Grease in the Diet
by Ellen White
One family in particular have needed all the benefits they could receive from the
reform in diet, yet these very ones have been completely backslidden. Meat and butter have
been used by them quite freely, and spices have not been entirely discarded. This family
could have received great benefit from a nourishing, well-regulated diet. The head of the
family needed plain, nutritious food. His habits were sedentary, and his blood moved
sluggishly through the system. He could not, like others, have the benefit of healthful
exercise; therefore his food should have been of the right quality and quantity. There has
not been in this family the right management in regard to diet; there has been
irregularity. There should have been a specified time for each meal, and the food should
have been prepared in a simple form and free from grease; but pains should have been taken
to have it nutritious, healthful, and inviting. In this family, as also in many others, a
special parade has been made for visitors, many dishes prepared and frequently made too
rich, so that those seated at the table would be tempted to eat to excess. Then in the
absence of company there was a great reaction, a falling off in the preparations brought
on the table. The diet was spare and lacked nourishment. It was considered not so much
matter "just for ourselves." The meals were frequently picked up, and the
regular time for eating not regarded. Every member of the family was injured by such
management. It is a sin for any of our sisters to make such great preparations for
visitors, and wrong their own families by a spare diet which will fail to nourish the
system. 2T 485
One family in particular have needed all the benefits they could receive from the
reform in diet, yet these very ones have been completely backslidden. Meat and butter have
been used by them quite freely, and spices have not been entirely discarded. This family
could have received great benefit from a nourishing, well-regulated diet. The head of the
family needed plain, nutritious food. His habits were sedentary, and his blood moved
sluggishly through the system. He could not, like others, have the benefit of healthful
exercise; therefore his food should have been of the right quality and quantity. There has
not been in this family the right management in regard to diet; there has been
irregularity. There should have been a specified time for each meal, and the food should
have been prepared in a simple form and free from grease; but pains should have been taken
to have it nutritious, healthful, and inviting. In this family, as also in many others, a
special parade has been made for visitors, many dishes prepared and frequently made too
rich, so that those seated at the table would be tempted to eat to excess. Then in the
absence of company there was a great reaction, a falling off in the preparations brought
on the table. The diet was spare and lacked nourishment. It was considered not so much
matter "just for ourselves." The meals were frequently picked up, and the
regular time for eating not regarded. Every member of the family was injured by such
management. It is a sin for any of our sisters to make such great preparations for
visitors, and wrong their own families by a spare diet which will fail to nourish the
system. 2T 485
These things of course, we should not countenance, yet, when I view the matter from
another standpoint, I am led to inquire, What better can be done for the feeble sick who
have no hope of heaven, no consolation received by the Christian? Their sources of
enjoyment must be derived from a different source; while the Christian has the elevating
influence of the power of grace, the sinner must draw from another source his enjoyments.
If ever I prize Christ and the Christian hope, it is here, while looking upon poor
invalids with but little prospect before them of ever recovering their health and having
no hope for a better life. Dr. Jackson carries out his principles in regard to diet to the
letter. He places no butter or salt upon his table, no meat or any kind of grease. But he
sets a liberal table. Waiters are constantly in attendance and if a dish is getting low
they remove it and replenish. The food I call liberal and good. All the difficulty is,
there is danger of eating too much. All our food is eaten with a keen relish. If anyone
requires a little salt they have it supplied for the asking. A little bell sits by their
plate, which they use to call the waiter, who provides them what they ask. 5MR 381
This is what we need: simple food prepared in a simple, wholesome, and relishable
manner. We have no butter and no meat on our table. We do not think fried potatoes are
healthful, for there is more or less grease or butter used in preparing them. Good baked
or boiled potatoes served up with cream and a sprinkling of salt are the most healthful.
