Sweet Poison

There was a very interesting article in today’s Telegraph about how poisonous sugar is for us.  If you want to read the article, here is the link – Sweet Poison – or I have copied it at the end for you.  I will certainly want to read it again and will be frustrated if the link is lost.  Thank you Alison for showing me the article.

I already know I shouldn’t eat sugar and this article has inspired me to begin to cut it out.  By Monday I aim to have quit sugar, the Sweet Poison.

Baby steps though.  I felt really hungry this morning and had an egg and bacon brown bap for breakfast with a latte.  Lattes will be going as there is too much sugar in milk.  Bread will also be going as I am cutting back on carbs unless they are plant based.egg and bacon mayo bap Mid morning I had a small pot of mixed unsalted and raw nuts with a satsuma and an apple.  I will be cutting right back on fruit too.

At lunch time I went back to Albion which is the closest place to the office that I like and had a fruit juice drink and a chicken sandwich.
lunch 17-9-13 I could easily have had one of these rounds of sandwich.  But I did eat them both.Chicken mayo sandwich This drink is labelled as a ‘Natural Drink’ and packaged as if it is healthy.  It is better then a Coke but full of sugar as the fruit juice is concentrated so the sugar content is really high.FireFly ingredients How gloomy and grey London looked today.  This is the back of Tate Modern and the spire of St.Paul’s Cathedral is hardly visible in the distance.raint Tate Modern When I returned home I felt tired and not in the mood for cooking or clearing up so I made a smoothie.stuff 3 I added lots of superfoods for extra nutrition such as Goji Berries,  Acai, Lucuma, Maca and blue-green algae.  For protein I added Natural yogurt, pumpkin seeds and sunflower seeds.  I added 1 tbsp Udo’s Oil plus blackberries, banana and strawberries.stuff 2 There is sugar in the fruits (fructose), sugar in the milk (lactose) and in the Goji berries.stuff 1 I also added a scoop of protein powder.  This is the one I use.Sunwarrior protein I had to add some soya milk to get it blending and I have one which is organic and contains no sugar.  It was a really good smoothie and I had 2 glasses of it.Smoothie 17-9-13

Compared to many people, I am sure I ate realtively healthily today.  But I ate too much to lose weight and I did eat too much sugar even though I didn’t have any sweets, cakes or traditionally sweet foods.  Each day I will improve my diet gradually so by Monday it is very low in sugar.

By the way, my delivery did not happen today so hopefully tomorrow!

Here is the article, Sweet Poison, from The Telegraph.

Like it or lump it, few of us get through the day without adding sugar to our daily diet. We are a Pavlovian population made up of sugar, treacle and toffee addicts, drawn to the taste of sweetness like bees to honey. So ingrained is our desire that even writing about sugar now is sending my salivary glands into overdrive as my brain reacts to the very thought of it, whizzing neurotransmitters around to prepare my body for some serious glucose action. Perhaps you, while reading this, are reaching – almost unwittingly – for a chocolate Hobnob?

But that’s not a problem, is it? We could stop and eat a piece of cheese instead – any time we wanted. Or could we?

Maybe not. It seems that our desire to load up with sugar regularly may not be the cheeky reward-cum-energy boost we think it is. Increasingly, experts believe we can be truly addicted to sugar. French scientists in Bordeaux reported that in animal trials, rats chose sugar over cocaine (even when they were addicted to cocaine), and speculated that no mammals’ sweet receptors are naturally adapted to the high concentrations of sweet tastes on offer in modern times. They worried, in a paper published in 2007, that the intense stimulation of these receptors by our typical 21st-century sugar-rich diets must generate a supra-normal reward signal in the brain, with the potential to override self-control mechanisms and thus to lead to addiction.

So if you feel like you are craving a chocolatey treat, that craving is more than just a figure of speech. You may be one of the world’s most common dependants: a sugar addict.

But take heart. Around the world, a growing body of expert opinion – the ‘No Sugar’ movement – is leading a global fightback and warning that our sweet habit is completely out of control, leaving a nasty taste in the mouth of the body public. Sugar, whether added to food by you or the manufacturer, is the greatest threat to human health, bar none, they say. And unless we wise up and quit en masse, we don’t just risk personal obesity and disease, but national bankruptcy and collapse as the toll our ill health takes on our countries’ economies threatens to destabilise the modern world.

Lustig leads the field with his warning that not all calories are equal, because not all monosaccharides – the simplest forms of sugar, the building blocks of all carbohydrates – are equal.

At a basic level, sucrose, or table sugar (which is made up of equal molecules of the monosaccharides fructose and glucose) is not metabolised in the same way that a carbohydrate such as flour is.

He explains: ”An analysis of 175 countries over the past decade showed that when you look for the cause of type 2 (non-insulin dependent) diabetes, the total number of calories you consume is irrelevant. It’s the specific calories that count. When people ate 150 calories more every day, the rate of diabetes went up 0.1 per cent. But if those 150 calories came from a can of fizzy drink, the rate went up 1.1 per cent. Added sugar is 11 times more potent at causing diabetes than general calories.”

Why is this? Well, look more closely through the microscope, and Lustig (and others) believe it is the fructose molecule in sugar that is to blame.

Lustig explains that instead of helping to sate us, some scientists believe that fructose fools our brains into thinking we are not full, so we overeat. Moreover, excess fructose cannot be converted into energy by the mitochondria inside our cells (which perform this function). “Instead,” he explains, “they turn excess fructose into liver fat. That starts a cascade of insulin resistance (insulin promotes sugar uptake from blood) which leads to chronic metabolic disease, including diabetes and heart disease.”

