Posts Tagged ‘health’

What Foods Are Acidic?

April 30th, 2010

If you have decided to eat for energy, you may have begun to hear more and more about the pH levels of your food, and how they can affect your overall health. It has been said that a diet higher in acidic foods can result in an increase in stiffness of the joints and muscles, as well as an increase in headaches. If you are interested to know what your pH levels are, you can test your urine with pH papers, available at any pharmacy or drug store.


It is true that foods with a high acidity will be less beneficial to you than if you were to dine on a diet with a higher concentration of alkaline or non-acidic foods. And while you might think it would be relatively easy to determine which raw foods have a high acidity level and which do not, there are always a few trick foods that will make it very difficult to guess.


For instance, you might assume, based on the sour taste, that a lemon would certainly be highly acidic. The truth is, lemon juice is in the low end of the alkaline scale – it is not the most alkaline food to be sure, but it certainly is not acidic in your system.


A high energy diet, of course, cannot forgo all acidic foods when maintaining a raw diet, but it is a good idea to limit your intake of highly acidic foods as much as possible.


Raw foods can even have differing pH levels within the same food groupings. For example, high levels of acidity can be found in some nuts and legumes like walnuts, peanuts and lentils – which can certainly be a healthy part of a raw diet. Other nuts, like filberts and brazil nuts, are less acidic; and nuts like almonds are actually very high in alkalinity.


There are also some vegetables that are fairly high in acidity, including asparagus, green olives and artichokes. Again, these food items can be successfully incorporated into a healthy raw food diet for effective eating for energy, but care should be taken to include highly alkaline foods on the same plate, including most leafy greens, or other items like carrots, beets or cucumbers.


Surprisingly, most fruits are moderately to highly alkaline, with the notable exception of the very popular blueberry. This little fruit has an incredible number of benefits for the body when eaten raw, so it would be a mistake to remove it from your raw foods diet. But again, balance is what you are going for here, so for every heaping helping of blueberries you eat, make sure you include some alkaline fruits, like figs, raisins or prunes (highly alkaline), or peaches, bananas and avocado (moderately alkaline).


Avoiding acidic raw foods altogether is not practical or advisable for most people. These items often contain other benefits that you would be harder pressed to replace in a raw foods situation. But on the whole, you want your meals to be heavily favored towards an alkaline pH level, for optimal health and good eating.

Raw Diet Recipes – Great Tasting Simple Nutrition

April 3rd, 2010

If you remember a few years ago, there was a very effective advertising campaign for a beer company, debating what the key quality was that drew in their consumers. Was it the great taste, or the fact that the beer was less filling? There was no clear answer, no definitive winner.


And while you would usually be at a loss as to what a mass-produced beer and a healthy raw diet might have in common, this is one instance where a similar argument can be made for both.


With a raw diet, there are two key reasons to forgo the cooked foods, and move towards a diet rich in vitamins, nutrients and fresh foods. Raw foods taste great! No, raw foods offer better nutrition! Both are right, and both draw a different group of people to the raw food diet.


Sure, raw foods taste great. Raw food recipes use plenty of fresh, ripe produce that is full of its own flavors – so much so, that you rarely need the salts and sugars that you might otherwise add to your cooking to give an extra dimension of taste.


Take, for instance, those fresh green smoothie recipes that you have heard so much about. While the average grocery store purchased smoothie might be full of sugars, preservatives and other chemicals in order to enhance the long-dead and diluted tastes, a fresh smoothie recipe reads more like a haiku. No long list of additives and other outside influences on flavor. Instead, it’s a few simple ingredients that will taste that much better.


This is great, especially if you have children and you want to set a good example for them by eating healthy, and providing them a tasty way to follow in your footsteps. After all, if you make the healthy option a delicious one, it makes the raw food diet a lot easier to stick with.


On the other side of the coin, those easy raw food recipes are more than just crowd pleasers for taste. The vitamins and nutrients that you find in the average raw food diet are going to be several powers higher than a similar cooked food item.


A great example of this is broccoli. Most people eat their broccoli cooked, which means boiling it in a pot of water, and then covering it with melted cheese to make it somewhat palatable. But if you skip the scalding, and eat your broccoli raw, you will find a lot more than better flavors. You will find that the vitamins A, C and K that you hear so much about will actually stay on your food, not get leached out in the cooking pot. On top of that, the natural levels of glucoraphanin in your broccoli will be closer to what the studies tell you should be there, helping to create sulforaphane in the body to help fight cancer. And don’t forget about the iron, calcium, magnesium and other minerals that will stay on your broccoli, and get into your body when you consume it raw.

Eating for Energy Recipes

April 3rd, 2010

Do you own a cook book these days? Most of us can remember from our childhood, when our parents owned a whole shelf full of cook books, with everything from baking for the holidays to recipes for the slow cooker to that tacky 70’s version with all of the fondues and gelatinous salads included.

But in the modern era, the shelf that used to hold the cook books is now, more often than not, used to hold the microwave. Recipes, if we use them at all, tend to be ones that come right off the box of ingredients, or are replaced wholesale by a slew of fast food menus.


But if you want to eat for energy, maybe it’s time to consider updating your recipe collection. Eating for energy can be a little harder if you don’t plan ahead, and if you try to just “throw something together” at the last minute. That sort of disorganization can lead straight into some very unhealthy – and energy-draining – meal selections.


