Read The Better Baby Book Online
Authors: Lana Asprey,David Asprey
The Better Baby Book Nutrition Guidelines
We have just presented you with an almost dizzying array of information, some of which challenges conventional dietary wisdom. Please don't feel like you need to do everything in this chapter to give your baby a good start in life. The reason our book is called
The Better Baby Book
instead of
The Perfect Baby Book
is that your goal should be improvement rather than perfection. The pursuit of perfection can only lead to feelings of failure, which will undermine rather than enhance your health.
That said, the information in this chapter can help you to be more conscious of your diet's effect on both your own body and your baby's growing body. Although our diet is designed for a healthy pregnancy, it is equally suited to helping your body create optimal breast milk and to giving you the energy and stamina you need to wake up several times a night to nourish your little one with that breast milk.
We've included the diagrams to help you track our recommendations and decide which are right for you. So you can see how healthy foods compare to unhealthy ones, we include the good foods from this chapter as well as the foods to avoid mentioned in chapter 4. We also explain how costly or difficult it is to buy, prepare, and eat foods the Better Baby way, and we give hints to make things easier for you.
Proteins
Meat from grass-fed animals costs a lot at restaurants or from gourmet butchers, but if you order it online, it costs little more than beef from grain-fed cows from the average butcher. For one adult, high-end protein powders cost about a dollar per day.
If you cook at home or pack your own lunch, there's no difference in convenience. If you eat out, it may be harder (as well as more expensive) to find meat from grass-fed animals or the recommended kinds of seafood.
Protein Hints
Oils and Fats
It does cost more to “live off the fat of the land,” but it's one of the most important recommendations in this book. High-end fat sources are expensive because they are highly sought. Choosing your fats wisely will change your life and improve your baby's future.
Using the right healthy fats at home is easy, but many chain restaurants don't even serve pure butter anymore, instead favoring a mix of margarine and butter. Restaurants usually use unhealthy oils (like canola) for cooking, too. Since eating healthy oils and fats usually means cooking at home, this can be difficult.
Oil and Fat Hints
Vegetables and Fruits
Some of the healthiest vegetables, like cabbage, cauliflower, collard greens, and kale, are also some of the cheapest vegetables. It takes some work to buy, wash, and prepare fresh vegetables, but it's definitely worth the effort.
Vegetable and Fruit Hints
Nuts and Legumes
As a quick snack, nuts are more expensive than pretzels, chips, and other unhealthy alternatives, but the health benefits make them an excellent choice. Adding nuts to your diet is simple—they're easy to carry around with you for snacking on the go, no preparation is required, and they're widely available.
Nut and Legume Hints
Grains
Most grains are cheap, but it's better to avoid them, whether they're refined or whole. The difficulty with grains isn't in preparing them or finding the right ones. The difficulty is in avoiding them. It's hard to avoid grains, because they're so common in the American diet, and it takes a conscious effort to stop eating them. But if you stick to it for thirty days, you'll find a whole new level of wellness.
Grain Hints
Dairy
Butter from grass-fed cows is marginally more expensive than organic butter, but European brands are sometimes cheaper. Expensive or not, the best, healthiest butter still adds up to only a fraction of your overall food costs and is well worth it. Finding butter from grass-fed cows at grocery stores is usually easy, but it's not available at most restaurants, where your best bet is regular butter or olive oil.
Dairy Hints
Spices and Flavorings
It costs very little to buy the dried herbs listed in the diagram (or to grow your own fresh herbs), and it adds a lot to the taste of your food. Switching to healthy spices is simple when cooking at home, but it's very difficult to know what spices you're getting when you eat at restaurants.
Spice and Flavoring Hints