Guest guest Posted March 4, 2010 Report Share Posted March 4, 2010 You don't need nut butters to make pancakes. If you tolerate eggs and ripe bananas, you can have them anytime. 1 ripe banana 1 egg dash of cinnamon topping 1 apple, peeled, cored and sliced very thing 1 tsp - 1 tbs cinnamon 1 tbs butter 1 tbs honey Over medium heat, add the topping ingredients to a small saucepan and when it starts bubbling, put the lid on and turn the heat down to medium - low, stirring often. Let this cook while you get the pancakes ready. You want at least 20 minutes total of cooking time. If you don't tolerate apples or honey, you can leave the topping off. Cut banana into small chunks. Add banana, egg and cinnamon if using to a bowl. Beat with a hand mixer until smooth (when you get more advanced you can start adding nut or coconut flour 1 tbs at a time... coconut makes them more like real pancakes). Heat a nonstick skillet over medium heat. You can add butter to the pan if you want. Pour pancakes in 3 or 4 even sized cakes. Cooked about 7-8 minutes, checking often after about 3 minutes. When they look done, flip and cook about 2 more minutes. Serve with the apple topping over it instead of syrup. This is probably one the best breakfast foods I make. It tastes like something you'd get at a B & B... so yummy. Misty Kimble CD - no meds SCD - 2 years > > I thank you as well. This is exactly where I am with the diet (day 12) and I've definitely taken away from your article encouragement and the desire to slow down a bit. Your right, I really want those nut flours so I can start making " pancakes " and muffins. I keep looking at the pecanbread list and wondering how long it's going to take to get there. After reading your article I realize I should be happy adding the foods that I can add now, like cheddar cheese! > > Thanks so much for sharing this. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 4, 2010 Report Share Posted March 4, 2010 Thank you for posting this information as well. I am on Day 1 of the Intro Diet. I am optimistic, but I am traveling for a conference next week, Wednesday - Saturday. I'm not sure yet how I can make it through that time, if anyone has advice, please let me know. In addition, I am slightly confused about the yogurt. Pecanbread says a common mistake is introducing yogurt too early. But it seems like the book is saying it is part of the Intro Diet. Not sure which way to go there, but I'm not in a hurry to learn how to make yogurt yet either. If anyone has advice about something crunchy or something to munch on as a good thing to introduce, please let me know. All this chicken, broth, and eggs are good, but no crunch.Thanks,Caitlin On Wed, Mar 3, 2010 at 10:42 PM, Wizop Marilyn L. Alm wrote: Adding New Foods (from SCD Made Easy, a book I'm working on) One of the most common complaints is that the introductory diet is boring. So it is. Its purpose is to give your gut the lowest common denominator of food, foods which your system can digest, even if it is badly injured. Just as priming a water pump makes it possible to obtain water from a well, or putting primer on a wall before painting it makes the paint last longer, the introductory diet prepares your system for getting well. If you are sensitive to any of the foods on the intro diet, especially if you have ever had an anaphylactic shock reaction to any of them, do not eat them. Instead, substitute plain meat, and basic, plain cooked, peeled and seeded vegetables. Many people want to know if there is a list of foods they should introduce and if they should introduce them in a particular order. Unfortunately, the answer is no. (The Pecanbread " stages " can be helpful, but they are not rigid, and not part of the original SCD.) No two people are exactly alike, and no two people will tolerate the same things. However, based on reports from various SCD lists, some good foods to add after the introductory diet may include: ripe banana ripe avocado cooked, seeded, peeled zucchini well-cooked green beans cooked winter squash (such as acorn, butternut, buttercup, pumpkin) steamed asparagus tips cooked, peeled, seeded tomato sautéed baby spinach Everyone tolerates different things, but these seem to be foods tolerated by a lot of people early on. There are two schools of thought on how to proceed once one has finished the introductory diet. Both schools agree that how quickly you add new foods depends on how quickly you respond to the diet. There have actually been people who had trophies after a mere two or three days on Intro, but those lucky folks are, unfortunately, not the norm. The first school of thought holds that you sit down and make a list of what you ate the week or weeks before you started SCD. Look over it, cross off any illegals, and write in legal substitutions. For example: Subway™ turkey sandwich on wheat sliced home-baked turkey breast. If raw lettuce is tolerated, roll up in a lettuce leaf with SCD mayonnaise. Potato chips. SCD cheese crisps or commercial pork rinds (check to be sure they have no starch or flavorings.) Icee™. Whirl crushed ice and legal fruit juice in blender. Drink. Milkshake. Make a smoothie with SCD yogurt and fruit or yogurt and legal flavorings. Mashed potatoes. Cheesy mock potatoes made with bean or lentil paste or steamed mashed cauliflower or boiled, pureed celeriac. According to this first school of thought, you can then go ahead and prepare a menu, and resume normal eating patterns. While the above works for some people, the majority of individuals who come to SCD have been sick for many years. Because of this, their systems may react badly even to legal foods. Even