Paleo Approach Cookbook Review & Sample Recipe: Paleo AIP BBQ Sauce (2024)

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226 Comments / By Eileen / August 11, 2014

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Paleo Approach Cookbook Review & Sample Recipe: Paleo AIP BBQ Sauce (1)

“If you really want to make a friend, go to someone’s house and eat with him… the people who give you their food give you their heart.”
~ Cesar Chavez

Big and Beautiful

If you follow Sarah Ballantyne (aka The Paleo Mom), you know she never does anything halfway. Her first book, The Paleo Approach, is an encyclopedic guide to reversing autoimmune disease. This cookbook is the much-anticipated companion, and it contains over 200 autoimmune-friendly recipes. She will be the first to tell you that she writes BIG BOOKS! And they’re beautiful.

What’s Inside

  • Over 200 AIP-friendly recipes: kitchen staples, breakfasts, appetizers, salads, snacks, soups/stews, meat/poultry, fish/shellfish, offal (organ meats), side dishes, sweet treats, and beverages.
  • A cool recipe format: In addition to photos and detailed instructions, every recipe contains preparation time, recipe tips, creative variations, and also detailed nutrition facts, telling not just the macros (calories, fat, carb, protein) but the vitamin and mineral content of the meal as well.
  • 6 weeks of meal plans with shopping lists: Designed for two people, they can be halved or doubled. The time-consuming recipes are scheduled for the weekends, and some of the weekday recipes incorporate leftovers to save time. Each meal plan is nutrient-dense, incorporating all of Sarah’s recommendations for seafood, offal and a wide variety of veggies, while still including some good old-fashioned comfort food.
  • Food Lists: The resource section contains a ten-page “A to Z” food list, called “Yes No Maybe So.” It’s a detailed checklist for the foods you can and can’t eat on the AIP. The “maybe” column contains grassfed ghee, egg yolks, fresh legumes (green beans and peas), fruitbased spices, seedbased spices, and seed/nut oils. These foods are eliminated initially on the AIP, but are considered Stage One Reintroductions, which are the foods most easily tolerated and recommended as the first to reintroduce.
  • Low-FODMAP resources: People diagnosed with small intestine bacterial overgrowth (SIBO) often need to follow a Low-FODMAP diet temporarily. Sarah has included FODMAP alerts on every recipe, with modifications if applicable. Also, two of the weekly meal plans are Low-FODMAP.
  • Cooking Guides: The beginning of the cookbook is full of helpful charts like meat cuts and cooking times, measurement conversions, grilling tips, oil smoke points, and alcohol burn-off times. It’s information helpful to any cook, paleo or not.

A Few of My Favorite Things

  • A Recipe Top Ten: Sarah and I are both firm believers in getting nutrition through food, not supplements, whenever possible. She’s created an appendix in the resource section that shows which recipes have the highest concentration of which vitamins and minerals, so you can actively choose the ones you need.
  • Substitution Charts: Many common foods aren’t allowed on the AIP, and new cooks can feel at a loss, without their familiar ingredients. Sarah tells you which AIP foods are good substitutions for flour, butter, tomatoes, pasta, bread, crackers, and more.
  • Quick Description of the Why’s behind the AIP: An awesome two-page summary that efficiently describes how the AIP works: through nutrient density, gut health, hormone regulation and immune health. It’s basically the cliff notes for her first book: The Paleo Approach.
  • A Picture Recipe Index: How cool is that?

Paleo Approach Cookbook Review & Sample Recipe: Paleo AIP BBQ Sauce (2)
Paleo Approach Cookbook Review & Sample Recipe: Paleo AIP BBQ Sauce (3)

Sample Recipe

Ready for a recipe? Last year, Sarah asked if I would like to test some recipes for her book. Yes, please! My favorite was this barbecue sauce, which I used on a rack of babyback ribs. Let me tell you now – it’s gooooood! She’s graciously agreed to let me share it with you!

