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Recovery Nutrition

Feed Your Recovery

What you eat directly shapes your neurotransmitters, cravings, mood, and the speed of brain repair. Food is not a side issue in recovery — it is a core tool.

How addiction depletes you

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B vitamins

Alcohol destroys up to 80% of thiamine (B1) stores — directly causing Wernicke's encephalopathy in severe depletion

Magnesium

Chronic alcohol use causes urinary magnesium wasting — low magnesium amplifies anxiety, muscle cramps, and poor sleep

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Zinc

Opioids and alcohol both suppress zinc absorption — zinc deficiency impairs taste, immune function, and testosterone

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Omega-3

Substance use depletes DHA in brain cell membranes, slowing neural repair and worsening depression and cognitive fog

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Protein

Many people in active addiction skip meals entirely — protein deficiency means your brain cannot synthesize dopamine or serotonin

Why cravings are often nutritional

Many cravings are not purely psychological — they are your body sending biochemical signals. Low blood sugar feels almost identical to withdrawal. Magnesium deficiency creates restlessness and anxiety that can be mistaken for a craving. Protein deficiency impairs the dopamine system, making you seek stimulation.

When a craving hits, the fastest diagnostic is to eat something high-protein with complex carbs first. If the craving subsides within 20 minutes, it was nutritional. If it does not, it is psychological — and you address it with your recovery tools.

Timeline of nutritional recovery

Your gut is inflamed. Digestion is impaired. The priority is eating regularly every 3–4 hours — even small amounts — to prevent blood sugar crashes that masquerade as cravings. High-protein, low-sugar foods. Hydration above all else.

Protein at every meal

Complex carbs over simple sugars

8+ glasses water daily

B-complex supplement immediately

Meal planner

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Dopamine rebuild

Maximizes amino acid supply for neurotransmitter synthesis. Protein at every meal keeps dopamine and serotonin precursors flowing.

Today's meals

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Breakfast

Egg scramble (3 eggs, ground turkey, spinach, mushrooms) + whole grain toast

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Lunch

Grilled chicken breast + brown rice + steamed broccoli + olive oil

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Dinner

Baked salmon fillet + quinoa + roasted asparagus + lemon

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Snack

Greek yogurt (plain, full-fat) + walnuts + berries

Nutrient tracker

Track your key recovery nutrients. Tap each to see why it matters, food sources, and deficiency signs.

Getting enough
Not sure
Deficient

Blood sugar and cravings

The craving-glucose connection

When blood glucose drops below ~70 mg/dL, the brain activates the same stress-response system that drives substance cravings. The physiological experience is nearly identical: restlessness, irritability, difficulty concentrating, an urgent need for relief.

For people in recovery, this can trigger a craving episode that feels like a genuine urge to use — but is actually hypoglycemia. Stabilizing blood sugar is one of the highest-leverage interventions in early recovery.

Hypoglycemia signs in recovery

Sudden intense craving that arrives fast and feels urgent

Irritability or emotional flattening with no obvious cause

Shakiness, trembling, or light-headedness

Difficulty concentrating or thinking clearly

Heart racing or palpitations

Sweating when you should not be warm

Glycemic index guide for recovery

Oats (rolled)

GI ~55 — slow glucose release, stable energy 3–4 hours

Low GI

Lentils

GI ~30 — extremely stable, high fiber and protein

Low GI

Sweet potato (baked)

GI ~54 — nutrient-dense slow carb, excellent recovery food

Low GI

Brown rice

GI ~68 — better than white rice, pair with protein or fat

Medium GI

Banana (ripe)

GI ~62 — great pre-workout, pair with nut butter to slow spike

Medium GI

Whole grain bread

GI ~65 — much better than white, always choose whole grain

Medium GI

White bread

GI ~75 — rapid spike and crash, triggers cravings in recovery

High GI

Sugary cereal

GI ~80+ — one of the worst breakfast choices in recovery

High GI

White rice

GI ~73 — spikes blood sugar quickly, use brown rice instead

High GI

Meal timing in recovery

7–8am

Breakfast

Never skip — breaks the overnight fast before blood sugar crashes

11am–12pm

Lunch

Keep to a consistent window. Erratic eating schedules dysregulate cortisol

2–3pm

Afternoon snack

The most important craving-prevention window — do not skip this one

6–7pm

Dinner

Eat before 8pm to allow digestion before sleep

Optional

Evening snack

Small protein + fat snack if dinner was early — prevents 2am blood sugar drop

Anti-craving snacks

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Almond butter + apple slices

Fat and fiber slow glucose — kills sugar cravings without a spike

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Hard-boiled eggs + cherry tomatoes

Protein + vitamin C — fills you and supports cortisol regulation

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Greek yogurt + walnuts + berries

Probiotics + omega-3 + antioxidants — the power combo

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Mixed nuts + dark chocolate

Magnesium + natural dopamine trigger — genuinely satisfying without the crash

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Hummus + carrots/celery

Fiber and protein that blunts hunger cravings for 2+ hours

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Frozen blueberries + cashews

BDNF support + protein — eat frozen for a slower, satisfying pace

Gut-brain axis

How addiction disrupts your microbiome

Your gut contains approximately 100 trillion bacteria that produce neurotransmitters, regulate inflammation, and communicate directly with your brain via the vagus nerve. Alcohol devastates this ecosystem within weeks of heavy use.

