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4 minute read
THE ERIC ADAMS DIET
I ATE LIKE ERIC ADAMS FOR A WEEK
And no, I'm not giving up olive oil anytime soon.
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By Caitlin Dorman
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In 2016, New York City Mayor Eric Adams woke up blind, went to the doctor and discovered he had diabetes. It’s a story Adams likes to tell because there’s a happy ending: after radically altering his lifestyle and committing to an aggressively healthy, plant-based diet, Adams reversed his diagnosis.
While plenty of people are curious about what the city’s first vegan mayor’s plans are for keeping New Yorkers healthy, I was curious to learn more about what it’s like to eat like Adams on a day-to-day basis.
Even if it all went up in flames, I figured I could gain a new appreciation for the kind of discipline it takes to be a New Yorker who doesn’t eat bagels.
Using Adams’ cookbook, “Healthy At Last: A PlantBased Approach to Preventing and Reversing Diabetes and Other Chronic Illnesses,” as my guide, along with a well-placed source/food guru on his staff, I embarked on a weeklong project to do my absolute best to eat like Adams. Following Adams’ diet, as described in “Healthy At Last,” means skipping meat, fish, dairy, eggs or as Adams puts it: “nothing that has a face and a mother.” It also involves avoiding processed foods, salt, sugar and cooking with or adding oil to your food – Adams says he sautés his food with broth, wine or water. Eating mostly fruits, vegetables, legumes and whole grains is the ultimate goal.
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Monday Tuesday Wednesday
Oatmeal with sliced peaches and a few lightly salted nuts for breakfast, a depressing bowl of chickpeas with rice vinegar and dried herbs, and then dinner was a recipe from “Healthy At Last,” a sliced polenta and black bean dish that was actually delicious!
As bland as the lunch chickpeas were, the worst part of the day was waking up to find my partner had purchased rolled oats for our oatmeal – Adams only eats steel cut. Steel cut oats are less processed, but I like to imagine the mayor demands a cereal as chiseled as he is. One cup of Oatly yogurt with sliced banana for breakfast, a triumphant return to chickpeas for lunch (this time with some chopped up celery, fresh parsley and a lot of lemon juice), and then dinner is … a vegan Chipotle burrito bowl. Sure, it was vegan, but its high salt content left me feeling as though I had betrayed Adams, a feeling that stuck with me longer than my Chipotle food baby. A single banana for breakfast because I’m in my minimalist era, leftover polenta and beans for lunch, but things fall apart at dinner after I crash a friend’s barbecue. All I could eat were two skewers of grilled zucchini and to add insult to injury they were absolutely slathered in olive oil.
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Thursday Friday Saturday Sunday
For breakfast my partner tried to prepare a smoothie based on a recipe shared on Adams’ Twitter. I say he tried because he also objectively failed. The smoothie looked like dirt and it tasted like dirt.
A veggie bowl with
pumpkin, kale, zucchini
and quinoa, some apple and parsnip soup and a few chickpea fries served for lunch at a vegan restaurant. Canned corn, a package of Tex-Mex flavored shredded jackfruit and some avocado and nutritional yeast (Adams calls it “nooch”) for dinner. Another smoothie to start off the day but this time it’s edible! Lunch is another veggie bowl, made up of brown rice, roasted butternut squash, peppers, onions and more nooch. Dinner is more brown rice with some seitan and steamed broccoli that I was too cowardly to try sautéing with water. A hearty vegan lentil soup from the cafe around the corner for breakfast, a random medley of kidney beans, kale and jalapenos for lunch, and back to the vegan restaurant for a dinner of raw vegetable sushi and a chai smoothie.
I was craving some kind of dessert and after consulting my bible (“Healthy At Last”) learned that Adams will eat a singular date when he’s looking to satiate his sweet tooth. Except sometimes that’s actually too much sugar for him, so he’ll cut the date in half and save the rest for later. I was impressed by how delicious my medjool date was, but I must confess I did not cut it in half. One peach and an apple for breakfast as things get down to the wire, and leftover kidney bean medley for lunch. Dinner was some lentil rotini pasta with vegan pesto from the farmers market, which contained loads of olive oil and probably salt (Eric forgive me) and a side of roasted sweet potato topped with nooch. The very last thing I ate before the clock struck midnight was a carton of fresh blueberries. Sadly, I never got around to eating Adams’ dessert of choice, which happens to also be his preferred last meal on Earth: his homemade ice cream, which contains frozen banana, peanut butter and cacao powder. Sounds like I really missed out.
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