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experiencelifemag.com
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Live Foods
The biggest problem with the average American diet is not just how much we eat, it's the percentage of our diet that's made up of cooked and over-processed foods. Find out how eating "live" can help you live healthier, happierjj and longer.
By Steven Lang |
August 2001 |
Wanted Alive FOR YEARS, NUTRITIONISTS HAVE CATEGORIZED FOODS into groups — meats, grains,
legumes, fruits, etc. — and by now we’re all familiar with the USDA’s “food
pyramid.” But there is another way of thinking about and categorizing the
foods we eat, a way that may actually offer much more meaning and value
than our more traditional distinctions: What if we thought about foods in
terms of whether or not they are alive?
This distinction between living and
dead foods may be unfamiliar to most of the American public, but to many
of today’s forward thinking nutritional experts, it is a very real and
important one. In fact, many nutritionists have long insisted that eating a
diet rich in raw and other “live” foods is the single most important thing
you can do to improve and preserve your health. Live foods are foods that
are consumed fresh, raw and/or in a condition as close as possible to their
original, vibrant, living state. Consider the difference between crisp red
apples and beige, jarred applesauce; between green, ripe avocados and
grayish, reconstituted guacamole dip; between a piece of salmon sashimi and a
frozen fish stick; between sweet corn on the cob and a box of cornflakes. You
get the picture. Depending on which expert you are consulting (and how much of a purist he
or she is), the term “live food” may refer strictly to raw fruits and
vegetables and sprouted nuts and grains. Or, it might also include whole,
unpasteurized, organic milk products (illegal in most states!), frozen
berries, and even very lightly “cooked” items like seared fish
and air-dried pizzas. The basic idea behind all live foods is the same
though: retaining the very best that natural foods have to offer,
including live enzymes, antioxidants and other nutrients. The Enzyme Connection The naturally occurring enzymes, nutrients and pure, filtered water found in
living foods are all vital to our health and immunity, and most experts agree
they can never be sufficiently replaced by supplements and
powders. Enzymes are complex organic substances that originate from
living cells. By initiating chemical changes in surrounding
organic substances, they help to transform and digest them. This
is the mechanism you see at work in enzymatic cleansers that lift
dirt out of tough stains in your laundry. The same principle is also
behind “Beano,” “Dairy Ease” and other enzyme-based supplements that
aid people in ingesting foods that might otherwise give them digestive
trouble.
But enzyme supplements aren’t the only place (or the best place)
to get your digestive help. Live foods are treasure troves of living enzymes,
phyto-nutrients and other compounds that are essential to proper digestion,
absorption, elimination, immunity and health. Unfortunately,
virtually none of these delicate entities can survive temperatures greater
than 116° Fahrenheit (most enzymes start to degrade at about 106°), so they
are generally destroyed by the heat of cooking and most commercial
processing.
Most experts agree that by foregoing such processing and
eating foods more or less as nature prepared them, we retain their cellular
structure and, thus, far more of their nutritional value. We also enjoy a
wide array of important, accompanying health and beauty benefits.
People
who make a conscious effort to include a large percentage of live foods in
their diets often notice rapid and dramatic results. These include leaner,
stronger physiques, higher energy levels and better athletic endurance. Many
also enjoy a variety of other benefits — from increased mental alertness
and focus to rapid healing and recovery, improved eyesight and peripheral
vision¸ brighter moods and clearer, more radiant skin. Oh, and there’s
another important and frequently noted upside: enhanced sex drive and
performance. (No wonder those crazy rabbits eat all those carrots!) Reaping the Harvest Live foods experts say all these benefits stem from a simple synergy. Live
foods naturally contain more nutrients (flavanoids, caratanoids), but they
also contain the enzymes and other components that naturally enable our
bodies to optimally process those nutrients.
