Habits and Hustle - Episode 243: Vani Hari: How to Stop Food Lies and Fight Food Corruption
Episode Date: May 23, 2023Do you really believe that cardiologists recommend Cheerios? In this episode of Habits and Hustle, I chat with Vani Hari about the lies that multi-billion dollar industries are feeding us every day w...hen it comes to our foods. From misleading statements to paying for health associations to give their seal of approval for their products, the corruption in the food industry is enormous. Vani explains how it’s up to you to watch out for yourself and make informed decisions when buying food for your family. Not only does she provides tips on how you can do that, but she also shares some of the corruption she witnessed first-hand. Vani Hari is an activist that lives in North Carolina and the author of the new book, The Food Babe Way, which guides 21 essential habits she taught herself to take control of her health. What we discuss: 01:17: How did Vani get started in the food industry? 12:03: How did Vani monetize her blog? 14:43: Who are Vani’s business partners? 19:27: What’s happening in the food industry? 24:38: Do health associations care about our health? 26:57: What is the three questions detox? 34:26: What is the difference between organic and grass-fed? 36:24: What buzzwords do you need to watch out for? 38:10: Why are American companies using better ingredients for overseas consumption but not in the United States? 46:18: How do Vani’s kids eat? 53:00: How can you eat healthy when you’re out and about? 56:47: Where can you find Truvani products? Key takeaways: Our food is corrupted in America. Most of the labels we see on our foods aren’t worth much - they’re pay to play and multi-billion dollar companies have the money to play. For example. health associations are putting their stamps of approval on products in exchange for a large cheque. As a result, these companies are playing with our health as we trust these indications on food packaging as telling the quality of a product we are buying. We need to inform ourselves about what these companies are putting in our food so we can make better decisions at the grocery store. Most food companies in the United States are purposely feeding Americans lower-quality foods using lower-quality ingredients, simply because they can and the regulations allow them to. But when it comes to expanding overseas, these same companies have no issue using better quality ingredients to serve those populations to comply with their regulations over food. Thus, these companies do have the “winning recipe” for making better quality foods here in America but chose not to. You can’t take anything for face value when you’re reading marketing statements on a product’s packaging. Many of these statements can be manipulated to make you believe that products are a lot healthier for you than they are. This is why learning how to read labels and researching what some of the added ingredients are is your best bet for buying foods that aren’t harmful to your health. Thank you to our sponsors: Get started today with Disney’s Hulu Ad Manager at www.huluadmanager.com/stream. Sign up for a $1/month trial period at shopify.com/hustle To learn more about Vani: Website: https://foodbabe.com/ Instagram: https://www.instagram.com/thefoodbabe/ Book: https://foodbabekitchen.com/ My links: Website: https://www.jennifercohen.com/ Instagram: @therealjencohen Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
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I guys is Tony Robbins,
you're listening to Hab and hustle, fresh it.
All right, Bonnie, here we are.
I'm very happy to be talking to you.
I've been dying to talk to you for a very, very long time.
Well, thank you.
I'm excited to.
I know it's been a long time in the making.
We've had some scheduling challenges, but I'm excited to be here.
So I mean, you're just amazing.
We have a, I think, I think you're very good friends
with Jesse Itzler, right?
He's told me, like, yeah, I was mentioning
that you're coming on.
He was like, she's doing all sorts of crazy things,
amazing things.
Like you really have, like, changed the landscape
of like the food industry.
More so than I believe anybody I,
that I know has had the ability to do.
I mean, you are,
when the leading food activist,
you're a blogger, you're a co-founder of Truvani,
a company by the way,
the food that you guys have and the supplements bar none.
I use the protein powder,
I love your protein bar.
So good job. Good job.
So thank you. No, you're very, very welcome. I guess I want to start with by asking you more
or so than anything because you're not a nutritionist or you don't have a medical background
by any means. How did you become this person? How did you become such a force to be reckoned
with in the food industry? Well, you Well, it started with my own health challenges.
I was on several prescription drugs,
had eczema, asthma, intermetriosis.
I had appendicitis.
I had all sorts of mental issues that arose
as a result of my diet and my lifestyle
and the jobs that I chose to the point
where they put me on all sorts of drugs for that.
So I went through a lot of medical health issues
in my early 20s and I hit so rock bottom
in terms of just feeling like a zombie
and feeling just absolutely awful about myself
to the point where I just made a commitment
to myself that I was gonna teach myself about food and health. And one of the first things I did was like go to the library. And
back then, when I started doing this, we didn't have Google. And so, or maybe Google had just started
or something. So I literally just like went to old school library and checked out books on nutrition. And one of the first books that I came across
was called Conscious Eating by Gabriel Cousins.
And he was this renowned doctor who specialized in raw,
dieting and vegan food.
And but what he talked about in that book
was just so eye-opening.
He talked about how the majority of foods in the grocery store center, like the center
of the grocery store are all dead foods.
That's how I felt for most of my life, just completely dead in zombie life.
I was working in this corporate job, working in this rat race environment, literally eating
what everybody else was eating around me, bagels and blueberry
muffins for breakfast and lunch, bringing eating in whatever they were catering in. And at night,
they catered dinner so we would work through dinner. And I was just living this lifestyle that I
thought I had to live and I kind of outsourced all of my food to other people and other people's
decisions. It didn't really take ownership of it.
And so when I started learning about food,
I realized that I can't outsource it anymore.
I have to take ownership of it.
And so I started cooking for myself for the first time ever.
I grew up with two immigrant Indian parents.
And so they were very about like math and science.
And you
stay out of the kitchen. You don't need to learn how to cook or do any of these life skills.
You need to learn how to become, you know, either a doctor or an engineer. And I went to
engineering school. And so I focused on that. And so it wasn't until I like had to teach
myself how to eat that I learned this information.
And so then what started to happen was really crazy.
I went on, off of every single prescription drug, my weight normalized for the first time
and my skin, my hair, everything about me changed to the point where people around me who
had grown up with me and seen me day after day just couldn't believe the transformation.
