Understand
the principles of healthy selection, preparation and combining of
foods
In a nutshell,
the most important diet rule is to eat our food as much as
possible whole, live, organic and free of added chemicals. Other
important rules are to chew well, enjoy what we eat, combine the
food correctly and deliberately under-eat rather than over-eat.
WHOLE
FOOD
Whole food means
that there should be as little refining as possible. To give an
example: natural brown rice is the preferred whole food. White
rice has the bran and germ removed together with most of its
vitamins and minerals. Vitamin B1, for instance, is about 450%
higher in brown than in white rice. This means that the body may
not use the deficient food efficiently. This can lead to
overweight or underweight and poor blood-sugar regulation. The
lack of fiber in refined rice contributes to constipation. In
varying degrees this also applies to other commonly eaten foods.
Over thousands
of years our metabolic and enzyme structures have evolved on
whole foods and rely on certain combinations of ingredients being
supplied together. Protective or synergistic (co-operative)
factors are present in whole foods. Vitamin C is much better
absorbed and retained if taken together with bioflavonoids. Both
nutrients naturally occur in the same food. The sensitive
polyunsaturated oils are protected from oxidation and structural
damage as long as they remain in the whole seed. They also
naturally occur together with protective vitamin E. When
extracted and refined, they are partly oxidized and harmful
trans-fatty acids are formed in addition.
Carnivorous
animals do not just eat meat but also bones. They would quickly
become mineral deficient and diseased without the bones. The same
applies to us if we just eat flesh high in phosphorus or
low-mineral commercial food. We then need to use mineral
supplements or become deficient and prone to diseases.
As relates to
root vegetables, 'whole' means using the vitamin-and mineral-rich
outer parts, usually discarded as peel, as well as the inner
parts and the cooking water. Pouring out the cooking water loses
all the vitamins and minerals down the drain.
A story,
presumably true, has been published about the crew in one of the
early submarines. After a long crossing they were utterly
fatigued and disease-prone; they had lived on tinned and dried
food. The health authorities were at a loss about the cause as
there had been sufficient of the known vitamins in the food. A
nature-cure practitioner offered his advice, which quickly
corrected the problem. He told them to peel a lot of potatoes,
discard the potatoes and cook the peels; strain, discard the
peels and drink the broth. How many of us do it the other way
around?
However, there
is also a downside to some whole foods and in particular to
seeds. Seeds contain reactive proteins, called lectins, which are
mainly in the outer hull or bran. Individuals with certain blood
groups tend to react to specific lectins. Also other food
allergies develop mainly against the outer parts of seeds that
are removed in refining. Furthermore, if seeds are not sprouted
or fermented, then minerals tend to remain bound by chemicals in
these outer parts and cannot be absorbed. Therefore, if we have a
sensitive digestion and eat food that is not really suited for
us, then refined food tends to cause less immediate problems than
whole food.
LIVE
FOOD
'Live' means
that the food is still high in vitality and naturally occurring
enzymes. These are destroyed when food is heated above 1200 F.
While milk may be heated initially in making yogurt, added
lactic-acid bacteria provide a new complement of enzymes to
revive food, although I prefer to make yogurt from unheated milk.
Food has
different stages of 'aliveness' or vitality. A dry viable seed is
alive but dormant, the enzymes are inactivated by inhibitors.
During soaking and sprouting the seed awakens to full life with
an abundance of enzyme activity. Like an embryo, it is at the
height of its vital and restorative functions.
A young, growing
leaf or plant still has a high level of growth hormones and
enzyme activity, but in a mature plant or fully-grown leaf there
is little growth hormone and reduced enzyme activity. Wholemeal
flour that has not been unduly heated during milling (stone mill)
has some residual kind of life, but inhibitors block any enzymes.
Enzyme activity will be enhanced and starch predigested during
sourdough baking. Live food is basically the same as raw or
uncooked food and will be discussed in more detail later.
ORGANIC
FOOD
'Organically
grown' food means that it is free of toxic agricultural chemicals
and has been grown in good soil without the use of water-soluble
fertilizers. Very harmful are nitrogen fertilizers, especially
nitrates. In one scientific experiment hens were fed blueberries
that were either unfertilized or fertilized with nitrate. Hens
fed large amounts of nitrate-fertilized berries died within three
days. Those that received only small amounts of fertilized
berries laid eggs with defective missing shells. Hens fed
unfertilized berries in any quantity maintained normal health and
eggs. What will a low-dose long-term intake of such fertilized
foods do to us?
