I'm the first to admit it... I am a food snob. Luckily, so is my husband; otherwise we would have major issues! He actually is the one who began my obsession, by forcing me to do all our grocery shopping at Whole Foods. Before we met, he read a book called "The Maker's Diet" (no, not a diet of Maker's Mark; rather THE Maker- as in God!) and developed a desire to eat healthy, organic, natural foods that God said for us to eat. So, after reading this book myself, I believed in the message as well. Quite simply, God our Maker tells us in Leviticus which foods we should put into our bodies:Leviticus 11:3-12 "You may eat any animal that has a split hoof completely divided and that chews the cud.... The rabbit, though it chews the cud, does not have a split hoof; it is unclean for you. And the pig, though it has a split hoof completely divided, does not chew the cud; it is unclean for you.You must not eat their meat or touch their carcasses; they are unclean for you. Of all the creatures living in the water of the seas and the streams, you may eat any that have fins and scales. But all creatures in the seas or streams that do not have fins or scales- whether among all the swarming things or among all the other living creatures in the water- you are to detest. And since you are to detest them, you must not eat their meat and you must detest their carcasses. Anything living in the water that does not have fins and scales is to be detestable to you."
Even though we know that when Jesus died for our sins he made all things "clean", there is still a message to be taken from Leviticus. God knew that certain animals were not good for us to eat. The animals and sea creatures that he tells us to avoid are those that eat dead and decomposing organisms, feces, and even their own offspring. When we eat these animals that have a diet of other dead animals, we essentially are eating what they ate before they were killed. A pig, for example, metabolizes what it eats within just 4 hours of eating it. If that pig is slaughtered after it's just eaten slop, feces, other dead things, etc (a pig will eat literally anything it can find), it has already metabolized that and it's in it's meat, which we eat! The phrase "you are what you eat" has a lot of truth behind it!
Regarding shellfish- scientists actually gauge the contaminate levels of our oceans, bays, rivers, and lakes by measuring the mercury and biological toxin levels in the flesh of crabs, clams, oysters and lobsters. I love the taste of lobster and crab, but not enough to eat it when obviously it holds toxic levels in it's flesh. Yuck.
You may be saying, "Yeah, but those were in Bible times. Things have changed by now in the way we preserve food and the foods we eat. What about organic pork?" That's true, modern science has enabled us to preserve and treat food differently. But, also in Leviticus, along with not eating pigs, God also tells us not to eat camels, horses, rats, skunks, dogs, cats, squirrels, and possums (they don't chew cud and don't have split hooves). Why does society say it's ok to eat pigs but it's not ok to eat horses or rats? What makes pigs different? For food purposes, they are not different according to God. God knows what He's talking about. He made it all! So I choose to believe in His word and follow the directions He's given us about what and what not to eat.
So, back to my food snobbery. Is it really snobbery if its Biblically based? Not that the Bible talks directly about organic food.. but eating organically just makes sense. Who wants to eat food that has been sprayed with pesticides? If the purpose of pesticides is to kill bugs, what is that doing to our bodies when we eat those pesticides? It can't be good. So, because Whole Foods has the most selection of organic produce and foods, that is where I do my shopping. They also carry many delicious lines of turkey bacon, chicken sausage, and other "pork substitutes" type foods.
No, I do not work for Whole Foods. But check out these yummy snacks I bought there last night:
From left to right: Blue cheese wrapped in a chestnut leaf, brie, olive tapenade mix, green and kalamata olives, sea salt and rosemary crostinis, red wine, and sun dried tomatoes.
Mmm, mmm! Were these ever good! If you've never had sun dried tomatoes like that, you need to get some! They are chewy, salty, and delicious!
Thank you God, for having Whole Foods available here in Louisville!