If you’re starting AIP — or refining your approach — it’s easy to assume you need to buy new ingredients, new tools, or completely overhaul your kitchen before you begin.
But sustainable success on AIP doesn’t start with buying more. It starts with clarity.
In this Small Bite episode of the Autoimmune Wellness Podcast, Mickey Trescott walks you through how to set up your kitchen in a way that supports you through Transition, Elimination, Reintroduction, and long-term maintenance.
From clearing out visual clutter to stocking foundational pantry items and choosing tools that truly matter, this episode focuses on building an environment that reduces friction, protects your energy, and makes cooking feel more manageable.
Kitchen confidence isn’t about culinary skill — it’s about preparation.
00:00 – Why kitchen setup impacts AIP success
02:28 – Clear before you add
05:49 – Removing “not-right-now” foods
07:51 – Boxing up “maybe later” foods
09:43 – Building a simplified AIP pantry
11:13 – Cooking fats (non-negotiable)
12:32 – Acids and umami flavor builders
13:18 – Shelf-stable proteins that save the day
14:11 – Spices and simple flavor foundations
15:02 – What you don’t need to prioritize
16:43 – Essential kitchen tools
19:27 – Helpful (but optional) upgrades
21:06 – Setting up your space for success
23:28 – AIP Kitchen Tour inspiration
24:10 – Recap & wrap-up
Over the years, I've taught AIP cooking classes and workshops all over the
Mickey:world, in community kitchens, conference centers, and in online classrooms.
Mickey:Over that time, one of the clearest patterns I've seen is that the way someone
Mickey:sets up their kitchen has a direct impact on how sustainable their time on AIP is.
Mickey:When a pantry is organized, when the right cooking ingredients are
Mickey:on hand, when there's a reliable pot for soup and a sharp knife for prep,
Mickey:people move through the transition and elimination phases with far more ease.
Mickey:And when those foundations are not in place, even the most motivated
Mickey:person can feel overwhelmed by simple tasks required to be successful.
Mickey:I remember one student who told me she understood exactly what
Mickey:she was supposed to be eating.
Mickey:She had the food list all printed out, highlighted, but every day she
Mickey:felt frustrated because her knives were dull and her only pan was
Mickey:just too small to make leftovers.
Mickey:So with a little bit of maintenance, a larger pot, a
Mickey:few foundational ingredients, everything felt different for her.
Mickey:And this might sound super practical or obvious, and it is, but it's also
Mickey:one of the most meaningful predictors of success on AIP that I've seen.
Mickey:Your environment either supports your new habits or makes them
Mickey:harder than they need to be.
Mickey:So today we're going to walk through your AIP Kitchen Starter Kit.
Mickey:What's important, what deserves your attention first, and how to set up
Mickey:your space in a way that supports you through transition, elimination,
Mickey:reintroduction, and then the long-term maintenance that comes after.
Mickey:And I've said this before, kitchen confidence isn't about culinary
Mickey:skill, it's about preparation.
Mickey:And in the updated framework of the Autoimmune Protocol,
Mickey:preparation is foundational.
Mickey:Welcome back to the Autoimmune Wellness Podcast.
Mickey:I'm your host, Mickey Trescott, and alongside those longer
Mickey:Deep Dive and Research Review conversations, I'm continuing this
Mickey:Small Bite series on Thursdays.
Mickey:Shorter, practical episodes designed to help you apply what
Mickey:you're learning in real life.
Mickey:Today's Kitchen Confidence episode is about building a kitchen setup
Mickey:that supports you through transition, elimination, reintroduction and beyond.
Mickey:And before we get started, a quick reminder, this podcast
Mickey:is for informational and educational purposes only and is
Mickey:not intended as medical advice.
Mickey:Let's get into it.
Mickey:Before we talk about what to buy, before we talk about any specialty
Mickey:ingredients or upgrading tools, I want to begin somewhere much less
Mickey:exciting and much more important.
Mickey:We start by clearing and organizing.
Mickey:When people begin AIP, there's often this understandable
Mickey:urge to take action quickly.
Mickey:I know this was me when I first read about the protocol,
Mickey:I just wanted to feel better.
Mickey:And that action frequently looks like wanting to buy something new, maybe some
Mickey:new ingredients, a new appliance, a set of containers, maybe just completely
Mickey:replacing everything in your pantry.
Mickey:And we also have this cultural assumption that improvement requires acquisition.
