Low-FODMAP and Vegan
By Jo Stepaniak and MSEd
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Low-FODMAP and Vegan - Jo Stepaniak
Low-FODMAP
and Vegan
WHAT TO EAT WHEN YOU CAN’T EAT ANYTHING
Jo Stepaniak, MSEd
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Names: Stepaniak, Jo, author.
Title: Low-FODMAP and vegan : what to eat when you can’t eat anything / Jo Stepaniak, MSEd.
Other titles: Low-Fermentable Oligosaccharides, Disaccharides, Monosaccharides and Polyols and vegan
Description: Summertown, Tennessee : Book Publishing Company, [2016] | Includes index.
Identifiers: LCCN 2016005668 (print) | LCCN 2016009816 (ebook) | ISBN 9781570673375 (pbk.) | ISBN 9781570678592 (e-book)
Subjects: LCSH: Malabsorption syndromes—Diet therapy—Recipes. | Irritable colon—Diet therapy—Recipes. | Veganism.
Classification: LCC RC862.M3 S74 2016 (print) | LCC RC862.M3 (ebook) | DDC 641.5/631—dc23
LC record available at http://lccn.loc.gov/2016005668
Front cover: Bliss Bowls, page 104
Back cover: Cream of Carrot and Parsnip Soup, page 122;
Eggplant and Spinach Bolognese with Pasta, page 98
Photography and food styling: Alan Roettinger
Cover and interior design: John Wincek
Stock photography: 123 RF
Printed in Canada
Book Publishing Company
PO Box 99
Summertown, TN 38483
888-260-8458
bookpubco.com
ISBN: 978-1-57067-337-5
Disclaimer: The information in this book is presented for educational purposes only. It isn’t intended to be a substitute for the medical advice of a physician, dietitian, or other health care professional.
21 20 19 18 17 16 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9
CONTENTS
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
INTRODUCTION
1Understanding IBS
2Treating IBS
3The Better You Eat the Worse You Feel
4Navigating FODMAPs Safely
5What to Eat When You Can’t Eat Anything
6Low-FODMAP Staples
7Breakfast Bowls, Beverages, and Light Bites
8Dinner Buffet
9Getting Sauced
10Soup, Sandwich, and Salad Bar
RESOURCES
INDEX
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
My deepest gratitude to Book Publishing Company for being innovators in ethical publishing, and especially to Bob and Cynthia Holzapfel for recognizing the need for a book that addresses functional digestive disorders and vegan diets. Enormous thanks to chef Beverly Lynn Bennett for tirelessly testing a number of recipes in this book and contributing a few of her own specifically for it. Her suggestions, culinary expertise, and boundless generosity have been invaluable. I greatly appreciate the nutritional analyses done by cookbook author and recipe developer Laurie Sadowski, as well as her extremely helpful advice and constructive feedback. Many thanks to chef, cookbook author, and photographer Alan Roettinger for meticulously preparing, styling, and shooting the photos for this book, and to photographer Laura Look for her astute direction and oversight. Much gratitude to John Wincek for his infinite creativity and spectacular job with the cover and interior design.
I’m indebted to Sue Shepherd, PhD, Peter Gibson, MD, and all the amazing researchers and dieticians affiliated with the low-FODMAP diet project and app at Monash University in Australia. Thank you to dietitians Kate Scarlata, RD/RDN, and Patsy Catsos, MS, RDN, LD, who have pioneered peer education in the United States about the low-FODMAP diet and also provide clinical support to people with IBS and other digestive issues. A deep bow of appreciation to Mark Pimentel, MD, director of the Gastrointestinal Motility Program and Laboratory at Cedars-Sinai Medical Center, for his ongoing commitment to find the causes of IBS and develop effective treatments. And, of course, I’m ever grateful to the members of the vegan community and their selfless efforts to make our planet a more loving and compassionate home for all life. Finally, I extend my love and gratitude to my husband, Michael, who has not only patiently endured my digestive challenges but has also remained my champion, best friend, and intrepid taste tester.
