Warning: getimagesize(https://scontent-mia3-1.cdninstagram.com/v/t51.29350-15/242123646_530104031389246_1870688772678022982_n.jpg?_nc_cat=103&ccb=1-5&_nc_sid=8ae9d6&_nc_ohc=rvVy_EeZhZ0AX_efkuu&_nc_ht=scontent-mia3-1.cdninstagram.com&edm=ANo9K5cEAAAA&oh=05a8648f9e8302861b38ca9ff4ef2481&oe=61498B84): Failed to open stream: HTTP request failed! HTTP/1.1 403 Forbidden
in /media/penzance/dev.ank.freedomonlineservices.net/public/wp-content/plugins/wonderm00ns-simple-facebook-open-graph-tags/public/class-webdados-fb-open-graph-public.php on line 1404
Instagram
Home»Instagram»Breakfast fit for a king (well, my 7 year-old thinks he *is* The King, at least in our house!): Sourdough spelt pancake, local watermelon, ‘waste’ water kefir grains, ground linseed and soaked and dehydrated crunchy almonds.
.
He then gets to be in charge of the olive oil bottle, liberally dousing the goodies.
.
We usually eat a incidentally vegan breakfast. I wholeheartedly believe that any sustainable agricultural process needs animals at its core, but it doesn’t mean we eat their produce with every meal. This plate will be devoured by a little man who eats animal produce (including offal and lots of fat) at other meals and – importantly for me – everything on the dish comes from Italy, most of it from Tuscany.
.
I’d love to hear whether ancestral eating for you means animal produce at every meal and how you feel about the non-animal foods that you have available locally.
Breakfast fit for a king (well, my 7 year-old thinks he *is* The King, at least in our house!): Sourdough spelt pancake, local watermelon, ‘waste’ water kefir grains, ground linseed and soaked and dehydrated crunchy almonds.
.
He then gets to be in charge of the olive oil bottle, liberally dousing the goodies.
.
We usually eat a incidentally vegan breakfast. I wholeheartedly believe that any sustainable agricultural process needs animals at its core, but it doesn’t mean we eat their produce with every meal. This plate will be devoured by a little man who eats animal produce (including offal and lots of fat) at other meals and – importantly for me – everything on the dish comes from Italy, most of it from Tuscany.
.
I’d love to hear whether ancestral eating for you means animal produce at every meal and how you feel about the non-animal foods that you have available locally.