Look online and you’ll see fructose described as “fruit sugar” – it’s the nutrient that nature put into apples and pears to entice humans (and birds) to eat them. So do we stop eating fruit in order to go sugar-free? It’s not that easy. Fruit is sweetened by fructose but it doesn’t contain very much, although you still shouldn’t eat very sweet fruit like grapes and melon to excess.

The problem lies in sources of sweetness like corn syrup, agave or maple syrup and honey, which contain a higher percentage of fructose than fruit, especially if they have been processed, meaning additional fructose is added in. Some agave nectars, for example, can be 92 per cent fructose, eight per cent glucose.

The food industry loves these sweeteners, especially high fructose corn syrup (HFCS), as they make every type of food more palatable – from soup to bagels, ketchup to bread. In the United States, HFCS is especially popular following governmental production quotas of domestic sugar, subsidies of US corn, and an import tariff on foreign sugar, making HFCS super cheap. As a liquid, it is also easier to blend and transport. In particular, it is used in low-fat foods (which would otherwise taste, says Lustig, “like cardboard”). His theory goes a long way to explaining why the low-fat diets which rose to popularity in the Seventies have coincided with a rise in obesity and related illnesses.

So before you can think about giving these sweeteners up, you have to turn label detective – and find them.

Thousands of miles away, nodding in agreement, is David Gillespie, a Brisbane-based lawyer turned researcher whose Sweet Poison books chart his own decision to stop eating sugar, resulting in him losing six stone without dieting in a year. He explains: “You are breaking an addiction, so you need to stop consuming all sources of the addictive substance. They are all hard to give up because they are addictive – but they are all easy to give up once you understand what you are doing and why.”

He adds: “Your palate adjusts significantly and quickly when you delete sugar. You can suddenly experience a whole range of flavours that either you didn’t know existed before or were muted by the presence of sugar. One thing people often remark on after they’ve been off sugar for a month or so is that suddenly they can smell it. They can tell you where the confectionery aisle or the breakfast cereal aisle is in a strange supermarket by smell alone.” What worries Gillespie, though, is not the candy by the checkout – but the fructose lurking in your ready-meal. “Very few of us are making conscious decisions about the sugar we eat,” he says. “The average Briton is consuming more than a kilo – 238 teaspoonfuls – a week, but I bet they’d be flummoxed accounting for more than a few teaspoons of that. Sugar is deeply and thoroughly embedded in our food supply.”

He’s right. We’re buying fewer bags of granulated sugar. And Defra statistics show that we’re consuming fewer calories from “free sugars” such as table sugar, honey and sugars found naturally in fruit juices – although at 13.9 per cent that is still higher than the recommended 11 per cent we should be aiming for – than in previous years.

Even the actual number of calories we consume has fallen: Defra figures show that there has been a long-term downward trend in energy intake since 1964, with average energy intake per person 28 per cent lower in 2010 than in 1974.

Yet, obesity rates continue to rise: currently 26 per cent of Britons are obese, half of us are overweight. This is a mighty problem: direct costs caused by obesity are now estimated to be £5.1billion per year. Obesity is associated with cardiovascular risk and with cancer, disability during old age, decreased life expectancy and serious chronic conditions such as type 2 diabetes, osteoarthritis and hypertension.

Like Lustig, Gillespie sees our inate weight problem as connected to the rise in consumption of hidden sugar. Unlike Lustig, Gillespie’s ideas were inspired personally, from looking down at a belly that was expanding year on merciless year, regardless of what trendy diet he tried.

“In 2002, my wife Lizzie and I had four kids under the age of nine,” he explains, “when I reached my maximum weight of 20 stone [127kg].” (Gillespie is 5ft 9in.) “I felt lethargic and unwell most of the time. When Lizzie announced our fifth child was to be twins, I had to do something.”

Gillespie began reading John Yudkin’s book Pure, White and Deadly, published in 1972, which also showed that consumption of sugar and refined sweeteners is closely associated with long-term disease.

Fascinated, Gillespie soaked up research papers which connected fructose (in particular) to fatty liver disease, to appetite stimulation, and to gout, diabetes, memory loss and, of course, obesity. He was shocked to learn “how many of our organs sugar systematically destroys without symptoms until it is too late. First the liver, then the pancreas, then the kidneys, and ultimately the heart.”

The more he learnt, the more Gillespie was determined to do something about his own eating habits. “I stopped eating sugar and immediately started losing weight – without adjusting anything else about how I lived.”

For Gillespie, the weight started dropping straight away, but the sense of addiction took a little longer to go: “At the two-four week mark I noticed I was no longer craving food and in particular I could leave things which I would have found difficult to bypass before.

“But I wasn’t feeling deprived. I ate what I wanted and as long as it didn’t contain sugar, the weight kept coming off. I had stumbled upon a way of fixing what had obviously been a broken appetite control system up to that point in my life.”

But there were setbacks: “I discovered the addictive power of sugar early in the process. I was out at a fundraiser and was served up a chocolate cake. I’d been off sugar for about a month and I didn’t want to waste it, so I ate it. I figured I’d be all right, but how wrong I was.

“The next day I had constant cravings for sugar and the gnawing desire to eat and drink everything available – clearly I’d crossed a threshold and needed to go through sugar withdrawal again. I did, and two weeks later was once again able to walk past chocolate without feeling any particular longing.”