keeping a food diary doesn’t help isolate which are the problem foods and which are the keepers if you introduce too many new things at once. So your symptoms either don’t improve or get worse. And you look at what you were eating. Was it the honey mead you had for a wine on Tuesday? Could it have been the baked celery and onion you seasoned the turkey with, and decided to eat as a side dish on Wednesday? Or was it the cauliflower cheesy mock potatoes with the Creole spiced beef roast on Thursday? You simply don’t know. That’s why, for most people, introducing new foods one at a time works best. To do this, you should introduce a small amount of a single food such as half of properly ripe banana (freeze the other half for later), then wait two days (continuing with all the food on the intro diet). Chart all reactions. On the second day, try the other half of the banana, and chart reactions for two days. If your system is better, or at least no worse, then you can add fully ripe bananas to your repertoire. Then you can select something else – steamed green beans, for instance, to add in the same manner. Eventually, you will have a full repertoire of healthy foods which your system digests well, and which will benefit your health. My intro diet was beef roast, pork roast, steamed zucchini with butter, and soft boiled eggs with butter -- and I ate it for about six weeks before I was feeling equal to tackling SCD cooking. Somewhere around week two, I added shredded cheddar to my zucchini. The previously mentioned method of sitting down and making a list of what you ate the week or weeks before you started SCD is helpful here, as well. Look over your list, cross off any illegals, and write in legal substitutions. For example: BurgerKing Whopper™ for lunch homemade beef burger with cheddar cheese, legal pickle slices on the side. Microwaved canned asparagus with butter. Steamed fresh asparagus with butter. Grilled chicken[1]. OK if homemade. Grilled fish. OK if homemade. Microwaved canned green beans. Steamed fresh green beans. I was actually startled to discover, when I did this, how few foods had comprised my weekly food patterns. I could still eat all the meats I had before: burgers, beef roasts, grilled chicken, baked or grilled fish, baked or grilled pork, lamb occasionally. I introduced cheddar cheese first because I am a cheddar cheese fiend. I was already able to eat eggs. Then I started looking at vegetables. As it turned out, I was able to handle all the ones I had been willing to eat pre-SCD: steamed green beans, steamed fresh asparagus, steamed broccoli, steamed cauliflower, steamed spinach, steamed zucchini. The major difference was that I was now using fresh, or fresh frozen for the green beans and asparagus. I discovered very quickly that I did not tolerate carrots, peas, or Brussels sprouts at all well. (That was OK; I never liked them pre-SCD anyway.) I also found I had to very strictly ration my consumption of fruit and honey. (Wail!) Despite the legality of these items, it was simply too much sugar for my system to absorb, and continuing to eat it fed the bad bugs because it wasn’t being absorbed. After I had been on the diet for awhile, I found I tolerated carrots just fine. I have no ambitions to see what my system now thinks of peas and Brussels sprouts. <grin> One common mistake people make is to introduce the nut flour goodies much too soon. They want bread, they crave the comfort of having cookies to munch. As delicious as the nut flour goodies are, experience indicates that you may have to wait several weeks, or even months before your system is ready for them. Personally, I had no trouble introducing them at about six weeks. However, members of the listservs report two months, six months, sometimes longer before badly injured guts are ready to digest these wonderful, nutritious foods. Yet some of the people who cannot handle nut flours also report that nut butters – made strictly from nuts, with no added ingredients – can be substituted in recipes and are often tolerated well. Apparently the fact that in nut butters, the nuts are ground even finer than in the nut flours, makes them more easily digested than simply finely ground nuts. Another common mistake people make is eating too much of a newly introduced food. Munching down on an entire batch of Cinnamon Cookies or Basic Muffins, or a whole recipe of Honey Toffee, delicious as they are, is a good way to send your system in a whirl. For my first foray into nut flour cooking, I made the cheese bread from Breaking the Vicious Cycle and forcibly limited myself to one very thin slice the three times I ate it. When I introduced steamed, chopped spinach, it was really tough. I am quite capable of eating 10 ounces of steamed spinach with butter by myself. (No, my other name isn’t Popeyena the Sailorwoman! Besides, canned veggies are illegal!) I carefully weighed out 2 ounces (about ¼ cup) of steamed spinach and gave the rest to my husband. Who stared at me. For the wonderful rich, creamy SCD yogurt, I had to measure out ½ cup of yogurt and one-half teaspoon vanilla extract and two tablespoons honey. Mind you, after decades of weight-loss diets, I hate weighing and measuring food. But by doing it this way, I learned to within a hairs’ breadth what I could tolerate and what I couldn’t. And I could note down on my calendar to re-try favorite foods in a couple of months. After the introductory diet, one of the first foods recommended by Dr. Haas was very ripe banana. Most people tolerate this very well. Then introduce tender, well cooked vegetables. Elaine recommended string beans, petite peas (frozen are fine), and