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Paleo Approach Cookbook Review & Sample Recipe: Paleo AIP BBQ Sauce (4)

Barbecue Sauce (Paleo, AIP)

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  • Author: Sarah Ballantyne
  • Total Time: 45 minutes
  • Yield: 2 cups
Print Recipe

Ingredients

Instructions

  1. Heat the palm oil in a saucepan over medium-high heat. Add the onion and sauté for 10 to 15 minutes, until caramelized.
  2. Add the remaining ingredients. Bring to a boil, then reduce the heat to maintain a simmer. Simmer uncovered for 15 minutes.
  3. Remove from the heat and purée with an immersion blender.
  • Prep Time: 20 minutes
  • Cook Time: 25 minutes
  • Category: Condiments
  • Method: Stovetop

More Delicious Recipes & Resources

Update: A giveaway was held to celebrate the publication of this book, and the winner was chosen with a random number generator. Congratulations to Heidi! If you didn’t win, don’t despair. The book is reasonably priced and worth every penny. You can purchase a copy here.

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Paleo Approach Cookbook Review & Sample Recipe: Paleo AIP BBQ Sauce (2024)

FAQs

What sauce can I eat on AIP? ›

Condiments, Sauces, and Dressings
  • Peach Salad Dressing. August 6, 2022 4 comments. ...
  • Coleslaw Dressing. June 7, 2022 2 comments. ...
  • Creamy Dill Dressing. ...
  • Pineapple Salad Dressing. ...
  • Instant Pot Nomato Ketchup. ...
  • Instant Pot Nomato Sauce (AIP/Paleo) ...
  • Caesar Salad Dressing (AIP/Paleo/Whole30/Keto) ...
  • Ranch Dip (AIP/Paleo/Whole30/Keto)

Does BBQ sauce have tomatoes? ›

Ingredients vary, but most include vinegar or tomato paste (or a combination) as a base, as well as liquid smoke, onion powder, spices such as mustard and black pepper, and sweeteners such as sugar or molasses.

Are bananas OK on AIP? ›

Examples of foods you can eat while on the AIP diet include: Vegetables that aren't nightshade vegetables like cucumbers, spinach, sweet potatoes and zucchini. Fresh fruits like apples, oranges, mangos, strawberries, bananas and blueberries.

Is peanut butter OK for AIP? ›

The foods to avoid on the AIP diet include the following: Dairy products (including milk, cream, butter, yogurt, and cheese) Legumes (including beans, soybeans, peanuts, and lentils)

What is healthier BBQ sauce or ketchup? ›

BBQ sauce

In fact, BBQ sauce contains even more sugar than ketchup: One tablespoon has more than seven grams of sugar. To get the sweet and savoury flavour without the added sugar, look for an organic, low-sugar option or make your own sauce with raw honey as a sweetener.

What is the base for BBQ sauce? ›

What Is Barbecue Sauce Made Of? Every red barbecue sauce starts with a tomato base. In this recipe, ketchup makes a fantastic foundation. Classic barbecue sauce gets its signature sweetness from brown sugar.

What makes BBQ sauce not vegetarian? ›

Look out for these ingredients that render a BBQ sauce definitively not vegan:
  • Honey. It's made by bees, so most vegans won't go near it. ...
  • Anchovies. ...
  • Worcestershire. ...
  • Sardines. ...
  • Gelatin. ...
  • Sugar.
Jun 10, 2022

Is balsamic glaze AIP compliant? ›

This recipe for Balsamic Glazed Carrots is a simple, delicious and easy side dish that is full of flavor. These are AIP, paleo, vegan and Whole30.

Can you eat soy sauce on AIP diet? ›

Core AIP excludes all beans and legumes like chickpeas, green beans, peanuts, peas, soybeans and all soy derivatives like tofu and soy sauce. Modified AIP excludes peanuts, soybeans and all soy-based foods and products, but allows beans and other legumes.

Is soy sauce OK for AIP diet? ›

Most traditional stir fry sauces include soy and corn starch, two highly inflammatory ingredients that are avoided on the Autoimmune protocol.

What seasonings are allowed on AIP? ›

First, a list of AIP herbs and spices you probably already know and don't need much explanation. You can still use basil, bay leaves, chives, cilantro/coriander leaves, cinnamon, cloves, dill weed, garlic, ginger, onion powder, parsley, mints, marjoram, rosemary, sage, thyme, and vanilla bean.

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