Jump to content
IndiaDivine.org

Raw Foods Around the World

Rate this topic


Guest guest

Recommended Posts

Guest guest

Traditional Nutrition: maybe your great grandmother was right

Written by Tanya Carwyn Cherry Creek News, CO

 

Friday, 20 April 2007

 

Are you confused about all the different ways of eating you hear and

read about? From kosher to vegan, low carb to lacto-ovo vegetarian,

and the (appropriately named) SAD (Standard American Diet) diet, what

do you choose?

 

There is a new (well, old actually) way of eating that is getting

more and more press lately. It's about going beyond organic, back to

home cooking and sustainable agriculture, as well as local eating and

the slow food movement. The catch-all phrase for this way of eating

is " Traditional Nutrition " and it is gaining a loyal following, among

many who have been eating " TF " (Traditional Food) or following " NT "

(Nourishing Traditions, one of the best-known traditional foods

cookbooks) for years without even knowing it.

 

In the 1920s and 30s, Dr. Weston Price, a retired dentist, and his

wife traveled all around the world and recorded the health of many

different traditional peoples. They found a startling difference

between people eating their traditional diets and the health of

people that were eating a more " modern " diet. The people who

continued eating their traditional diets not only enjoyed excellent

dental health (no cavities even though most of them never brushed

their teeth), well developed bone structure (very evident in

handsome, broad faces), freedom from any modern diseases ranging from

cancer, heart disease and diabetes to headaches and constipation, and

they also seemed full of a true joie-de-vivre. When Dr. Price

compared these people to the people of the same genetic make-up

(often siblings or other relatives) who ate a modern diet (refined

flour, sugar, less healthy meats and fats) he found rampant tooth

decay, stunted bone development (narrow faces, crowded teeth due to

lack of room in the jaw) and many modern diseases, as well as a

certain lackluster attitude towards life.

 

Dr. Price published his findings in a book called " Nutrition and

Physical Degeneration " and accompanied the text with tons of

photographs he and his wife took on their travels. The differences

in the face of the people pictured in those photographs are truly

startling.

 

Dr. and Mrs. Price traveled far and wide and visited many different

peoples, from the Celtic fisher people of the Outer Hebrides in

Scotland to the peoples of Papua New Guinea, and found that many of

the diets did not resemble each other. The Massai in Africa subsist

mainly on the blood and soured milk from their cows while farmers in

the Swiss Alps were found to eat mostly sourdough rye bread and raw

cheese. The Prices did find that there were similarities in all the

diets they studied and today people following Traditional Nutrition

ideals try to incorporate these into their diets.

A few basics of eating traditional food:

 

Eat Meat: In all their travels the Prices did not encounter any

traditional peoples who were entirely vegetarian. While the amounts

of animal protein and fat varied from very high, to reasonably

limited, there was always some animal protein in the diet.

 

Eat Raw: The Prices found that every society they studied ate a

portion of its food raw. In raw foods, enzymes remain intact that

help digestion and improve absorption. Often it was not just

vegetables and fruit that were consumed raw, but also dairy products

and meats. Many foods were also fermented to increase amounts of

enzymes and rates of absorption even more, as well as improve taste.

Lacto-fermentation was (and still is) also used to preserve foods.

Eat Fat: Diets of traditional people were relatively high in fat.

Much of the fact consumed was of the saturated kind found in dairy

products, animal fat and fat from tropical plants such as coconut and

palm oil.

 

Soak Grains: And seeds, and legumes, and nuts. It turns out that

traditional people rarely ate unsoaked or unfermented grain products.

Scientific research has proven the inherent wisdom of their ways by

proving that unsoaked or unfermented grains contain high levels of

enzyme inhibitors as well as phytic acid. The enzyme inhibitors make

the grains hard to digest (they inhibit the enzymes in our digestive

tract) and the phytic acid binds to minerals in the intestines and

prevents their absorption. Traditionally, grains, legumes, seeds and

nuts were always soaked in warm and slightly acidic water or soured

dairy and/or fermented as in sourdough breads and the sour porridges

found all over the world.