And it was because I was just eating so much crap.
And I mean, I used to have like all of these sores
all over my face from the exome.
I mean, it was always on my face and on my neck.
And all of a sudden, I had this beautiful skin.
And people were just like, whoa, what are you doing?
And back then in Charlotte,
North Carolina, we didn't have a whole food. So we had a tiny little health food store. And that was it.
And so I had to learn how to do all this, you know, on my own. And so I started green juice,
scene, green smoothies, started to eliminate processed foods for my diet, started to teach
myself about the chemicals that
I had been eating. I wondered what was in the runscandy that I used to like down a whole
box of every night. I say one of those, yeah. Yeah, right, you know, but I'd always leave
the bananas. I never liked bananas. So, you know, I was just wondering about what is all this
crap I've been eating, right? It was just not real food at all.
It was like zero nutrition in your body.
And what I learned is that over the last 50 or so years,
all of these chemicals that have been invented
and put into processed foods had been invented
for one sole purpose.
And that was actually for the food companies themselves
to make more money, to either preserve the
product, to make it more uniform, to make a product that isn't real food, tastes like
real food, to make a product addictive with different additives.
So I realized that all of these chemicals that I was reading on the back of the package
had literally no purpose for nutrition in your body, so it wouldn't make you feel good at all.
So I just decided to eliminate it all.
And then around that time is when Michael Paulins started getting super popular, I started
reading his books and like getting really deep into the food system and how it was created
and where our food comes from.
And I just could not shut up about what I was learning to the point where I was telling
everybody at work, I was still working in this rat race environment, but at this point
I was bringing in my lunch, bringing in my breakfast and determining where I was eating
in the evening.
I wouldn't just eat whatever was available.
And everybody at work really thought I was like the health nut.
And everyone was asking like, hey,
you need to start a blog or something
and teach people about what you're doing.
And at the time, when a palatrist started goop,
I think around that time, it was 2011.
So it's almost like 12 years ago.
And I was reading that and I was like,
you know, I could do something like this.
I could start a blog and whatever.
And so I wanted to call it eat healthy, live
forever.com. And I yelled it over to my husband who's the tech geek in the family and said,
hey, can you register this name? And he was like, this is the worst name ever. And he came
back 10 minutes later and yelled from the other room and said, hey, what about food babe?
And I'm like, oh, that's catchy.
Okay, okay.
All right, that could work, but wait a minute.
I'm not a food babe, because I didn't feel like a babe
for most of my life.
I didn't want to be the babe, right?
So I said, why don't I teach people how to become a food babe?
And so for the first two years of my blog,
I had these cartoon characters similar to what Goop was
at the time, just these just no pictures
of myself and started just teach people what I was learning as I was going in my health journey.
And then when I started to really get upset about the ways that I had been duped by certain
things that I thought were healthy that weren't, that's when I realized I had a readership,
a community of amazing activists and people who also felt
this way to the point where they would share my stuff
so virally that the food companies themselves
I was talking about would reach back out to me
and either ask me to consult or they would change
their ingredients or they would invite me to their headquarters to discuss what I found wrong with their products.
And I was still working in this financial consulting job.
And I was taking off work to go consult with the largest food companies in the world.
And I was like, wait a minute, like this is not what I need to be doing, this like this financial stuff, like I need to be like changing the food industry.
I need to do this full time. And it was really hard for me to make the decision because
when I did food baby, it was just for fun. I gave up television for lunch, so I'd have time
to blog. And I would just do it every day after work or all the weekends. And so I wasn't making any money doing it.
And when I made the decision to quit, I quit cold turkey.
I didn't, I wasn't making a dime doing any of it.
And it was because I was on the top of Machu Picchu, I swear.
And it was because of this like magical up there.
And it was the day the world was supposed to end.
It was December 21, 2012, and that auspicious day
in the mind calendar.
And I got a note from my consulting agency
that said my consulting gig was coming to an end.
Would you like to renew for the next year?
And I just like wrote back no.
And I looked at my husband and was like,
I'm doing this, I'm gonna just be a food activist full time. And I expected him to say, what about the mortgage? What about,
you know, hello health insurance, your 401k, all that that you've been working towards,
right? For the last 10 years. And instead he says, you know, what have you been waiting
for? And he was ready, ready to support me in this mission. And it was fantastic. And I remember
when I got back from that trip, I was living in this two bedroom apartment in downtown Charlotte,
and I looked down and everybody's going to work, and I'm still in my PJs, and I'm not going to work,
I don't have a paycheck anymore. And I'm like, freaking out going like, what the hell am I going to do
now? Right? How am I going to make this work?
And everything, I tell you, everything happens in my for a reason, right?
Because as soon as I was able to 100% focus on being a food activist within two months
of that, I was literally on every front page newspaper across the world taking on craft and their macaroni and cheese and the
fact that they use artificial dyes here in America and not overseas. And that just thrust a whole
amazing opportunities for me in terms of writing books and figuring out a way to support myself
creating programs and meal plans and all sorts of things that allow me
to this passion and do it full time. So it's fun. No, it's amazing. No, it's amazing.
Because the reality is, I can't name another person that is as well known as you are in what you've done. I'm sure there's other people who've done things I don't know, but you've really
kind of,
I think because of social media, whatever else, the way you explain it or position it,
it's so hard hitting, right?
I think so many people are shocked of what the information is.
So, before you quit then, you're a consulting job, we're used to, at that point, you weren't
making any money, right?
You were still, you were just kind of just giving free information
because that was what was happening, but you took a leap.
And then the second you did take a leap,
that's when all the floodgates started to open.
Yeah, and at first I thought I had to turn on Google ads
and make advertisement, because I got,
I mean, I had like, over that next year,
I think I had like 60 million visitors to my website, right? You know, and so I had the capability of like just making money off
the ads, right? Yeah, yeah, yeah. And I remember I like blocked all pharmaceutical and food ads,
and somehow McDonald's snuck in there, and someone says me a screenshot of foodbabe.com with McDonald's ad on there. And mine, I like died inside.
