Guest guest Posted December 19, 2005 Report Share Posted December 19, 2005 Our group aims at sharing ayurveda related knowledge. Author would like to share something he learnt in Indian kitchen. Most recommended diet in Ayurveda is Khitchri, easier to digest being the main reason. When this author recommends it to many patients, they are afraid to eat or they flately refuse for interesting reasons. Since Khitchri contains almost 70% rice and rice has more calories, my obesity will increase or my blood sugar will increase, or it may cause flatulence are the notions patients have. Similar sitution was that Oil-filled nuts were like poison during the long "fear of fat" era. But now, in the new "learning-to-love-good- fats" era, nuts have won back their hippie-era status as health foods and especially as heart healthy foods. http://www.themonitor.com/SiteProcessor.cfm? Template=/GlobalTemplates/Details.cfm&StoryID=10693&Section=Valley% 20Life Similarly, people who are on the Atkins diet avoid all sugar (you bet we do!), as well as so-called "healthful foods" which include rice. http://www.commonvoice.com/article.asp?colid=3678 A south indian pregnant mom wrote: "I am im my 29th week of pregnancy and i am detected with Gestational Diabetics.The carbohydrate food diet suggested by the nutrition and Dietist are not helping me much. I am eating less cabrohydrate and less food than before pregnancy.Still there is little high reading .I feel i am forced to eat fatty(nuts) food to fill my stomach I was not normal weight , was doing regular excercise before pregnancy. But now this diet is making me less energtic. Can you please suggest me some good vegeterian diet for this and also any vegetable/things that can induce more insulin to keep my Blood sugar normal. Dietician has told me that fruits, lentils ,rice, yogurt has carbohydrates. I dont know how to get proteins ,minerals ,vitamins if i cant eat lentils ,fruits, yogurt. Please help me here." Author advised to eat Idlis and curd rice, what she had eaten from her own birth. As a result, her diabetes remained in control and child birth was OK, a sweet outcome of gestational diabetes. This requires some discussion and author thought this as appropriate time for such a discussion. 2006 is just round the corner and it is better that we do some clean up of our biases. India has hundreds of different varieties of Rice. India exports rice to neighbour countries and every year the exports increase: http://news.webindia123.com/news/showdetails.asp? id=186574&n_date=20051209&cat=India South India, Orissa, West Bengal, Assam, parts of Kashmir are states where rice is a major part of meal. Rice has mainly carbohydrates with negligible protein content. Fat and minerals almost nil. 100 gms of rice will give 300 to 400 calories. The proteins in rice, when combine with proteins in green gram, Bengal gram, mysore gram Toor dhal, soya bean or other legumes, more nutrition results. On this count, Khitchri is a good nutritious food. Many housewives in Gujarat cook rice with milk to make a Payasam which is very nutritious, but should be taken without sugar. Similarly milk products such as curd, yoghurt, buttermilk or Gujarathi Kadhi (made from buttermilk) also harmoniously mix with rice to increase its nutritional value. Amongst all varieties of rice, the one polished manually is the best for digestion and nutritional value. However, such a rice is difficult to find in Metros. A farmer friend sends a quintal of such organic rice to this author every year. Rice, a major food in India, has sweet Vipaka. It converts to sweet taste on digestion, becomes sugar. Being a cooling food, reduces pitta vitiation. In villages, even today, women remove water from the vessel when rice is partially cooked and serve it to children. This is termed `Pej' in Marathi and `Osaman' in Gujrati language. Very light for digestion and rich in nutrition, can be compared to mothers milk. Give to children when they are suffering from fever, mumps, measles, ring worm etc. It has natural gum inside, similar to cooked rice. Author remembers using cooked rice as gum to make kites and its thread during childhood. Post offices in villages keep a paste made from rice floor to stick covers and stamps. Rice is very easy to digest and pacifies pitta. It causes slight increase in Kapha and Vata, but rice is also `Vrisya' meaning strengthens semen. Ayurvedic texts recommend eating milk, rice, dates to increase and strengthen semen. By eating rice as a major diet, voice improves and becomes strong in volume too. Those suffering from hyperacidity or GERD need not be afraid of rice. It is necessary to improve digestion first. With rice and milk, rice and curd (fermented just for 4-5 hours) will take care of acidity