Mickey:Working on ourselves means that we need to buy something, that doing
Mickey:better means buying better, but that mindset doesn't serve most people
Mickey:very well when it comes to AIP.
Mickey:What's going to serve you well is clarity.
Mickey:So I just want to start here because most of you likely
Mickey:already have a functional kitchen.
Mickey:You probably already own pots, pans, utensils, and some cooking ingredients.
Mickey:You've invested time and money into building your space over the years, and
Mickey:rather than discarding that foundation and just starting over, the more
Mickey:sustainable approach is to assess what you have, organize it thoughtfully,
Mickey:and make a plan for using it well.
Mickey:There's also a cognitive reason for beginning this way.
Mickey:During the transition and the elimination phases, your mental bandwidth is
Mickey:already being asked to stretch.
Mickey:You're going to be learning some new categories of food maybe you
Mickey:weren't eating before, you're going to be observing your symptoms.
Mickey:You might be managing fatigue, pain, family logistics, or work
Mickey:stress on top of all of that.
Mickey:And so even positive change requires energy.
Mickey:So when your pantry is cluttered or visually dominated by foods that
Mickey:don't align with the way that you're trying to eat, every time you open
Mickey:that cabinet, your brain has to sort.
Mickey:That may seem minor, but the small act of filtering accumulates throughout the day.
Mickey:And organization, in this context, isn't just about making
Mickey:something that looks good.
Mickey:It's actually about conserving that mental energy.
Mickey:So when your environment reflects your current goals, you're going to
Mickey:be removing dozens of small decisions.
Mickey:You reduce that visual noise and you create a space where the
Mickey:next step is clear instead of needing you to make a decision.
Mickey:Starting with clearing also creates an opportunity to inventory what you
Mickey:already have that actually works.
Mickey:You might discover you have some oils, spices, some frozen proteins, or some
Mickey:basic tools already in your kitchen that are going to work perfectly well.
Mickey:You might identify items that can simply be stored for later rather than discarded.
Mickey:I'm talking about that stand mixer that you may or may not have gotten
Mickey:on your wedding registry years ago.
Mickey:You definitely don't need to be getting rid of those things, but that
Mickey:might not be serving you right now.
Mickey:And you might actually realize that very little actually needs to be replaced.
Mickey:So this approach honors your resources, it respects the money that you have
Mickey:already spent, and it shifts the focus from accumulation to intention.
Mickey:So before adding anything new to your kitchen, begin by subtracting what's not
Mickey:serving you In this phase, organizing what remains and creating clarity.
Mickey:The first place we're going to start is your pantry.
Mickey:Open the pantry and look for the foods that clearly don't fit where you are
Mickey:right now in your process with AIP.
Mickey:So if you're preparing for elimination, or maybe you're already in it, that
Mickey:might include things like breads, pastas, processed snack foods, packaged items
Mickey:with long ingredient lists, and baking mixes or flours you know you're not
Mickey:going to be using during this phase.
Mickey:Move through carefully and practically, identifying what
Mickey:doesn't align with your current plan.
Mickey:So if that's Modified AIP, or Core AIP, go back to those episodes or look at the
Mickey:resources in my AIP Foundation Series, autoimmune wellness.com/foundations
Mickey:for your free download.
Mickey:You'll be able to see what is included and not included in that phase.
Mickey:And I want to be careful here.
Mickey:This isn't about labeling foods as good or bad.
Mickey:It's about reducing your decision making fatigue.
Mickey:So again, when these items remain front and center, every
Mickey:time you open the cabinet, your brain has to reevaluate them.
Mickey:When I originally went through elimination, this was chocolate.
Mickey:Even though I was not eating chocolate, every time I would open my pantry and see
Mickey:it there, I would be tempted and upset that I just couldn't have a little square.
Mickey:Even if you ultimately decide not to eat that, that small act of
Mickey:filtering, that willpower that you have to use costs energy.
Mickey:My recommendation is to box them up, maybe make a donation pile
Mickey:for items that are going to expire soon, or you think, this is just not
Mickey:going to be for me for a long time.
Mickey:When I first did this, I was diagnosed with celiac disease, so it was really
Mickey:obvious all of the products with gluten we're going to be given away.
Mickey:And the goal is to remove the food you're avoiding from
Mickey:your immediate line of sight.