His family were not left behind. “The kids didn’t like it,” he says, “but eventually they got used to it and their palates adjusted. Now they are pretty pleased with teeth that don’t have cavities, rarely getting colds and feeling energetic, with none of the highs and lows that come with sugar eating.”

That mood roller-coaster is one of the reasons Gwyneth Paltrow, in a blog entry on her website Goop, gives for quitting sugar: “Sugar gives you an initial high, then you crash, then you crave more, so you consume more sugar. It’s this series of highs and lows that provoke unnecessary stress on your adrenals. You get anxious, moody (sugar is a mood-altering drug) and eventually you feel exhausted.”

So is it time for everyone to accept a life of total abstinence? Not so fast, says the British Dietetic Association (BDA). “Sugar is not bad for you as part of a balanced diet,” says dietitian Sylvia Turner. “It has an important role in providing flavour and texture to foods. Just remember, sugar contains calories but few nutrients, so eating too much added sugar and sugary food and drinks instead of other healthy foods can make your diet less nutritious.”

She adds: “Some research suggests that sugary drinks make it harder for us to regulate the overall amount of calories eaten and a regular intake may be a factor contributing to obesity in children.”

And not all scientists agree with Lustig: a US study published last summer in the journal Diabetes Care suggested that fructose could have a positive role to play in the regulation of blood sugar in type 1 (insulin-dependent) diabetes. Even so, Gillespie points out: “The public have taken to the ‘No Sugar’ movement. In Australia, hundreds of thousands of people have successfully quit sugar.”

And once the decision is made, it can be stuck to. “It’s no particular feat of willpower,” he promises. “I just make sure I don’t inadvertently consume fructose and the rest takes care of itself. My weight stays the same and I eat and exercise normally (not like a person on a diet). I am no more tempted to eat sugar again than a smoker who has successfully quit for 10 years would be tempted to light up again.”

Are you addicted to sugar?

1. Do you struggle to walk past a sugary treat without taking ‘just one’?

2. Do you have routines around sugar consumption – for example, always having pudding, or needing a piece of chocolate to relax in front of the television?

3. Are there times when you feel as if you cannot go on without a sugar hit?

4. If you are forced to go without sugar for 24 hours, do you develop headaches and mood swings?

If you answered ‘yes’ to one of the questions above, you are addicted.

Case study: Richard Dehn, 59, a retailer on Merseyside

I did my degree in hotel management and catering, and I’ve run a corner shop for more than 30 years. I’ve always been aware of the dangers of sugar and I remember reading a book about it called Pure, White and Deadly by John Yudkin, about five years before I started working at the shop.

I’ve got a very addictive nature and although I’ve managed to completely keep away from the other addictive and dangerous products we sell – alcohol and tobacco – for more than 20 years, I’ve always had a problem with sugar.

I’m lucky enough to be married to a superb cook, Sue, who has always prepared meals from natural ingredients, so I don’t eat ready-meals and I’ve never taken sugar in my tea and coffee. It’s really the hidden, refined sugar in other products that has been my downfall.

I think the main difficulty is that we work quite long hours, and it’s the easiest thing in the world for someone with a corner shop to go and have a Magnum or a handful – and I mean a handful – of chocolate Freddos or jelly babies, or a cherry muffin. You feel like the sugar rush will get you through the hours.

Then about eight years ago, I started to have serious health problems. I had an upset tummy all the time, I lost a lot of weight, and I really felt rotten. The doctor diagnosed IBS (irritable bowel syndrome) and told me to eat more fibre. I then did a little extra self-diagnosis and had a stool test done, which revealed I had a Candida problem; this means bad pathogenic bacteria in my gut, which were feeding on the sugar I was eating.

I started taking probiotics and stayed completely away from all types of sugar for a year, meaning no sweets or fizzy drinks and also no fruit for the first couple of months. I could feel the benefits of it reasonably quickly, and gradually I got better.

However, just like every smoker who has tried to quit, I felt that I’d cracked giving up sugar and one chocolate bar wouldn’t do me any harm. From there it was a slippery slope, as one became three in a couple of days, and three became even more after that. I didn’t get as ill again and didn’t necessarily realise I had any symptoms from returning to sugar, but gradually I did get to a stage where I’d feel so tired during the day that I absolutely had to have a sugar rush. Even being more aware of the dangers of sugar since I’ve been ill hasn’t actually stopped me going for that hit on a regular basis.

Personally, I do believe that sugar is a poison. But this has still not stopped me poisoning myself on a regular basis over the years. At the moment I am trying, once again, to stay clear.

Read David Gillespie’s tips on how to kick the sugar habit

‘Fat Chance: The Bitter Truth About Sugar’ by Robert Lustig (Fourth Estate, RRP £13.99) is available to order from Telegraph Books (0844 871 1514) at £12.99 + £1.35 p&p

 

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Crushed

As an Arachnaphobe, beginning my day with a huge spider trapped inside my trousers was a terrifying ordeal.  It really happened.  I put on my smart work trousers, buttoned and zipped them up and walked across the room.  Something tickled my leg and I brushed it and it wriggled a lot more.  I guessed it was something inside my trousers so walloped my leg whilst trying simultaneously to unbutton, unzip and remove my trousers.  A big fat leg (no, not mine!!) fell on the floor and I was almost too terrified to touch my trousers to see what the leg had been attached to in case it was still alive.  Luckily it was definitely dead and crushed.  One huge and very dead spider.  Eeeeeurgh.  Fortunately, the rest of the day was a huge improvement.  Not an exciting or happy or thrilling day but one without further incident.