INTRODUCTION
Nearly everyone who adopts a vegan diet, regardless of their reasons, rightfully expects to see improvements in their health. After all, eating more plant-based foods, especially whole, minimally processed foods, has been shown in study after study to benefit health in a vast number of ways. Scout the web, go to a vegan festival, attend an animal rights conference, take a vegan nutrition course, read a vegan blog or book, or listen to a vegan podcast, and you’ll discover countless people who claim to have cured every ailment under the sun just by following a vegan diet.
But what if you don’t feel good when you become vegan? What if your health problems take a nosedive rather than resolve? Who can you turn to if you feel worse rather than better?
Because of the well-deserved positive press that plant foods have received, it’s become almost heretical to disclose that you don’t feel well on a vegan diet. And if you do speak up, your vegan friends and countless others on social media will no doubt be delighted to tell you exactly what you’re doing wrong and how to fix it: adopt a raw diet; go oil-free; fast; juice more; eat fewer starches; eat more starches; eliminate grains; ditch gluten; get more fiber; avoid sugar; go low-carb; abstain from nuts; drink green smoothies. Consequently, it’s no surprise that most vegans who don’t feel well are unwilling to talk about it, and it’s also no surprise that many of us privately harbor an enormous amount of guilt, shame, and embarrassment about our situation. We too wonder what we’re doing wrong. Why aren’t we among the majority of vegans who are thriving and feeling fabulous? What’s the matter with us?
I became a vegetarian when I was a child, long before it was fashionable or commonplace. And I became a vegan many decades ago, also long before it trended. I loved vegetables when I was little (yes, I was the nerdy kid who would rather eat spinach than dessert) and any food deemed healthy. And yet I never seemed to feel very good. I suffered from terrible stomachaches, headaches, and bowel issues, and rather than feel better when I became vegan, I actually felt worse.
As an adult, I tried every approach under the sun to make the pain and gut problems go away: probiotics, prebiotics, a raw diet, a high-fiber diet, juicing, nutritional supplements, fiber supplements, fasting, going gluten-free, going oil-free, going fat-free, going sugar-free, going yeast-free, going nutritarian, eating fermented foods, following food combining, doing cleanses, trying elimination diets, you name it. I tried each of these methods not just briefly on a whim but for years (as I mentioned, I’ve been vegan for many decades). But absolutely nothing worked.
In addition, I shuttled from doctor to doctor, trying to get a handle on what was wrong with me. I exercised. I ate well. I didn’t smoke. I didn’t drink alcohol or take drugs. I meditated. I had meaningful work. I should have been feeling great, right? After rounds and rounds of tests, each doctor declared that I was fit and healthy and that I only
had irritable bowel syndrome. Then they ushered me out of their offices, dismissing me with a flick of the wrist and a subtle smirk that implied I have patients with serious health issues. Stop bothering me.
When you’re vegan and have unrelenting IBS, it’s a pretty lonely and exasperating experience. I was tired of my vegan peers telling me what I should do (been there, done that) and doctors brushing me off as though IBS wasn’t a real
problem or was all in my head. And, let’s face it, discussing digestive troubles isn’t pretty, pleasant, or socially acceptable, so getting support and understanding, especially from people who don’t have a clue what you’re going through or know what it’s like to live with chronic pain and discomfort, fear about embarrassing yourself, and anxiety over where to find the nearest bathroom is particularly challenging.
But after many years of suffering and many years of research, I finally hit upon something that has helped. And because of that, I’m stepping out of the water closet to share my discoveries and reveal (rather reluctantly) that I’m vegan and I have IBS. No longer should those of us with functional digestive disorders suffer in silence or be ashamed of being vegan and not feeling well.
I offer this book to you unapologetically, my friend: the vegan with IBS. I also offer it to any vegan with other functional digestive disorders and related gastrointestinal conditions, including inflammatory bowel disease (Crohn’s disease and ulcerative colitis), celiac disease, and those with sensitive stomachs.
If you’ve ever had days (or weeks, or months, or years) when you’ve felt you’re essentially allergic to food and can’t eat anything at all, this book is for you.
Although there currently is no cure for IBS, we can learn how to pinpoint triggers and manage our symptoms through a revolutionary, scientifically proven method. I invite you to turn the page and join me on this exciting journey.
