Guest guest Posted January 12, 2007 Report Share Posted January 12, 2007 http://www.macrobiotics.nl/encyclopedia/encyclopedia_b.html The Kushi Institute of Europe Beans are traditionally eaten around the world as a complement to whole cereal grains. In Mesoamerica, people eat black beans or pinto beans. In the Middle East and South Asia, they eat lentils and other pulses. In the Far East, they enjoy tofu and tempeh. Beans are an excellent source of protein, complex carbohydrates, and vitamins and minerals, especially calcium. They are associated with lower incidence of heart disease, cancer, and other degenerative diseases. See Azuki Beans, Chickpeas, Lentils, Menopause. • Bile Acids and Cancer - Beans lowered bile acid production by 30 percent in men with a tendency toward elevated bile acid. Bile acids are necessary for proper fat digestion but in excess have been associated with causing cancer, especially in the large intestine. Case-control studies showed that pinto and navy beans were effective in lowering bile acid production in men at high risk for this condition. Source: J. Anderson, " Hypocholesterolemic Effects of Oat-Bran or Bean Intake for Hypercholesterolemic Men, " American Journal of Clinical Nutrition 40:1146-55, 1984 Whole grain bread is traditionally eaten in the West, Middle East, and South Asia. Unleavened or sourdough bread is preferable to yeasted breads or breads containing sweeteners, baking soda, and other additives. See Prostate Cancer, Sesame. • Sourdough Fermentation Increases Nutrition of Bread - In a study comparing the effects of sourdough bread with wholemeal bread, researchers reported that sourdough bread significantly lowered serum glucose and insulin responses and gave greater satisfaction than the other bread. " It is concluded that sourdough baking and other fermentation processes may improve the nutritional features of starch, " the researchers concluded. Source: H. G. Liljeberg, et al., " Sourdough Fermentation or Addition of Organic Acids or Corresponding Salts to Bread Improves Nutritional Properties of Starch in Healthy Humans, " Journal of Nutrition 125 (6)1503-11, 1995. • Diet Protected Jews During the Exodus - Unleavened bread may have helped the Jewish people survive a plague that killed many Egyptians and their livestock, according to two medical researchers. Saccharomyces, a toxic yeast, is believed to have been transmitted in yeasted bread. By eating unleavened bread that did not harbor this potentially deadly mold, the Jews escaped the plague and prepared themselves to escape from Egypt during the Exodus. Source: John Bladwin and John S. Marr, M.D., " Ancient Scroll Carries Clue to Deadly Mold, " New York Times, August 1, 1997. • Asian Diet Helps Heal - A diet high in soy foods, vegetables, and fish oil may reduce the risk of breast cancer, according to a study conducted by the Jonsson Cancer Center at the University of California at Los Angeles. Dr. John Glaspy put 25 American women in remission from breast cancer on an Asian-style diet and reported that in three months on the diet the ratio of omega-3 in the women's blood rose fivefold. The omega-3 to omega-6 ratio in breast fat is considered a major indicator of risk for this disease. Source: D. Bagga et al., " Dietary Modulation of Omega-3/Omega-6 Polyunsaturated Fatty Acid Ratios in Patients with Breast Cancer, " Journal of the National Cancer Institute 89(15):1123-31, 1997. • Diet Lowers Risk for Hispanics - Hispanic women in the U.S. have the lowest mortality rate from breast cancer of all ethnic groups. University of Texas researchers reported that a study of 22 Hispanic women in the Houston area showed their mean intake of dietary fiber from whole grain breads, beans, and vegetables was higher than other groups. " This may help explain the lower incidence of breast cancer among some Hispanic populations, " the study concluded. Source: " Dietary Fiber, Hispanics, and Breast Cancer Risk? " Annals of the New York Academy of Science 837:524-36, 1997. • Men with high LDL who ate a diet including a half cup daily of dried pinto, navy, kidney, and other beans had an average drop in their LDL lipid levels of 20 percent after three weeks. Source: J. W. Anderson and W. L. Chen, " Effects of Legumes and Their Soluble Fibers on Lipoproteins, " American Chemical Society Abstracts AGFD #39, 1982. • Beans Inhibit Induced Colon Cancer - In laboratory experiments, researchers at Northern Arizona University reported that rats fed a diet high in pinto beans had over four times less tumors than rats fed a diet high in dairy protein. The bean group also had slower growing tumors. The experiment was designed to simulate the high bean diet of Latin American countries where there is a low incidence of colon cancer. " This study demonstrates that dry beans contain anticarcinogenic compounds, " the scientists concluded. Source: J. S. Hughes et al., " Dry Beans Inhibit Azoxymethane-Induced Colon Carcinogenesis in F344 Rats, " Journal of Nutrition 127(12):2328-33, 1997. According to traditional Far Eastern medicine, blood is created largely in the small intestine from the transmutation of metabolized food through the villi. A diet centered on organic whole grains and vegetables creates strong, healthy blood with a slightly more alkaline pH value, while the modern diet, combining extremes of meat and sugar, creates weak, acid blood, requiring buffer mechanisms, especially depletion of minerals in the body, to make balance. See Immune Function. • Macrobiotic Subjects Show Ideal Blood Values - Researchers at the Academic Hospital of Ghent University in Belgium evaluated the blood values of 20 men assembled by Lima Natural Foods Factory who had an average age of 36 and had been macrobiotic for about eight years. According to the tests, all the men were very healthy. Their blood pressure and body weights were low, their hormone levels favorable, and they had normal values for proteins, vitamins, and minerals. Overall, their LDL values were significantly lower than ordinary people. J. P. Deslypere, M.D., one of the researchers, concluded, " [in} the field of cardiovascular and cancer risk factors this kind of blood is very favorable. It's ideal; we couldn't do better; that's what we're dreaming of. It's really fantastic, like children, whose blood vessels are still completely open and whole. This is a very important matter, deserving our full attention. " Source: Rik Vermuyten, MacroMuse (Fall/Metal 1984), p. 39. Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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