It is well known
to organic growers that their plants and the animals fed these
plants are much more resistant to pests and diseases than
chemically fertilized plants. It has been published that cattle
on an organic farm remained disease-free while cattle on
surrounding properties were badly affected with foot-and-mouth
disease.
Most damaging
are pesticide residues, or the interaction between different
chemicals. Many natural therapists believe that organically grown
food is an important part in the successful treatment of
degenerative diseases. The term 'organic' is generally understood
to mean that such food also has not been irradiated and is free
of genetically engineered components and any added chemicals that
are normally used during storing or processing.
COOKING
Food ideally
suited for human nutrition does not require cooking, such as
sprouted seeds and fresh shoots, ripening seeds (sweet corn,
green peas), oily seeds and nuts, sweet root vegetables and
fruits. Cooking damages many proteins. They coagulate and harden
and their complement of digestive enzymes is destroyed. This
makes them more difficult to digest.
However, cooking
also makes some foods more easily digestible by breaking down
cellulose in plant food and connective tissue in meat This
enables our digestive juices to get more easily to the nutrients
and is especially important for people with weak digestive
organs. A further advantage of cooking is the preservation of
food, easier chewing and enhanced flavors. All this means that
cooked food generally is more convenient and tastes better and
for most of us that is more important than any long-term health
concerns.
Nevertheless,
here I try to show how these harmful effects can be minimized by
combining the least damaging use of cooking with the more
acceptable forms of raw food eating.
Steaming is the
most recommended method of cooking. You may add sufficient water
to cover the bottom of the pot, even without special steaming
equipment. Then most of the vegetables will be steamed and if you
use the remaining water, nothing will be lost anyway. By adding
vegetables after the water has started to boil less vitamins will
be destroyed. However, I do not see a problem with simmering
vegetables submersed in water as long as you also ingest this
water, preferably soon after cooking.
Pressure cookers
are acceptable; their main disadvantage is that they are usually
made of aluminum or stainless steel. Microwave ovens are
suspected of causing harmful radiation in the kitchen while in
use. In addition, they may contribute to health deterioration by
scrambling the delicate structures of sensitive food molecules in
unnatural ways. Therefore avoid or minimize microwaved food. It
is also safer to discard any outer part of meat or fish after
grilling or broiling.
When cooking
grains or legumes, always soak the seeds beforehand overnight and
discard the soaking water. In this way we ingest less potentially
harmful anti-nutrients, such as phytates, which make minerals
unavailable, protease inhibitors that interfere with the
digestion of proteins or lectins that cause unpleasant symptoms
with some blood groups. If beans cause wind, change the water
during cooking once or twice. The main disadvantage of all
cooking is that it destroys food enzymes and some vitamins. This
significantly contributes to more rapid aging and the development
of degenerative diseases if the diet consists predominantly of
cooked food. Therefore try to use only a minimum of cooked food.
Most harmed by
cooking are animal products and polyunsaturated oils; least
harmful are cooked starches. Eat your food, but especially
vegetables, as soon as possible after a short cooking time; try
to minimize steam or fumes escaping from cooking food. Except
baked grains avoid leftover food from a previous meal.
A large amount
of aluminum dissolves in the water during cooking in aluminum
cooking ware, the more so, the more acid the water is. This is
also a problem with stainless steel pots. While it is more
resistant to acids, it can still release harmful amounts of
nickel. Nickel is implicated in weakening the immune system and
promoting cancer. Enamel cooking-ware is generally fine, except
that cheap Asian imports reportedly may contain high levels of
lead; this is also a problem with ceramic pots. Glass
cooking-ware is the safest.