The enzymes in live foods act
very much like catalytic converters for general digestion, helping our bodies
to properly absorb and eliminate even the cooked and other processed,
non-live foods we consume. Most live foods are also high in fiber. So eating
live foods helps your system make better use of virtually every healthy thing
you eat, while also running damage control on the not-so-healthy stuff you
gobble down. Eating more live foods can help your metabolism hum along at
peak efficiency while saving your system from getting bogged down in toxic
waste. By the same token, a person who does not eat enough live foods is much
more likely to suffer from low energy, excessive weight, skin
problems, food allergies, heartburn, intestinal distress and
constipation. Why? Without live foods to help break up and move the dead
foods along, these hard-to-digest items can easily decompose and turn toxic
in the intestine, causing the body all kinds of harm.
Moreover, without
enzymes, no vitamins or minerals can accomplish their nutritive missions. As
a result, a diet too laden with dead foods and too lacking in live ones can
lead to malnutrition (regardless of how much a person eats). Subsequently,
malnutrition can cause illness, compromise immunity and hasten death. Get Eating So, by now you are probably looking for some simple ways to incorporate more
living foods into your diet (without moving to a hut in Costa Rica, freaking
out your friends or scaring your children). One way is to think green.
Experts say that green, leafy vegetables such as spinach, kale, romaine
lettuce, arugula and Swiss chard are great sources of living phytochemicals.
They are also great complements to any meal.
The healthiest way to enjoy
these foods is as a first course. Leafy greens can be digested quickly if
eaten on an empty stomach, or along with other healthy vegetables such
as sprouts, peppers, onions, cilantro, radishes or any fresh
salad ingredient. An exception is cucumber or any other fruit from the
melon family. These are known to create a chemical “conflict” in the stomach
that slows digestion. (That’s why cukes cause some people to burp.) But eaten
alone, both melons and cucumbers are highly digestible and extremely
healthful.
Fresh fruit is another great way to add living foods to your
diet. Nothing is faster (or better for you) than a simple breakfast of fresh
fruit. Whether oranges, plums or pineapples, fruit provides a healthy dose of
needed sugar along with the natural enzymes and vitamins your body needs.
This kind of meal is a gentle jump-start to the day, and much
more energizing than a heavy, greasy load of hashbrowns, eggs and bacon.
Bonus: If you consistently make a fruit breakfast part of your morning
regimen, you may see your caffeine consumption naturally decrease as your
living-food vitality increases.
Making a Change It’s important to take a
common-sense approach when shifting your diet toward living foods. To avoid a
massive, sudden detox and potential withdrawal symptoms (which could lead
to an unhealthy junk-food binge), be sure to wean yourself from your regular
diet gradually as you incorporate more live foods into each meal. After a few
months of transition time, you can begin to eat entire meals of
fresh, living foods.
If you want to make a faster start, consider a
mono-diet fast (having only fruits and vegetables for a few days), but
be sure to consult a natural-health professional or a good book on the
subject first. Live-food fasting is a great way to give your body a chance to
detoxify and heal itself, but you’ll have the best success if you are
well-informed before you begin. Carrot or the Stick Whether you respond
more powerfully to the benefit-oriented aspects of the live-foods proposition
(health, beauty, vitality!), or the more ominous repercussions of going
without them (disease, obesity, death), the argument for live foods is a
pretty straightforward one. Fad diets and wonder supplements aside, eating
plenty of fresh, live foods is the most reliable way to permanently reduce
fat while achieving robust health. So ultimately, what your mother told you
about an apple a day keeping the doctor away is probably pretty well-founded.
Just to be on the safe side, though, better make that an apple, a carrot, a
beet, and a giant green salad. Surviving the Stomach For years, health experts have argued about whether or not the acidic PH of
the stomach summarily destroys live food enzymes. Some scientists have
insisted that stomach acid kills most enzymes on contact, thereby rendering
useless the considerable efforts raw food eaters take in preserving and
consuming them. However, research by Viktorus Kulvinskas, a leading expert
on raw foods and enzyme nutrition, suggests that stomach acid does not in
fact kill, but rather temporarily deactivates most food enzymes. According
to Kulvinskas, the enzymes are then reactivated in the more alkaline small
intestine.