Alcohol increases intestinal permeability — a condition called "leaky gut" — allowing bacterial endotoxins to enter the bloodstream and reach the brain, causing neuroinflammation that drives depression, anxiety, and cognitive impairment in early recovery.

Gut healing timeline

Week 1–2

Gut inflammation peaks then begins to subside. Digestion may be uncomfortable — eat gently with cooked, soft foods.

Month 1

Intestinal permeability begins closing. Probiotic foods start colonizing. Bloating and gas reduce.

Month 3

Microbiome diversity measurably improving. Mood more stable. Better absorption of nutrients from food.

Month 6–12

Gut microbiome approaching baseline diversity. Gut-brain axis functioning normally. Serotonin production stabilized.

Probiotic foods

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Plain Greek yogurt

Lactobacillus and Bifidobacterium strains — directly restores gut flora damaged by alcohol

Serving: 1/2 cup daily — plain, unsweetened, full-fat

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Kefir

Contains 12+ probiotic strains, more diverse than yogurt alone. Supports serotonin production

Serving: 1 cup daily, mixed into smoothies or drunk straight

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Sauerkraut

Fermented cabbage — rich in Lactobacillus plantarum, shown to reduce anxiety in animal studies

Serving: 2 tbsp daily — raw, refrigerated (not shelf-stable)

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Kimchi

Korean fermented vegetables — diverse probiotic strains plus anti-inflammatory compounds from chili

Serving: 2–4 tbsp with dinner — adds flavor and microbiome diversity

Miso soup

Fermented soybean paste with Aspergillus oryzae — gentle, warming, easy to digest in early recovery

Serving: 1 cup at any meal, made from unpasteurized white or red miso

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Kombucha (low-sugar)

Fermented tea with beneficial yeasts and bacteria — choose brands under 6g sugar per serving

Serving: 8 oz, 3–4 times per week — do not exceed due to trace alcohol content

Prebiotic foods — feeding the good bacteria

Probiotics introduce beneficial bacteria. Prebiotics are the fiber that feeds and sustains them. Both are necessary.

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Garlic

Feeds Bifidobacterium — one of the most potent prebiotic foods

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Onions

Inulin and FOS fiber — selective food for beneficial bacteria

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Oats

Beta-glucan feeds Lactobacillus and reduces gut inflammation

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Slightly unripe banana

Resistant starch that passes to colon to feed good bacteria

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Legumes

Chickpeas, lentils, black beans — highest fiber diversity in any food group

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Jerusalem artichoke

Highest inulin content of any food — even a small amount has major prebiotic effect

Supplement guide

Always consult your doctor first

Supplements can interact with medications including Suboxone, naltrexone, antidepressants, and others. This guide is educational — your treatment provider should approve any supplementation protocol.

Hydration tracker

Today

0 of 8 glasses

8 more to hit your daily goal.

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Liver detox support

The liver processes toxins dissolved in water. Dehydration slows clearance of metabolic waste and medication byproducts.

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Mood and cognition

Even mild dehydration (1–2% body weight) measurably worsens mood, increases anxiety, and impairs working memory.

Energy and fatigue

Fatigue is one of the first signs of dehydration. Many people in recovery mistake dehydration fatigue for PAWS — water first, always.

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Medication absorption

Many recovery medications (naltrexone, bupropion, antidepressants) have better absorption and fewer side effects when you are well-hydrated.

Foods to avoid in early recovery

These are not permanent restrictions — they are early-recovery priorities. The first 90 days are when the brain is most vulnerable to reward-circuit disruption.

Cross-addiction and food

Cross-addiction occurs when the same dopamine reward circuit that drove substance use is activated by a different stimulus — most commonly sugar, caffeine, and ultra-processed foods. The mechanism is not metaphorical: it is the same neural pathway.

This is why many people in early sobriety develop intense sugar cravings or compulsive eating patterns. Awareness of cross-addiction does not mean avoiding all pleasure — it means building a stable nutritional foundation before reintroducing stimulating foods.

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Nutrition is medicine

Every meal is an opportunity. You do not need to be perfect — consistent, nourishing choices compound over weeks and months into measurable changes in how your brain works and how recovery feels.