All Access — The Complete Collection
Module 1: Welcome to Roe's Gratitude
The Sacred Foundation
The Seven Sacred Teas
Ritual Practice and Integration
Advanced Tea Wisdom
Your Financial Foundation
Life Insurance Demystified
Legacy Planning Essentials
Building Generational Wealth
Foundations of Ancestral Plant-Based Cooking
The Ancestral Foods Library
Meal Prep and Kitchen Systems
The Recipe Vault
Legumes and Ancient Grains — The Protein and Fiber Medicine
The belief that plant proteins are “incomplete” has led to the misconception that plant-based eaters must obsessively combine proteins at every meal. The reality: specific legume-grain combinations — the ones that appear across every ancestral food culture on earth — are complementary in their amino acid profiles.
The ancestral pairings:
- Rice and black-eyed peas (West African and Caribbean)
- Millet and groundnut stew (West African)
- Injera (teff flatbread) and lentil wat (Ethiopian)
- Corn tortillas and black beans (Central American)
- Rice and dal (South Asian)
Legume Preparation Science
Soaking dried legumes before cooking significantly reduces antinutrients:
- Phytic acid: Binds calcium, zinc, iron, and magnesium. 8 to 12 hours of soaking reduces phytic acid by 40 to 60%.
- Lectins: Soaking and thorough cooking to boiling temperatures deactivates lectins entirely.
- Oligosaccharides: The compounds responsible for gas and bloating are drawn out into the soak water.
Ancient Grain Profiles
Millet: When allowed to ferment overnight, the porridge develops beneficial lactic acid bacteria and a gentle sour flavor. The fermentation pre-digests the starch.
Teff Injera: The 3-day fermentation process transforms teff flour into a bubbly, tangy sourdough flatbread, dramatically increasing iron absorption.
Fonio Pilaf: Cooks in 5 minutes — the fastest-cooking ancient grain. Toasting fonio briefly before adding water develops a nutty depth.