Mickey:When you open your pantry and see only foods that support your current phase,
Mickey:your space begins to feel aligned instead of conflicting, and that alignment reduces
Mickey:friction before you even start cooking.
Mickey:Next, you're going to want to gather the foods that may not be part of your current
Mickey:phase, but you could return to them later.
Mickey:So depending on, again, whether you're following that Core or Modified AIP lists,
Mickey:that might include nuts and seeds as well as any oils or spices derived from them.
Mickey:Nightshade family ingredients, coffee, chocolate, certain spices.
Mickey:Ghee, rice and legumes.
Mickey:And some of these foods might come back into your routines sooner than
Mickey:you think, especially if you're using that Modified approach.
Mickey:So we're not going to get rid of these, especially since a lot of
Mickey:these things are very shelf stable.
Mickey:We're going to simply relocate them, put them in a box, tape it
Mickey:closed if you need to, and store it somewhere mildly inconvenient,
Mickey:a closet, the garage, a high shelf.
Mickey:Out of sight doesn't just reduce temptation, it reduces that nervous
Mickey:system tension that I was talking about.
Mickey:When you really know something is available.
Mickey:When the food you're not eating isn't visually present, or if it's just
Mickey:a little bit harder to get to, your brain stops making that negotiation.
Mickey:And for those of you who live with partners or family members who aren't
Mickey:following AIP, I know this is a big segment of the community, this doesn't
Mickey:mean that everyone in your household has to eat exactly the same way.
Mickey:What it does mean is that you're going to want to set up some clear zones.
Mickey:If other foods need to stay in the house, designate a specific
Mickey:cabinet or a shelf for them.
Mickey:Keep your AIP staples separate and easily accessible, and you can
Mickey:even label shelves if you need to.
Mickey:Reduce that overlap as much as possible so that you're not trying
Mickey:to just control everyone's food.
Mickey:When you can open your section of the pantry and see only what
Mickey:supports you, decision making becomes simple and that simplicity
Mickey:is going to protect your energy.
Mickey:So part two, once you've cleared the space, the natural impulse is to fill it.
Mickey:And again, this is where I want you to slow down.
Mickey:You definitely do not need an exotic pantry to succeed on AIP, but what
Mickey:you do need are reliable basics that you're actually going to use.
Mickey:Over the years I've seen people spend hundreds of dollars on specialty
Mickey:flours, alternative sweeteners, snack replacements, and baking
Mickey:ingredients before they've even cooked a single simple AIP meal.
Mickey:And this approach usually causes overwhelm and often a lot of waste.
Mickey:And I am just saying, I have definitely been here before.
Mickey:Kitchen confidence comes from mastering a handful of foundational ingredients
Mickey:that make everyday meals easy.
Mickey:So before you start stocking up, here's one practical guideline.
Mickey:Start small.
Mickey:It's so easy to get excited and purchase large bags of specialty flours or multiple
Mickey:oils and spices only to realize that you just don't reach for them that often.
Mickey:So let your habits determine your inventory.
Mickey:If you find yourself using a particular cooking fat daily, then it makes sense
Mickey:to buy a larger container next time.
Mickey:If a certain spice blend becomes a part of your weekly routine, then
Mickey:stocking more of it is practical.
Mickey:AIP becomes more affordable when you focus on simple, repeatable
Mickey:meals instead of substitutions.
Mickey:So my recommendation here is to build that pantry slowly.
Mickey:Let it evolve with you as you discover how you like to cook for AIP, and
Mickey:what ingredients you truly love.
Mickey:The first category is cooking fats.
Mickey:And if there's one thing you prioritize, let it be this.
Mickey:You need stable, reliable cooking fats.
Mickey:I like to have at least one solid cooking fat, these are firm at
Mickey:room temperature and very versatile for sauteing and roasting.
Mickey:Coconut oil has been my mainstay for many years.
Mickey:It's very dependable for medium heat cooking.
Mickey:And if you get it refined, it doesn't have any coconutty flavor.
Mickey:And that being said, if coconut isn't for you and you are on Modified AIP, you can
Mickey:also try ghee, which has a buttery flavor.
Mickey:Other solid fats like duck fat and tallow are options.
Mickey:And again, you don't need to stock them all, but I think having one is handy.
Mickey:And next, I like to have both olive oil and avocado oil.
Mickey:Olive oil is really great for low heat applications like dressings
Mickey:and avocado oil is great for medium to high heat cooking, and if you've
Mickey:never tried it because you don't like the way that avocados taste,
Mickey:you might be surprised to find that it actually has a very mild flavor.
