Chapter 1:
The Joys of Country Life

About sixteen years ago, my husband and I embarked upon a rather intrepid journey when we decided to move our family of four young men to the southern California countryside where, with the help of a few sub-contractors, we built our own home. We also built several out buildings, installed a five-acre fence, a septic system, and drip lines. We planted over 120 trees and a vegetable garden, learned to keep goats, a pet pig, raise chickens (keeping chicks in the house is not recommended), and most recently hired a crew to dig a new well because our original one was running dry. These last dozen years have been the most exhausting, frustrating, exhilarating, and rewarding years of our lives. Our boys are now grown but the memories of their adolescent adventures in the country are often dinnertime conversations . . . like the time someone nearly stepped on a rattlesnake, or when dad tumbled off the roof (into some soft dirt, thank God!), or when the dirt bike jump twenty feet in the air took our son left and the motorcycle right, and when our dog, Honey, once chased three coyotes down the road. We recall standing our first walls of the house and installing drywall (that one nearly ended our marriage) and when we carried a thirty-foot beam and used the pick-up truck to help get it into place. Installing a seven-foot wide window on the third floor during a storm wasn’t such a good idea, but we did it. We learned to operate a tractor and other heavy equipment. Our sons encountered a huge millipede in the bathroom, a scorpion in the laundry room, and, imagine me being surprised by the tarantula in the kitchen! Somewhere along the way my husband even earned the nickname “Animal.” You simply won’t find memories like these in most suburban settings. Notice I didn’t necessarily refer to all of these as “fond” memories, but they are my memories, our memories, nonetheless, and I wouldn’t trade them for anything. Ahh, the joys of country life.

I haven’t always been a country bumpkin, though. I grew up a bit of a San Diego beach bum and went on to become a Los Angeles city slicker. Then, by the time I was twenty-one, life had taken my new, small family from our California home to New York City where we lived, worked, and ate for almost a decade. There I learned the ways of the city and experienced wonderful restaurants with chefs that opened my eyes to what real cooking meant . . . to prepare food myself—from scratch. As a teenage wife and mother, for the most part I had cooked and baked like my mom had, rarely using a cookbook except for referencing, finding true joy in creating a dish myself. Often I used the typical ingredients Mom used, convenient packages and cans, with some fresh items thrown in for good measure. Though Mom would hop on health kicks now and again, mostly she believed what our government and big business would hype, and like so many Americans back then began a love affair with processed foods. As a young mom, I began reading the ingredients on labels and all the words I’d never heard before just didn’t sound like food for my family. I realized that the convenience of opening packages and cans was not the best option to keep a healthy body. Then, I read a book that described how margarine contained nickel and that the chemical used to flavor pineapple ice cream was basically anti-freeze, so I rarely brought processed foods into our home after that.

After our stint on the East Coast, we moved back out West and continued living a typical family life with four active boys, a mortgage, stressful jobs, yada-yada (I learned that in New York). As time went by and my boys turned into young men, I noticed I had put on a pound or two (okay, more like ten or twelve), and my body just wasn’t running as smoothly any more. What on Earth was going on?

In both New York and Los Angeles, I worked as a fashion model, so I have always been conscious of my weight, and my now-growing waistline was not appealing to me. Was this menopause? Egad, NO! And if it was, why? Before the chemical food era most women seemed to cross that threshold without a hitch. Well, I may just be your “country gal next door,” but I must tell you that when declining health and a growing belly opened my eyes enough, I finally realized my “healthy diet” wasn’t making me healthy at all. I began looking more and more at mainstream food and the government’s food pyramid as a taker of health and real whole foods as a giver of health. I decided to step up my research of nutrition with my creative spirit in the kitchen and teach myself how to bake and cook with common, inexpensive, “real food” ingredients, so that my family could continue to enjoy the same beloved comfort foods they were used to. When I changed my cupboards and my buying habits, it changed my life.

When I began cooking, baking, and eating beyond gluten-free and even beyond grain-free, now filling my cupboards and tummy with real whole foods, my lifestyle naturally transitioned to one that went beyond dieting. I no longer needed to make sure I maintained my weight (as a model, this was, of course, important to my job), as the foods I ate maintained it for me. Did I give up comfort foods? Nope! I discovered I could use real foods to replace the refined flours, starches, and often even the oils typically used in recipes. The results have been so wonderful I’ve never looked back.

Moving to the country is a choice we’ve always been happy with. Living where we can have our own chickens to provide eggs, the ability to grow our own vegetables and fruit, and where we can buy fresh raw milk, cream, and cheese from our neighbor has its obvious rewards, but there have certainly been years when I had to rely on our farmer’s markets and the organic produce aisle. Though sometimes confusing, we are lucky for the vast choices available to us today so that we don’t all have to live on a farm to be healthy. However, we do have to make the commitment mentally and financially to purchase high-quality, organic, fresh, free-range, and locally whenever possible. If we encourage our friends and community to participate, it will help to move society back towards health instead of the slippery slope it’s now on.

Country Living Evolved

It’s kind of funny to me that I never felt truly “countrified” until the day we brought home our first chickens. I love raising happy chickens (and you thought California just had happy cows). It’s amazing to see the different personalities of all the animals and to learn how smart and even loving they can be. For this reason, while I may eat a little meat on occasion (usually just fish and occasional bacon, but please don’t tell my pet pig Chuckles because I realize it’s very disrespectful to him), unless great misfortune requires it, I certainly prefer to never actually raise any animal for their meat. I’m okay with feeding and caring for them in exchange for their eggs or cream and entertaining antics, however I’m afraid I would quickly become a vegetarian should I need to “process” my own meat. Besides, as nature intended, meat would run from me while an apple would patiently wait for me to pick it. Much easier and more inviting, don’t you think? Nature’s divine intelligence has already selected the perfect diet and food pyramid for us, and truly, for many reasons, we do not want to stray.