I died and I immediately I was like,
oh, that's it.
We're not making our money to using ads.
No more Google ads.
I think I had it on for like a couple months.
And I was just like, this is not the way I want
to make a living.
It just was, it didn't serve the purpose of like,
it just, it made me so, it cringed me so bad
that I was just like, I don't even care
about that source of revenue.
So I turned off Google ads.
And so then I figured out what people really wanted
from me, which was they wanted to know what to eat.
And they wanna know what I was eating.
So I just shared my meal plans with everybody
every single week and had a weekly subscription to those meal plans.
And I remember launching it on the worst weekend ever.
It was six months after I quit my job,
it was on July 4th weekend,
which was, you don't launch anything on July 4th weekend.
I obviously knew nothing about business, right?
But where'd you want business consultants?
Where'd you want business consultants before?
I was like, I wasn't teaching people how to make money
in that financial consulting.
It was like project management, right?
It was like managing all these sea level projects.
It wasn't like how to make money, right?
So like, I'm just telling your listeners
don't ever launch anything on holiday weekends.
Okay.
It's a bit, right? But the funny thing is, it was so popular.
And I had so many people that wanted it
that I literally could not, I didn't sleep
and I didn't take a shower for like two days
because I was handling so many customer requests.
Wow.
And I looked at my husband and I said,
I can't do this on my own.
I need help.
Oh my gosh, look at all these people who want this.
I can't handle this amount of requests.
Can you please quit your job?
And he's like, yeah.
And he quit his job on Monday,
that Monday after July 4th.
And he's never looked back since.
He's been with me working on food babes since that day.
Stop it.
So what was he doing before?
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Well, I have two other business partners with truvani. So when I started truvani, it was
after I had my first child and there's something that happens after you become a mom, you kind of,
I didn't lose my edge as an activist. I just knew I needed to change the food industry
in a different way.
And I wanted to impact it in a way that was very inspirational
and would grow a business in a way that I could
like, you know, hand it down to my kids one day
or something like that.
Like, there's so much fight involved with being an activist and there's so much resistance
and with it came a lot of haters too, like from the people who are being paid by the
food industry, the people who make these chemicals, all of them were against me, right?
Because it costs a lot of money to change an ingredient in a product,
especially when you go from a petroleum-based product
to a more natural product, right?
It's gonna cost a lot of more money,
it's gonna cost millions and millions of dollars.
So the impact I was having was way beyond my comprehension
at some points, but also I had a whole slew of
a misinformation campaign waged at me as a person so that people wouldn't listen to me anymore.
They didn't want anybody to know about this information because the food industry didn't want to make any of these changes.
So having all of that attention on me as a mom, I felt very protective over my children.
And so I felt like I needed to do something less risky with my life.
Although now that I've had both my children and my second one's growing up in these two,
I'm getting that fight back again because there's so much screwed up with the food industry that I wanna change
and I want to teach my kids that like,
they don't have to put up with this stuff
and their next generation,
and I really want them to see,
well, I want them to remember their mom
as someone who fought for that old gosh,
I'm gonna cry.
Oh, but yeah, I do, but anyways, okay.
Back to true Varani, so I started to think that's really beautiful
and I understand what you're saying.
I have two kids in myself and I understand how,
you know, your brain starts to think in different ways
and you transition where your goals are
and you think about being protective as a mom.
And so, and I understand that.
And I understand that like now that they're getting older,
hey, you want them to be proud and you wanna leave a legacy and I get, that's me, I understand that. And I understand that like now that they're getting older, hey, you want them to be proud
and you wanna leave a legacy.
And I get, oh, that's me, I really understand.
And then now when they're a little bit older,
you know, you start to kind of like your baseline
starts to change again.
I get it.
Like I think that's really amazing.
And I think it's beautiful.
And I'm like, what you're doing as a mom,
I think it's so just not only is it incredible, I thank you, right?
Because I just want to read a couple of the things just for people who may not know what
you've already accomplished.
You know, craft decided to remove artificial food diets from their kids mac and cheese.
A subway removed like some chemical that's in yoga masks in their bread.
Chick-fil-A now uses antibiotic-free chicken, Starbucks dropped their, I don't know,
some type of food coloring in the pumpkin,
let latte or something, based on the viral,
yes, caramel coloring.
Yeah.
Caramel coloring in like, because of a viral post you did.
I mean, it goes on and on, and the fact that,
the fact that these companies now,
the biggest food conglomerates in the world are scared of you.
I mean, that is just insane to me.
Like, what kind of impact and disruption you've had for their bottom line and what you've made them do?
I mean, the kind of legacy that you're leaving for those children and what you've been able to accomplish on such a mass scale
is beyond even impressive.
I don't even know what the word would be,
but you should be very proud.
That's what I have to say.
Thank you.
I'm not done yet.
I'm not done yet.
That's so much work to do.
I know you're like, what do you mean?
I'm not even, I'm not even beginning.
What's interesting to me though is like,
what people, I think,
it's so crazy to me as the amount of money
that these companies are paying medical experts,
doctors, like just nutritionists,
like people don't know what they don't know.
And when people are promoting something
or supporting something, they're usually,
and that's respect or getting paid,
and people have no idea,
because they're so underhanded about it.
Can you just talk about that too a little bit?
Yeah, no, absolutely.
So I'll just give you a great story that happens.
So when my first book came out,
The New York Times reached out to me
and they wanted to do a profile piece.
And I said, sure, let's do this.
And I met with her at first of all
in my favorite place in New York, ABC Kitchen.
And we sat down and I ordered the squash toast because it's so delicious. I don't even know if they still make it there, but I haven't been to New York, ABC kitchen. And we sat down and I ordered the squash toast
because it's so delicious. I don't even know if they still make it there, but I haven't
been to New York and forever. And I remember her just looking at it and being like, yeah,
I don't eat that. And she just, she just immediately, I could tell just, I could just tell this
interview was not going to go well. Okay, she just immediately did not like who I was or what I was about. And when the article came out, she quoted three different scientists and professors
who went on to criticize me and anything that I was doing.
