Did You Know?

Some grocery stores offer incentives for bringing your own bags.  Trader Joe’s will give you a raffle ticket towards free groceries every time you bring your own bags.  Whole Foods will knock 25 cents off your grocery bill for each bag you bring, and Wild Oats will either give you five cents back per bag, or the equivalent in wooden nickles that you can then place in receptacles to donate that amount to the charity of your choice.

All good reasons to make your answer to the age-old question, “Paper or plastic?” “Neither!”

Resources for Going Green

It’s amazing to me how much my attitude has changed in just the last few weeks about what it means to live my best life––my definition has expanded to include eating organic foods and wanting to “go green” in other areas of my life.

But I have so much still to learn!  I feel like every new thing I learn opens up six more questions.  For instance, I just recently learned that cotton is one of the biggest offenders when it comes to chemical pesticides and fertalizers––because it’s not a food crop, people dump all kinds of crap on it.

I know I can’t make all these changes at once, but sometimes it’s tough to know where to start.  That’s why I was excited to find Co-op America and their National Green Pages. There is so much information on this web site, I barely know where to begin––and I’m sure I’ve only scratched the surface––but the National Green Pages are “the nation’s only directory of screened and approved green businesses.”  Looking for an organic cotton t-shirt?  Now you know where to look.

Also?  I’m now dying to go to Co-op America’s Green Festival in Chicago at the end of April.   Anybody up for a road trip?

You Gotta Have a Plan

By nature, I’m a planner, a list-maker, a goal setter, a little type A, and possibly a little OCD.  This is not to say that I always cross everything off my lists or follow through with all my plans––I’m much too right-brain for that––but if you need a list, honey I’m your girl.

Sometimes my attempts at organization fizzle like wet firewood, but one thing that has stuck is a routine of making a weekly meal plan, a shopping list from that plan, and then shopping only once a week (save any emergency trips to the store for essentials like… ice cream).  I don’t plan out every single meal, but I do plan every dinner I mean to cook for the week and then buy accordingly.  This helps us stick to a budget in terms of how much we spend on groceries and also how often we eat out.

I’ve been planning our meals this way for about a year now, but it’s a big change for me.   My mother is a combination of a pantry cooker and an impulse cooker.  She makes one ENORMOUS trip to the grocery store once or twice a month and stocks up on staples for some of her standard meals.  Then, she goes to the store two or three times a week for the remainder of the month, either to pick up things she forgot, things that need to be fresh (like bread or specialty produce) or if she gets an idea to cook something different than her standard pantry meals.

I’m not saying that’s a bad way to go––it certainly kept my family fed for the 18 or so years I was living at home––but it’s a LOT of work.  I tried shopping that way when I was first on my own and found that, cooking for only one or two people, a lot of food that I purchased on my big monthly trips spoiled before I could eat it.  Plus, all those shopping trips can really bog you down.

I first got the idea to do weekly meal plans and shopping trips from Flylady––an online group that tries to help people organize their lives and get out from under all-consuming clutter.  I eventually came to find the whole Flylady program (the daily emails, etc.) to be too much for me, but I still find a lot of her principles useful and smart.

Many diet programs, including Weight Watchers, also suggest planning out meals in advance, so you know exactly what you’re eating and when.  Very helpful when counting calories.

And, if you’re anything like me, you may collect cookbooks and interesting recipes from magazines.  Meal plans are a great way to make sure you try some new recipes or even some new foods that might not be on your comfort list yet.

Anyway,  I love gadgets, so when I came across Meals Matter, a web site and group of web-based tools produced for FREE by the California Dairy Council, I was pretty excited.  First of all, FREE is a term certain to perk up my little ears.  The tools on the web site are the kinds of things you’d normally find at subscription-based web sites, and are very cool.

The menu planner lets you plan out breakfasts, lunches, and dinners including which will be cooked at home and which will be eaten out.  You can even just put “no plan” if, like me, you prefer to only plan  one or two meals a day.  If you use a recipe from the site’s database, you can automatically add the ingredients to your shopping list––or you can manually enter any items you like.  Finally, you can keep a list of what you have on hand in your pantry for those moments of desperation when you have to make dinner, but don’t know what you have on hand.

And here’s another tip: save the weekly ad flyer from your favorite grocery store.  When you sit down to plan your weekly meals, go through the flyer and plan meals around what’s on sale.   Major grocery chains’ specials are listed at the Coupon Mom website in conjunction with coupons from the newspaper circulars.  If you’re shopping at a health food store like Wild Oats or Whole Foods, check their websites––many stores now publish their flyers online.  This makes it easier to eat around what’s in season and what’s on sale at your grocery store.

