Vegan and we would love a daughter!!
My husband and I have our hearts set on a daughter. I'm a vegan, which means that I eat no meat, fish, dairy, or eggs, though sometimes I will eat honey. My husband is a vegetarian and a huge coffee drinker. We both love our pastas and our curries.
I'm familiar with the timing methods, which we can of course use without altering. The dietary one however is a difficult one to navigate. Mainly we're curious about which vegetables, fruits, nuts, grains, and legumes are good to load up on and to avoid, and if things such as tofu, coffee, and dark chocolate are more likely to sway girl or boy. I'm also a big herbal tea drinker, so info on how that affects things is always appreciated as well, though I'm happy to just drink raspberry leaf tea (which I've heard sways girl and helps with reproductive health) if need be. Other foods I consume enough of where they should be considered, and I haven't found any good solid info on which gender they sway, are quinoa, kale, ginger, many other spices, seaweed, dark chocolate, cashew nuts, Brazil nuts, and maple syrup. We also eat a lot of brown rice and wholemeal pasta, but are wondering if we should switch to the whiter varieties while trying to conceive.
As of right now, on the dietary front, I am thinking that the French Gender Diet, with rice milk substituted for cow's milk, is the way to go, as it requires little to no meat and fish anyway, and I can stay on it for a while if it takes a while to conceive. Though one thing we eat a lot of which it says is forbidden is tomato sauce. I know that the varieties sold in many countries have long ingredient lists, but we're in the Netherlands, and the tomato paste which we use LOTS of on our pasta has only 1 ingredient, tomatoes, so would this be OK to keep using? And am I on the right track with my idea of modified French Gender Diet? And are there any foods or supplements that would be good for my husband to take?
As for anything else that may affect the outcome I enjoy fitness, particularly yoga. I practice Ashtanga yoga 6 mornings per week, which I definitely need to maintain no matter what to keep my sanity, and I also do cycling for fitness most days, and the odd pilates or kickboxing class here and there.
Thanks for any help that you guys can give. We will let our child make their own choice about what she/he eats, I just don't want to compromise my principles concerning what goes in my mouth at any point.