Mickey:So with the exception of ghee, which can only be used for Modified
Mickey:AIP, all of these fats work across both Core and Modified protocols.
Mickey:So if you have them on hand, you can make a meal out of just about anything.
Mickey:The next category is simple flavor builders, apple cider vinegar, coconut
Mickey:aminos, fish sauce, if you tolerate it well and don't struggle with histamine
Mickey:sensitivity, which I know is a very small group of the AIP community.
Mickey:These ingredients don't look exciting sitting on a shelf, but
Mickey:they really do transform food.
Mickey:A splash of acid brightens a dish instantly, a little bit of umami,
Mickey:which is what you get with coconut aminos and fish sauce, makes simple
Mickey:proteins and vegetables feel satisfying.
Mickey:And when your meals taste good, adherence becomes easier.
Mickey:So if you want to go a little bit further here, stocking some other vinegars
Mickey:to mix in dressings like red or white wine vinegar, maybe a balsamic can be
Mickey:handy, but definitely not necessary.
Mickey:The next category is proteins, and this is one that a lot of people overlook.
Mickey:Shelf stable or ready to use proteins include things like canned
Mickey:salmon, tuna, sardines, oysters.
Mickey:I have a whole drawer in my pantry devoted to canned fish because
Mickey:they are such a problem solver and they are so nutrient dense.
Mickey:This could also include jerky without additives that are not included on AIP.
Mickey:Gelatin or collagen for broths or simple desserts.
Mickey:And if you're on Modified AIP, it also includes pea, rice, or hemp
Mickey:protein for making smoothies.
Mickey:Of all of those, pea is my personal favorite.
Mickey:Now, these are not cheats.
Mickey:They're great to have on hand for low capacity days.
Mickey:Having a protein that doesn't require prep can be the difference between
Mickey:staying aligned with your elimination plan and defaulting to whatever's easiest.
Mickey:Next we're going to talk about spices and flavor builders.
Mickey:Again, start simple.
Mickey:This is somewhere that I think a lot of people can go overboard
Mickey:and buy too many things.
Mickey:There's only a few dried herbs that I think really make
Mickey:sense in a regular rotation.
Mickey:Thyme, rosemary, oregano.
Mickey:Ground spices like turmeric, ginger, garlic, cinnamon.
Mickey:That's it.
Mickey:A good sea salt, maybe even a couple types like a smoked salt, I love to use this in
Mickey:like an AIP chili or a stew or a finishing salt, but you don't need to go crazy.
Mickey:You just need a handful of reliable combinations that make vegetables
Mickey:and proteins feel interesting.
Mickey:Flavor is insurance against compliance.
Mickey:When food feels abundant and enjoyable, the process feels sustainable, but you
Mickey:definitely don't need to go out and buy a million spices in order to succeed.
Mickey:Before you start building out a pantry full of specialty ingredients, I want
Mickey:to be really clear about something.
Mickey:Treats are not necessary to begin or be successful in elimination,
Mickey:so you do not need alternative flours, multiple sweeteners, snack
Mickey:replacements, or baking projects to successfully start or complete AIP.
Mickey:Those foods can absolutely have a place.
Mickey:And for some people who really enjoy baking, it's a hobby for them, or
Mickey:maybe they really want to have a little sweet treat after dinner or something.
Mickey:This can come in later in the process and they can be enjoyable and
Mickey:supportive, but they're not foundational.
Mickey:So if you're in transition or you're beginning elimination, your priority is
Mickey:building consistent, nourishing meals, not recreating familiar foods in AIP form.
Mickey:It's completely understandable to want to soften the change by
Mickey:replacing bread with maybe an AIP bread or cookies with AIP cookies,
Mickey:the instinct makes a lot of sense.
Mickey:But the time that you're going to take in actually making those recipes and
Mickey:the money that you're going to spend in buying all of those ingredients to
Mickey:make really good renditions of those foods are going to add complexity,
Mickey:cost, and frustration at a time when you're still learning the basics.
Mickey:So start with meals, simple proteins, vegetables, cooking fats, flavor builders
Mickey:that make the foods more enjoyable.
Mickey:That's your foundation.
Mickey:As you stock your pantry, ask yourself, does this ingredient
Mickey:help me build a simple meal?
Mickey:If the answer is no, it might not need to be a part of your starter kit yet.