It was actually a very sunny start to the day and I headed to Crussh for a healthy breaky.  I had intended to bring my own breakfast in but the incident with the spider wasted too much time.Crussh at Bankside I resisted the latte and had a regular coffee with a small amount of milk and a blueberry breakfast pot.Crussh breakfast 16-9-13 Their breakfast pots are really good.  This was a smoothie made with blueberries which they layer between granola, more berries and banana.  So it is dairy free and basically just granola and berries.  I really enjoyed it.blueberry breakfast pot As I walked out of the office for lunch it poured with rain.  It was very strange as it was still quite sunny.  I was going to get a salad from M&S but the rain was too heavy for a walk so I went over the road to Albion and picked up a sandwich and a yogurt with gooseberry.Albion lunch 16-9-13 This was a dreadful diet choice but my goodness it was fantastic.  The chicken was roasted and served as a huge chunk with mayo and lettuce.  The focaccia was salty with lots of rosemary in it.  So a gazillion calories but it tasted wonderful.Chicken Mayo from Albion Supper was quick and easy.  I poured some soy sauce in to the tupperware pot, crushed a whole head of garlic and a big chunk of ginger and mixed it with the soy sauce.  I added 4 chopped up chicken breasts and left them to marinate while I picked some sweetcorn from the garden and chopped the vegetables.chicken and peppers Le voila!  About 20 minutes after walking through the door we were sitting down to this and it was really good.  Chicken marinated in garlic and ginger with peppers, spinach and mushrooms with a corn on the cob.dinner 16-9-13 These were really good too!  Naughty but very nice.  The last of my birthday treats was a box of mini macaroons which I adore.  Wonderful.Mini Macaroons

The birthday treats are all gone and tomorrow I should be receiving something to help with a rapid weight loss!  Guesses on a postcard please 🙂

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More Birthday Fun

I am a very lucky person indeed.  I had a wonderful weekend last weekend celebrating my birthday with my family and I was spoilt again this weekend by another wonderful celebration with my girls and our children.

We met up on Friday night at our house in Ramsgate and I completely failed to take any photos at all!  The camera made its weekend debut on Saturday in Whitstable where we went for lunch and a potter.

We had lunch in Samphire which I highly recommend.

Samphire We had a delicious lunch and a cheeky bottle of Prosecco.cheeky Prosecco Our children had their own table in a separate part of the restaurant.  At the end of the meal, the manager came over to compliment us on how well our children had behaved which was a lovely thing to be told.  We all know how completely gorgeous they all are but it was great to be told.  We done good and brunged ’em up proper 🙂our children The weather was somewhat bracing but we persevered, snuggled in to our coats and went for a lovely walk about.Michelle and Lara Beauty and the beast !You'll be fine It is such a privilege to have known these lovely ladies for so long – since we were at school together!4 of usIt is a while since I have been in Whitstable and I really enjoyed being here again.Whitstable 9 It is never too cold for an ice-cream when you are beside the sea.all of us at Mr Whippy We managed to visit some lovely shops such as Pink Flamingo.Pink Flamingo Whitstable unsusual shoesWhitstable is famous for its oysters.  Note the large pile of oyster shells on the right of the picture below.

wandering around

Here is a close up with a young boy who was unable to resist them.Harvey in oysters Walking along by the seashore, you go past lots of charming old fishermen’s cottages, many of which are available to rent.  I have had a  delightful weekend with these friends in some similar huts a few years ago.Whitstable 8 When you stay in these cottages, it is wonderful to be so close to restaurants and then wake up in the morning at the beach.Whitstable 7 Whitstable 6 Whitstable 5 Whitstable 3 Whitstable is totally charming.Whitstable 2 Whitstable 1As well as the lovely restaurants, cute buildings by the sea and boats to look at, there are some very unusual shops to look in and art galleries too.

If you like knitting but need some inspiration, how about a bicycle cover?knitted bicycle covers We went in to a Chemists which was delightfully old fashioned.  Look at  these charming drawers.old fashioned chemist Back at the house a surprise was brewing.kids in secret huddle Or rather baking.  Holly made me a fantastic carrot cake.  The recipe was one of the Hummingbird Bakery’s and it was perfect.  Moist and nutty.  cake 4 with Holly Beautifully decorated too.cake 3 cake 2 Thank you Holly for such a wonderful cake.cake 1 carrot cake We were all silent for a couple of minutes while we enjoyed our cake, which is very extraordinary for us to be so quiet!cake in sitting room I enjoyed an afternoon siesta while my lovely friends prepared a feast for us all.  We began with champagne and presents.  I was completely and utterly spoilt.  Thank you Gini, Lucy, Michelle and Sally.  presents and champagne I was so overwhelmed by my lovely presents and champagne that I forgot to take pictures again so you will have to take my word for it that the canapes and dinner were delicious.dinner 14-9-13 The best bit though was the company.  Over the years we have had so many holidays and weekends away together, we have a very rich store of experiences and stories to enjoy retelling and reliving.  It is really good fun to remember some of our (with hindsight) very ambitious holidays we had with so many young children and remember the tales for our amusement and the children’s.  Well, hopefully they are amused rather than horrified by some of the situations we ended up in.  They are all still alive, which is the main thing.