Jo Stepaniak
ibsvegan.com
Irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) is a chronic, common disorder that affects about 10 percent of the world’s population and 10 to 15 percent of the general population in the United States, including women and men of all ages. According to the Canadian Digestive Health Foundation, IBS affects 18 percent of the population in Canada, one of the highest rates in the world. The Gastrointestinal Society of Canada and the Canadian Society of Intestinal Research state that the lifetime risk for a Canadian to develop IBS is 30 percent. Despite these startling numbers, it’s estimated that fewer than 15 percent of people worldwide who are affected by IBS seek medical attention.
IBS mainly involves the large intestine (colon) and is characterized by cramping, recurrent abdominal pain, altered bowel habits, bloating, abdominal distention, excessive gas and flatulence, variations in stool characteristics, audible abdominal noises or rumbling (the noises are called borborygmi
), fecal urgency, unsatisfied defecation (a sensation of incomplete emptying), mucus in the stools, rectal pain, nausea, and fatigue. For most people, IBS is a persistent, unrelenting condition, although there will likely be times when the signs and symptoms are worse and times when they improve or even disappear completely.
Upper GI symptoms, such as belching, dysphagia (difficulty swallowing), dyspepsia (indigestion), heartburn, noncardiac chest pain, and increased gas production are also common in people with IBS. Extraintestinal (non-gastrointestinal) symptoms that are frequently reported include rheumatologic symptoms (inflammation or pain in muscles, joints, or fibrous tissue), headaches (including migraines), increased urinary frequency and urgency, sexual dysfunction, and sleep-related disturbances. There also appears to be a strong connection between IBS and fibromyalgia (chronic muscle aches and pain). In his paper titled The Association of Irritable Bowel Syndrome and Fibromyalgia,
Lin Chang, MD, associate professor of medicine, co-director of the UCLA/CURE Neuroenteric Disease Program, and director of the UCLA Motility Unit, reported that up to 60 percent of people diagnosed with fibromyalgia have symptoms of IBS and up to 70 percent of people diagnosed with IBS have symptoms of fibromyalgia. The similar clinical characteristics and significant overlap of symptoms between these two syndromes suggest that they may have a common etiology. Most notable, however, is that the primary clinical pattern of IBS—the chronic abdominal pain and altered bowel habits—hasn’t been explained by any identifiable structural or biochemical abnormalities, as it has with inflammatory bowel diseases, such as Crohn’s disease and ulcerative colitis. While some research shows that the colons of IBS sufferers have similar physical characteristics, for the most part IBS has been defined by its lack of verifiable criteria. Nevertheless, having a diagnosis of IBS does not mean the symptoms are any less real than for patients with organic or structural diagnoses. In fact, research has shown that the severity of the symptoms and degree of disability for many IBS patients are even greater than for patients with ulcers, esophageal reflux, or milder forms of inflammatory bowel disease.
Because the pathophysiology of IBS has not been entirely clear, it has made diagnosis and treatment challenging. It’s also the main reason that IBS has long been dismissed as a psychosomatic condition. Traditionally, doctors have diagnosed IBS by exclusion, which means that rather than making a positive diagnosis of IBS, they’ve relied on ruling out the presence of other conditions and illnesses, such as colorectal disease, colon cancer, celiac disease, and inflammatory bowel disease (IBD). Since IBS is a disorder of abnormal gut functioning, no abnormalities should show up on the various conventional diagnostic tests that are used, so negative test results only help to reinforce this diagnosis. In addition to investigative tests, the diagnostic process typically includes identification of symptoms suggestive of IBS, known as the ABC of IBS:
AAbdominal pain or cramping
BBloating or a feeling of fullness
CChanges in bowel habits:
•more than three bowel movements per day or fewer than three bowel movements per week
•change in stool form or appearance (e.g., lumpy/hard stool, pellets, pencil-like stool, unformed stool, loose and/or watery stool)
•change in stool passage (e.g., straining, urgency, or a feeling of incomplete emptying)
The official medical definition of IBS is part of what is known as the Rome III Diagnostic Criteria for Functional Gastrointestinal Disorders. This criteria system was developed to classify functional