IMPROVING DIET FOR FERTILITY: CHOOSING HEALTHY PRODUCTS
Breads
Organic whole meal bread is best and health food shops and supermarkets stock some good ones such as Shipton Mill. Some breads contain either sugar or dextrose and/or flour improvers, so read the labels carefully. If the flour improver is ascorbic acid, that’s OK as it is a form of vitamin C. Whole meal pitta bread makes a nice change but do check the label for undesirable ingredients.
Flavourings
Avoid over-processed, commercially-produced flavourings. Instead, choose from ginger, garlic, fresh and dried herbs, lemon juice, sea salt, Lo-salt, miso (soya bean paste), mustard (check for added sugar, chemicals, etc), and arrowroot for thickening to make gravies and sauces.
Soya sauce is good on rice, in salad dressings and sauces, as well as Chinese stir-fries. Choose organic where possible and avoid any makes which contain monosodium glutamate. There are also a number of ready-made salad dressings with no sugar or chemicals, but do check the labels.
Sweeteners
It is better to rely on the natural sweetness in foods rather than using artificial sweeteners. For example, if you are making cakes, try carrot and raisin or banana cake. However, if you do want to add a sweetener, use maple syrup, concentrated apple juice, barley malt, date syrup and honey.
When buying honey, avoid those which are ‘blended’ or the ‘produce of more than one country’, as they are often heated to temperatures as high as 71°C (160°F) which destroys their goodness. With maple syrup, if the label says ‘flavoured’ beware: if it is not the real thing it could contain sugar and chemical flavouring.
Beans/Pulses
Beans make a good base for many healthy dishes, especially if you are trying to stay off meat to improve your fertility. They are great added to salads, soups and casseroles, and you’ll find them a useful and economical addition to your culinary repertoire.
Most beans (not lentils) need to be soaked, some overnight, before cooking. Alternatively, you can buy organic beans in tins from most supermarkets which have a little salt added to them but no sugar.
Houmous, which is made from chickpeas, can be bought ready-made from most supermarkets and is a good source of protein and essential fatty acids.
Meat
Meat is high in saturated fat so you should try to cut down on it. Of all meat, poultry is the healthiest choice and several supermarkets now sell organic, free-range or corn-fed birds, all of which are preferable to the usual mass-produced birds. However, apart from saturated fat, meat also contains growth hormones, antibiotics and other chemicals given to many animals reared for human consumption.
In addition to its adverse effects on fertility, these is also a possible link between the consumption of red meat and bowel cancer. The Government has therefore suggested that our intake of red meat should be less than 90g (3.2oz) a day.
Fish
Fish has low saturated fat levels and is very nutritious. It’s best to grill or poach fish, rather than fry it. Oily fish is particularly good, as it contains high levels of essential fatty acids, so you can enjoy mackerel, tuna, salmon (eat the bones), sardines and anchovies. Fresh is best but frozen or tinned are acceptable.
Eggs
Buy organic free-range eggs. You want organic as well as free-range. ‘Free-range’ only implies that the hens, unlike their battery cousins, have been given a certain amount of freedom but they can still be fed on ‘junk’.
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