Raw Intelligence of Half-Baked Idea? Raw foodism (eating raw, living foods exclusively) is a trend that is gaining
popularity with all kinds of people, from small-town gardeners to
Hollywood celebrities like Mel Gibson and Nick Nolte. For most of us,
committing to a diet of all raw foods still seems pretty extreme. Who wants
to totally give up grilled foods, our favorite pasta dishes or the
occasional order of fries? Plus, some nutritionists insist that many foods
are actually better assimilated by the body in cooked form. Regardless of
whom you want to believe, though, there’s no doubt most of us could stand to
weed out a lot of processed, packaged foods and replace them with fresher,
more wholesome options.
Do a Live-Foods Inventory You won't eat live foods if you don’t have them around the house. So what’s
in your kitchen, and where is it living? How much live food do you really
have on hand?
ON THE SHELF: If most of your food lives on a shelf or in
the cupboard, it probably isn’t live food at all. Almost any food that can
survive unrefrigerated for more than a few days is likely canned, boxed,
cooked, dehydrated, vacuum packed, ultrapasteurized or otherwise processed
(which is to say, it is largely dead). There’s nothing wrong with having some
dry staples and gently processed foods in your house, of course, but if less
healthy shelf-dwellers like chips and crackers constitute the bulk of your
available nourishment, watch out.
IN THE DARK: Some foods that do have
a decent shelf-life include potatoes, yams, onions, garlic, squash and other
root vegetables, most of which do well unrefrigerated for long periods, as
long as they’re kept in a relatively cool, dark place. Of course, most people
end up cooking these items at some point, and once cooked, they are no longer
considered live. Even cooked, though, many of these foods are still quite
nutritious, and most can be eaten raw (just check the books in the Resources
section for advice and preparation instructions).
IN THE OPEN: In the old
days, nearly everyone used to have a tempting fruit bowl right out in plain
site. For some reason you don’t see fruit bowls so much anymore. That’s a
shame, because most fresh fruits, including peaches, pears and plums (as well
as tomatoes and avocados) belong here, not in your refrigerator (at least,
not until they are sliced or they’ve reached their peak of ripeness). If
you’ve got nothing but a mushy banana or two sitting around on your counter,
repent. Keep a bowl of tempting produce where it’s handy to snack on or slice
into salads and sandwiches.
IN THE ICE BOX: Welcome to the fridge — you’ve
hit the motherload of live, raw foods. Chilled watermelon, grapes, cherries
and apples, crunchy carrots and cucumbers, green leafy vegetables, fresh
herbs — if it’s in the refrigerated produce section at the grocery store, it
probably belongs in your fridge at home. That goes double for perishable
oils, like flaxseed oil and nut butters, as well as sesame and olive oils
more commonly found on the shelf.
If you’re eating live and fresh, your
fridge should be full of brightly colored produce. If, on the other hand, you
open your ice box door and find nothing but condiments, cheese, cold cuts and
soft drinks, there’s a good chance you’re diet is in trouble.
Check out
the freezer, too. Most experts agree that most kinds of produce, if picked at
the peak of ripeness and quickly frozen, offer many of the same benefits of
their fresh counterparts. If you can thaw produce and eat it as is, or (as
with frozen berries and bananas) blend it into a smoothietype concoction, you
can still call it live. Just remember, all bets are off if you have to cook
it before you eat it. And if your freezer only contains pizza rolls, tater
tots and ice cream, consider a change. Resources WEB www.livingfoods.net www.rawfood.com www.lovingfoods.com www.rawfoodists.com www.naturalrawpetfood.com
BOOKS Diet
for a New America by John Robbins The Art of Loving Foods by J. Safron and R.