For the sake of my dear friends, I will not share any of the photos we were in hysterics about.Laughing 2 We were reduced to tears of laughter , yet again, by looking back at pictures of us in a Hammam in Turkey.  To say we look like we are in a Nativity play is being rather polite.  They are so funny but not for public consumption.laughing 1 Sunday morning was sunny – Yippee.  It is ALWAYS such a joy to wake up and see the sun shining and the water in the marina sparkling, as it was today.sparkly marina The advantage of facing East is that the sun shines on the front of this old house in the morning which is my favourite time of day.  I couldn’t wait to get out and enjoy the sun, especially as the forecast was for rain.Sun on this old house The marina looked glorious in the sunshine.H and marina Ramsgate marina 15-9-13 church and marina

We walked along the cycle path to Pegwell Bay.


NCN 15H in handsI had wanted to sit on the huge outside terrace of the pub with a coffee, enjoying the lovely view over the sea but it didn’t open until 12 so we sat in the bar of the hotel instead and had a coffee there.
coffee time Or a hot chocolate.M and C The weather completely changed in that short time.  When we came out it was cloudy, threatening to rain and very windy.scarf in wind Pegwell has some sweet little flint cottages.Flint cottages, Pegwell Harvey had many climbing opportunities on this walk and enjoyed taking his skateboard.3 way wall More food.  My goodness we did eat well this weekend.  Gini made us all a delicious caramelised onion and goats cheese tartonion and cheese tart and a pesto and tomato tart.pesto and tomato tart I had both, but began with the onion and cheese with a large helping of Michelle’s salad.  It was all very lovely.lunch 15-9-13

Maddi had made 2 huge batches of meringues and I thought we had eaten them all last night but I was very pleased to see some more on the lunch table.  They were perfect and amongst the best I have ever eaten – crisp on the outside and chewy inside.Maddi's meringues

I enjoyed some loads with some whipped cream in to which I stirred some delicious gooseberry and elderflower jam made by my neighbours at LNH, mixed berries and mango cheesecake.  Yummy!Puddong 15-9-13 I do wish these lovely weekends could go on for ever.  Thank you Gini, Lucy, Michelle and Sally for such a wonderful weekend.  Thank you Harvey, Lara, Alex, Holly, Maddie, Tilli and Charlie for being there with us too and making it even more special.  We missed you Emily but hope you can make it the next time.

Michelle summed it up well:M's comment in guest book The next person who wants to tease me about my very old age can take note of the below please; I am not old, I am Retro.  I feel so much better about it now.Not old RetroI do not feel better about my diet though which has been non existent recently.  I have one more birthday celebration to look forward to and then it is back on with the weight loss with a vengeance!

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Trying To Be Good

I am trying to be good but finding it difficult.  I think after my birthday celebrations are finished (2 more weekends to go 🙂 ) I am going to give up sugar except for an occasional piece of fruit.  As soon as I have just a little bit, I want more!  So I think the time is nearly here for me to give it up for good.

On Tuesday evening I decided to try my first sweetcorn of the year.  The plants were looking good – the best I have ever grown.  I have been disappointed before though when I peeled away the leaves to find hardly any corn kernels.  I felt quite nervous.

sweetcorn 10-9-13 1 No need to worry though this year – success!  They were delicious which I know because I had 2 for supper.sweetcorn 10-9-13 This morning I fancied a smoothie.  I haven’t had one for a while but today was the day for one; 1 cup of soya milk, 1/2 a cup of jumbo oats, 1 tbsp Chia seeds, a scoop of protein powder, blueberries and a juicy peach.smoothie ingredients 12-9-13 For extra nutrition I added matcha powder and a marine algae.green powder Not bad at all and a lovely thick consistency.Smoothie 12-9-13 Mid morning though I was hungry so I had some scrambled egg on toast.  scrambled egg on toast 12-9 Then some almonds, raisins and pumpkin seeds.snack 12-9-13 That kept me going until supper time when I made a stir fry with a variety of vegetables.veg for supper 12-9-13 I marinated the chopped up chicken breast in some soy sauce with finely minced garlic and ginger.  It was served with half a sweet potato and half a white potato.  Very tasty.  If I hadn’t added so much butter, it would have been healthy too !dinner 12-9-13

I have a wonderful weekend away with the girls to look forward to so I don’t think there will be much abstaining going on!  I had better behave tomorrow during the day at least.

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The Big Birthday Weekend

What a wonderful weekend I had celebrating my birthday with my 3 sisters and their families.

Saturday morning came round very soon after Friday night ended!  It was bright and sunny as the sun rose over the Marina in Ramsgate.dawn on 7-9-13 A healthyish start; granola, natural yogurt and a sweet and juicy peach.peaches and granola My sisters and our families make a party of 15.  Our destination for the day was Margate.my beautiful family Which we travelled to by bus!  The Thanet Loop costs £5 for a day ticket for a family and you can hop on and off when you like which is great value for money.family bus trip Margate sign We strolled through the Old Town to the sea front,Margate Old Town where we sat on the steps,Margate steps eating fish and chips.hanging out Margate A traditional by the sea meal in Britain.  Eaten out of the box with your fingers.  We are a classy lot!MargateIt was fabulously sunny.L, H and R Zoe and her sisters.  Aren’t they fabulous?Zoe and her sisters 1 In age order now.4 plus 2 It was a wonderful place to hang out and chill while children played and adults chatted.Max and Olivia Harry in Margate Lara in Margate Katie at seaside Olivia Next stop was the Turner Contemporary.crossing to the Turner A is for Abi 🙂a for abi The ground floor always has some interesting sculptures which inspired us in different ways.

at the TurnerThe main exhibition upstairs was fascinating.  I loved it and want to go again.  There was the expected range of what I call “proper art” i.e. skilled drawings/paintings which I could never do if I practised for the rest of my life plus interesting and quirky plus “so what”? art.  There was also, which completely took me by surprise, some works by some extraordinary people.  There were drawings and writings by Da Vinci, beautiful drawings of anemones by Gosse, a letter written by Shackleton in the Antarctic (plus a penguin he brought back) and sketches of mildew completed during an expedition on the Endeavour.