And I couldn't believe that the New York Times would actually put these three people
in this article without telling the reader their conflicts of interest. So one person was being
paid by Monsanto in bear as a speaker. The other person was on the board
of Senseiit Technologies,
the company that makes caramel coloring,
the one that Starbucks removed, right?
And then the other guy was literally part
of an entire misinformation campaign
that I found out through the Freedom of Information
Request Act that I can submit to his university.
And found out he was part of this entire web of people
and trolls that were created to go against me
and other activists.
And thankfully, the New York Times later on,
I think it was like, you know, a year later,
actually published on the front page
that this guy was this guy, which was so cool
to just see that one, you know, come full circle.
But at the time, I was telling this, this writer,
hey, the people who are going against me,
they have conflicts of interest.
They're like actually working with the food companies
that are making these chemicals or glyphosate,
which is, you know, the main ingredient and roundup,
which is one
of the big campaigns that I was part of in terms of getting GMOs labeled in the United States.
But they wouldn't publish that. And that just made me so irritated to the point where
I had to write a whole book about it. It's called Feeding You Lies.
I just read it by the way. It's excellent.
Thank you. It's my second book. It's probably my favorite book and that it really opens your
eyes about what's happening in the food industry and the corruption involved in how the food
companies can pay, spokespeople that look reputable and that look like they don't have any complex of interest and they can make opinions
that the media then writes about and then that becomes nutrition science. It also happens all the time
through grants to universities. One huge one that I talk about and feeding you lies is about
how Harvard's, you know, one of the top universities in the world, their scientists were paid by
Coke to put the onus on obesity, on the fact that we have lack of exercise versus sugary
drinks.
And that conflict of interest in terms of funding, in terms of the analysis of studies is just absolutely unethical and just despicable to the point where
you have to realize the things that you read in the media about health and nutrition, you have to
take with a grain of salt, you have to find out who funds the study, you have to find out why
who's writing about it and what's their agenda. You can't just take something for face value.
And so when I, it's funny because during the pandemic, when we were also getting fed
a lot of information about health, I was very skeptical about the things that were being
talked about.
And the reason I was skeptical is because of everything I'd learned in the food and pharmaceutical
industry that I talk about in feeding you lies.
But anyways, so yeah, we could go on a real big tangent there.
No, no, I think it's very important.
It's very important, because I think even when people
don't know what they don't know, and so when they see people
that they actually highly respect and think,
OK, this person's a pediatrician,
and they're saying that the Flintstone vitamins
are wonderful, or this person was saying this thing. the amount of money that's spent on these things, it's really hard
to know and navigate. And so, can we talk about, I mean, there's also even like the trade
associations and how about even the American Heart Association? You know that heart, you
talk about this in the book, that heart check. Do you remember that? What was it called? Like,
I put it here. Yeah. The American Heart Association and the heart check. Do you remember that, what was it called? Like I put it here, yeah.
The American Heart Association and the heart check,
people think that symbol means this is good for you
or for me to be on tricks.
Like used to be on trick cereal.
Like American Heart Association approved cereal
on trick cereal.
I mean, that alone did teach you
that that's absolutely ridiculous.
And they, I mean, it's a pay for play system, right?
Yeah.
And so it's kind of like how, you know, number one pediatrician recommended vitamin is
Flintstone's vitamins, full of artificial food dies in like all of the other chemicals
in it.
And sugar is in it.
It's like, who's the pediatrician?
On the same day.
Right.
Who's the pediatrician that recommends this?
Come on. And Jesse, your friend is one of the awesomeest guys, because he literally
put, I think he's put up a million dollars, he goes, I will give a million dollars to
the first pediatrician who helped me that they recommend when so bad about it.
I mean, it was insane, right?
And nobody came forward.
No one came forward.
No one came forward. No one came forward.
No one came forward.
And then I think he wanted to debate, you know, the CEO of Outfit about this and they wouldn't
come forward either.
I mean, and the CEO of Kellogg's, I think too many of it.
I love Jesse because, you know, it's just so funny.
He is very passionate and for good reason.
I mean, a lot like this is like, this is also where people that have kids
and it's very dangerous, right?
Because kids become addicted to these things
and then to get them off of it
to a healthier alternative.
And I know because I try, it's very, very hard.
And sugar addiction is way more difficult
than probably any, like even like any other drug addiction, right?
Like it is, it's so invasive and to have it,
it does on your body.
So, okay, so then can you tell us properly?
I think how do people properly read labels?
Because it is so confusing.
There's like all natural, natural flavors.
I mean, that's just the tip of the iceberg.
Like no added hormones.
Like you said something that I thought was really interesting
that I didn't even really know.
And I thought I was pretty good.
Was no growth form.
Look, they can add one word, like no growth hormone added
or something like that, where they can get around something
by just tweaking the way they say it, just a little. tell us what to look for what to avoid what to all that.
Yeah absolutely so there's just it's really simple so i have this this thing called the three question detox and all you have to do is ask yourself these three questions every time you sit down for a meal or prepare a meal and like you will learn you will teach yourself about how to read labels and you will learn so much about what you're eating to the point
where you may start to make better decisions. So the first thing is what are the ingredients?
Like do I recognize the ingredients in this product? Can I pronounce them? Do I know what they're
there for? Why am I eating, you know, maltodextrin, mono-diglesserides?
Why am I eating all of these different chemicals?
Like, what is all this stuff doing in my body?
Like, is this something I need to be eating?
And so it'll spawn kind of your ability to like quickly
Google, like, what does this chemical do?
Like, why do I need to eat this, right?
And then you asked yourself a second question
about that
ingredient, which is, are these ingredients nutritious? Well, you'll quickly realize if you were to google
monodiglycerides, that it's a type of preservative that they add to processed foods that was created
as a substitute for trans fats when they remove those from products. And it actually has natural,
it's small traces of trans fats in them.
And it's something that you probably shouldn't be eating, right?
It's not nutritious.
It's not there for your nutrition purposes.
It's there for the preservation of a product.
