Is a healthy eater born or made?
I was a terribly unhealthy eater all throughout my childhood and teenage years. I can honestly tell you that I’d not tasted a tomato or a pineapple until I was 25 – and I grew up in Queensland.
That’s not to say that my mother didn’t TRY to make me eat healthy food. And I guess if steak, peas and potato were considered a healthy diet in the ‘80s, then she succeeded.
But as soon as I could fend for myself, pay for my own food and eat as I pleased, not a vegetable was seen across my plate – it was fast food and caffeine all the way, baby. And I think now that I’m a little older (and wiser) I can tell you why.
It was a mental block. On pure principle, I hated health foods simply because they were decreed “healthy”.
Just as an FYI, this post is sponsored by SodaStream. But all opinions expressed by the author are 100 per cent authentic and written in their own words.
It wasn’t until I realised that I could incorporate healthy food into my diet that could still taste amazing that I changed my ways. And it really is so easy.
I started with:
1. Simple sandwiches.
Why do we think we have to stick with bog-standard sandwiches when it is so easy to create healthy, filling sangas? Not only that, why do we pay a ‘sandwich artist’ half of our weekly wage for one when it is so easy to prepare a pulled chicken, cheese, avocado and tomato wrap before we head out the door of a morning?
2. Stir frys.
They are God’s gift to the lazy cook. I mean, really, if there are vegetables that you can’t make taste delicious with some oyster and soy sauce, I don’t even want to know about them.
Top Comments
Add spinach or avo to a yummy smoothie (along with frozen berries, a banana, plain yogurt and hemp protein powder). My kids don't even know they are drinking greens every morning.