separately. I'd feed extra yolks to the dog if I weren't doing the allergy experiment.
I forgot to mention the high end chocolate bars. It was my birthday recently and it's a vice. Also I was given some. When it runs out I may not buy anymore, or I may be sparing about it. Real dark chocolate (not the consumer branwash "looks dark" stuff) might have some antioxidant value. It also has loads of caffeine, and I've sworn off coffee to keep my Irritable Bowel Syndrome under control.
If you go crazy with the austerity of the diet, and you start craving that McDouble while you're mooching the free wifi, consider buying a "guilty pleasure" food at the grocery store instead. For us that's pepperoni. If you eat it with cheese, it's like having a pizza without the bread.
I am currently experimenting with some dietary ideas from my Dad. Basically, the big idea is that wheat is bad for you for various reasons. I'm also opposed to corn and soy, as the inorganic stuff is GMOed to emit the pesticide BT, and soybeans are reputed to be endocrine disruptors anyways. I have a provisional belief that what works for us, depends on what worked for our specific ancestors, what they happened to eat. I think my ancestors probably ate a lot of dairy so that's what my diet is mostly based upon. That of course is not going to work for everybody.
Other health ideas: proteins and fats are good for you. Carbs not so much, I've reduced them quite a bit although I still think it's important to have some and I do eat 'em. Sugar, not that great for you, should be drastically reduced. Even fruit counts as sugar, and as carbs. I eat some, not tons.
I'm generally opposed to canned foods as can linings contain Bisphenol-A, an endocrine disruptor. It leeches into your food, especially fatty / oily foods. I usually won't buy olive oil that comes in plastic containers or cans for the same reason. Needs to be glass.
Moral ideas: I'd like to be a vegetarian or even a vegan, but when I do vegetarianism for a few days my brain falls apart. Even after much experimenting I haven't figured out exactly what the problem is. Liverwurst fixes the problem. I used to think the heme iron was responsible, but I've managed to go increasingly longer periods of time without the liverwurst iron input, instead eating small amounts of other meats. I've evolved towards a position of "meat minimalism". I can't seem to stop the killing if I want to maintain the quality of my life, until I find a solution. But I don't have to do as much damage. It's worth remembering that animals are still killed to grow food on most farms. Burrowing animals are killed when fields are tilled, fish are killed for fertilizer, billions of insects are killed by pesticides, deer that want to nibble on things are shot, etc. If you grow everything yourself or pay a lot of money to a local farmer whose practices you trust, you could get past these realities, but many of us don't have that kind of option or money.
So, the diet.
Cheese, especially cottage cheese now as it's cheaper. Cheese has a good protein and fat profile. Not cream cheese though, as it's almost entirely fat. It's cheap for a reason, it's not worth that much as food. Yogurt if I can get it cheap. I can actually make my own yogurt out of milk if I'm willing to cook, but I haven't done it in the field. I've done it with a simple plastic gallon thermos at my Mom's house. Whole milk has a good protein / fat / carb profile, and good bang for the buck, but I've been resisting it as I prefer cheese. Also cheese and yogurt are cultured foods, milk is not. This may make some difference for the health of the diet, but I don't know how this affects me personally.
Lettuce, tomatoes, oil, vinegar. I mix these with the cheese and make cheese salads. I eat this stuff all the friggin' time and it's hard for me to get bored of it.
Peas. That's a very recent discovery. They cost $1/lb. frozen and they don't suck. They provide carbs in a form that isn't as nasty for you as the grains, I wager. Seem to have some smoothing vegetable fiber effects to them. They count as a small amount of additional coolant for your cooler. I eat peas when my body feels it's overloaded on the fats and proteins, when I know I'm craving some carbs.
Peanuts and raisins. Yeah, raisins are sugar, but they're replacing all the cookies and candy and other junk I used to eat. It's less sugar. Good peanuts aren't cheap but they last a long time. Good raisins are cheap.
Bananas. They're cheap and I find I need the potassium, even if they count as sort of a sugar.
LIverwurst, or some other meat, whatever you find. I eat very little of this. Liverwurst has tons of iron and that's why I've preferred it. However I've also gotten sick of it. I don't buy the cheap stuff, as I only need at most 2 oz. / day to keep my brain running. Better stuff is $4..$7/lb.
I'm also feeding my dog. I don't believe in dog food, I say it's garbage. I used to feed him chicken gizzards, which are really high in protein and iron. However I've recently realized they're lacking in fat and calcium, so I might have been causing my dog some problems. I've now switched to sardines. They're high in protein, iron, and calcium, but there's no fat. Haven't quite resolved the fat issue. Bought some cheap expiring 73/23 grade hamburger the other week for him, but that option isn't available all the time. I've bought cheap olive oil for now, in a plastic bottle. It used to be easier to find cheap glass bottle sources, I've been having difficulty lately. The sardines are also canned, last ones I got were product of Morocco. Check your countries of origin carefully. DO NOT BUY ANYTHING FROM CHINA. YOU ARE ASKING FOR IT IF YOU DO. My dog has had some serious itching problems, presumed mange, but possibly nutritional deficiency or even an allergy. So we're ditching chicken gizzards for now and trying the sardine diet. The cure is better than the disease at this point; I'll reintroduce gizzards after he's cured and see how he does.
I only got the food stamps recently and don't have a good sense yet of how sustainable my choices are. I think we might come close to fitting it within the allotted $190/mo though. We tend to score food in other way at times, like my dog finding a street pizza. I don't tend to deprive him of that stuff, as I'm taking the mange and nutritional deficiency theories more seriously than the allergy theory.
That's it. In summary: cheddar cheese, cottage cheese, lettuce, tomato, olive oil, vinegar, peas, peanuts, raisins, bananas, and liverwurst for me. Sardines, expiring fatty meats, olive oil, and trash can / ground scores for the dog.
I do have cooking gear. It has been cold the pats 3 weeks, discouraging me from doing it. When I do cook, I make bean chili and will probably hard boil an entire flat of eggs at once. Egg whites have pretty good brain revival value, they might reduce the amount of meat yet again. Egg whites also partly block the absorption of B12 from the egg yolks, so I will be eating the yolks separately. I'd feed extra yolks to the dog if I weren't doing the allergy experiment.
I forgot to mention the high end chocolate bars. It was my birthday recently and it's a vice. Also I was given some. When it runs out I may not buy anymore, or I may be sparing about it. Real dark chocolate (not the consumer branwash "looks dark" stuff) might have some antioxidant value. It also has loads of caffeine, and I've sworn off coffee to keep my Irritable Bowel Syndrome under control.
If you go crazy with the austerity of the diet, and you start craving that McDouble while you're mooching the free wifi, consider buying a "guilty pleasure" food at the grocery store instead. For us that's pepperoni. If you eat it with cheese, it's like having a pizza without the bread.