Thursday, April 05, 2007

Romancing the Bean

Both chemotherapy and antibiotics tend to throw off the balance between beneficial bacteria and yeasts in the body. I am finding that my body is not in harmony and in need of some re-balancing, evidenced by the presence of various unwelcome fungi! I have begun a Candida albicans-eliminating diet this week. The diet allows absolutely no sugar, no milk, cheese, bread, or vinegar, very little fruit, and lots and lots of vegetables, beans and meat. This disallows many of our traditional North American, calorie-dense foods, and in consequence I am hungry ALL the time! My stomach isn't used to handling the bulk of food required to find enough energy for the day. It has also been shocking how few commercial foods are truly real- sugar free, without nasty substitutes!

The beauty of this diet is that it demands utter nakedness in your relationship with food. I recently picked up Joanne Saltzman's cookbook, "Romancing the Bean". It is an intimate introduction to all sorts of beans, including ancient history and cultural cookery nuances. It has struck me that "romancing" beans, or anything else, requires bareness and simplicity. This Candida diet cuts out the sugar and other distractions with which we tend to douse true, nourishing food. I have been startled by the joy of eating, for breakfast, a bowl of plain, raw oats with sunflower seeds and unsweetened soy milk in all of its beany glory. How wonderful, to roll the texture of the oats over my tongue and really taste their flavor! True fuel in the tank.

Alexander Solzhenitsyn wrote an incredible book about the Soviet Gulags called, "One Day in the Life of Ivan Denisovich". This supper scene is etched into my mind:

“It was at this evening count, when they returned through the camp gates, that the prisoners felt most weather-beaten, cold and hungry – and their bowl of thin, hotted-up cabbage soup in the evening was, for them, like rain in a drought. They swallowed it in one gulp. The bowl of soup was more precious to them than freedom, more precious than their previous life and the life which the future held for them.”

“Shukhov ... began to eat. First of all, he drank just the watery stuff at the top. As it went down, the warmth flooded through his whole body – and his insides seemed to be quivering in expectation of that gruel. Goo-ood! It was for this brief moment that a prisoner lived!

I will be beginning to understand true nourishment when simple, unadulterated meals become as precious to me as gulag gruel.

2 comments:

MamaMonk said...

Good morning! I've had to do a similiar diet recently. I got a wicked case of Mastitis a few weeks ago and was prescribed a very strong antibiotic. Needless to say, I sorely needed de-yeasting after the regime. And consequently, we ate a lot of beans and veggies! I would love to get ahold of the book you mentioned.

Happy Anniversary, by the way---

tamie marie said...

well, hello there!

this was a great post. and i read it while eating yummy cream of wheat, flavored with just a smidgeon of locally-farmed honey. recently a doctor told me that i have high cholesterol, which i find almost impossible to imagine, but i've been trying to cut down on cholesterol-laden foods anyway. trying to eat more veggies. in the process i've realized how much dairy & wheat i eat, and how little vegetables! so it's made me feel a lot healthier, plus i've lost some weight....but i too am hungry more often than usual! beans and rice is filling, but just an hour or so after a salad lunch i am so hungry!

all this to say: we should trade recipes that are filling and tasty. iffn ya want.