 

What To Eat and How To Eat It

 

If you are interested in giving Traditional Nutrition a go in your

diet, below you will find some pointers to get you started.

Meat and fish: Look for grass-fed or pastured beef, chicken, pork, or

eat venison. Buy wild caught fish. Cook it however you want to, or

try some traditional raw meals such as steak tartare or raw sushi.

Vegetables and fruit: Eat a large variety and eat at least some of

them raw each day ( that means lots of salads).

 

Fat: Do not shy away from healthy saturated fats. Traditional peoples

ate a lot of healthy fat from animals eating the diet they evolved to

eat, as well as milk fat and the saturated fat from coconut and palm

oil. Also monounsaturated oils such as extra virgin olive oil is

great. The human animal evolved to eat saturated fat and did so for

millions of years before heart disease ever became the staple it is

today. It is very likely that the problem is not saturated fat from

animals, but merely fat from animals eating unnatural (for them)

diets such as corn and soy beans.

 

Grains: Soak `em! With a little planning it is easy. Want to eat

oatmeal for breakfast? Put them out to soak the night before in some

water with yogurt or even lemon juice added. Eating rice for

dinner? Put it to soak in the morning before you leave for work.

Look for traditional sourdough bread or buy bread made from sprouted

grains. Use brown rice pasta or sprouted grain pasta instead of

regular pasta made from unsprouted flour.

 

Fermented Foods: Eat something that is naturally fermented every day

or preferably with every meal to help digestion and absorption. For

some it might take a bit of getting used to the flavor but there are

many fermented foods that are already part of the mainstream diet.

Eat yogurt, cheese, unpasteurized sauerkraut and kim chee (a Korean

condiment), naturally fermented pickles (not brined in vinegar) and

drink dairy or water kefir, kombucha or home-made lacto-fermented

sodas and ginger beer (they are actually good for you and kids love

them!).

 

Dairy: Eat raw grass-fed dairy or if you can only find pasteurized

milk, ferment it yourself. Learn to make your own yogurt, which is

very simple, inexpensive, and tastier then the store-bought kind and

full of healthy probiotics. Eat raw cheeses, which are widely

available.

 

This may all seem overwhelming at first, especially if you have just

been nuking some frozen meals for dinner. Start doing one thing at a

time, like making some home-made sauerkraut and eating it on a

regular basis.

 

Eating a traditional diet can do wonders for your health, energy, and

looks. Many people cooking and eating a traditional diet become

slightly obsessed with the quality of their food. Online message

boards have many a discussion on the particular smell of certain

dishes, the particular color of chicken stock and the intricacies of

baking sourdough bread.

 

For more information on Dr. Weston Price and traditional nutrition

check out the website of the Weston A. Price foundation at

www.westonaprice.org

 

Tanya Carwyn is a Certified Clinical Herbalist practicing in the

greater Denver area. She lives in Littleton with her husband and

their two young daughters.

 

Check out her new website, devoted to traditional nutrition, home

cooking, slow food, local and seasonal eating and how to fit that all

into a busy lifestyle. www.kitchenmuse.net

 

 

Will even one cook spoil the broth? Australia is getting a taste of

the raw-food diet revival. Bisbane Times

 

Hollywood film stars are raving about it, a documentary heralds its

benefits and restaurants dedicated to it are springing up across the

United States. And the raw-food movement is gaining popularity in

Australia, too.

 

Runi Burton, 34 from Byron Bay, has been on a raw-food diet for the

past six months and says she'll never turn back. " It's been the first

time in my life I'm not hungry, " she says. " I'm eating about a third

of the quantity of the food I've eaten before, going a longer time

between meals and not having the same carbohydrate cravings I'd been

having all my life. "

 

Burton had been looking for alternative diets after battling health

and diet problems throughout her life and came across the diet at Raw

Power, a business run by Anand Wells in Byron Bay.