Underkoffler Nature’s First Law by S. Arlin, R.C. Dini and D. Wolfe RAW:
The Uncook Book by Juliano Fit for Life by Harvey Diamond
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Live Foods
The biggest problem with the average American diet is not just how much we eat, it's the percentage of our diet that's made up of cooked and over-processed foods. Find out how eating "live" can help you live healthier, happierjj and longer.
By Steven Lang | Features, August 2001 |
Wanted Alive FOR YEARS, NUTRITIONISTS HAVE CATEGORIZED FOODS into groups — meats, grains,
legumes, fruits, etc. — and by now we’re all familiar with the USDA’s “food
pyramid.” But there is another way of thinking about and categorizing the
foods we eat, a way that may actually offer much more meaning and value
than our more traditional distinctions: What if we thought about foods in
terms of whether or not they are alive?
This distinction between living and
dead foods may be unfamiliar to most of the American public, but to many
of today’s forward thinking nutritional experts, it is a very real and
important one. In fact, many nutritionists have long insisted that eating a
diet rich in raw and other “live” foods is the single most important thing
you can do to improve and preserve your health. Live foods are foods that
are consumed fresh, raw and/or in a condition as close as possible to their
original, vibrant, living state. Consider the difference between crisp red
apples and beige, jarred applesauce; between green, ripe avocados and
grayish, reconstituted guacamole dip; between a piece of salmon sashimi and a
frozen fish stick; between sweet corn on the cob and a box of cornflakes. You
get the picture. Depending on which expert you are consulting (and how much of a purist he
or she is), the term “live food” may refer strictly to raw fruits and
vegetables and sprouted nuts and grains. Or, it might also include whole,
unpasteurized, organic milk products (illegal in most states!), frozen
berries, and even very lightly “cooked” items like seared fish
and air-dried pizzas. The basic idea behind all live foods is the same
though: retaining the very best that natural foods have to offer,
including live enzymes, antioxidants and other nutrients. The Enzyme Connection The naturally occurring enzymes, nutrients and pure, filtered water found in
living foods are all vital to our health and immunity, and most experts agree
they can never be sufficiently replaced by supplements and
powders. Enzymes are complex organic substances that originate from
living cells. By initiating chemical changes in surrounding
organic substances, they help to transform and digest them. This
is the mechanism you see at work in enzymatic cleansers that lift
dirt out of tough stains in your laundry. The same principle is also
behind “Beano,” “Dairy Ease” and other enzyme-based supplements that
aid people in ingesting foods that might otherwise give them digestive
trouble.
But enzyme supplements aren’t the only place (or the best place)
to get your digestive help. Live foods are treasure troves of living enzymes,
phyto-nutrients and other compounds that are essential to proper digestion,
absorption, elimination, immunity and health. Unfortunately,
virtually none of these delicate entities can survive temperatures greater
than 116° Fahrenheit (most enzymes start to degrade at about 106°), so they
are generally destroyed by the heat of cooking and most commercial
processing.
Most experts agree that by foregoing such processing and
eating foods more or less as nature prepared them, we retain their cellular
structure and, thus, far more of their nutritional value. We also enjoy a
wide array of important, accompanying health and beauty benefits.
People
who make a conscious effort to include a large percentage of live foods in
their diets often notice rapid and dramatic results. These include leaner,
stronger physiques, higher energy levels and better athletic endurance. Many
also enjoy a variety of other benefits — from increased mental alertness
and focus to rapid healing and recovery, improved eyesight and peripheral
vision¸ brighter moods and clearer, more radiant skin. Oh, and there’s
another important and frequently noted upside: enhanced sex drive and
performance. (No wonder those crazy rabbits eat all those carrots!) Reaping the Harvest Live foods experts say all these benefits stem from a simple synergy. Live
foods naturally contain more nutrients (flavanoids, caratanoids), but they
also contain the enzymes and other components that naturally enable our
bodies to optimally process those nutrients.