Here are
some important cooking rules:
·
Avoid soda in cooking or baking, it destroys B-vitamins
·
Add salt or minerals after cooking to preserve vitamins
·
Save and use the cooking water; it is rich in minerals
·
Cook for the shortest period possible
·
Do not keep food warm for long, cool quickly for storage
·
Avoid aluminum and minimize stainless steel cooking utensils, use
enamel or glassware instead
·
Do not leave acid food in contact with metal surfaces
·
Do not cook what can conveniently be eaten raw
·
Do not fry or heat oils or fats
·
Do not cook with microwave
CHEWING
AND ENJOYING THE MEAL
Good chewing is
of vital importance. It is necessary to break down food particles
to a fine pulp and at the same time insalivate it sufficiently
for proper enzyme activity. Furthermore, trace elements and
vitamins are already partly absorbed through the mouth tissue,
while the stomach needs adequate advance warning of the expected
composition and quantity of the food. So, even if the food is
already liquid (soups, broth), chewing is important. Keep and
move such liquid food in the mouth for several seconds. Solid
food needs chewing until it is thoroughly liquefied. Teach your
children early to chew thoroughly; possibly check the stool to
see if it contains large pieces and whole seeds.
You should not
only chew thoroughly but also eat slowly and in a leisurely
fashion. This not only improves digestion but helps prevent
overeating. A certain amount of time is needed for the body to
form the message that it has enough. Therefore, if you stuff
yourself within a short period, your body has no time to prevent
you from overeating. Overeating may also occur if you do not pay
attention to the eating itself but to a conversation, to a book
or the television. Then you cannot hear when your body says
'enough'.
It is also
important to have a peaceful mind at mealtime. Before the meal,
completely relax for a minute or more with eyes closed; if able
to meditate, raise your awareness to a joyful meditative state.
During the meal pay attention to the process of chewing and enjoy
the various flavors as they develop.
It is beneficial
to enjoy what one eats. Unpalatable food is not well digested.
Neither is it good to continue eating poor food just because one
has acquired a preference for it. For many, this is the most
difficult problem to overcome during health improvement: to
acquire a liking for what is nutritionally good. There is
no doubt that taste buds are adaptable and can be re-educated,
but this comes gradually. Introduce unfamiliar foods and
supplements in very small mounts only, well mixed with familiar
foods.
Be imaginative
and experiment with new ways to prepare food. Do not eat if you
are not really hungry, if you are extremely agitated or
emotionally upset, if you are unwell with a fever or comparable
condition or if you are still full from the previous meal. Always
prepare food lovingly.
FOOD
COMBINING
Food muscle
testing, experience with patients as well as my own body have
shown me the importance of correct food combining. The
fundamental biochemical considerations with regard to food
combining are as follows:
1.
Typical protein foods (usually containing oil or fat) require
strongly acid gastric juices.
2.
Different types of protein foods may need differently composed
gastric juices for digestion.
3.
Starches need B vitamins and chlorides, calcium and magnesium,
for enzyme activation.
4.
Sweeteners or sugars as well as acids inhibit the digestion of
starches.
Disregarding
these facts by mixing foods indiscriminately may be contributing
to infections and degenerative diseases - especially allergies,
arthritis, cancer and autoimmune diseases.
Initially, most
people have a reasonably strong digestive system and do not feel
any ill effects, no matter what they eat or combine. This is also
true if bodily responses have become dull by being ignored for
many years. However, sooner or later the unpleasant effects and
degenerative symptoms will appear.
There
are three main groups of food to consider when working out
correct combinations:
1.
proteins, sweet and acid foods, sweet vegetables, fruits
2.
neutral foods such as fats and oils, non-sweet vegetables,
avocados olives, cream cheese
3.
starches such as cereals, potatoes and dry legumes
The
neutral foods may be combined with either one of the other groups
while the two
extreme groups should be kept apart.
Observing this simple rule will already prevent the more
serious consequences of incorrect food combining.
In poor health
and during health improvement, however, it is advisable to be
even more careful. With few exceptions, most foods are best
digested as a moderated mono-diet - only closely related foods
are eaten together, for example different kinds of grains. With
severe digestive problems one may temporarily adopt a strict
mono-diet, one kind of food only at a meal, and observe its
effects.
The next best
possibility is to eat foods correctly combined, but still
separated during the meal. This is most important with meat, fish
or nuts. These are best eaten at the beginning of the meal for
proteins to receive the strong gastric juices in the pit of the
stomach. The rest of the meal, if not too liquid, will remain in
distinct layers on top. Remember this if you have proteins and
starches at the same meal.