The remnants of Irish and sweet potatoes are prepared with a little cream and salt and
rebaked, and not fried; they are excellent. I have had a good appetite and relish my food,
and am perfectly satisfied with the portion which I select, which I know does not injure
my digestive organs. Others can eat food which I cannot, such as lentils and
beans.--Letter 322, 1905. (To Brother and Sister Belden, November 26, 1905.) 5MR 408
God has furnished man with abundant means for the gratification of an unperverted
appetite. He has spread before him the products of the earth,--a bountiful variety of food
that is palatable to the taste and nutritious to the system. Of these our benevolent
heavenly Father says we may freely eat. Fruits, grains, and vegetables, prepared in a
simple way, free from spice and grease of all kinds, make, with milk or cream, the most
healthful diet. They impart nourishment to the body, and give a power of endurance and a
vigour of intellect that are not produced by a stimulating diet. [ [C.T.B.H. 47] (1890) ]
CD 092
It is impossible for those who give the reins to appetite to attain to Christian
perfection. The moral sensibilities of your children cannot be easily aroused, unless you
are careful in the selection of their food. Many a mother sets a table that is a snare to
her family. Flesh meats, butter, cheese, rich pastry, spiced foods, and condiments are
freely partaken of by both old and young. These things do their work in deranging the
stomach, exciting the nerves, and enfeebling the intellect. The blood-making organs cannot
convert such things into good blood. The grease cooked in the food renders it difficult of
digestion. The effect of cheese is deleterious. Fine-flour bread does not impart to the
system the nourishment that is to be found in unbolted-wheat bread. Its common use will
not keep the system in the best condition. Spices at first irritate the tender coating of
the stomach, but finally destroy the natural sensitiveness of this delicate membrane. The
blood becomes fevered, the animal propensities are aroused, while the moral and
intellectual powers are weakened, and become servants to the baser passions. The mother
should study to set a simple yet nutritious diet before her family. [CTBH 46, 47 (1890)]
CD 236
Our fare is simple and wholesome. We have on our table no butter, no meat, no cheese,
no greasy mixtures of food. For some months a young man who was an unbeliever, and who had
eaten meat all his life, boarded with us. We made no change in our diet on his account;
and while he stayed with us he gained about twenty pounds. The food which we provided for
him was far better for him than that to which he had been accustomed. All who sit at my
table express themselves as being well satisfied with the food provided. CD 491
God has furnished man with abundant means for the gratification of an unperverted
appetite. He has spread before him the products of the earth, -- a bountiful variety of
food that is palatable to the taste and nutritious to the system. Of these our benevolent
heavenly Father says we may freely eat. Fruits, grains, and vegetables, prepared in a
simple way, free from spice and grease of all kinds, make, with milk or cream, the most
healthful diet. They impart nourishment to the body, and give a power of endurance and a
vigour of intellect that are not produced by a stimulating diet. CTBH 047
This might be correct if the appetite had never been perverted. There is a natural, and
a depraved, appetite. Parents who have taught their children to eat unhealthful,
stimulating food, all their lives, until the taste is perverted, and they crave clay,
slate pencils, burned coffee, tea grounds, cinnamon, cloves, and spices, cannot claim that
the appetite demands what the system requires. The appetite has been falsely educated,
until it is depraved. The fine organs of the stomach have been stimulated and burned,
until they have lost their delicate sensitiveness. Simple, healthful food, seems to them
insipid. The abused stomach will not perform the work given it, unless urged to it by the
most stimulating substances. If these children had been trained from their infancy to take
only healthful food, prepared in the most simple manner, preserving its natural properties
as much as possible, and avoiding flesh meats, grease, and all spices, the taste and
appetite would be unimpaired. In its natural state, it might indicate, in a great degree,
the food best adapted to the wants of the system. HR DEC.01,1870
A nutritious diet does not consist in the eating of flesh-meats, butter, spice, and
grease. The fruits, vegetables, and grains, God has caused to grow for the benefit of man.
These are indeed the fat of the land; and if these articles of food are prepared in a
manner to preserve their natural taste as much as possible, they are all that our wants
require. A perverted appetite will not be satisfied with these, but will crave flesh-meats
highly seasoned, pastry, and spices. Indigestible condiments cannot be eaten without
injuring the tender coats of the stomach. PH123 044
I recommended them to take something warm upon the stomach every morning, at least.
They could do this without much labour, they could make graham gruel. If the graham was
too coarse they could sift it. While the gruel is hot they could add milk to suit
themselves,this will make a most palatable and healthful dish for the camp-ground, and if
your bread is dry you can crumb it into your gruel, and it will be enjoyed. I do not
approve of eating much cold food for the reason that the vitality must be drawn from the
system to warm the food until it becomes of the same temperature as the stomach before the
work of digestion can be carried on. Another very simple, yet wholesome dish is beans
boiled and baked, and a portion of them may be diluted with water, add more cream and make
a broth, the bread can be used the same as in the graham gruel. Dried corn can be easily
prepared, left to soak over night, scald it up in the morning, add milk, which is easily
obtained, and you have warm, healthful food, free from spice and grease. RH JUL.19,1870
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