Then you'll say, well, where does this ingredient come from?
Or where does this food come from?
If you're eating a piece of meat,
you would find out what kind of farm it's coming from,
what that animal was being fed.
But if it's an ingredient, you'd say,
is it, was it created in a laboratory,
or is it coming from nature, right?
Is it an, is it apple on the ingredient label?
Is it wheat on the ingredient label,
or is it monodiclycerides that's coming from a factory?
And once you start to ask yourself those three questions,
you quickly realize what the majority of your diet is,
whether it's majority of chemicals and process
ingredients, or if it's real food.
And when you make that transition to real food,
your body, your life, everything will change.
Everything from the way you think, the way you sleep,
the way you act, the way you're able to exercise,
the way you are able to exercise, the way you
are able to get up in the morning and actually know what you're supposed to be doing in life,
all of that will change because when your body gets to nutrition, it needs. You actually end up
finding your purpose in life is what I believe. And I don't think anybody, in the reason why I'm so
passionate about the work that I do and what I'm doing, I don't
think anybody can actually realize the true potential in their life until they actually
start to eat healthy and actually eat the foods that are the most nutritious for them
because everything else will fall into place.
And I know I wouldn't have become the food babe taking on all these big organizations
and starting an amazing supplement company like Truvani had I not been taking care of myself because
there's just no way my brain and my mental capacity could even handle this, especially
being a mom of two people.
You know, so you're staying with people you've come out.
I know.
Girl, I know you're saying.
I thought Charlie.
Exactly.
I know.
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portfolio, visit GlobalXETFs.com. So you're saying that the correlation between that is nutrition equals mental focus, alert,
mental, like the cognitive strength, your brain becomes that much more powerful by just
eating well.
So you're able to conquer and accomplish all these other things.
It's kind of like a process.
And I totally agree.
I talk about that with exercise a lot.
And I always say to people, always shop the perimeter, never
shop in the middle of the store or the grocery store.
But to what you were saying, I want to just kind of keep on
with that a little bit, because even when you're on the perimeter,
let's say, with the meats and all the other stuff,
you can get very taken for also, because that's where I get, you know, I can get stuck,
too. It's not just, it's that's when they say
all natural no added hormones, like the meats,
the chickens, the turkeys, yogurt, it's like all the dairy stuff,
like that's where people get really,
can get really kind of stuck.
So how do you, right?
I mean, I think the main thing, like if you have to make
some choices from the fact of your finances,
if you have to make any kind of choice, I would choose the highest quality meat and dairy as possible.
And then you just, you could have conventional fruits and vegetables as long as this real whole foods,
but you need to go organic because you're going to be avoiding genetically engineered grain that is doused
with tons of roundup when you are eating organic meat. So you want to avoid all of that.
You want to avoid the growth hormone that is in conventional dairy that's linked to cancer.
You want to avoid the antibiotics that are also put into cow feed, chicken feed, any of that,
you want to avoid all of that.
So wait, that's where I, I don't mean to interrupt you, but I want to make sure that, so you're
saying it had, if it doesn't say organic on it, then what, do we not buy it?
Or you're saying there's other things that other labels that you say would go for like
if I can't find organic, you should be able to find organic meat
in just about every grocery store now.
I mean, within a reasonable distance from your house,
you should be able to, or you can get it online
and ship to you frozen.
And that's a lot of people do that,
and it's very economical to do that.
And then if you're not able to find it,
then I would go to some plant protein like beans, nuts,
legumes for that meal, right?
And I would use, and this is one of the things I talk about in my first book, Food Babe
Ways, I use meat like a condiment, you know, I don't eat it at every single meal, I eat
it once a day, right?
You still get a lot of the amino acids and what you need for meat if you eat it once a
day, right?
You don't have to eat it every meal.
And so if you can get high quality meat that you eat once a day, or even a few times a
week, you're doing really great in terms of nutritional benefits of having me to your diet,
but also avoiding some of the other things that are happening. You know, one of the really sad things that is happening actually with our meat supply is that
the majority of it's being fed corn and soy. And so our meat is actually really high in what
they call linoleic acid. And this linoleic acid has been linked to every major disease that a modern man is,
you know, experiencing right now diabetes, heart disease, cancer.
And it, like, it almost like turns on those cancer cells in your body.
And so when you're thinking about meat or any kind of meat product, you want to do grass
fed, you want to have
something that's pasture raised, even the chickens itself or the eggs that come
from the chicken. You want it from a pasture raised chicken. And so, and then that's one of the reasons why at Truvani,
when we developed our bovine collagen and our marine collagen, it was real well marine collagen.
We were so concerned about that our bovine collagen, we were very concerned about making sure that they were coming from cows that are raised on a pasture that are grass fed.
And if they're not grass fed, there's a reason why, like, what happens to those cows? We figured out
exactly how they're raised because it was so important to avoid that linoleic acid that can happen
as a result. So sometimes you can see grass fed and not the word organic
or organic and not the word grass fed.
Right, so grass, yeah, you're right.
So to get certified USDA certified organic and grass fed,
that's ideal, but you're pretty much not gonna get that
when it comes to majority of beef products
because they are raised on a huge pasture and to have that kind of land to be USDA certified
organic is very rare.
It's very rare.
You can find it, but it's very rare.
So I would go with grass fed and there's, you know, certified grass fed labels that you
can look for.
You can also look for certified humane.
So, you know that those animals have been treated humane.
You also want to avoid racked dopamine in pigs.
And so, a lot of people don't realize that the majority of pork in our country,
well, at least the stuff that comes around in this area,
we have this huge conglomerate, you know, Smithfield,
Pork, you may have heard of that company.
It's here in North Carolina, but Chinese company bought it,
and they actually raised the pigs here in North Carolina,
but they shipped the meat to China to process it,
and then ship it back. It's crazy.
And yeah, yeah, yeah.
And they don't have a lot of regulations around the chemicals and then ship it back. It's crazy. Really? Yeah. Yeah.
And they don't have a lot of regulations
around the chemicals they use in the production of the meat
and the processing of meat in China.
