I've been about 90%+ raw for the last month, after getting 're'interested in it from Cherie Soria's "Raw Food Revolution" book.
The most "unraw" I've had during that time is isolated ingredients (nutritional yeast, frozen peas or corn thawed out--it's blanched before freezing, so is not raw) and maybe one food item a day every few days (a mung bean stew, a veggie pocket).
I start the mornings with a huge green smoothie (about 70% fruits, including frozen banana most times, and 30$ greens like kale or celery or romaine or sprouts). One other meal is a big green and veggie salad (like a base of 1/2-1 head of romaine, cut in chiffonade--that makes it really compact down, and it's very pretty, IMO!)
I've been able to find some few raw foods at a coop (lasagne, pâtés, etc.), but for the most part, have been making my own.
I've been making lots of 'stuff' like wraps, almond milk (I took some time to soak and peel almonds, and the milk was delicious! just added a date, some vanilla and salt), some other dehydrated foods, a luscious golden dressing (though I mixed up the recipe, as there were two recipes on facing pages with the same initial ingredients, and I ended up combining the two--turned out great anyway!).
The only stuff that went pretty much straight to the compost was a horrid apple-kale soup (from the Soria book---she claims it's delicious, but unless using a granny smith apple takes it a whole other way, she is dead wrong!) and one of my green drinks that was not that tasty.
I intended to just start learning some raw techniques (or 'relearning,' as I've toyed with raw off and on for a while, and have all the equipment: a dehydrator, a Vitamix, a juicer--though I haven't used that much--a spiralizer), but I got more into it.
My short-term intent is to break some bad habits I'd gotten into foodwise, and to clean up my tastebuds (it really works! I don't have much of a craving for the trigger foods that were getting me in trouble).
My longterm intent is to go as much raw as works for me (I'm thinking 80%+ in summer, 60%+ in winter, but I'm not making any hard-and-fast rules for myself) and to add some raw foods to my repertoire that I can use in place of cooked foods (I haven't explored raw desserts much yet, but I intend to).
I've been rereading the raw books I already had, and getting some more, and culling those I think are not good (either because the recipes are way high in fat, like the Botenko recipe books, or because the info is questionable, like Douglas Graham's recommendation to eat 80% fruits, or Matt Monarch's off-the-wall claim that the reason fruitarians start losing their hair and teeth is because their diet is too pure for the environment they live in. Um...couldn't be because a diet of just fruits is lacking in nutrients, has too much sugar and acids for the teeth--especially if you don't practice good oral hygiene--and is unbalanced?).
Actually, Natalia Roses's second book was one I just got rid of, but I don't remember why off hand. I did keep her first one, but there are others I think are better.