February 4, 2009
Nutrition educator advocates uncooked food for good health
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After three battles with recurring breast cancer, Sally Miller was tired - body and soul.

 

She was 36 years old when she had a double mastectomy to combat her first breast cancer diagnosis. The cancer returned 11 years later on the incision points. She had 33 radiation treatments. The following year, it was back. Doctors scraped her insides from ribs to clavicle and placed her on an estrogen-blocking drugs.

"Tamoxifen did terrible things to me. I had no energy and I was depressed," she said. "I became a person nobody knew."

She had taken the medication for two years, when her daughter in Atlanta suggested she attend a conference on the topic of a raw foods diet that reputedly bolstered the body to battle illness. In all her cancer treatments, nobody suggested a connection between diet and cancer, so she still ate the meat-heavy diet that had been part of her Irish/Italian/Polish heritage.

A raw and living foodie eats a plant-based, uncooked diet that contains the nutrients, enzymes, vitamins and minerals that a body needs to maintain good health and balance. It's basically a step beyond a vegan diet - no meat, dairy, processed flour, yeast, refined sugar or cooked foods.

"At the conference, I was introduced to the idea of food being your medicine and medicine being your food," she said. "It blew my mind that I met all these people who had been through illness and changed their lives by changing what they were putting in their mouths. I thought to myself, 'I can do this.'"

Miller's husband, architect Lloyd Miller, attended the conference at the Living Foods Institute in Atlanta with her and supported their move to raw foods, although he had a few reservations. "I was skeptical. It's quite a dramatic change from a traditional diet," he said.

After a bit more research, Miller began preparing exclusively raw foods. Both Lloyd and Sandy Miller lost weight, had more energy and sharpened their thinking. Their previous heavy, meat-laden diet held little appeal.

"We both felt great. I was having so much fun with food, developing recipes," she said. "I moved into more gourmet recipes."

About six months later, Sally told her doctor that she wanted to quit

taking the medicine. The doctor agreed, as long as she continued to enjoy good health. She's been medicine- and cancer-free ever since. That was six years ago.

Today, Miller teaches classes on raw and living foods from her home office. She'll receive her master's in nutrition education from Bauman College in California in May. As a certified nutrition educator, she'll offer individual consultations to help people personalize a raw foods diet.

"I want to teach people how to eat and to enjoy healthy foods," she said. "I'll look at their diet and lifestyle and help them make menu plans."

Her two-day weekend overview class is her most popular. For $150, she gives a general overview of raw foods and tells students where to shop, what to buy and gives 10 to 12 recipes to get them started. She's taught about 150 people. She partners with Healthy Life Markets at Drug Emporium and buys organic produce at Kroger.

In addition to fresh fruits and vegetables, the Millers eat lots of sprouted and fermented foods. She drinks wheat grass juice every morning made fresh in their juicer. She makes scones and cookies from sprouted grains, fruits and nuts and flatbreads and crackers from flax seeds, ground sunflower seeds, almond pulp and dehydrated vegetables. She forms the sprouted grain mixture into loaves.

"There's some psychological need for something that you slice," she said. "This allows me to do that."

A typical lunch might be bok choy stalks filled with hummus, cabbage salad with raisins and lentils spooned on top, and a lentil soup base with juice of carrots, celery, onion and garlic. She makes large quantities of crackers and eats them with soup.

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