spinach. Spaghetti squash, although delicious with homemade meat sauce on it, may have too much fiber for the first few weeks after the intro diet. Baked butternut squash, and baked acorn squash is also good to start with. As indicated, I found steamed zucchini delicious and soothing, although I made sure to remove any large seeds. How quickly you are able to add foods depends on your system alone. What is tolerated by one person may not be tolerated by you, and vice versa. In the early days on the listserv, I used to read all the wonderful yogurt smoothie recipes people were having for breakfast or snacks and whimper… because I simply could not tolerate that much fruit and honey, and I hated the taste of saccharin. On the other hand, when I posted my beef-and-broccoli quiche recipe, there were people saying, “Oh, how delicious that sounds… but I can’t go anywhere near broccoli!” Take things one day at a time, keeping in mind Dr. Gee’s statement: “We must never forget that what the patient takes beyond his ability to digest does harm.” Don’t force yourself. And one day, you may wake up to the realization that you had a full night’s sleep, that you are no longer spotting every public toilet enroute to all your favorite places, and that you are eating more foods than you ever thought possible – including some which, only weeks before, might send you catapulting into the necessary. [1] Newcomers frequently ask if they can't continue to eat at fast food restaurants if they just get “plain meat” or a “plain salad and dressing” and eliminate the obvious offenders like the grain-based breads and the potato products. For links to various national fast food chains, check http://members.shaw.ca/allergies/restaurants.html. From the Arby’s Roast Beef™ page: “Roast Chicken Breast: Chicken breast, chicken broth, seasoning (salt, sugar, onion powder, garlic powder, deheated mustard, autolyzed yeast extract, corn syrup solids, soy sauce [fermented soybeans, wheat, salt], paprika, dextrin, natural flavors, spice, partially hydrogenated soybean oil), sodium lactate, soybean oil, seasoning (modified food starch, carrageenan, methylcellulose gum, salt, flavor), sodium phosphates.” And from the ’s™ page: “Grilled Chicken Sandwich: Chicken Breast with Rib Meat, Water, Seasoning (Salt, Dextrose, Sodium Tripolyphosphate, Maltodextrin, Grill Flavor [from Partially Hydrogenated Cottonseed and Soybean Oil], Garlic, Corn Starch Modified, Onion, Beef Flavor [beef Stock, Maltodextrin, Salt, Flavor, Colored with Caramel, Disodium Inosinate and Guanylate (flavor enhancers), Lactic Acid], Polysorbate 80 (stabilizer), Colored with Caramel, Natural Flavor), Partially Hydrogenated Soybean and/or Cottonseed Oil. Commercial onion powder, commercial garlic powder, yeast products, corn syrup solids, soy sauce, modified food starch, carrageenan, methylcellulose gum, “flavors”, “natural flavors”, commercial chicken broth (you wouldn’t believe the ingredients in so-called broths!), dextrose (technically legal, but what is used as dextrose is not pure dextrose but a mix of di- and polysaccharides), maltodextrin, modified corn starch, and caramel (often derived from sugar or flour) are all illegal. And all this in what is supposed to be a “plain” grilled or baked piece of chicken! — Marilyn New Orleans, Louisiana, USA Undiagnosed IBS since 1976, SCD since 2001 Darn Good SCD Cook No Human Children Shadow & Sunny Longhair Dachshund Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 5, 2010 Report Share Posted March 5, 2010 There is an apparent conflict here. I would suggest going by what you know about yourself already. If you have been eating some dairy products, then maybe you will be fine with legal yoghurt right from the start. If you are like me, have been allergic to dairy forever and haven't dared have any for decades, well, guess what? I am approaching 8 months and don't dare try to make yoghurt yet. But recently I have found that ghee seems to be OK and clarified butter maybe (I can't get it totally clear of the solids yet). If you do try it early and have some trouble it would be one logical thing to back off from for awhile. But there's no hard and fast rule. Each one of us is different as to what we can tolerate and when. In addition, I am slightly confused about the yogurt. Pecanbread says a common mistake is introducing yogurt too early. But it seems like the book is saying it is part of the Intro Diet. Not sure which way to go there, but I'm not in a hurry to learn how to make yogurt yet either. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 5, 2010 Report Share Posted March 5, 2010 Your most welcome!!! I know how bad it is to crave something. Misty > > Misty, > Thank you, thank you, thank you, thank you! I just had these for breakfast and they were so delicious!!! > > I didn't have whole apples on hand, but I did have some homemade apple sauce so I used that. It was very good. > ~ Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted March 5, 2010 Report Share Posted March 5, 2010 So true ! Just to add an opposite perspective... I had been eating yogurt for years before the diet. So, naturally, I was very excited to learn how to make my own. I followed the book and had it straight away mixed with DCCC during the intro. I eat about 1.5 cups every day now. I love it! -Joanna > > There is an apparent conflict here. I would suggest going by what > you know about yourself already. If you have been eating some dairy > products, then maybe you will be fine with legal yoghurt right from > the start. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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