Eventually, research and exciting kitchen experiments had me wanting to shout my discoveries from rooftops, so with my dear Animal’s encouragement, www.californiacountrygal.com was born. Now, before you start thinking I have an endless supply of energy, let me just tell you that I can also be just as lazy as the next gal.

I must admit, between regular chores, the website, all of my kitchen experimenting, meddling in my children’s lives, and gossiping with friends means I can sometimes get overwhelmed. There are times I just want to be able to reach into my cupboard and find a mix that will give me delicious and good-for-me breads, pizza dough, and lots of other goodies in a jiffy. So, I decided to take the time to create that perfect baking mix, which we now ship nationwide and to Canada. We also now sell our line of both vegan and Paleo baked breads, buns, and baguettes in southern California and hope to someday reach your town. Then we can all enjoy delicious and healthy real bread at our lazy fingertips, any time of the day or night.

Who Do You Want to Be?

Now that you know a little bit about my background and why I’m writing this book, an equally important question may be: Who are you? Are you the person you want to be? Or are you a person who has been led down the modern food path of least resistance and most disease? Are you the person who is ready to change that path? Will you take the road labeled “pain and disease” or the one labeled “health and vibrancy”? Surprisingly, it has always been your choice—like Dorothy and her ruby slippers giving her the power to go home—you just haven’t known it because “big business” with “big advertising” campaigns, skewed and confusing studies, and media hype (even disagreements between professionals) have all kept you misinformed. All you have to do is trust in Mother Nature and believe in yourself. Because believing you have been given the power is your biggest step to changing the road you’re on. Now, all you need is a little old-school teaching, and you’ll be on your way. It may be the road less traveled, but I promise you, it’s the road that will take you home.

Let’s Get Real

Probably much like yours, mine has been a journey towards trying to look and feel my best while also striving to raise a healthy family. In a confusing, expensive, and polluted world, we all know this is not an easy process. Along the way I’ve let go of diet crazes and plenty of inaccurate and misleading information, such as “eat low fat, lots of whole grains, and half the egg.” I no longer need to remember all the reasons why I should trade out that box of cake mix, or even some of the ingredients Gramma used in her baking; it’s now so ingrained in me that I just do it. These days I trust no one but Mother Nature.

Once I learned to change my pantry from items that were really non-food ingredients to real-food ingredients, my life transformed as well. My ultimate reward was to actually see the pounds drop off, feel my health improve, and my energy increase, which gave me gratification knowing I was giving my family what they needed to thrive.

There’s nothing wrong with eating simply—enjoying a steamed vegetable, maybe an egg or two, a slice of cheese, and salad greens. However, we’ve become a species who has spent centuries devising creative ways to fill our bellies and satisfy our taste buds. As cities developed, savvy business people discovered there was a lot of money to be made feeding people who didn’t live in conditions where they could grow or supply their own food. They also found that certain “foods” and ingredients would keep their customers coming back for more, again and again. Modern humans have become accustomed to eating dishes like pancakes, pizza, lasagna, hamburgers, wraps, biscuits, casseroles, cakes, and cookies—all foods made with addictive, simple and complex, starchy, sugary, processed carbohydrates. A truly simple meal is rare these days. Even the raw food community may spend hours dehydrating vegetables so they can recreate something similar to childhood memories. Let’s face it: We like the flavors and textures we grew up with and change is not easy, even when we learn that the “food” we’ve been consuming is greatly contributing to—if not causing—our aches, ills, and even our nation’s epidemic diseases.

Although the real food ingredients I use are all gluten-free and Paleo-diet friendly, they are a bit different from the typical grain/gluten-free and Paleo ingredients, as I firmly choose not to use high-glycemic sweeteners, refined starches or, even the newest trending Cassava (yucca) flour (because of its toxic level of arsenic before it’s refined). I will explain why the trend of omitting wheat and other grains while adding refined starch is a big mistake—for your health and your waistline.

When striving for a healthier diet, breads, crackers, crusts, wraps, cookies, and cakes are usually the most difficult to give up or replace. Lifelong habits, food addictions, misinformation, and confusion make this no easy task. My goal is to help you understand why and how to make the necessary changes by simply using real food ingredients, without following a one-way, diet-cult strategy. The “whole food” ingredients used in my recipes are full of vitamins, minerals, protein, and resistant fiber that can actually help people lose weight naturally, and the great tastes and textures will astound you.

Along with other fruits and veggies, the main ingredients in my recipes include blanched almonds (or blanched almond flour) and other nuts, coconut, zucchini, new potatoes, and the yellow sweet potato. I also use plantain and sweet potato flour (the whole, ground food). It should be easier to buy many different whole food flours in the future but for now mashing a banana is simply easier (and cheaper) than finding banana flour, so most recipes use the whole food. The foods I use each have an impressive nutritional resume, as well as plenty of much-needed fiber, without any harsh, heavy whole-grain taste. When blended together in the right proportions, the tastes of these whole-food ingredients meld together to create delectable baked goods.

You and your family will never feel deprived of classic “comfort food” dishes or even guess you’re actually eating to promote a long, healthy life. You’ll discover how simple changes to your pantry and baking techniques allows you to enjoy delicious bread and decadent desserts and be healthy, too.

So, throw out what you think you know about baking, get out your blender and food processor, and roll up your sleeves, because I’m going to show you how to enjoy your guilty indulgences—without the guilt!