Posts Tagged ‘enzymes’

Benefits of Eating More Raw Foods

April 5th, 2010

There are plenty of very good reasons to make the switch to a higher concentration of raw foods in your diet. Ideally, of course, you would make the switch to an all-raw diet if eating for energy was your main priority in life. However, sometimes life gets in the way of your ideal eating goals.


But when you feel yourself wavering between a healthy raw option and that processed chocolate bar at snack time, here’s a few thoughts you can review in your mind to remind yourself of why you chose to eat more raw foods in the first place.


Raw foods take less preparation time. Sure, it might not seem like it at time, but overall, a raw diet means you spend a lot less time in the kitchen, and a lot more time out enjoying your life. No longer will you have to baste roasts, cook pasta, thaw turkeys, or wait for water to boil. A raw diet means, at most, you have to put something in the dehydrator overnight. Otherwise, it’s a few minutes of prep time, and straight onto the plate.


Eating raw also means less energy waste, both in your home and in your body. Cooking foods means electricity-hogging appliances like your stove are used, spilling excess heat into your home and adding big bucks to your bills.


But while eating raw means less energy used, it is also a high energy diet for you, in that the essential vitamins, nutrients and living enzymes in the food that sometimes are lost to the cooking process are instead brought into the body. You will probably notice, almost immediately after you begin eating more raw foods that you will have energy levels you haven’t felt since you were much younger. You won’t believe how tired and sluggish you used to feel, and it is that feeling of power, energy and vitality that you need to remember when you feel your will power slipping, and the lure of something cooked and unhealthy beaconing to you.


What other reasons do you need to keep yourself on the raw foods straight and narrow path? Eating for energy in its raw form means you will be taking in more fibre, which will aide in digestion and help you to feel full on less food.


Eating raw also usually means an intake of fewer calories, but more good calories. Many people try to lose weight by simply cutting calories, but in the end, their body craves the energy. Eating raw doesn’t deprive the body, it floods it with good fuel, and encourages the body to become a more high-powered and efficient machine in the process.


A diet high in raw foods will, by its very nature, have less processed sugar than the average person’s diet. But with all of the fresh fruits available, you will never have to deny your sweet tooth.


In the end, when you make the change to eat more raw foods, the biggest benefit will be the higher levels of energy, and how good overall you will feel. Can a moment on the lips replace that? Fat chance.

Healthy Eating Plan for More Energy

March 25th, 2010

Most people simply eat. They don’t stop to think about what they’re putting into their bodies, and they certainly never ponder if there are better options when it comes to maintaining a healthy lifestyle, and getting more energy from their food. But if these are areas that concern you, here are a few tips to help you get the most out of every mouthful.

One of the best things you can do is eat raw foods as often as possible. In their raw form, many of the foods you eat contain more vitamins and nutrients. That’s because the cooking process leaches away many of these benefits, not to mention killing all of the natural living enzymes that could really be helping your body out.

Another way to help yourself is to choose healthy snacks instead of junk food. It sounds obvious, but it does take a little planning ahead. There is always a candy machine nearby, but if you have a bag full of almonds and apple slices, you’ll get the snack you need, when you need it, and you won’t suffer later when the candy would usually run out and leave you with a sugar deficit.

And while it might seem like a good idea at the time, you should never skip a meal. Your body thrives on regular consumption of fuel – if you skip meals, you teach your body to store excess calories for lean times, rather than letting your body burn them as needed. Stay to a fairly regular eating routine, and your body will know that there is always more fuel coming, and be more willing to let you run the tank right to empty.

Drink plenty of water. Again, this sounds like common sense, but sadly, many people neglect their water intake needs. A properly hydrated body is one that can concentrate all of its efforts on the task at hand.

You should always eat when you’re hungry. If you are between meals and you feel a little pull in your stomach, go find yourself a healthy snack. Ignoring those signs from your body will impair your energy levels, as a starving body will begin to shut down, and you will feel weaker for it.

On the flip side, don’t eat when you’re not hungry. Many people will do this, absent-mindedly snacking while they watch television or read a book, or while they are out with friends. When snacks arrive, take a second to do an inventory of your stomach. Are you really hungry, or just looking for something to do?

Don’t eat out of boredom!

Watch the toppings! Even the healthiest foods lose their purpose when they’re drenched in fatty, heavy dressings, or covered with salts or sugars. Always remember that even an energy-rich food like blueberries can be rendered into an “energy bar” that’s more sugar than anything else.

And don’t forget to season your food. Many people grew up with the only seasoning on the table being salt. There is a whole world of spices out there, and they will allow you to keep eating healthy foods without getting bored of the same old tastes with every meal. Spice things up, and you’ll be able to stick to the good stuff longer.