It was excellent and a privilege to see works by such incredible people.  Top marks to the Turner for that exhibition.Curiosity exhibition There is a large room at the Turner looking out over the sea.in the art room It is a light and bright room filled with art materials so you can have a go yourself and ALL the children did just that which was wonderful to see.in art room Shall we lock them in?3 in lockers 2 3 in lockers All that oohing and aahing was hungry work.  Luckily the Cupcake Cafe had just the thing; a strawberry meringue cupcake and a cup of tea.strawberry meringue cake The women and children enjoyed tea and cakes.H and L in Cupcake Cafe The boys were enjoying a bit of peace and quiet in the Lifebuoy.  It seemed only right to join them.  I had a marmalade vodka with lemonade which was very quaffable.in the Lifeboat champagne on ice Back at the ranch the champagne was chilled and we began to celebrate the main event of the weekend – my birthday.Sunshine on sofa We enjoyed a pretty sunset which reflected in the water to make the water pink.  sunset in Ramsgate We walked less than 5 minutes away to our local Italian which treated us very well.dinner at La Marinara We all shared different starters of Brushettas and cold meats.cold meats Calamari.calamariThis was my lovely view while I ate.Lara and Holly birthday dinner For my main I chose chicken escalope which isn’t breadcrumbed which I like.  It was cooked with parma ham and Mozarella and served with perfectly crispy French Fries.  Delicious.chicken escaloppe and fries Dessert was a chocolate filled Hazlenut Semi Freddo.  Wonderful.semi freddo I am ashamed to admit I have no recollection of the children playing cards when we got back.playing cardsI do have a hazy memory of the Mah Jongg which was not our finest ever game but it was still fun.  Especially this hand which I won 🙂Mah Jongg Sunday was super sunny.  I had a birthday table which was full of very thoughtful and lovely presents and cards.  It was so special, sitting beside the window with the lovely view and all my family together.  One of those times I wish I could bottle and keep reliving.birthday balloons More food!birthday fruit plate This was my deconstructed Bucks Fizz.  What a way to start the day.my kind of bucks fizz Jimmy did us proud with scrambled eggs and smoked salmon, bacon, toast, croissant and fresh fruit.  Plus rather a lot of coffee.  And champagne.birthday breakfast 8-9-13 The early morning walkers reported a historical street market so we set off to look at that. These shelters along the promenade are lovely.In a shelter Addington Street was the High Street in Victorian times and today it was closed to cars for a historical street market.Addington St historical fair Lace making is fascinating.  It looks so complicated yet produces delicate little patterns.watching lace making The Queen Charlotte was making the most of the weather by spilling outside.Queen Charlotte outside This is such a one off pub.  One of my favourites.Queen Charlotte Ramsgate Katie the pink cat.Katie At the end of Addington Street is a Pinball Museum.  It is only open at weekends (except January and February when it is completely closed) and I have never been in before.  It was brilliant.  All the machines are in working order and £5 buys 12 tokens which is 12 turns.Pinball Museum Ramsgate This basketball game was infuriating if you were not quick thinking and nimble fingered but quite compulsive too.basketball game The more mature members of the group enjoyed being better at games than the younger members who had no idea how to play pinball.  This was a very enjoyable way to relax and I shall definitely be going back.Firepower pinball There was something for everyone at the street fair.back down Addington St bunting addington street Sunshine won 2 rosettes at the dog show ; Best in Show and Judges Favourite 🙂Sunshne with rosettes After lunch at the house we went to Botany Bay, my favourite local beach.Harvey at BB We often notice these chalk stacks in adverts and even a film the other day.Botany Bay Zoe is 50 + fabulous! Katie at BB 4 swam Harry and Olivia at Botany Bay Our lovely weekend finished with cake.birthday cake for me What an incredible cake it was.  Lara made me a chocolate and salted caramel cake and she even made the caramel herself.  It was completely fabulous and decorated with lots of chocolates and sweet things.choc caramel cakeThat was an amazing weekend.  Such a shame everyone had to go.  I want to do it all again!family on sofaThank you to my big, beautiful family for the best birthday ever.  You made me laugh and cry and feel special and loved.  Thank you all.

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Juice And Scrambled Egg On Toast Fast Day 4

One boy despatched to new school.  We were late !!!!!  Yes, on day 1.  I couldn’t believe it.  I was driving along and we hit a wall of fog.  Visibility was dreadful and I then became confused about a route I was already quite unsure about and I missed a turn without realising.  We ended up in a large town with horrendous traffic jams.  Luckily I had left super early, such was my fear of being late, so we were actually only 5 minutes late but I was still mortified.