So that's one of the companies I avoid at all costs.
If I go to a restaurant, they sort of bake in.
I ask where it's from.
If it's from Smithfield, forget it.
But yeah.
So I'm Jewish.
I don't eat bacon or pork. So yeah, so that's good. But yeah, that's
crazy. So what about fortify? Okay, there's two thing. I was at the fortification of foods.
Why is that something we should be worried about? What is it? Yeah, so a lot of different
foods out there process foods will use these buzzwords to make us think that
we have to consume it in order to get these other vitamins and minerals.
So you'll see orange juice, for example, and it says plus vitamin D and plus vitamin C.
You'll see that across the board, not just in orange juice anymore.
You'll see it everywhere in cereals, in, bars, fruit snacks, anything.
They're adding synthetic versions of those vitamins to that product to create a health
halo.
It's basically a synthetic version of a vitamin that your body doesn't process as well as
a natural source. And then you're getting a product that is pretty much nutritionally dead and you're paying
for that product thinking that you're getting that vitamin, but you're not actually able
to absorb it.
So it's just a con.
Yeah.
Well, I want to ask you something.
Are you talking about this a lot?
And you show the different products like ketchup, McDonald's, French fries, a ton of prock, Mountain Dew,
the difference in ingredients in the UK versus in the US,
and how much cleaner those products are in the UK
versus in the US.
What I still don't understand is why can they not just use
those versions in the US, especially when there's been so much talk
and chatter about the differences between how in the US it's so much more dangerous and full of
crap in the food, like why has that not been switched? Well, it's because of money. And so in Europe,
they actually use the precautionary principle before they approve additives. So a lot of the additives that we use here in the United States are banned
or not used in Europe. And so these food manufacturers that are American companies have figured
out a way to make their products safer and cleaner and better for people overseas and not for us.
A great example that you mentioned was McDonald's French fries. McDonald's French fries in the UK
has potatoes, oil, salt, and dextrose.
That's it.
Those three things.
They actually add the salt after they fry it.
So you can actually determine how much salt
you want to add to it.
And then here in the United States,
they're using like nine different ingredients.
One of them called dimethyl polysiloxane,
which is the main ingredient in silly putty,
is actually preserved using formaldehyde.
The FDA doesn't, it does not look at the safety data
of this at all.
And so it's like, it's generally approved for use
or whatever, you know, generally regarded as safe,
grass status, but it's not really,
it hasn't been like studied in terms of being
actually safe to consume. But this is a chemical that you would definitely want to void in your diet.
And it's actually also used, people would never believe this, but it's actually used in fountain
drinks as well. Fountain Diet Coke uses di methol polysiloxane. So if you buy a Diet Coke,
that's in a can or in a bottle on
the shelf at a grocery store, it has different ingredients than you would having it in a fountain drink.
People don't know that. But anyway, so this is an ingredient. That's a huge thing.
That's a huge thing. Like think about all the fountain you drink, you go and you get even
it Chipotle, right? Chipotle still has Coca-Cola products everywhere you're going and you're
getting a fountain drink. You may be getting this additional chemical, you don't
even know it. This kind of discrepancy of American companies using better ingredients overseas,
I feel like is so unethical and hypocritical. And it happens with some of the products that
are targeted towards children too. And Kellogg's is actually one of the biggest culprits of this.
They have been literally having root loops and all of those different cereals overseas without artificial dyes for years.
And they said actually in 2015 that they would remove the artificial food dyes here in the United States.
And they said they would do it by 2018. Well, it's 2023 and they haven't done it.
It's not like they have to reinvent the formula
or create a new formula or whatever.
They already have it overseas.
They haven't done it and it's been over eight years.
And instead, they've been creating new products
like Baby Shark Serially and Unicorn and like Elf's and Michelle
and all this crap out there that
still has artificial food diets. So it's these companies are getting away with murder. I mean,
they really are and it's like our kids are really suffering. These artificial food diets are linked
to hyperactivity and children. You know, in order to use an artificial food diet overseas, you have
to have a warning label that warns parents. And we don't know how much is being consumed by kids because it's in everything, right?
And you wonder about all of the rise of ADHD medication and all of these medications we're
putting our kids on and why they won't sit still and why they can't pay attention.
And it's because of the food that they're eating.
So you're winding down with the podcast.
Sounds like you have no plans to leave the couch tonight.
Nope, you just want to unzip your jeans, slip on a pair of fuzzy slippers, and rip open
a bag of skinny pop popcorn.
Because the only place you're going tonight is the bottom of this back of popcorn. It's a whole back kind of night.
It's a whole back kind of night.
Keep coming back.
You got plenty of space.
Oof, not how you would have done that.
You like working with people you can rely on,
like USAA, who has helped guide the military community
for the past 100 years.
USAA, get a quote today.
It's also because of video games and the iPad and technology, but it's a combination
of probably both.
But I think that like 20 years, when we were younger, you and I, when we were like kids,
was it better or was it still pretty bad?
Has it gotten worse over years in a lot of ways?
Not better?
Because yeah, it's definitely gotten worse in terms of
just the prevalence of chemicals in our food supply for sure. It's definitely been worse.
Which is interesting because we, I feel like wherever you get so over, well, there's so many health,
I think nutrition and health that industry of organic and everything else has had
a real uptick, right?
Like we never talked about that when I was a kid, you know, like all these healthier alternatives
and food.
But yet, at the same time, as that's rising, I feel like to your point, so is the bad stuff
that's been incorporated in a way more addictive way, which is interesting. Man, I would say the last five years, we've really had, we've definitely had this
revolution happening in terms of people becoming more aware because of social
media. And, you know, I, I know my career was largely based on that too, just
this ability to quickly educate and create a community of people that are like, I call them
the Food Babe Army people who go out there and just like educate and share this information
and tell people and they're making the next generation of kids like super smart about food.