Mickey:You can always expand later, but in the beginning, clarity and
Mickey:simplicity will serve you far better than variety and novelty.
Mickey:Now that we've talked about what belongs in your pantry, let's talk about
Mickey:your kitchen itself and specifically the tools that you are going to use.
Mickey:This is another area where it's easy to assume you need to upgrade
Mickey:everything before you begin, and like I said in the opening, you don't.
Mickey:Most people already have a functional kitchen, and if you're working
Mickey:within financial limits, which most of us are, that's also important.
Mickey:AIP doesn't require you to replace your entire cookware collection.
Mickey:So start by looking at what you already own.
Mickey:Open your drawers, check your cabinets, take inventory.
Mickey:Do you have a cutting board that feels stable?
Mickey:Do you have one knife that works reasonably well that
Mickey:maybe you could get sharpened?
Mickey:Do you have a nice pot that's large enough to cook a batch of soup or stew?
Mickey:If the answer is yes, you're already in great shape.
Mickey:Over the years, I have written more than 500 AIP recipes, and the ones
Mickey:that I return to most often, and the ones that people report that they're
Mickey:making over and over and over in their kitchens, rely on the most basic
Mickey:tools and the simplest ingredients.
Mickey:A solid pot, a dependable skillet, a sharp knife.
Mickey:That's where consistency lives.
Mickey:So what matters most isn't having more tools or all the tools, it's having a
Mickey:few basics that function well enough to make cooking straightforward.
Mickey:If something truly isn't working, maybe you have a pan that everything
Mickey:sticks to, a knife that just can't be sharpened anymore, then consider
Mickey:replacing that one item intentionally.
Mickey:Thrift stores, secondhand marketplaces and community swaps can be excellent
Mickey:sources for quality pieces at lower cost, but avoid the assumption that
Mickey:a new appliance is just going to miraculously solve your consistency issue.
Mickey:The goal is a kitchen that works for you, not one that looks impressive.
Mickey:Practical, functional, sustainable, and within your budget.
Mickey:That's what we're going for here.
Mickey:So with that said, let's get into some more specifics.
Mickey:If you're transitioning to a more real food, home-cooked way of eating, these are
Mickey:the tools that truly make a difference: a stable cutting board, one good chef's
Mickey:knife that fits your hand and stays sharp.
Mickey:A large soup pot or Dutch oven, ideally six quarts or more for batch cooking.
Mickey:A heavy bottom skillet, like cast iron or stainless steel, at least one baking
Mickey:dish, a few mixing bowls, measuring cups if you plan to use recipes.
Mickey:And then basic utensils: a wooden spoon, tongs, a ladle, a spatula.
Mickey:And then some storage containers for leftovers.
Mickey:And that's it.
Mickey:I hope you're thinking I have most of those items.
Mickey:Quality basics reduce resistance to cooking and that matters, especially
Mickey:during transition and elimination when you're building those new habits.
Mickey:Now that we've covered the basic tools, let's talk about some advanced tools
Mickey:that can make AIP more convenient, but they're definitely not prerequisites.
Mickey:If I were to recommend one upgrade for convenience, it would be the Instant Pot.
Mickey:It's a pressure cooker, slow cooker combo that allows you to make bone broth,
Mickey:soups, shredded meats, and simple one pot meals with minimal hands on time.
Mickey:And for people managing fatigue, parenting full-time work or flares,
Mickey:that can be incredibly supportive.
Mickey:I will link my favorite Instant Pot in the show notes.
Mickey:After that, I recommend choosing either a food processor or a high powered blender,
Mickey:but you definitely don't need both.
Mickey:A food processor is helpful for chopping vegetables and making things like pate or
Mickey:really thick, blended sauces and purees.
Mickey:If you have arthritis or trouble chopping, you can use the shredder blade and throw
Mickey:a bunch of onions and garlic and root vegetables for like a soup or a stew.
Mickey:A high powered blender can also handle some thinner soups,
Mickey:smoothies, and thicker mixtures.
Mickey:A freezer, if you have the space, is another powerful tool.
Mickey:It allows you to batch cook, buy meat in bulk, store broth, and protect
Mickey:your energy on low capacity days.
Mickey:And what all of these tools have in common is this: they help
Mickey:save your energy, and that is so important when you have an autoimmune
Mickey:disease and energy is of concern.
Mickey:AIP isn't something that you only do when you're feeling great.