The enzymes in live foods act
very much like catalytic converters for general digestion, helping our bodies
to properly absorb and eliminate even the cooked and other processed,
non-live foods we consume. Most live foods are also high in fiber. So eating
live foods helps your system make better use of virtually every healthy thing
you eat, while also running damage control on the not-so-healthy stuff you
gobble down. Eating more live foods can help your metabolism hum along at
peak efficiency while saving your system from getting bogged down in toxic
waste. By the same token, a person who does not eat enough live foods is much
more likely to suffer from low energy, excessive weight, skin
problems, food allergies, heartburn, intestinal distress and
constipation. Why? Without live foods to help break up and move the dead
foods along, these hard-to-digest items can easily decompose and turn toxic
in the intestine, causing the body all kinds of harm.
Moreover, without
enzymes, no vitamins or minerals can accomplish their nutritive missions. As
a result, a diet too laden with dead foods and too lacking in live ones can
lead to malnutrition (regardless of how much a person eats). Subsequently,
malnutrition can cause illness, compromise immunity and hasten death. Get Eating So, by now you are probably looking for some simple ways to incorporate more
living foods into your diet (without moving to a hut in Costa Rica, freaking
out your friends or scaring your children). One way is to think green.
Experts say that green, leafy vegetables such as spinach, kale, romaine
lettuce, arugula and Swiss chard are great sources of living phytochemicals.
They are also great complements to any meal.
The healthiest way to enjoy
these foods is as a first course. Leafy greens can be digested quickly if
eaten on an empty stomach, or along with other healthy vegetables such
as sprouts, peppers, onions, cilantro, radishes or any fresh
salad ingredient. An exception is cucumber or any other fruit from the
melon family. These are known to create a chemical “conflict” in the stomach
that slows digestion. (That’s why cukes cause some people to burp.) But eaten
alone, both melons and cucumbers are highly digestible and extremely
healthful.
Fresh fruit is another great way to add living foods to your
diet. Nothing is faster (or better for you) than a simple breakfast of fresh
fruit. Whether oranges, plums or pineapples, fruit provides a healthy dose of
needed sugar along with the natural enzymes and vitamins your body needs.
This kind of meal is a gentle jump-start to the day, and much
more energizing than a heavy, greasy load of hashbrowns, eggs and bacon.
Bonus: If you consistently make a fruit breakfast part of your morning
regimen, you may see your caffeine consumption naturally decrease as your
living-food vitality increases.
Making a Change It’s important to take a
common-sense approach when shifting your diet toward living foods. To avoid a
massive, sudden detox and potential withdrawal symptoms (which could lead
to an unhealthy junk-food binge), be sure to wean yourself from your regular
diet gradually as you incorporate more live foods into each meal. After a few
months of transition time, you can begin to eat entire meals of
fresh, living foods.
If you want to make a faster start, consider a
mono-diet fast (having only fruits and vegetables for a few days), but
be sure to consult a natural-health professional or a good book on the
subject first. Live-food fasting is a great way to give your body a chance to
detoxify and heal itself, but you’ll have the best success if you are
well-informed before you begin. Carrot or the Stick Whether you respond
more powerfully to the benefit-oriented aspects of the live-foods proposition
(health, beauty, vitality!), or the more ominous repercussions of going
without them (disease, obesity, death), the argument for live foods is a
pretty straightforward one. Fad diets and wonder supplements aside, eating
plenty of fresh, live foods is the most reliable way to permanently reduce
fat while achieving robust health. So ultimately, what your mother told you
about an apple a day keeping the doctor away is probably pretty well-founded.
Just to be on the safe side, though, better make that an apple, a carrot, a
beet, and a giant green salad. Surviving the Stomach For years, health experts have argued about whether or not the acidic PH of
the stomach summarily destroys live food enzymes. Some scientists have
insisted that stomach acid kills most enzymes on contact, thereby rendering
useless the considerable efforts raw food eaters take in preserving and
consuming them. However, research by Viktorus Kulvinskas, a leading expert
on raw foods and enzyme nutrition, suggests that stomach acid does not in
fact kill, but rather temporarily deactivates most food enzymes. According
to Kulvinskas, the enzymes are then reactivated in the more alkaline small
intestine.