And so that's why these companies have realized that organic matters and natural matters and why
some of the huge companies out there are buying organic
companies up and they're not thankfully a lot of them are not changing. Sometimes a big conglomerate
will buy a smaller organic company and change the ingredients to make more money or whatever,
but largely what I've seen in the last five or six years, these companies are remaining somewhat unchanged.
They are creating some newer products that maybe they wouldn't have created otherwise,
but that are semi-healthy.
But they realize that this is the new economy.
And it's something that I'm really excited to inspire with Truvani,
because I've realized since we created our protein powder with our very simple ingredients or five simple ingredients in our vanilla
since then
So many companies the legacy companies the huge giant protein powder companies have copied our model
And they're creating new simpler products as a result and it's awesome awesome to watch. Our product's still better because we don't have
the natural flavors, we don't have the gums,
we don't have the rith brittal,
we don't have the stevia, we're using organic monk fruit,
the purest form of it to sweetener products.
So, we still have the best,
but it's awesome to watch the copycats out there
because that's why I wanted to start
true vami.
It's literally changed the protein pattern supplement companies from within and like inspire
all of them to do better because I can't tell you for so much of my life, the protein
patterns I always tried would always make me sick.
One time one of them went out of commission at GNC and I was like well where is it what's
wrong like I need my protein powder where is this product and they're like oh I got recalled
because it's had rat dropping so I was like oh goodness you know I mean I know I've been through
like the ringer with like the worst protein powders and I love a protein powder is part of my routine
because I wanted to be able to like have quick fast food.
Like I won't go to McDonald's or Chick-fil-A or Wendy's right.
I won't ever do that, but sometimes I need quick fast food and smoothies are my quick fast food.
And I wanted to feel like I was having a complete like package in that.
And so I have always loved protein powders as a tool with my real food diet, right?
Like I'm still so about real food, but I use protein powders as a tool. And but I wanted
to be the cleanest possible, right? I didn't want any like chemical natural flavors in it.
I wanted my vanilla to be real vanilla. I wanted, you know, the pea protein to feel,
to have like the whole fiber
and all of it intact, right?
I never tried the vanilla one. I want to try that one.
A little silly. Yeah.
Yeah, I want to try that one because I, I mean, you know, I'm curious, like, your kid,
how old is your older one? I know that the younger ones too. How old are you older?
Six. So does that mean that you don't ever give this kid any,
or both kids, any French fries McDonald's pizza from pizza?
Like do they never eat that?
They've never had McDonald's before, no.
Or any of it, like how?
Yeah.
Do they eat super clean like you?
Like how do you feed your kids?
I'm making, yeah, I'm making breakfast, lunch,
and dinner pretty much every day unless we go out to eat.
And I try to go go out to eat with everybody
at least once a week.
We try to.
And then we'll do takeout from some really great places.
We have a flower child in Charlotte
and they have really clean oils and they're really good.
And I've looked into it and I feel really confident
that that's a great takeout option.
But even when I do takeout,
I still make a couple of things on the side for my kids.
Like, I still, they'll eat some of the takeout,
but like, I still make things
because I'm in my kitchen and I'm right there.
And it's so easy.
My biggest thing is I don't like to shop
and cook on the same day.
So we've figured it out between me and my husband.
Like, he's the shopper.
Like, if he stocks the kitchen,
I'm like all about cooking all day.
Like, I can cook and cook and cook and cook and cook.
And in a lot of times he cooks too. He's a great cook.
So we take the cooking and the food so serious in our family that we make sure we make it a priority every single day.
And we're we've set up our lifestyle and our businesses so that we can make it a priority.
If I lived in LA like you do, if I lived in New York or Miami
or any of these other big cities that have a lot more organic
healthy places, I would eat out way more, right?
When we travel, that's when I let go of the rains a little bit,
right?
I let my kids indulge in the sorbet or not my little one,
he hasn't had ice cream yet.
He will soon though because we're gonna,
we're probably gonna go Italy this summer
and he's gonna have gelato, I know it.
But he hasn't had ice cream yet.
But and I should make him like some homemade sorbet.
I don't know why I haven't given an ice cream yet,
but I haven't.
I'm surprised.
How can that be possible?
I don't write, but it's possible.
Yeah, it is possible, I guess.
And it's funny, he just discovered these little spelt cookies.
They're little heart-shaped spelt cookies
they're made with spelt.
And they have like a teeny bit of sugar in them
and they're cinnamon-y.
And you can buy them at Whole Foods or whatever.
I don't even remember the brand of it.
It's like follow your heart or something like that.
He loves them.
And he's just like,
Kookie, like,
you trust,
do you trust Whole Foods and trade or joes?
Cause I know that whole foods are to put on lots
of canola oil in there around prepared foods.
Yeah, I don't buy their prepared foods
because they just use a lot of seed oils.
If I go to whole foods,
it's for fresh fruits and vegetables
and meats and things like that.
So I don't really buy a lot of that there
on a weekly daily basis.
I mean, if we're traveling again, if we're traveling,
we may go to Whole Foods for a meal, right?
But my family, we love to travel.
So when we do travel, I have my laundry list of snacks
that I bring.
I mean, I'm bringing organic olives.
I'm bringing organic beet chips, epic salmon strips, like real foods that are in snack form
that my kids are snacking on when they're stuck on a plane
or stuck in a car or whatever,
and a lot of dried fruit, that kind of stuff.
And then when we go out to eat,
like we would never pick like a fast food to go eat out,
we'd find some mom pop restaurant to go to.
And, you know, I really food to go eat out. We find some mom pop restaurant to go to. And, you know,
I really love to go. This sounds so just so bougie, but it's not. I really love to spend my
my time in St. Bart's, which is one of my favorite places on the world because the French that live
there, they love food so much and that the quality of the food is so high that I'm just like so happy because I can order
anything and everything is so healthy and the way they prepare it is so clean and just like
really minimal and like the vegetables even are prepared like I make at home. So when my kids
eat at a restaurant and they're eating the vegetables they actually eat them, you know, with lots of
butter and a little bit of sea salt. And so I love going there because I just love the food there.
And I'm a huge scuba diver snorkeler.
So I love the ocean and swimming.