=> Got any favourite energy tips of your own? Feel free to share them in the comments.

Milk, Dairy Products, and Pasteurization

October 5th, 2009

Within the last year or so, I’ve noticed a huge push by the dairy industry promoting the benefits of consuming dairy products among tennagers and athletes.

It’s so bad now that you can’t go to a movie without being subjected to 6-10 quick clips with the message “Milk makes you strong!”. It’s very annoying and that’s one of it’s one of the biggest reasons why kids and their parents believe that milk and dairy actually do your body good.

But nothing could be farther from the truth!

Especially, when talking about commercially available dairy which is pasteurized and homogenized, and which provides little benefit to the human body.

There are many proponents of raw milk (I’m still not one of them) but considering how rare raw milk really is there’s really no point in talking about it.

Instead, we’re going to discuss the milk and dairy that you have access to in the grocery store.

The Problem with Pasteurization

Pasteurization is not intended to kill all pathogenic micro-organisms in milk. Instead, pasteurization aims to reduce the number of viable pathogens so they are unlikely to cause disease (assuming the pasteurization product is refrigerated and consumed before its expiration date).

Pasteurization typically uses temperatures below boiling since at very high temperatures milk, casein (protein) micelles will curdle.

Nonetheless, the heat used is well above 118 degrees Fahrenheit which inherently destroys any potential value raw milk could provide.

While the dairy industry is passing off pasteurized milk as being wholesome and healthy, it is far from that. Studies have shown mounting evidence that commercial, pasteurized milk may play a role in a variety of health problems, including: diabetes, prostate cancer, rheumatoid arthritis, atherosclerosis, anemia, MS, leukemia and ovarian cancer.

There are dozens of reports and studies on pasteurized milk, most of them highly unfavorable. The main focus of the published reports seems to be on the health issues that commercial, pasteurized milk causes such as: intestinal colic, intestinal irritation, intestinal bleeding, anemia, allergic and sinus problems, and salmonella. Contamination of milk by blood and white (pus) cells as well as a variety of hormones, chemicals and insecticides is a big cause for concern.

Raw milk sours naturally, but pasteurized milk turns putrid and thus manufactueres must remove the slime and pus from pasteurized milk through centrifugal clarification.

Furthermore, inspection of dairy herds for disease is not even required for pasteurized milk.

I don’t know about you but I surely don’t want to be drinking milk from an infected cow!

I’ve recently developed a real appreciation for cows and I love seeing them as they were meant to be – grazing off the land – not confined in cubicle-like barns being subjected to the nasties of big business!

On the topic of pasteurization (and for that matter heating any food), according to Sally Fallon of the Weston Price Foundation:

“Heat alters milk’s amino acids, lysine and tyrosine, making the whole complex of proteins less available; it promotes rancidity of unsaturated fatty acids and destruction of vitamins. Vitamin C loss in pasteurization usually exceeds 50 percent; loss of other water-soluble vitamins can run as high as 80 percent. Pasteurization alters milk’s mineral components such as calcium, chlorine, magnesium,  phosphorus, potassium, sodium and sulphur as well as many trace minerals, making them less available. There is some evidence that pasteurization alters lactose, making it more readily absorbable.”

If heat does this to milk, just imagine what heating other foods does.

That’s just one of the reasons for following more of a raw food diet.

Development of Allergies

When milk is pasteurized, the delicate protein molecules are changed, making them much harder for our bodies to break down and digest. Pasteurized milk then puts an unnecessary strain on the pancreas to produce digestive enzymes to break this down.

This may be partly the reason why milk consumption has been linked with diabetes. It is also the reason behind many milk allergies. It is the protein portion—the casein–that becomes difficult to digest after pasteurization, thus causing reactions.

Like any dead enzyme-void food, pasteurized milk, puts an enormous strain on your body’s digestive system. In many cases, those with milk intolerance, leaky gut, or compromised digestion, these protein molecules pass through the intestinal walls into the blood stream, not fully digested.

This is the first step in the development of allergies and a host of other systemic problems such as auto-immune disorders.

Last but not least, pasteurization destroys all of the active and healthy enzymes in milk–in fact, the test for successful pasteurization is absence of enzymes.

These enzymes help the body break down and assimilate all the healthy nutrients in milk, including calcium. That is why those who drink pasteurized milk may suffer, nevertheless, from osteoporosis.

The calcium in milk is simply not utilized very well.

To hit home the problem with pasteurization, calves (baby cows) fed pasteurized milk die before maturity!

Hey, if cows die when they consume dead milk, why would humans be any different?

Tomorrow, we’ll look at some more negatives of consuming cow’s milk and dairy products. We’ll investigate the effect of homogenization, how cow’s are fed, and hormonal issues.

Be sure to read tomorrow’s post!