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A frequent email request I receive from readers is to post a few days or a week of the Traditional Diet I eat or what my family eats. Seems like a simple enough request, right?
Just write down our meals for a few days and post it. No big deal.
I’ve posted my personal menu before when I was on the GAPS Diet and I’ve posted one of my children’s food logs, but I’ve never posted a food diary while eating a regular Traditional Diet.
With many people asking for this, you might wonder why I haven’t done it. Let me explain.
There are many Traditional Diets!
During Dr. Weston A. Price’s travels around the world in the early 1900’s, he studied 14 of them in detail. These cultures all ate quite differently. Some ate no plant foods, some ate a lot. Some consumed raw dairy, some did not. The variations go on and on.
The common denominator between these 14 cultures is that they all had at least one sacred food which was always from an animal, never from plants. A few of these cultures even followed a mostly carnivorous diet.
These sacred foods were discovered by lab analysis to be extraordinarily high in the fat soluble vitamins A, D, and Vitamin K2.
What’s more, these Traditional Cultures were consuming the fat soluble activators at a rate about 10x higher than Americans of the 1930’s!
These sacred foods were revered by the Traditional Cultures that consumed them for bestowing easy fertility and healthy babies. Ample quantities of these sacred foods were provided to growing children, pregnant mothers, and the elderly to maintain health including the prevention of tooth decay.
With so many different Traditional Diets, you can see why it could be misleading for me to post what I eat specifically. My Traditional Diet could easily be misconstrued by some that this is the way to eat traditionally, when it is, in fact, only the implementation of a mix of Traditional Diets that works for me given my unique genetic heritage, health history, home environment, toxin load, food budget etc.
How to Determine the Best Traditional Diet for YOU
So how did I come up with the typical way I eat?
Here’s the approach I used.
First, you need to read Dr. Price’s book Nutrition and Physical Degeneration. There is absolutely no substitute for reading this amazing book. Just seeing all the pictures alone is guaranteed to rock your world! This book really should be required reading for every dietician, nutritionist, doctor, nurse or anyone else working in the healthcare field today. It really is quite laughable for anyone working in the field of nutrition to attempt to counsel people on the best way to eat without intimate knowledge of the groundbreaking work of Dr. Price.
That is a clear example of the blind leading the blind, don’t you think?
Once you’ve read Nutrition and Physical Degeneration, then you should read Nourishing Traditions Cookbook, which is the practical implementation of the Traditional Diet blueprint.
If by that point, you are still confused about how to implement a Traditional Diet for yourself, then you can do what I did.
What is YOUR Ancestral Heritage?
Take a look at your genetic heritage and focus your Traditional Diet on those foods consumed by your specific, cultural ancestors. In my case, the Northern European cultures described in Dr. Price’s book fit the bill.
The Northern European cultures did not consume rice, beans, and corn for example. These cultures also ate little if any fruit or raw vegetables. So, my Traditional Diet at home does not include these foods very frequently.
Instead, I focus on sourdough bread, raw dairy, fermented vegetables like sauerkraut, and meat, cooked stews and soups like the mountaintop Swiss culture.
I also include seafood and oats like what the isolated Gaelics consumed.
Of course, there is variation in our diet based on the other cultures studied by Dr. Price, but we focus our staple whole foods on the cultures from which we obtained our genome.
My cultural ancestors didn’t eat that many vegetables unless they were fermented or cooked in stews or butter, for example. Consequently, raw veggies are not consumed much at all in our home except for the occasional veggie juice or salad.
Watch out for Modern Fads Masquerading as Ancestral
Are you drinking regular green smoothies? You need to know that no Traditional Society ever consumed raw plant foods at that kind of rate. Given that many green vegetables contain anti-nutrients like oxalic acid or are goitrogenic (thyroid depressing), you are really rolling the dice with this modern day health fad even if you “rotate” your greens.
While this may go against conventional “wisdom” to eat raw veggies, fruits and salads with abandon, to that I say “why”?
The healthy traditional cultures that comprise my ancestry didn’t eat much in the way of vegetables and fruit unless fermented or cooked and they were perfectly healthy with straight teeth free from tooth decay, high immunity to disease, and excellent vitality into old age.
Sounds good to me. Those are the same health goals I have for myself and my family, so I’m going to stick with what works, thank you very much, not with nutritional “science” that blows with the wind and is more interested in influencing your buying habits than your health.