 

Wells started teaching people how to prepare gourmet raw foods a year

and a half ago - his market stalls of organic, raw foods around the

NSW North Coast became increasingly popular and people started asking

for his recipes. Wells says the benefits of a raw food diet can be

felt immediately.

 

" Most people report feeling much clearer, having heaps of energy and

not getting sick any more after eating raw food, " Wells says. " A

relatively healthy person can have a difference in vitality, clarity

and happiness after a week or two of the raw food diet. "

 

The raw-food diet comprises uncooked fruits, vegetables, grains,

sprouts, nuts and beans. The popular view among adherents is that

enzymes in food are destroyed when the food is heated beyond 45

degrees.

 

They claim Kirilian photography, which captures electric fields

around objects, shows this. Adherents say the enzymes, which

carry " life force " , are essential for healthy chemical processes

within the body. Much of this theory was detailed 25 years ago in the

bestselling book Raw Energy by British writers Leslie and Susannah

Kenton.

 

More recent reports based on these principles stem from American

nutritionists David Wolfe and Gabriel Cousens. The duo appear on a

documentary film Raw for 30 Days, which claims a raw-food diet can

reverse diabetes. (A trailer of the film is posted on YouTube.)

However, the enzyme theory is not accepted by the wider scientific

community. Sue Radd, a nutritionist and practising dietitian at

Sydney's Nutrition and Wellbeing Clinic, says there is no scientific

basis for the theory that raw-food diets provide essential enzymes

that might otherwise be destroyed by cooking.

 

" Where there are enzymes in raw foods, those enzymes are inactivated

as soon as the food hits our stomach because of the strong acidic

conditions, " Radd says. The raw-food theory " is not scientifically

proven but I still think there are other fantastic reasons to eat

more raw and plant foods " .

 

She says people on raw-food diets commonly report they have a better

quality of life and health and research studies have found numerous

benefits from short-term, raw-food diet trials.

 

" Studies have shown a significant improvement in rheumatoid arthritis

symptoms, favourable changes in bacteria that live in the large bowel

that would suggest lower risk of bowel cancer and also improved

immune function. "

 

She says this makes sense - raw-food diets are much lower in fat and

kilojoules, with a higher intake of flavonoids and other

antioxidants, all thanks to the high proportion of fruit and plant

foods in the diet.

 

However, studies have found longer-term, raw-food adherents have

deficiencies in vitamin B12 (which can only be gained from animal

products), zinc and iron.

 

The longest study was conduct-ed in the US with 500 people on raw

food diets for an average 3.7 years.

 

" On average, men had lost 10 kilograms, women had lost 12 kilograms,

but one in five had [body mass index] less than normal and 30 per

cent of women who were under the age of 45 actually stopped

menstruating or had irregular periods, " Radd says.

 

" I can't recommend an exclusive raw food diet. If you are going to be

on it for a longer period of time, it puts you at risk of a number of

deficiencies, so you have to know how to plan it. "

 

Surinder Baines from the University of Newcastle's school of health

sciences says many of the positive benefits found in such diets are

exactly the same with vegan or vegetarian diets and may result

from " the extreme limitation of foods of an animal origin " .

 

Baines is concerned that there isn't sufficient research into the

long-term impact of a raw food diet and says its restrictive nature

makes it a very difficult diet to adhere to for any length of

time " without having support, advice and follow up " .

 

" It is very dramatic if you go from a usual diet. Compliance is low

because it is such a rigid, strict diet. "

 

After six months on a raw food diet, Burton says she has stuck to it

about 95 per cent of the time, making occasional exceptions for

cooked meat.

" I haven't found it that hard to stick to, but I've heard other

people have found it really hard during winter, " she says. " The

longer I've gone [on the diet] the more it's about tuning into how my

body feels after I eat. I'm more into that than taste sensation. "

 

The diet is not just raw fruit, vegetables, nuts and sprouts. A

variety of recipes are based on dehydrated, soaked and blended foods,

including pastries made from ground almond and bound together with

honey; noodles made from zucchini cut through a spiral slicer and

chocolate cake made from raw cocoa butter and crushed cocoa nibs.