A Little Goes a Long Way

The Mission Organic 2010 website has one goal: get everyone in the country to commit to increasing their organic consumption to just ten percent of their diet––that means one item out of ten in your grocery cart will be organic, or one meal out of ten will be.

But how much good could that little change do? According to the statistics on the site, it would eliminate more than 2 million pounds of antibiotics, save 2 billion barrels of imported oil annually and restore more than 6 billion pounds of carbon to our soil––proof that small choices can have a big impact.

Mmm… Tangy

This weekend, I bought a big container of plain organic yogurt.  I don’t really like plain yogurt.  I’ve grown up on the sweetened, fruity stuff.  But since I’m trying to eat less processed food, I wanted to try the plain stuff –– no artificial colors or flavors or sweeteners.

It’s… tangy.  I mixed it with frozen (thawed) mixed berries and the least amount of sugar I could get away with –– which ended up being a little less than half a teaspoon.  Not bad!  And hopefully, as I get more used to the taste, I’ll be able to use even less.

Plus, the good bacteria in the yogurt have got to be good for my tummy.

Organic on the Cheap

A reader and I got to talking last weekend about the high cost of eating organic. While proponents of organic will explain that the cost of conventional foods are higher than their price tags make it seem (in terms of cost to your health, the environment, etc.), that doesn’t ease the burden of the cost of organic foods on consumers in the here and now.

But there has to be a way to eat healthfully and thriftily, right?

As a proponent of the mantra “all things in moderation,” I think one good strategy is to spend your food dollar more wisely by picking and choosing the organic products you buy. You don’t have to go all-organic overnight — especially if money is an issue. The Environmental Working Group has produced a guide called Pesticides in Produce that lists the 12 fruits and vegetables with the most and least pesticides. Choosing to go organic for those with the most pesticides will decrease your exposure exponentially — something that is especially important for kids.

body+soul magazine also has an article about eating organic in its March 2007 issue suggesting that buying organic chocolate, peanuts, and soy will also drastically limit your intake of pesticides.

Next, choosing where you buy your organic goodies may also have an effect on your grocery budget. Big-box stores like Walmart and Costco have begun introducing more organic items into their product lines and Super Target recently announced that they are now a “certified organic produce retailer.”

But when it comes to discount organics, the key words are buyer beware. Walmart has come under fire recently both for their new house brand of organic milk and for allegedly mislabeling non-organic products as organic. Organic advocate groups claim that stores like Walmart are “diluting” organics by watering down the standards for organic products. For example, Walmart brand of organic milk (which comes from the same supplier as Safeway, Costco, Target and Wild Oats store brands of organic milk) is produced at a factory farm where animals have no access to the outdoors and are fed a diet of grain rather than grass.

So, perhaps the best place to search for deals on organic foods is in your own local community. LocalHarvest.org offers a comprehensive, searchable list of local farmers’ markets and Community Supported Agriculture programs, which allow consumers to purchase a “share” of a farm’s produce for an entire season. Eatwild.com is a directory of more than 800 pasture-based farms selling grass-fed meat, eggs, poultry, and dairy products in all 50 states.

Finally, consider this: Americans today spend only one-tenth of their household income on food, compared to spending one-fifth in the 1950s. Spending a little more for organic isn’t something we have to do, but it’s a choice we can make to improve our quality of life.

Sharpen the Saw

According to Stephen Covey’s Seven Habits of Highly Effective People, a person is like a saw:

A worn-down saw can’t do its job well––or sometimes at all––but a sharp saw can quickly and efficiently make a cut. People are the same. If we take the time to renew ourselves, we will return to our activities and responsibilities refreshed and ready to do our best.

I think it is an important part of my journey to sit down and take stock of my progress once in a while, to ask myself, am I living my best life? What can I do right now to improve, to reach my goals?

Covey defines four areas of life that need to be in balance in order to be most effective: physical, social/emotional, mental, and spiritual.

Physical

  • I’m improving my health by making better food choices, including organic and non-processed foods.
  • I can improve by adding some consistent physical activity––like yoga––to my daily and weekly routines.

Social/Emotional

  • I’m getting a lot more social interaction at my new job, meeting new people, etc.
  • I can improve by making more of an effort to be friendly and engage these new people (something that’s difficult for me!).

Mental

  • I’m learning so much from reading The Omnivore’s Dillemma!
  • I can improve by using more of the time I spend watching TV for reading interesting books like this one.

Spiritual

  • I’m spending at least 15 minutes every morning writing in a journal and time blogging.
  • I can improve by trying meditation when I add yoga to my daily practice.

I truly believe that this kind of self-inventory is key to making any kind of lasting changes.  Ask yourself today, “Am I living my best life?  What can I do today to sharpen the saw?”