Figure Out Your Ancestry then Go from There …
What if you aren’t of Northern European heritage? What if your genetic heritage hails from South America, for example? In that case, I would suggest reading the chapters on the South American cultures in Nutrition and Physical Degeneration and focusing your staple foods on what those cultures emphasized, which was corn, beans, and fish – grains and legumes prepared in a traditional manner!
If you are of Asian descent, rice is likely to be a better choice for you instead of the oats and wheat in my home. We don’t eat rice much in our home. We don’t do as well on this grain as we do on wheat and oats which is what our ancestors ate. An exception to this is wild rice, which is not really even rice at all.
Are you getting the picture somewhat?
The Most Important Key to Implementation of Traditional Diet
However you choose to implement your Traditional Diet, the most important key is to focus on ample amounts of the sacred foods. These foods include raw grassfed butter, organ meats like liver, egg yolks from outdoor chickens, fish eggs (roe), and fish liver oils like cod liver oil.
Don’t skimp on these critical foods! You can round out your diet with whatever whole food staples comprised the general eating pattern of your ancestors, but the sacred foods should always remain the focal point of the diet to ensure maximum health and immunity to disease both infectious and chronic.
I hope this discussion helps you along the path to finding the best implementation of Traditional Diets for you and your family. As you can see, it’s not as simple as just posting a mealplan.
Sarah, The Healthy Home Economist
Shikha Ahuja
Hi Sarah,
I am from India. My ancestors were vegetarian but they used to consume a lot of dairy. The part of India (north) I come from eats cooked vegetables, cooked lentils and whole wheat bread at pretty much every meal. Rice is an occasional treat. I am one of the very few Indians who are WAPF’s member. I get so confused about eating meat on a regular basis because that may not agree with my genes. Please help clarify things for me. Thank you.
Kait
In my quest for my ideal diet, learning traditional methods and foods (no more processed! Back to basics, and what i can process in my own kitchen), I never thought to look at my ancestry to guide me! What a great concept. So, I’m mostly Irish, with some Italian, French, Dutch, and Blackfeet & Cherokee. I have some research ahead of me. I’ll check out the books, too. Why is the rest of society (ugh, grocery stores and corporations!) so slow to reconfigure our farming system and food supply to be natural, traditional, mostly local? I’m only just learning about this…
Elle
I am mostly German – did Price study this part of the world?
Joyce
I am also wondering the same thing…
Sara r
I find that I can eat pretty much anything unprocessed and feel good afterward! However, I do tend towards the same as you: cooked veggies, raw dairy, eggs, and meat, with some sourdough breads thrown in. I throw other things in for variety like rice, pasta, or polenta, fish..but those are the staples. This post pretty much sums up how I have approached traditional foods, but it’s part of my personality NOT to have a prescription and just to wing it!
Kate @ Modern Alternative Mama
I feel great when I eat lots of fruit and vegetables — with plenty of fat! I need a lot of both of those things, with some meat and properly prepared grains to balance it out. An ideal meal for me would be a taco salad with plenty of greens, fresh salsa (fermented?), raw cheese, grass-fed beef, soaked rice, and beans. I keep all the fat on the beef and sometimes add extra tallow.
That is what I have found works *for me.* I had to stop paying attention to all the new science that wanted to tell me I should eat more of this and less of that (whole foods, not junk food) or entirely avoid something. I don’t think that’s right, especially not across the board.
Joyce
Hi Sarah, not to sound stupid, but what exactly is N. European? My ancestry is 50% German and then some French and English.
thanks,
Joyce
Lucila
Hi, Sarah, Thank you for this post. That`s what I was thinking when I started in Traditional Diet,. But my problem is that I`m from Ecuador (I`m a mixed middle class woman living in the urban center of Quito- 2.850 meters above sea level), so my traditional culture is a mixture from Spain and the traditional indigenous people who lived here (incas, and other cultures). There is very little information about what incas ate and drunk and how they prepared their food. It`s typical to know that they consumed a lot of corn products, and diferent kinds of tubers and fermented beverages made from corn, but we don`t exactly know if they ate meat (since they had different kinds of alpacas), what kind and how often and if they ate fruits or vegetables. I live in Los Andes, where fish food is not directly available, so the information available in the book of Weston Price about indigenous people in the cost of Peru doesn´t helps me.
Paz
@Saraha can you answer this questions? I’m in the same situation…. I’m from Cuenca, Ecuador (also in los Andes). What should we eat?