Food Combining

The Hay Diet
 
Introduction to Food Combining
All About Food Combining
Diets for Life Stages
Special Diets
Starch food list
Protein Food Lists
Fruit with Starch
Vegetables, Herbs, Peas
Protein Nuts and Seeds
Oils and Fats
Tea, Coffee, Other Ingredients

Lots of Starch Recipes

Lots of Protein Recipes
Vegetables
Salads
Vegetable dishes
Dressings
Fresh Non-Starchy Fruit
Christmas Menu
Conversion Tables
BUY the Book
Discussion and Support

Visit Peter's Food Combining Shop for books

Click on a menu item to see more information

Did you find what you want? Search here for your next topic:

Food mixers, food processors, grain mill

Cooking your own food from the basic ingredients gives you the closest control over what you or your family eat. It allows you to keep the most closely to the food combining diet and it allows you to avoid all those additives which are needed to make processed foods palatable.

Fresh meat, vegetables and fruit do not need any elaborate processing. Neither do starchy meals based on rice, potatoes and vegetables. Wheat whole-meal bread from the supermarket is of high quality and can form the basis for up to half your starch meals.

The food combining diet does not include pastry or cakes and biscuits and so removes the need for a lot of elaborate processing equipment. A food mixer or processor is valuable if you plan to bake your own bread, and a grain mill is very useful for non-wheat flours for special diets.


 
 Your Name:
 Your Email:
 Subject:
 In reply to message (delete if not applicable):
 Display heading
  Security Code:
  
Checking for files that match search criteria.

The following files on this site match your query


Search for any topic in this forum