My body definitely liked to transition. Raw eggs, butter, coconut oil, sashimi salmon, etc all are staples here. I steam my vegetables or else juice them. I'm not into digesting large quantities of raw cellulose. People in Ayurveda and chinese medicine do this a lot. It is coming to winter here and I will probably need higher quantities of steamed veggies, fats, and animal products. I agree with GS on the building up of reserves. I mean from a logical standpoint; our bodies won't want anything that they don't need.
1. Make sure the fats (butter, coconut oil, olive oil, avocados, olives, egg yolks, etc) are raw. They are super easy to digest and don't tax the liver like cooked fats
2. Add salt (even to raw food). Some health challenges require more salt for a while. Adrenal/hormone issues is a good example. I have noticed that over time, my bodies requests for salt have gone down dramatically
3. Sometimes just warming the food or leaving it on the counter before eating makes a huge difference. For instance, some raw eggs warmed on the counter and swished around in your mouth before swallowing are way different "yin/yang" wise then downing some super-chilled raw eggs from the fridge. Remember raw can be what, under 115 degrees or so? So you can heat it, just not much.
Those are my ideas. I wouldn't stress out about not being 100% raw. That is a dogma in my opinion. People have been living full, healthy lives on less than all raw diets. Actually, if you view some of the longest lived people on the planet, I don't think I have seen one 100% raw foodist. They usually cite spirituality, family relationships, fun, happiness, and good diet as the reasons for their longevity. I just try to evolve into it. However, I have no intention of eating massive amounts of raw vegetables, etc in the future. Oh, and take some fermented foods with the cooked foods/veggies to help digest better.