as well as loose motions. Bengalees eat much more rice along with fish curry and south Indians will die if they are starved of rice. Many south Indian sweets cooked on festive occasions use rice. They eat Idli, dosa and so many different varieties of rice, that even their mention salivated this authors mouth. Having spent one third of life in south India, author adopted their food style too. Despite eating so much rice with Rasam, Sambhar, Buttermilk, the proportion of obese people is very less in these communities as compared to North Indians and Gujratis in India! And if you compare smartness in movements, supple bodies, proportionate muscles, South Indians and Bengalees will outsmart North Indians. Due to industrialization, following western culture, fast life style, the process of removing water while cooking rice is being forgotten. Pressure cooker does not permit this. Another food item getting outdated is use of butter milk or whey. Ayurveda has books written on just buttermilk alone. The number of families where Rice bread is being eaten is also declining. Basmati rice is well known all over world. But this rice, if taken excess in cooked form with ghee (as in Pulao) along with Chapati, Paratha, or rice bread (Bhakri) the digestion reduces causing gas, acidity. Pulao is maximum consumed in Cities, where sedentary lifestyle is predominant. While calorific value of rice and wheat is similar, their structure differs. If one eats wheat in the same manner as rice, 72% glucose one obtains from wheat. The phosphorus in wheat gets removed if floor is ground in electric mill. Vitamin B1 (thiamine), a nutrient is found in brown rice but not polished white rice: http://www.sciencedaily.com/releases/2005/12/051217005431.htm It is recommended that whole grains such as rice may be added to diet to correct mineral deficiencies: http://www.infozine.com/news/stories/op/storiesView/sid/11839/ Those who eat rice, should remember that the true benefit can be obtained only by chewing rice to fine paste. Mothers who see their children swallowing rice without chewing much, they over-cook it so that less chewing will digest. Though such rice becomes very soft, its nutritional quality reduces. Similarly when we add Toor dhal, spices such as chillies, tamarind, jaggery, sour items, the nutritional value of rice reduces. Extra cooked rice may be useful only to elderlies with most of teeth missing. Gujaratis often mix floors of Jwar, Bajra, Maze etc in rice floor, add curd for fermentation and make Vadas by frying next morning. Such a ready mix sells as `Gotano Lot' in Ahmedabad. This is unhealthy. Similarly, left over rice during night is given a sauting next morning and given to family members so that it need not be thrown as waste. But this type of rice induces acidity, as experienced by many. It tastes good while eating, but burning in food pipe or stomach after an hour is what one has to bear with. Tasty items such as `Bhajiya', `Muthia' are popular items in Gujarat, made from left over rice. If eaten infrequently, they may not cause problems, but those suffering from pitta disorder, be careful if you are served these items. Gujarati Dhokla is well known even in U.S. and Canada where motels run by Patels from Gujarat serve it. It is made by fermenting rice and steaming it like Idlis. If taken freshly made along with raw oil, ghee, it is easy to digest and nutritious. One can add a a little turmeric, ginger, green chilli, Saindhav salt to make it tasty and salivating. And finally a tip for boosting male fertility: Idlis amd Meduvada, due their content of Urid dhal is a good `Vrisya' food, as is `Adadiya' laddus, a gujarati item, right season for them being winter, running already. Dr Bhate Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted December 23, 2005 Report Share Posted December 23, 2005 ayurveda, Guru Khalsa <greatyoga> wrote: > A few months ago, a couple who were both overweight > asked me to recommend something for losing weight. I > recommended kitcheree and also triphala. They both > said they gained weight. They said they did the > kitcheree but did not get the triphala. They did cut > out the junk foods they were eating and said they felt > a little better but were dismayed that they gained > weight. Both tended to be pitta. Would you know why > they would gain weight on this diet? Dear Guru Khalsa The answer to your querry is provided at much more length in message# 3820. No diet or slimming medicine will reduce obesity till liver is made fat burning rather than fat generating organ. This is especially so when the patient has 'Pitta' unbalance, as mentioned in message#3820. Dr Bhate Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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