New schoolJuice 1 of the day was a simple one, made with 4 carrots and 2 oranges.
orange things Delicious.sunshine 2 Another glass of sunshine.sunshine 1 I am now juicing up leftovers so juice 2 was celery, kale, spinach, a manky old passionfruit, a squidgy kiwi fruit, half a cucumber and a lemon.juice ing 5-9-13 Another yucky green one.green 5-9-13 Juice 3 had to be better.  To my spinach and kale mountain I added half a ripe pineapple.greens and pineapple Yum-a-lum-a-ding-dong.  That was good !!lunch 5-9-13 Juice number 4 was more spinach and kale (yawn), a lime as I am out of lemons and lots of blueberries.greens and blues It was a horrible sludgy grey brown colour and tasted of not a lot really.  I think that was a waste of some good blueberries.grey juice Could I face juice number 5?  No I couldn’t.  So I enjoyed scrambled eggs on toast.  Food of the Gods 🙂Scrambled eggs on toast

I did actually feel much better today in terms of not feeling tired and by being alert.  But I felt very hungry all day and very irritable, which is quite something as I was home alone so I had no one to be irritable at but I was, anyway.  I am going away for the weekend and can not wait.  So no, tomorrow will not be a juice fast day.  The juicer is going back in the cupboard for a while.

 

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Juice Fast Day 3

According to the Reboot programme, I will begin to feel better by day 3.  I actually felt worse today than yesterday but better than Monday.  So relatively better then when I started but not as good as I was expecting.  I am hoping tomorrow will be the day I spring out of bed, full of energy and with startling mental clarity.

Today I got up feeling very tired and not very enthused about another day of juicing.  To make life harder I was working form home with Harvey around so I had to feed him while not eating myself.  Plus I am incredibly busy at work so today was going to be a challenge.

I heroically made Harvey a spinach and ham omelette for breakfast.  I always cook eggs in a little butter and the smell of melted butter was enough to make me salivate.  I really wanted this breakfast but managed to pass it on, in its entirety, to the little fella.Harvey breakfast 4-9-13 I tried to muster up some enthusiasm for the carrots, apple and lemon I was allowed.breakfast ing 4-9-13 This was a beautiful colour and actually tasted lovely.  A little glass of sunshine to start my day.breakfast 4-9-13 Mid – morning heralded a glass of coconut water.coconut water 4-9-13 For lunch Harvey had a plate of wholewheat pasta and ham in tomato sauce with some red pepper, cucumber and celery on the side.  I am not a big fan of pasta so I found this quite easy to resist.H lunch 4-9-13 I juiced up half a red pepper, 2 celery stalks, lots of kale and spinach, 1 cucumber and a lemon.lunch ingred 4-9-13 It tasted as gross as it looks.lunch 4-9-13 I was almost excited for the afternoon’s juice, working on the assumption that it had to be better then the lunch time juice.  3 stalks of celery, 1 orange, 2 beetroot, 1 carrot and half a lemon.  I would have loved to eat that orange whole instead of juicing it.pm juice ingreds 4-9-13 Not bad.  I think I would have liked it without the beetroot but apparently beetroot is very good for you so I persevere.pm juice 4-9-13 I really wanted Harvey’s dinner.  I REALLY wanted it.  Jacket potato, salad with mayonnaise and chicken baked in a chipotle BBQ sauce.  He is very lucky I am being so iron willed today or he would have had nothing.H dinner 4-9-13 Look how huge this Swiss chard leaf is!  I juiced 2 of these, with a cucumber, 2 celery stalks, half a lemon and an apple.Huge Swiss chard leaf My goodness it was green.  I am trying to picture those micronutrients, coursing through my blood, on route to repair damaged cells, build new ones and make me feel tip top in the morning.Mean Green in jug

3 days down, 2 to go !

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Juice Fast Day 2

I survived another day on just juice !!!  I am feeling very pleased with myself.

I began with hot water and lemon followed by an ‘Un-Beet-able’ ; 1 apple, 1 beetroot, 3 carrots, a sliver of ginger and 3 huge handfuls of kale.colourful juice 3-9-13 It looks better than it tastes!pink or orange I was too busy working to even pour my coconut water so apart from a black coffee, I had nothing else all morning.

For lunch I made ‘Green lemonade’ ; 2 huge Swiss chard leaves, 3 handfuls of spinach, 1 apple, 1 cucumber, 2 sticks of celery and 1 lemon.green stuff 3-9-13 The chard leaves were so huge it made 2 large glassfuls of juice which is just as well as I didn’t manage my afternoon juice and had nothing else until nearly 8pm.green juice 3-9-13 In the evening I had ‘Red, White, Blue (and green)’ which was made with 1/4 of a watermelon, lots of kale and blueberries.  It came out quite a dark grey colour which was a bit off-puting but it tasted ok.  I was glad of the nourishment by then.watermelon, kale and blueberries I have actually under juiced today.  This was not intentional but circumstantial.  I was too busy working today to make all the juices I should have had.  In the evening I went out to collect Harvey from a lovely cricket and swimming party.  I was feeling hungry but managed to resist a glass of wine, twice, burgers and hot dogs which looked really good and even a platter of rocky road which was placed really close to me.  I was so relieved when it was all gone!

I have some gorgeous photos of all the children swimming together but I don’t like to put pictures of children up unless I ok it with their parents first.  So just to capture the beauty of the pool so many of us managed to enjoy today, here is one of Harvey.preparing to dive The technique needs more work but they couldn’t have had more fun and it was an absolute pleasure watching all those children enjoying the pool.the splash

I feel surprisingly well considering how few calories I have had today.  I am hungry and should probably have another juice but it is late and everything is clean and ready for the morning.  I am sure I will survive going to bed but feeling peckish.