You may mix a
small amount of flavoring vegetables 'with meat or fish, or eat a
fruit together with some nuts. Generally it is preferable to have
either some fresh vegetable juice or a small amount of raw
vegetables before a cooked meal.
For those with a
sluggish metabolism, a small amount of sweet food or fruits as
dessert after a protein meal will provide energy for the
digestion of slow-burning protein-fat combinations. This,
however, is not advisable after a starch meal or for those with
blood-sugar problems. Glucose and maltose (as in barley sugar) do
not contain fructose and therefore cause less of a problem if
combined with starches. If the digestion is sluggish, a small
amount of fruit acids, such as lemon juice sprinkled over meat or
fish, or ascorbic acid with or after protein meals, may be
beneficial as well as half a cup of a bitter herb tea afterwards.
Cooked subacid fruit that is low in fructose, such as apple, does
not react in the same way as sweet fruit that is high in
fructose. Therefore, most individuals will be fine using this as
a flavoring with cereals or starches, for example apple puree
with rice.

Direct
connections between groups indicate good combinations.
Connections
between groups with one interception are fair.
Connections
between groups with two interceptions
are poor.
FOOD
GROUPS
'Hard'
proteins meat, fish, nuts, oily seeds,
soybeans
'Soft'
proteins eggs, milk proteins, meat/fish
broth, tofu, soymilk, nut butters, fermented soy or nuts
Acid
fruit lemon, grapefruit, pineapple or acid berries
Subacid
fruits apricots, peaches, pears, bananas, cooked
apples
Sweet
food sweeteners, foods with added sugar, molasses,
honey, dried fruits, oranges, figs and other sweet fruits and
berries, juices of sweet vegetables
Sweet
vegetables sweet potatoes, pumpkin, onion,
carrot, turnip, beetroot, tomatoes, green peas
Neutral
foods fats and oils, non-sweet vegetables
(mainly green), sprouted seeds, avocados, olives
Starches
grain products, potatoes, dry legumes, food yeast, sago and
taro.
?
Some factors
that make food combining less important are:
·
A strong digestive system and being physically active
·
Chewing extremely well
·
Only eating small meals
The opposite
factors will, of course, increase the importance of correct food
combining. Being able to eat just about anything, however, is not
a guarantee of strong digestive powers; the system may be too
weak to react. If you are in good health, you may forget about
food combining by omitting just one group of foods from a mixed
meal - the cooked starches; most others combine reasonably well
with each other. However, it is generally acceptable to eat
starches at the end of a meal, separated from the protein part by
a vegetable or sprout salad or by some cooked vegetables. If you
are rather sensitive, then this middle part of the meal may
consist of neutral vegetables rather than sweet ones.
Foods are
classified as hard proteins, soft proteins or starches according
to the amount of gastric acid and pepsin that is needed for their
digestion. The actual percentage of protein in a food is less
important in this respect than the amount of fat, oil and fiber
surrounding the protein.
Meat, nuts and
cooked soybeans, for instance, are difficult to break down. They
need the full strength of gastric acid and pepsin and, therefore,
are called 'hard proteins'. Eggs, uncooked dairy proteins, broth
of meat and fish, fermented soy products, soy milk and fine nut
butters, on the other hand, need less acidity and may be called
'soft proteins'.
Proteins in
processed cheese, in cow's milk used as a drink, but especially
in milk added to coffee or tea, are very difficult to digest and
thus become hard proteins. Non-fatty fish, especially if
marinated, is easy to digest and almost a soft protein, while
fatty fish is closer to meat in its gastric requirements.
Food yeast with
a 50% protein content and also the non-oily legumes are grouped
with the starches because their fat-free proteins are relatively
easy to digest and require only slight acidity.
INTESTINAL
FERMENTATION
Combining food
high in fiber with sweet food is likely to cause wind. This gave
rise to the frequently quoted rule not to combine vegetables with
fruit. In this case some of the sugar from the fruit may not be
absorbed and then may over-stimulates bacterial activity in the
large intestine, causing excessive wind, flatulence or bloating.
Some intestinal fermentation is desirable in order to keep our
beneficial bacteria happy. This is best done with a moderate
amount of fiber in the diet. It breaks down at a slow rate and
greatly helps to maintain regular soft bowel motion.