There are now more than 60 restaurants in the US providing strictly

raw-food meals and in California, thanks to the endorsement of

Hollywood actors such as Woody Harrelson, they are among the most

popular restaurants. The raw food phenomenon hasn't caught on in

Australia's dining scene to the same extent, although it is still

possible to eat away from home on a raw-food diet.

 

Wells says most restaurants have salad options and he will often take

a stash of dehydrated nuts with him, just in case. In any case, he

says, he doesn't eat as much food anymore. " I am getting so much more

nutrition I eat literally one third or one quarter the volume, " he

says.

 

A University of Sydney associate professor in human nutrition, Samir

Samman, agrees raw food diets are likely to result in people eating

less.

 

" When you eat raw vegetables there is a lot of chewing and munching -

and that does help to satiate us. The mastication helps towards the

& #65533;feeling of fullness - it's a lot of work to be eating raw foods, "

he says. " Also the water content helps to fill us up. "

 

Samman says raw food diets are just another way to find good, healthy

food and consume less sodium and fewer saturated foods. " The end

benefit is that you are going to feel better. "

 

However, Samman says the raw food diet should not be followed too

strictly. " Domestic processing and cooking certain things can improve

their nutritional value, " he says.

 

" A good example is the tomato. Cooked tomato, which would normally

have a bit of oil in it, actually improves the absorption of

lycopenes. And small amounts of lean meat make a really important

contribution to the diet.

 

" This raw food diet is not a new fad. It's like a lot of these

popular healthy concepts -they just get recycled through history. "

Revival or not, Radd says nutritionists have updated their view on

the benefits of raw food in the past decade.

 

" What has changed is the push to eat more plant foods on a daily

basis, including raw types. The appreciation of the benefits of plant-

based diets [in reducing the risk of chronic disease] has increased.

Diets rich in plant foods are one of the best ways to keep yourself

healthy and out of hospital. "

 

Review, Juliano's Raw

At the famed Santa Monica, California, raw-food restaurant, I am

pleasantly surprised at how tasty the food is. The chefs obviously go

to a lot of trouble to prepare the food, incorporating plenty of

fresh herbs and spices. I try a " blood juice " , a refreshing mix made

from fuji apples, ginger, lime and pomegranate; and " no salmon wrap

sushi " - a pumpkin pate rolled with guacamole, seaweed, pickled

ginger and tomato. Pesto deep-dish pizza is a thin, flaky, buckwheat

crust with walnut pesto, tomato, herbs, olives, marinated onions and

mushrooms. The buckwheat base gave it lots of texture. For dessert I

tried the tender, delicious apple torte - thinly sliced apples filled

with cream of pecan.

 

Sue Radd, dietitian and nutritionist

 

Chocolate cookies

2 cups brazil nuts

1/2 cup pepitas

3 tbsp macca root powder

1 tbsp raw honey

1/2 cup raisins

1/4 cup raw chocolate nibs

In a food processor, whiz the brazil nuts for 5 minutes or until they

become almost liquid. Add the rest of ingredients except chocolate

and blend thoroughly. Mix in the chocolate by hand and form into

small round cookies. Place on dehydrator mesh sheets and dehydrate

for 16 hours, more or less depending on whether you like your cookies

soft or crunchy.

Recipe provided by Anand Wells, Raw Power

 

 

 

A raw deal worth having

 

By Dominique Herman

 

" It's not about food. " These are not the words one expects to hear on

the first day of a cookery course.

 

But learning how to prepare raw foods - some so they taste as if they

have been cooked - is not a conventional cookery course.

 

We begin with a glass of water followed by a freshly squeezed

watermelon and mint juice. There's a bit of guided deep breathing and

then with eyes closed we listen to a recorded narration about the

quality of one's life being brought about by the quality of one's

thinking. Turns out it is Sir Laurence Olivier reciting a poem from a

1960s West End play, Time.