Mickey:In fact, most of us come to it when we are not feeling our best.
Mickey:It needs to work when you're tired, when you're flaring, when life gets busy.
Mickey:And so tools that reduce that effort are tools that protect your consistency.
Mickey:So once you've cleared your pantry, stocked a few foundational ingredients,
Mickey:the next step isn't buying something new, it's maintaining what you already have.
Mickey:So before rearranging anything, take a few minutes to assess what you have.
Mickey:Does that knife need sharpening?
Mickey:Does the cutting board need to be cleaned and oiled?
Mickey:Does your Instant Pot need a new sealing ring or insert?
Mickey:Are your pans clean, dry, and ready to go?
Mickey:Often cooking feels harder than it should be because something
Mickey:small isn't functioning well.
Mickey:A dull knife makes prep exhausting.
Mickey:It's my number one complaint if I ever stay at an Airbnb and they say
Mickey:that the kitchen is fully stocked and I open the drawer and the
Mickey:knife can't cut anything, right?
Mickey:A warped pan that makes everything stick.
Mickey:A missing insert that makes you avoid an appliance entirely, you're now storing
Mickey:this giant Instant Pot that you can't use.
Mickey:Maintenance is practical.
Mickey:It protects the investment that you've already made, and it can dramatically
Mickey:improve how your kitchen feels without requiring you to buy something new.
Mickey:So once your tools are in good working order, then arrange your kitchen so
Mickey:cooking is easier than not cooking.
Mickey:Start with your counters, clear off anything that doesn't directly support
food prep:mail, paperwork, decorative items, appliances that you rarely use.
food prep:Even reclaiming a small stretch of uninterrupted workspace
food prep:can change how cooking feels.
food prep:When you don't have to move things out of the way before you begin,
food prep:you're more likely to start.
food prep:Next, create a simple prep zone.
food prep:Keep your cutting board, knife, salt, and primary cooking fat
food prep:within reach of each other.
food prep:If you have to cross the kitchen multiple times just to chop vegetables, you're
food prep:going to add unnecessary friction.
food prep:In your pantry, group items by function.
food prep:Keep all those cooking fats together.
food prep:Keep the flavor builders together and keep the quick proteins together.
food prep:And those clear groupings reduce searching and reduce hesitation
food prep:at the end of a long day.
food prep:And when you're about to go to the store, it's really easy to look
food prep:and see and put things on your list that you need to pick up.
food prep:So if you share your kitchen with others who aren't following
food prep:AIP, designate consistent shelves or containers for your food.
food prep:And finally, make low energy cooking visible.
food prep:If you batch cook, label your containers clearly.
food prep:If you freeze broth, stack it accessibly.
food prep:And if canned fish is part of your safety net, don't bury it
food prep:in the very back of the pantry.
food prep:If you want to see how other people organize their kitchens on AIP, especially
food prep:if you're looking for inspiration or practical ideas, I encourage
food prep:you to explore the AIP Kitchen Tour series over at Autoimmune Wellness.
food prep:In that series, we featured real kitchens from people all over
food prep:the world-- small apartments, shared family kitchens, minimalist
food prep:setups, rural homes, urban spaces.
food prep:Every layout looks a little different, and that's the point.
food prep:There isn't one correct way to do AIP in terms of setting up your kitchen and
food prep:what you'll see instead are functional spaces, organized in ways that make
food prep:sense for the people who use them.
food prep:You can find the full AIP Kitchen Tour Index at Autoimmune Wellness
food prep:. I'll link it in the show notes.
food prep:Today we talked about how the way you set up your kitchen has a direct
food prep:impact on how sustainable AIP feels.
food prep:When your pantry is clear, your tools are functional, and your most
food prep:used ingredients are easy to access, cooking becomes more straightforward.
food prep:That practicality supports consistency, and consistency is what allows
food prep:the protocol to work as intended.
food prep:Preparation is a part of the framework, and I hope this episode has inspired
food prep:you to set up your own kitchen.
food prep:If you'd like a deeper look at the updated AIP framework, including how preparation
food prep:supports transition, elimination, reintroduction, and long-term maintenance,
food prep:I cover all of that in my forthcoming book, The New Autoimmune Protocol.
food prep:Pre-orders are open now, and the book brings together the updated guidance
food prep:and practical tools so that you can move through each phase with clarity.
food prep:I'll see you in the next episode.