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

Where to shop

Food is freshest, and of the highest quality through the large supermarket shelves. No-one else can compete with their quality control and the speed of movement from farm to shelf. They also have the highest turnover, so food ingredients have rarely been on the shelf long, and only a very few ever reach their best before dates.

More unusual items can often be obtained at ethnic supermarkets and health food shops.

Helpful hints for the shopper

Fresh and frozen meat, fish, fruit and vegetables have the highest food values and the fewest additives. Buy them in quanities you can use quickly and store them at the correct temperature. Most should be kept cool and dry.

When you look at tinned foods, select those with the fewest added ingredients. There are hundreds of additives designed to modify the texture, appearance and taste, which do nothing for the food value but whose health risks are as yet unknown. There is no need to avoid them altogether, but it might be wise to restrict their use as far as possible.

Many tinned foods have high salt and/ or sugar levels and these are best avoided.

Breakfast cereals may also have excessive levels of salt and sugar.


 
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