And so I love going there.
And I just, I love travel in general.
And so usually if I pick a travel destination,
it has to have some kind of good food component.
I've been to 70 countries, and I can tell you
there's a lot of places that don't.
Good food, but you just make it work and you do the best you can.
I will say that you're controlling your environment, which is what you have to do if you want to be successful in this way.
You just have to be mindful. I do the same thing, by the way. So name a couple other places that are really good to travel to because
actually that's a good one. I didn't know that I didn't realize that same parts that's a healthy
food. What name a couple other ones that you've been to? So I love this resort in Mexico. It's called
Rose with my coba. It's in the jungle. And you take a little boat to your hotel room,
or villa, whatever you want to call it.
And they have an organic garden on property,
and they have this amazing organic garden dinner
two times a week.
And it's so beautiful that they really, really pay attention
to the food.
And I'll go there just to eat and relax with my kids and my kids love the kids club there.
And like we go to the pool and it's so much fun and the food's great.
And it's super like you can just get super clean food.
And I remember asking them they had popsicles and they were using artificial dye in the popsicles.
And they actually pop popsicles without artificial dye using artificial dye in the popsicles and they actually
Poppsicles without artificial dye for my kids, which was awesome And this is a tip for parents that really care about this stuff
You can email the resort or wherever you're staying the hotel ahead of time and tell them your dietary restrictions
Tell them my kids don't eat artificial food dye
So they knew not to put the basket of candy
that they normally put in everybody's room that has kids in my room.
I noticed that like online. I saw like, you know, parents showing,
oh, look how they treat your kids. So awesome.
They gave us a basket of candy and I'm like, oh, the candy looks awful.
Yeah.
So I just email them in advance.
I don't even have to go through the conversation with my kids of being like, hey, this isn't
that great candy.
Like, let's look at the ingredients.
Like, I do that a lot.
But if I can avoid those situations, just by a simple email, I'll do that.
And I found out that hotels love this.
And they love the challenge of making something awesome for you.
Like my little one was allergic to eggs.
He's starting to like,
a tolerate a little bit of eggs now,
but he was super allergic to eggs to the point
where the chef came out and was like,
hey, we can make pancakes, waffles,
everything without eggs, just tell us what you need.
And it was just so awesome for him to come out and say that.
And all I had to do was just send an email in advance,
and it was super easy, right, to the concierge.
So one other resort that I think is amazing now, this is like,
you know, you have to really splurge for, but it's, I can't tell you,
I think it's the best resort in terms of food on the East Coast,
Blackberry Farm and Blackberry Mountain.
They both are amazing properties. Like they're so beautiful
in Tennessee and they have the most meticulous attention to the quality of food. It's coming from
a lot of local farms around there and the farm that they have on site. And it's absolutely amazing
when you look at the kids menu and the ability to
like order vegetables and other things and chicken fingers and pizza, it's awesome.
When you, I love that. That's one of the things I love about St. Barz too. When you look
at the kids menu at the majority of restaurants in St. Barz, they are offering you a small piece of fish, a mahi mahi or a piece
of filet, like beef and vegetables and sometimes French fries too, but like because, you know,
French fries.
They're kids, and also it's good.
Yeah.
Right, kids, right.
And so it's just so cool to see that awesome menu and having like you know fresh fruit on the menu and other
things not just ice cream and it's just this is the best thing ever.
This episode is brought to you by FX is the Bear.
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FX is the bear, all episodes now streaming only on Hulu. my children. You're okay. I don't mind. Hello, hello child. I have one fat one more question
and we can actually wrap this up. I wanted to know if Trevani is going to be doing any kids
foods or kids line of foods. Yeah, so that could be in the works in the future. It's definitely
been a vision of mine in terms of doing a kids line. We'll have to see. We'll have to see.
Okay. And I guess basically I think we're good. I think that you
kind of gave us a lot of information and it was, listen, I'm going to look into those resorts,
but where can people find more information on you if they don't know who you are? Can you give
us all the things? And then, you know, we can always do part two again, because I love talking
about this stuff. I think it's just so important and it's information
everybody should be aware of.
Well, thank you so much.
I actually have a new book coming out in October.
It's called Food Babe Family.
I can't believe I haven't mentioned it until now,
but it's so super excited about because it's
about raising kids on real food.
And it includes 100 recipes to that are family friendly.
And it's so hot meeting every day.
And I can't wait to share it with everybody.
But that's coming out in the fall.
And you can find out about that and everything else at foodbabe.com and come
and also check out all of our amazing products at truvvani.com that has, we have protein powders,
we have collagen, we have the most amazing bars
that are made with ingredients that you would find
in your own kitchen, all USDA certified organic,
non-JMO, et cetera, and it's the highest quality
ingredients that you'll find in any supplements.
Amazing. How many employees do you guys have now?
Oh gosh. I don't know. It's got to be probably around 40 to 50 probably.
Wow. That's amazing. And you guys are now in Sprouts.
Where else do people find the products?
Yes. We are in Sprouts. We are in Fresh time, we were in mom's, mother's market.
We are in a lot of stores.
We are really taking retail by storm.
So yeah.
And it seems like you're growing pretty quickly, aren't you?
Like it looks like it.
Well, yeah, I mean, I would say we're the number one plant-based
protein in all of plant-based protein natural stores for the last five months.
Oh, wow. You're like bigger than like the big dogs, which is the coolest thing ever.
According to this state of company called Spins, and we are actually one of the most
trending emerging brands there is.
So it's pretty cool.
That's amazing.
Don't forget to send me the vanilla powder
so I can try it.
Oh, I will, I'll definitely will.
I love that.
Thank you.
I appreciate you coming on the podcast
and sharing all this information.
It's been a real pleasure to meet you.
Finally, finally.
Yes, you too.
Thank you so much.
You're welcome.
And well, when your new book comes out, let's do this again.
I would love to.
I hope you enjoyed this episode.
I'm Heather Monahan, host of Creating Confidence,
a part of the YAP media network, the number one
business and self improvement podcast network.
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