However, trouble
brews if we add a large amount of sugar in any form. This is like
adding petrol to a slow, controlled burn-off of bush land that
then gets out of control and becomes a raging wildfire. It is
very similar in our intestines. Because fiber remains in the
large intestine for a long time, excessive fermentation may even
happen if we have sweet food several hours after a raw salad. How
much sweetness we can tolerate together with fiber is very
individual. The more efficient we absorb our food, the larger the
amount of sweetness that we can handle without getting into
trouble.
For individuals
with a weak sugar metabolism it is not good to have much
sweetness on an empty stomach as that drives the blood sugar
level too high, followed by symptoms of hypoglycemia. In this
case it is best to completely separate food high in fiber from
sweet food and have the fiber meal after the sweet meal.
Therefore, breakfast is safest as a moderately sweet meal, for
instance by flavoring cooked rice or sago with banana or apple
puree. The evening meal is then safe as a fiber meal, such as
combining potatoes and other cooked non-sweet vegetables with a
vegetable salad. Lunch may be a protein food together with sweet
vegetables, such as pumpkin.
It may also be
acceptable to have a piece of fruit or a fresh juice of sweet
vegetables (e.g. carrots) some time before a meal that also has a
vegetable salad or other high-fiber food at the end of the meal.
Because fresh juice does not have much indigestible fiber, there
should be no fermentation problem by combining vegetable and
fruit in the same juice. However, if fruit high in fructose is
combined with vegetables, then the juice is high in glucose as
well as fructose and can cause a strong insulin response and
hypoglycemia in susceptible individuals.
The main rule in
all this is to have the fast digesting food first and the slow
digesting fiber afterwards. You need to experiment to see how
strictly you have to apply this rule to avoid intestinal
distress.
When eating
cooked beans we may encounter a similar fermentation problem.
These do not need any added sugar to start a strong fermentation.
They are high in long chains of carbohydrates (oligosaccharides)
that are not absorbed in the small intestine but are easily
broken down by the bacteria in the large intestine. To avoid
problems with beans, these may either be sprouted or fermented
before eating or the water in which they have been cooked may be
renewed and discarded several times.
PLANNING
MEALS
Our digestive
powers are strongest in the morning and weakest in the evening.
Therefore, it is advisable to eat difficult foods such as meat,
nuts, sweet food, large vegetable salads, during the daytime and
have a light, early evening meal. This will also improve your
sleep, while a heavy, late dinner often results in a restless or
'drugged' sleep with a feeling of tiredness in the morning.
If you are not
normally hungry in the morning, just omit the evening meal for
several nights and have 30 minutes of vigorous physical activity
before breakfast. If you do not need to leave home for work, you
may also spend an hour in the garden or want to engage in some
other outdoor activity before breakfast. Together with the time
required to drink your juice or herb tea or water, it will be one
to two hours before you finally sit down for breakfast. It is
definitely not advisable, especially with a sluggish digestion,
to eat a heavy breakfast without sufficient stimulation to your
circulation beforehand.
With a sluggish
thyroid and weak adrenal glands, of course, it is more difficult
to get going in the morning, but it is not too hard if you are
determined to make the effort. Immediately after awakening start
with some positive autosuggestion. Then mentally look forward to
something that you would like to do during the day. If necessary,
promise yourself a treat. Lack of enthusiasm can be a main factor
in suppressing your metabolic rate. Therefore, try to become
enthusiastic about something - anything!
Do some deep
breathing, stretching and muscle-tensing while still in bed. Then
jump out and immediately start some lively activity such as
circling the arms or gently pummeling the body all over. Also
stimulating are arousing music, skin brushing with rapid strokes
as well as cold water applications.
Do not rush your
breakfast. For many people it is the most important meal of the
day. Make it a habit to rise sufficiently early so that you have
at least two hours before needing to leave the house. You may
also divide the food and use a portion of your breakfast as
mid-morning snack.
A certain amount
of food eaten in the morning may produce a weight loss while the
same food in the evening is more likely to convert to body fat
and cause weight gain. Therefore, if you want to keep your weight
down, eat all your high-calorie food during the day and have only
some non-starchy vegetables or a few apples in the evening. If
you want to gain weight, on the other hand, then have a starch
meal in the evening. There will be some, however, for whom these
recommendations are not suited; you must find out in what way you
feel best and can cope most efficiently with your daily
activities.