 

Why are we listening to this? asks one of our instructors, Peter

Daniel. " You are what you eat. The secret to the universe is Q and

the intent for the four days is to bring an opportunity to begin to

question. Food is a good thing to question as it will rub off on

other areas of life, " he says.

 

The bit about Q makes more sense when Peter is talking. It also makes

more sense when at the end we are told our " homework " is to be more

mindful of everything we eat: What is it? Where does it come from?

How does it make us feel?

 

We are conditioned to eat in a certain way (that way being cooked for

the most part), and we are going to have to " transition " to an

exclusive or predominantly raw foods way of life.

 

The cornerstone of Mind Power, a system of conditioning the brain

which relies on the concept that thoughts are real things, is the

basis of Peter and Beryn Daniel's " first basic universal law " . And

for them it starts with what's on your plate. Every food you eat

creates a different thought, they say. Every food leads to a health

destination. Everything is energy and every food has a different

vibration and resonance. Thoughts affect food. And, conversely, food

affects thoughts. We raise our vibration by eating high energy foods

and that, in turn, raises the quality and mood of our

thoughts. " Quantum food! " one over excited potential raw foodist

shouts out.

 

Beryn and Peter are married and worked as " chalet chefs " in the

French Alps before moving to the UK. There they started investigating

an alternative way of eating, eventually training to become raw food

chefs. They then moved back to South Africa about a year ago at the

same time that they went totally raw.

 

Apart from instructing, catering and operating a stall at the

Saturday market in Woodstock, they import " super foods " such as the

goji berry and hemp protein powder, as well as sell " tools to process

food in a healthy way " . These include a R3 500 blender that can whip

any type of seed, nut or grain into a pulp, and a dehydrator, which

removes the moisture from foods giving it the taste of being cooked

without it having actually been cooked.

 

" We are not nutritionists, healers or doctors. We are raw food

chefs, " Peter states. But, he adds, that does not dispute the energy,

the " amazing clarity " , you get from eating like this.

 

It would take a 900g steak to provide the same amount of protein as

10g of spirulina, since steak loses much of its nutritional value

when cooked. And spirulina is more bio-available than beef, Peter

says.

 

If you cut animal fats out of your diet, you will not have a

cholesterol issue ever, he adds. " Your body doesn't recognise it as

food, " Beryn says, referring to items such as slap chips, " and it

goes into fight mode " . When we get hungry, that is our body's search

for minerals. Organic food, though more expensive, is higher in

minerals and so we need less to be satisfied and eat less as a

result, and the key to longevity is calorie restriction.

 

Most of us at this stage are about to slit our wrists. As one

participant says, " maybe we should do that breathing thing again " .

Instead Peter whips up an aloe and orange smoothie for us (although

oranges today are devoid of vitamin C, he adds). An aloe ferox leaf -

the sort available all over the local landscape - is filleted and

dropped in the blender. While that's happening, Beryn cuts off pieces

of an aloe vera pot plant and we rub it onto our hands. It's very

slimy but in a few seconds it has absorbed completely. Perfect for

an " instant facelift " , she says.

 

Finally we get to the food bit. There's salad sushi wraps - the

organic brown and wild rice is the only cooked ingredient and meant

as a transition for us newbies. Same for the mushrooms, which provide

a " meaty " taste and, after being dehydrated, the look of being

cooked.

 

Refried bean pâté, which is neither fried nor has beans in it, is a

combination of blended sunflower seeds and sundried tomatoes creating

a pinky paste to which Mexican spices are added.

 

The food is really good. And it does not require much to feel

satisfied, and that satisfied feeling remains for many hours

afterwards.

 

Cut out one unhealthy food a week. Adopt one new raw food recipe a

week. " It is ordinary things consistently done that produce

extraordinary results. "

• The Elements of Health four-week raw-food prep classes are two-and-

a-half hours once weekly, followed by a raw, organic two-course meal.

