I want to apologize for taking so long to get to the next subject in my
"Food Snubbing" blog series. Aside from my regular life of mother,
wife, grandma, personal trainer, and homemaker, we've been dealing with
the way-to-long installing of counters and back splash in a rather
gi-normous kitchen (had no sink or counters in there for a week!),
painting of said kitchen, plumbing emergencies, massive hail storm that
required lots of insurance people and repairs, and trying to find a MIA
ex-husband to get him to sign off so that my husband can adopt my
teenage daughter. (After 5 years of virtually no contact, a small miracle occurred: He was
located and signed the papers! Relieved is not an adequate enough
word.)
Here is a picture of the beautiful daughter who is in the process of
getting, finally, after 10 years, adopted by her REAL Daddy, the man who
has raised her since she was 6:
And here is a picture of part of our newly countered, tiled, and sinked
kitchen. I am SO enjoying it! (And yes- I am bragging a little. After
the process taking 5 weeks, I feel entitled to show it off!)
At any rate, much of the above is still in the process of being worked
out, but there is at least a bit of a respite for me to handle the next
Food Snubbing Topic: Corn and Potatoes.
I'm not really sure that the snubbing of corn is all that common. I
just heard someone at a Weight Watchers meeting once say that the reason
Americans are so overweight is because we eat corn. Huh? My thought
was that it probably has more to do with super-sized portions and eating
too much processed foods than the sole introduction of corn into our
diets.
I've also heard that corn is for animal consumption, not people
consumption. Er...... How many plants do animals and people both eat?
Yeah.... That one falls apart pretty quickly for me.
Besides: Wasn't it the Indians who introduced corn to us? Didn't they eat it? Weren't they pretty darned healthy?
Now, let's move on to potatoes. Actually, it's not all potatoes that
have a bad rap. Sweet potatoes are looked at as the Holy Grail in the
potato world. White potatoes are generally seen as too high in starchy,
quick-digesting carbs. Well, yes... but this is starch the way God
intended it to be. We've found time and time again that when we eat
stuff the way God grew it, not the way man modified it to be, it's good
for us.
Also, you know how many famines potatoes saw people through? Talk to the Irish.
So my short answer on potatoes and corn? As long as they are minimally processed, I'm eatin' 'em.
The trouble with both, I believe, happens when we start to mess with
them: Same problems I listed about white flour waaaaaaaaay back when I
did the wheat blog. We smash 'em up and mix 'em with things like white
flour or sugar or shortening (or all!), and then fry them (with corn,
this is called a hushpuppy), which makes them fatty and
super-high-glycemic, and NOW you have a problem on your hands.
Ever had fresh corn on the cob? Or a potato baked to perfection with
just a little salt sprinkled on it? Yum-o! But when you add butter and
sour cream and bacon bits and cheese and... well..... you get the
point..... When you do all of these things.... heck!..... you can no
longer taste the food you used as a base to pile all this junk on. Just
put the goo in a bowl to eat it, and save the poor, unsuspecting,
perfectly healthy potato or corn from being guilty by association.
One thing I do want to point out about both of these foods, though (as
well as peas), is that the body treats them more as a starch than a
veggie. So if you have potatoes or corn with your grilled chicken, you
need to add at least one more veggie to your plate for a truly
nutritionally balanced meal. And potatoes or corn AND a roll? THAT
truly is high-carb. Just sayin'.
So, minimally mess with them: Bake, boil until JUST done, steam, shuck,
and grill. Then count them as a starch and not a veggie, and you can
enjoy without guilt.
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