Foods must be Palatable
by Ellen White
There should be in our sanitarium a cook who thoroughly understands the work, one who
has good judgement, who can experiment, who will not introduce into the food those things
which should be avoided. It is well to leave sugar out of the crackers that are made. Some
enjoy best the sweetest crackers, but these are an injury to the digestive organs. Butter
should not be placed on the table, for if it is some will use it too freely, and it will
obstruct digestion. But for yourself, you should occasionally use a little butter on cold
bread, if this will make the food more appetising. This would do you far less harm than to
confine yourself to preparations of food that are not palatable. 12MR 173
Many do not feel that this is a matter of duty, hence they do not try to prepare food
properly. This can be done in a simple, healthful, and easy manner, without the use of
lard, butter, or flesh meats. Skill must be united with simplicity. To do this, women must
read, and then patiently reduce what they read to practice. Many are suffering because
they will not take the trouble to do this. I say to such: It is time for you to rouse your
dormant energies and read up. Learn how to cook with simplicity, and yet in a manner to
secure the most palatable and healthful food. 1T 681
If you can get apples you are in a good condition, as far as fruit is concerned, if you
have nothing else. We have beans at every meal, well cooked with a little salt and a
tablespoonful of sugar, which makes them more palatable.--Letter 5, 1870. 2BIO 303
I would advise all to take something warm into the stomach every morning at least. You
can do this without much labour. You can make graham gruel. If the graham flour is too
coarse, sift it, and while the gruel is hot, add milk. This will make a most palatable and
healthful dish for the campground. And if your bread is dry, crumb it into the 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 or baked. Dilute a portion of them with water,
add milk or cream, and make a broth; the bread can be used as in graham gruel. 2T 603
Concerning flesh meat, we should educate the people to let it alone. Its use is
contrary to the best development of the physical, mental, and moral powers. And we should
bear a clear testimony against the use of tea and coffee. It is also well to discard rich
desserts. Milk, eggs, and butter should not be classed with flesh meat. In some cases the
use of eggs is beneficial. The time has not come to say that the use of milk and eggs
should be wholly discarded. There are poor families whose diet consists largely of bread
and milk. They have little fruit and cannot afford to purchase the nut foods. In teaching
health reform, as in all other gospel work, we are to meet the people where they are.
Until we can teach them how to prepare health reform foods that are palatable, nourishing,
and yet inexpensive, we are not at liberty to present the most advanced propositions
regarding health reform diet. 7T 134
Milk, eggs, and butter should not be classed with flesh-meat. In some cases the use of
eggs is beneficial. The time has not come to say that the use of milk and eggs should be
wholly discarded. There are poor families whose diet consists largely of bread and milk.
They have little fruit, and can not afford to purchase the nut foods. In teaching health
reform, as in all other gospel work, we are to meet the people where they are. Until we
can teach them how to prepare health-reform foods that are palatable, nourishing, and yet
inexpensive, we are not at liberty to present the most advanced propositions regarding
health-reform diet. 7T 135
The food provided should be scrupulously simple. Pastry and other desserts make havoc
in the stomach, and these might better be discarded. The food should be palatable and
nutritious, and we do not recommend the disuse of salt or milk.--Letter 145, 1901, p. 3.
(To A. T. Jones, October 19, 1901.) 8MR 384
We need to have thoroughly competent cooks connected with our schools, that the youth
may be taught how to make much out of little. I have been pained as I have seen good,
sweet biscuits and ears of corn left from the noon meal thrown into the waste barrel. The
corn could have been cut from the cobs, and with a little milk prepared into a palatable
dish. I need not enumerate all the jots and tittles that might be saved. 8MR 390
Some of our people, while conscientiously abstaining from eating improper foods,
neglect to supply themselves with the elements necessary for the sustenance of the body.
Those who take an extreme view of health reform are in danger of preparing tasteless
dishes, making them so insipid that they are not satisfying. Food should be prepared in
such a way that it will be appetising as well as nourishing. It should not be robbed of
that which the system needs. I use some salt, and always have, because salt, instead of
being deleterious, is actually essential for the blood. Vegetables should be made
palatable with a little milk or cream, or something equivalent. 9T 161
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
Poor cookery is slowly wearing away the life energies of thousands. It is dangerous to
health and life to eat at some tables the heavy, sour bread, and the other food prepared
in keeping with it. Mothers, instead of seeking to give your daughters a musical
education, instruct them in these useful branches which have the closest connection with
life and health. Teach them all the mysteries of cooking. Show them that this is a part of
their education, and essential for them in order to become Christians. Unless the food is
prepared in a wholesome, palatable manner, it cannot be converted into good blood, to
build up the wasting tissues. CD 264
[ Graham Gruel (1871) 2T 603 ] 491. You can make graham gruel. If the graham flour is
too coarse, sift it, and while the gruel is hot, add milk. This will make a most palatable
and healthful dish for the campground. CD 315
Vegetables should be made palatable with a little milk or cream, or something
equivalent. CD 322
[ Letter 37, 1901 ] Butter should not be placed on the table; for if it is, some will
use it too freely, and it will obstruct digestion. But for yourself, you should
occasionally use a little butter on cold bread, if this will make the food more
appetising. This would do you far less harm than to confine yourself to preparations of
food that are not palatable. CD 350
611. We place no butter upon our table. Our vegetables are generally cooked with milk
or cream and made very palatable. . . . We think a moderate amount of milk from a healthy
cow not objectionable. CD 357
We are to be brought into connection with the masses. Should health reform be taught
them in its most extreme form, harm would be done. We ask them to leave off eating meat
and drinking tea and coffee. That is well. But some say that milk also should be given up.
This is a subject that needs to be carefully handled. There are poor families whose diet
consists of bread and milk, and, if they can get it, a little fruit. All flesh food should
be discarded, but vegetables should be made palatable with a little milk or cream or
something equivalent. The poor say, when health reform is presented to them, "What
shall we eat? We cannot afford to buy the nut foods." As I preach the gospel to the
poor, I am instructed to tell them to eat that food which is most nourishing. I cannot say
to them, "You must not eat eggs or milk or cream. You must use no butter in the
preparation of food." The gospel must be preached to the poor, and the time has not
yet come to prescribe the strictest diet. [ Letter 37, 1901 ] CD 358
Now no tea, coffee, or flesh meat is served in the institution. We are determined to
live out the principles of health reform, to walk in the way of truth and righteousness.
We shall not, for fear of losing patronage, be half-and-half reformers. We have taken our
position, and by God's help we shall stand by it. The food provided for the patients is
wholesome and palatable. The diet is composed of fruits and grains and nuts. Here in
California there is an abundance of fruit of all kinds. CD 414
The diet reform should be progressive. As disease in animals increases, the use of milk
and eggs will become more and more unsafe. An effort should be made to supply their place
with other things that are healthful and inexpensive. The people everywhere should be
taught how to cook without milk and eggs, so far as possible, and yet have their food
wholesome and palatable. MH 320
All flesh food should be discarded, but vegetables should be made palatable with a
little milk or cream or something equivalent. The poor say, when health reform is
presented to them, "What shall we eat? We cannot afford to buy the nut foods."
As I preach the gospel to the poor, I am instructed to tell them to eat that food which is
most nourishing. I cannot say to them, "You must not eat eggs or milk or cream. You
must use no butter in the preparation of food." The gospel must be preached to the
poor, and the time has not yet come to prescribe the strictest diet. MM 288
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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