I had planned on spending the day at the allotment but as I was on my way home from grocery shopping after breakfast the heavens opened, so I took that as a sign, and have spent the rest of today pretty much locked in the kitchen. But we've got yummy dinner ready and waiting plus I have a ton of stuff prepped for during the week. Things like grated carrot, sliced red cabbage and other bits that are easy to throw together for a fast lunch salad and a few treats for breakfast or evening dessert too.
I am feeling a bit tired and achey, but I don't know if that's just from last week's sleep deprivation or if I'm heading for a bit of detox. I doubt it's detox as I haven't been eating considerably cleaner than usual. In fact, with all this weekend's kitchen goings on, I've eaten lots more rich, nut-based food than I usually do.
So today, I have mostly eaten...
am:
fruit salad with cookies (made these up on the fly: used almond pulp leftover from making milk, added honey, vanilla, cacao nibs, dried mixed berries and dehydrated overnight)
apple
pm:
lunch was same as last night's dinner. Using up leftovers when they're that tasty is no hardship.
snack: cookies, juice of an orange
coleslaw with sweetcorn, ginger-orange-sesame dressing; courgette hummus and cashew crackers; warm peach pie with coconut-mango ice cream (pie adapted from a recipe in this summer's Get Fresh! magazine, ice cream was totally made up)
Found a lovely tea in the supermarket today. It's green honeybush, which is a herb from Cape Province in South Africa. It's mixed with a blend of flowers and is light and refreshing, and tastes of flowers and honey. Yummy.
newbie notes
I still struggle to stay raw, I'm not claiming I know everything, but there are a few things I've learned and can pass on to those who have just discovered raw. So when I think of something, I'll post it here.
today's top tip: drink more water.
Drink a pint, at least, when you first get up, and at least another 3 throughout the day. Don't drink large quantities just before or after you eat, do it between meals. This helps keep you hydrated and flush out toxins which will be leaving their homes in your fat cells and making their way into your bloodstream. You want them out as fast as possible, so keep things moving with plenty of liquids.
There are raw foodists who say because of the quantity of water you consume via fruits and vegetables on a plant-based diet that you shouldn't need to drink much water. I recognise that the quality of water locked in a cucumber, say, is far superior to that in your filter jug or transported half way around the world in a plastic bottle, but when you have toxins to rid yourself of, you need to supplement food-sourced water with drinking water. If you eat a lot of nuts or dehydrated foods, again, you'll need more water. Unless you're living off watermelon, you'll need water.
And, regardless, I still think you should drink more water, however water-rich your diet is. But that's just my opinion. Make your own mind up once you've done your research.