HB Salad for Os/dilemma

Hi Ossss:
Does anyone here make exclusively HB salads for O’s?
I’ve always used just Iceberg lettuce, tomatoes, & cucumbers for salads.
But, tomatoes are neutral, cuckes are an AVOID, and Iceberg lettuce, I
believe is neutral. I can used Romaine lettuce instead, but I’m looking for
other HB ingredients. All I could come up with were adzuki beans, onions,
spinach, romaine and olive oil. I understand Dr. D’s new encyclopedia has
an expanded list of HBs. But I don’t have the book yet.
Any ideas or suggestions are appreciated.
Best wishes,
karenb

13 Responses to “HB Salad for Os/dilemma”

  1. Meghan Geralyn Says:

    Hi Karen
    Though parsnips are not like carrots, though they look similar, chopped
    small they would be good in a salad along with fresh spinach and Romaine
    lettuce, chard, kale, broccoli. If you eat beets and can get them fresh the
    greens go good in a salad also. These are some of the things I’ve used
    during an HB challenge.
    Sarah

  2. Lottie Lorelei Says:

    Can’t remember if figs are HB, but they taste pretty good in salad,
    especially along with a little goat cheese! That’s a good question,
    though. I haven’t been in the mood for salad lately so I haven’t
    eaten much. I do buy organic, raw kim chi from Rejeuvenate Foods–the
    juice from this makes a good salad dressing. I also bought culture
    from The Body Ecology Diet web site so I could make cultured veggies
    with HB foods, but have been a bit lazy so haven’t gotten around to
    doing it. It’s too easy to buy the delicious kim chi from Rejeuvenate.
    Peace,
    Lisa

  3. Barbra Maye Says:

    Karen, here do you get this info from?
    Rose/Hun

  4. Barbra Maye Says:

    Red pepper, grated HB root vegetables can be used plus green
    herbs, most of all parsley, for nonsecretors tarragon, basil, oregano.
    Rose/Hun

  5. Barbra Maye Says:

    What is kim chi, please? ( Sounds like something
    Japanese/Chinese.)
    Rose/Hun

  6. Sofia Cabrera Says:

    Yum! I thought it was banned forever when I saw cabbage was an avoid.
    Now it’s neutral. Whew!
    E Long

    Korea.

  7. Sofia Cabrera Says:

    Yum! I thought it was banned forever when I saw cabbage was an avoid.
    Now it’s neutral. Whew!
    E Long

    Korea.

  8. Sofia Cabrera Says:

    Yum! I thought it was banned forever when I saw cabbage was an avoid.
    Now it’s neutral. Whew!
    E Long

    Korea.

  9. Odis Johns Says:

    This is interesting, I have been eating less too. Maybe because it’s
    getting colder…seasons–the body just knows. As far as salad
    ingredients, in addition to the ones already mentioned, I would add
    chicory, dandelion, ginger, onion (all kinds), artichoke hearts,
    kelp, escarole, okra (pickled is yummy, but make sure it’s apple
    cider vinegar!), and any of the dozens of chiles (peppers to you
    Yankees).
    Cheers,
    Ryan

  10. Sofia Cabrera Says:

    Interesting. I know people who kind of eat like that. They won’t mix
    any food on the plate together. I always thought they were weird!
    Guess not…
    Is this the gist (from “Fit for Life”):
    Fruits alone
    Veggies with meat
    Veggies with grains
    Never grains and meat
    Just wondering, because I thought I saw something on this list about
    eating protein to balance carbs, and that would blow it all to heck.
    Am I missing something?
    E Long

  11. Zack Hinton Says:

    Actually, that was a bigger picture kind of a thing. Eating protein
    to balance out an over-consumption of carbs. A type O individual
    needs to be more concerned with eating more protein than with overall
    calories.
    Karen

  12. Zack Hinton Says:

    Not necessarily on a per meal basis, but on a daily basis…
    Karen

  13. Sofia Cabrera Says:

    Gotcha. I was thinking a per meal basis. Makes more sense.
    Speaking of carbs, I was a b-a-d girl yesterday. Had some compliant
    chocolate and spelt bread toasted with butter, oh yeah and did I
    mention the pineapple jelly? Just a little beef jerky, but not enough
    to offset the carbs. I feel yukky today, with swelled belly. Really
    hard to wake up… I’m learning these lessons the hard way! You don’t
    realize how good you really feel until you feel lousy after a bad
    day.
    E Long

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