Carbohydrates
cause a greater weight gain than a protein-fat diet of equal
calories. Also the higher the amount of roughage (for example
rice bran, linseed meal, raw vegetables), the greater is the
weight loss on any slimming diet. These factors should be taken
into account in your meal planning.
It is desirable
to have about 30 minutes of rest or light, relaxing activity
after a meal before starting more heavy manual work or a more
stressful activity. I agree with the advice of Edgar Cayce:
'After breakfast work a while, after lunch rest some time and
after dinner walk a mile'. Try to fit in at least 15 minutes of
rest in the horizontal position after lunch, relax or try to
meditate or contemplate. If in poor health, a sleep after lunch
is highly desirable. If you wake up tired from this, next time
give yourself positive autosuggestions before falling asleep.
Even after breakfast you should not immediately start rushing
around. Some kind of steady physical activity, such as walking or
gardening, will be quite acceptable after the meal. But what is
harmful is stress - the feeling of being late for school or at
the office.
FOOD
BALANCING
The concept of
food balancing arises from the fact that the various food groups
have different effects on our metabolism, hormonal and nervous
system as well as on our emotions. Food balancing is vastly
different from what is described as eating balanced meals -
proteins, carbohydrates and fats - as recommended by conventional
dieticians. To give some examples: meat stimulates the adrenal
glands and the sympathetic nervous system, thus increasing
tension and readiness for action. Fruits have the opposite
effect. They stimulate the release of insulin, which counteracts
the effect of adrenal hormones. While vegetables, especially
those high in chlorophyll, make us more relaxed, fruits make us
physically, emotionally and psychically more sensitive.
Both fruit and
vegetables increase our intuition. Meat, on the other hand, makes
us more insensitive and possibly materialistic, and less
emotional and intuitive. Red meat especially has a strong
'grounding' effect and is therefore balancing for those who are
oversensitive, overemotional and open to negative psychic or
occult influences. It is, however, unsuitable for those who are
already too tense or insensitive either physically or emotionally
or who are aggressive or overly materialistic.
Acid and
acid-sweet fruits have the strongest sensitizing effect while
subacid fruits are less sensitizing and avocados are neutral. In
this way lemons and grapefruit are more sensitizing than oranges,
while oranges sensitize more strongly than do mandarins.
Flesh foods are
more suitable for those who cannot efficiently use glucose, such
as the fast oxidizers or hypoglycemics, while fruit and sweet
vegetables are best for those with a slow metabolism. This means
that those with an unbalanced metabolism should not generally eat
a balanced diet; they become balanced by selecting foods that are
either more slowly or more rapidly digested. However, it is not
necessary for sensitive individuals to eat flesh foods to be in
balance. They can do very well on oily seeds, legumes, grains,
green vegetables and raw sweet vegetables but less on cooked
sweet vegetables.
Grains and
legumes are neutral in their effects on our metabolism and on the
glandular and nervous systems. In this respect, they may be
grouped in the middle between meat and fruits. They are balanced
in themselves. This shows why one can be balanced on a
macrobiotic rice diet with few additions of other foods.
Between
meat on the one end of the scale and fruits at the other, we may
arrange our basic foods in the following order of their
sensitizing effect on body and emotions:
RED MEAT
- FOWL & FISH - EGGS & DAIRY PRODUCTS - OILY SEEDS -
LEGUMES - GRAINS - GREEN VEGETABLES - SWEET VEGETABLES - SUB-ACID
FRUIT - BERRIES, SWEET & ACID FRUIT
Someone with a
normal metabolism may eat in a balanced way by having mainly the
neutral grains and legumes, and balancing eggs and dairy products
with vegetables. However, it is also possible to balance meat,
fowl and fish with sweet vegetables and fruits, eating very
little of the in-between foods. Another possibility is to eat a
greater quantity of a food group that is closer to the neutral
position and replaces a smaller amount of a more unbalanced food.
For instance, instead of balancing meat with fruits, you may use
an increased amount of sweet vegetables. However, you do not need
to worry about accurately balancing and measuring quantities.
This is not an exact science but more a rule of thumb. Its main
importance is to show you in which direction to move in your food
selection if you feel that your health or emotions are out of
balance.
Chapter 1:
BASIC HEALTH IMPROVEMENT