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Juice Fast Day 1

Today was day 1 of a five day juice fast.  Yes, I am planning to consume nothing but vegetable and fruit juices all working week.

There are many plans out there to follow but I am following Joe Cross’ Reboot programme because I saw him on the telly and liked him and what he is all about.  You can see the juice fast via this link here.

The first thing to consume was a mug of hot water with lemon juice.  Exciting stuff!hot water and lemon Juice 1 of the day was ‘Sunrise’ i.e. the juice of 2 oranges, 4 carrots and 1 beetroot.carrots etc What a glorious colour it was.  A stunning purple/orange colour.  The pattern in the juice is from the light reflecting from the window, not some strange combination of colours mixing in the juice.beetroot juice Mid morning was a glass of coconut water.coconut water 2-9-13 Lunch was a glass of green juice.  I chose the ‘Mean Green’ which I made with 6 small Swiss Chard leaves, 1 cucumber, 2 stalks of celery, 1 apple, half a lemon and some ginger.green juice 2 2-9-13 It tastes OK if I drink it over lots of ice but I confess it does make me gag a bit at room temperature.green juice 2-9-13 “Supper” was much later than intended as I was out collecting Harvey which involved rather a lot of chatting (how unusual 🙂 ) so I was actually very hungry for my ‘Garden Variety’.  The recipe asked for 2 cucumbers but I think 1 was plenty.  The greenery was a round pointed cabbage and some kale.cabbage etc 2-9-13 I ended the day with a purple juice called ‘Peach Delight’.  Made with 2 ripe peaches, a cup of blueberries, an apple, a sweet potato and a pinch of cinnamon.  This was actually magnificent.  Genuinely it was and I don’t think that was my starved body being deluded in to thinking this was delicious.  It was sweet and the cinnamon made it taste like a pudding.  I can’t wait to have another one of these.  Actually, I will have to because I don’t have any more peaches but I am definitely buying some!purple 2-9-13

I did it.  I managed to have just juices all day and most of the juices were vegetable rather then fruit based.  To follow the plan strictly you give up tea and coffee but I was too tired this morning so I had a black coffee and in the afternoon a black tea.  I may give them up later but for now they are staying.

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Blackberry Time

Blackberry time is here again – yippee.

blackberry 3 The little crop in my garden was sweet and succulent.blackberry 2 I probably ate half of them while I was picking and the rest went in to a smoothie with a banana, some almond milk, lucuma and maca powders and some protein powder.blackberry 1 Deelicious!blackberry smoothie 1-9-13 Inspired by the berries in my garden I decided an early morning walk in the apple orchards was a good idea.  In the hedgerows dividing each field are plenty of blackberry bushes.apple orchard 1-9-13 I haven’t been here for several years I think.  I used to walk round here most days when Lara was at the village school.wooden bridge I really enjoyed revisiting favourite places again in the early morning sunshine.blackberry hunting Hellooooooo blackberries !blackberries 2 There were thousands of them.blackberries 1 And some hops growing amongst the brambles.  How very Kentish.hops and blackberries In no time at all we had filled our 2 pots so we headed home to use them.2 tubs blackberries I picked a little bit of the hops too to add to a vase of summer flowers.blackberries and flowers I put one pot in the freezer to use another day.  The second pot was prepared for cooking and a few made their way on to my snack plate with a ripe and juicy peach.peach and blackberries Plus some almonds.Australian Almonds I took this little vase outside to try and take a decent photo of the flowers and a bee hopped straight on to one of the cosmos.bee on cosmos My challenge with photographing this vase is that the ‘arrangement’ is very wide and there are few places in my house clear enough or clutter free to place it.  So I have failed to capture it in detail but have hopefully captured the colours and general prettiness of it.pink cosmos I made a very simple soup for lunch.  Last week I made a stock out of the chicken carcass which has been waiting in the fridge ever since for some inspiration of what to do with it?  Soup, she decided.   I fried up some onion, garlic and celery, added 500g red lentils and 2 litres chicken stock. Plus seasoning.  Very simple and quite delicious.red lentil and chicken soup We had a simple lunch to assuage any guilt we had with what followed.  An apple and blackberry crumble.  We had just picked the blackberries and I happen to have a cooking apple tree in the garden so I picked some of those too.

I used a wholemeal flour to make the crumble topping and brown sugar.

Heritage flour Apple and Blackberry Crumble (Serves 6-8)

Ingredients

  • 225 g flour
  • 75 g butter at room temperature plus 5-10 g for greasing crumble dish
  • 100 g brown sugar plus 20 g for fruit
  • 5-6 cooking apples
  • Punnett of blackberries

Method

  • Place flour and butter in food processor and blitz until looking like crumbs OR rub the butter in to the flour with your fingers.
  • Add the sugar, combine well with flour and butter and set aside.
  • Butter a wide and shallow dish.  Core and roughly chop the apples and place half in the dish.
  • Add 10g sugar and half the blackberries.
  • Add remaining apples, another 20 g sugar and remaining blackberries.
  • Pour on the crumble topping and press gently in to the fruit.
  • Bake in the oven at 180 ° C for 40 minutes or until apples are soft.

IMG_0961 Served with cream.  Yummy.Apple and blackberry crumbleI think we need some more blackberries!

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