Raw Intelligence of Half-Baked Idea? Raw foodism (eating raw, living foods exclusively) is a trend that is gaining
popularity with all kinds of people, from small-town gardeners to
Hollywood celebrities like Mel Gibson and Nick Nolte. For most of us,
committing to a diet of all raw foods still seems pretty extreme. Who wants
to totally give up grilled foods, our favorite pasta dishes or the
occasional order of fries? Plus, some nutritionists insist that many foods
are actually better assimilated by the body in cooked form. Regardless of
whom you want to believe, though, there’s no doubt most of us could stand to
weed out a lot of processed, packaged foods and replace them with fresher,
more wholesome options.
Do a Live-Foods Inventory You won't eat live foods if you don’t have them around the house. So what’s
in your kitchen, and where is it living? How much live food do you really
have on hand?
ON THE SHELF: If most of your food lives on a shelf or in
the cupboard, it probably isn’t live food at all. Almost any food that can
survive unrefrigerated for more than a few days is likely canned, boxed,
cooked, dehydrated, vacuum packed, ultrapasteurized or otherwise processed
(which is to say, it is largely dead). There’s nothing wrong with having some
dry staples and gently processed foods in your house, of course, but if less
healthy shelf-dwellers like chips and crackers constitute the bulk of your
available nourishment, watch out.
IN THE DARK: Some foods that do have
a decent shelf-life include potatoes, yams, onions, garlic, squash and other
root vegetables, most of which do well unrefrigerated for long periods, as
long as they’re kept in a relatively cool, dark place. Of course, most people
end up cooking these items at some point, and once cooked, they are no longer
considered live. Even cooked, though, many of these foods are still quite
nutritious, and most can be eaten raw (just check the books in the Resources
section for advice and preparation instructions).
IN THE OPEN: In the old
days, nearly everyone used to have a tempting fruit bowl right out in plain
site. For some reason you don’t see fruit bowls so much anymore. That’s a
shame, because most fresh fruits, including peaches, pears and plums (as well
as tomatoes and avocados) belong here, not in your refrigerator (at least,
not until they are sliced or they’ve reached their peak of ripeness). If
you’ve got nothing but a mushy banana or two sitting around on your counter,
repent. Keep a bowl of tempting produce where it’s handy to snack on or slice
into salads and sandwiches.
IN THE ICE BOX: Welcome to the fridge — you’ve
hit the motherload of live, raw foods. Chilled watermelon, grapes, cherries
and apples, crunchy carrots and cucumbers, green leafy vegetables, fresh
herbs — if it’s in the refrigerated produce section at the grocery store, it
probably belongs in your fridge at home. That goes double for perishable
oils, like flaxseed oil and nut butters, as well as sesame and olive oils
more commonly found on the shelf.
If you’re eating live and fresh, your
fridge should be full of brightly colored produce. If, on the other hand, you
open your ice box door and find nothing but condiments, cheese, cold cuts and
soft drinks, there’s a good chance you’re diet is in trouble.
Check out
the freezer, too. Most experts agree that most kinds of produce, if picked at
the peak of ripeness and quickly frozen, offer many of the same benefits of
their fresh counterparts. If you can thaw produce and eat it as is, or (as
with frozen berries and bananas) blend it into a smoothietype concoction, you
can still call it live. Just remember, all bets are off if you have to cook
it before you eat it. And if your freezer only contains pizza rolls, tater
tots and ice cream, consider a change. Resources WEB www.livingfoods.net www.rawfood.com www.lovingfoods.com www.rawfoodists.com www.naturalrawpetfood.com
BOOKS Diet
for a New America by John Robbins The Art of Loving Foods by J. Safron and R.
Underkoffler Nature’s First Law by S. Arlin, R.C. Dini and D. Wolfe RAW:
The Uncook Book by Juliano Fit for Life by Harvey Diamond
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