 

Call 021 780 9156, 072 056 9033 or 074 100 7547 for more info, or

email beryn or go to Superfoods

 

Published on the web by Tonight on April 20, 2007.

 

 

 

Raw foods make a delicious meal

Lucette Moramarco

Staff Writer/ The Village News

4/19/2007 7:32:59 PM

 

A year and a half ago, Angelena Bosco of Rainbow went on a raw food

diet to try to lose weight. Eight months and 45 pounds later, she

decided she had found a better way to live. " The human body is meant

to process plant foods [not meat or refined, processed foods], " she

said.

 

Bosco now eats a partly raw diet with the goal of " feeling healthy

and preventing disease, aches and pains. " " It is very calming when

you eat raw, very peaceful, " she added. Her mood swings went away, as

sugar is a depressant to her.

 

Inspired by her weight loss and newfound sense of wellbeing, Bosco

took raw food classes and became a Certified Live Food Chef and

Instructor so she could teach others the benefits of raw foods.

 

The Raw Food Diet (also called the Living Food Diet) is a step beyond

a vegetarian diet. Besides excluding all animal products (meat, eggs,

fish and dairy foods), the Raw Food Diet also excludes foods cooked

above 112 degrees. Raw and living foods are fruits, vegetables, nuts,

seeds and grains. Instead of being cooked, they are eaten whole or

are merely chopped, diced, shredded, juiced or mixed.

 

" By not heating our foods we preserve the enzymes that are necessary

for all body functions, " said Bosco. " The live enzymes in our food

can then assist in their digestion and reserves the enzymes in our

bodies to perform their necessary functions, such as distribution of

nutrients and cleansing. "

 

In an effort to lose weight, avoid allergies and go off medications,

many local residents are trying raw foods. Bosco teaches Raw Food

Preparation classes at Rainbow Valley Grange twice a month. A total

of 14 interested people, a few from as far away as Escondido,

attended her class on March 29, the theme of which was " Comfort

Foods. " As in most of her classes, Bosco demonstrated the preparation

of the raw foods on the menu while she talked about the nutritional

value of the methods and foods used. Once the food was prepared,

everyone shared the meal.

 

The " comfort foods " consisted of Chili topped with onion dip, a salad

with Smooth and Creamy Avocado Dressing and Chocolate Mousse dessert.

All recipes were taken from " Living on Live Food " by Alissa Cohen.

 

The Chili, uncooked, involved soaking kamut (a grain), dates and sun-

dried tomatoes; chopping and dicing a green bell pepper, red onion

and several tomatoes; shaving two corn cobs; crushing garlic; and

juicing two oranges. Several spices and seasonings were also added to

the mixture. Topped with the onion dip (made from macadamia nuts,

water, sea salt and onion), the chili tasted better than anticipated.

The salad dressing (which included cucumber, olive oil, honey and

apple cider vinegar) was predictably good on the salad.

 

The biggest and most delicious surprise of the evening was the

Chocolate Mousse, which is made without chocolate but is very rich

and chocolaty. The most unexpected ingredient is avocado! One avocado

is blended with almond milk, dates, carob powder and almond butter to

make a dessert that not only satisfies the sweet tooth but is also

nutritious. And that is the point of the raw food classes: to show

people how to prepare healthy food that also tastes good.

 

Angelena Bosco's next Raw Food Preparation Class, " Party Foods, " will

be on April 26 from 6:30 to 8:30 p.m. She will also offer classes on

May 10 and 24 (themes to be determined). For more information

including cost, or to register, call (760) 809-6668.

 

Blissed be, Annie

bodybybliss.com

Link to comment
Share on other sites

Join the conversation

You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.

Guest
Reply to this topic...

×   Pasted as rich text.   Paste as plain text instead

  Only 75 emoji are allowed.

×   Your link has been automatically embedded.   Display as a link instead

×   Your previous content has been restored.   Clear editor

×   You cannot paste images directly. Upload or insert images from URL.

Loading...
×
×
  • Create New...