So, where can you find the best recipes if you want to truly eat for energy? Sure, you can try your local bookstore, for one. The science of food is progressing at an amazing pace, and you should be able to find dozens of how-to books and old-fashioned cook books, albeit with new and exciting ways to prepare a meal. The only downside to a trip to your local book store is that they tend to frown on you bringing along some ingredients, and trying out a recipe or two right there in the store.

So, before you go browsing for books, take a quick look online, and see if you can find some reviews from other people who have read – and tried – the recipes.

But while you are online, there are two other things you might want to take a look for.

There are some great e-books online about eating for energy, so don’t be afraid to read the web sites that sell the books, and see if you find yourself nodding as you read the description. If you do, there’s a chance that the recipes they offer might be a good fit for you. Many times, these e-books can provide newer and less mainstream ideas than a traditionally published book.


Another option is to look into many of the online communities devoted to nutrition and particularly eating for energy. There will usually be a conversation, or “thread”, devoted to sharing recipes – you may find some that are highly unusual, but incredibly effective, and downright delicious! And be sure to share the raw food recipes and ideas that you’ve found with your new health-conscious online friends in exchange.


The key to eating for energy is planning, and recipes are a big part of that. Effective recipe collections will allow you to utilize your favourite energy-giving food items in new and interesting ways, and that will ensure that you don’t get bored, but don’t have to subject yourself to foods that you despise, either. So grab yourself some recipe cards, and start collecting and sharing your ideas.

FTC Ruling and New Eating for Energy Reviews

December 16th, 2009

book_cover_webI’ll get to the Eating for Energy reviews in a second but first…

On December 1, 2009 the FTC started a crack down mission on any online business making erroneous claims and doing fishy business. You’ve probably seen hundreds of these sites promoting the acai berry diet or how Jenny lost weight, right?

As a result of those kinds of spammy, illegitimate sites, businesses like mine have taken a low blow with regards to what we (or our clients) can say about what we offer.

Specifically, testimonials and reviews must now be come with a disclaimer as to the generally expected performance of a product.

With regards to Eating for Energy, how on earth am I supposed to know that? I know that in general, you’re going to improve your health, have more energy, and most likely lose weight if you follow the recommendations I make in the book.

But if the FTC is looking for more that that, I’m not sure what to say.

I receive so many incredible testimonials each week and to not display them to the world would only be a disservice to millions of potential people who could relate to these true stories. None of the reviews I post are fabricated or untrue. I post them verbatim from what these great clients of ours send me in their emails.

Here are 4 new reviews of Eating for Energy to show you what I mean

“There were many parts in your book that I enjoyed, but probably the most interesting for me was learning how our diet causes stress on our body.  When we think of stress we think of traffic jams, work, family arguments, etc – we tend to forget that what we put into our body can cause us even more stress - a dangerous combination if we’re already feeling stressed.

Thanks for writing it – it’s a great read!

Audra Starkey
Brisbane, Australia

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“In January 07, I was very sick….in and out or hospitals for months with Doctors doing test after test and finding nothing wrong. Eventually, the cancer specialist told me to start watching my body for signs of changes…lumps etc. She said that I had a fast growing cancer. I was sent home on a prescription of prednisone.

The problem started again the following year. Since I have read your “Eating for Energy” book, I feel fantastic. I have plenty of energy and no longer have aches and pains. I don’t feel like I am 100 years old anymore (I am 57yrs). My ph level is close to 7 whereas before I was very acidic due to chronic inflammation of the colon. I have never heard of an acid/alkaline level which should be maintained for optimum health. I have also lost weight….not a lot, because I have always kept my weight down but the last two or three kilos were impossible to lose until I started the raw food diet.

The doctors were looking for cancer because I had a massive dose of calcium leaching out of my bones which made me feel very sick and very weak also resulting in osteoporous. I had no idea that too much acid leaches calcium out of bones.

Yuri, if I had read your book in 2007, I would never have been so sick and would have resolved my problems without me having to use a walker because I did not have any strength left in my legs. I would not have put on so much weight because of the drug prednisone. The answer to my health was simple. Just eat lots of fruit and veges (raw). I still have to watch for foods that cause inflammation but I am on the right track now for a healthy body. Thank You Yuri for “Eating for Energy”!

My health is fine now and I feel wonderful and confident that I have at last resolved my health issues and I want to thank you for sharing your book with me. Regards,”

Frances Jeffs

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“Hi Yuri, thanks for this book – you have hit the right button on eating healthy. After 3 weeks I have more energy, experience a more positive attitude towards problems in life, realizing there is a solution for every problem, thinking twice before just eating that LOOKS nice. Thank you for opening our minds to realize what God already provide for us. Keep up the good work!”

Ursula Visser

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“Hi Yuri,The facts speak for themselves! Since purchasing Eating for Energy less than 2 months ago I have subscribed to your program and not only lost 5 kgs but I am now at my lowest weight in 20 years and have the energy levels of a 20 yo!! (I’m 41).

The great thing about Eating for Energy is that the raw foods recipes are so simple and incredibly tasty – I certainly don’t feel like I am missing out on any food experiences. In fact, I am appreciating the flavours in my food more than ever!

I’d always known which foods I should be eating more of but you’ve made it easy for me to finally do it through the variety of recipes and food ideas in your book.

Thank you so much Yuri – my family and I feel like we owe you so much!”

Geraint Gearon
Bangkok, Thailand

Health, Hunger, and Happiness

December 7th, 2009

sb10067107h-001I think it’s easier for most people to conquer the exercise side of the equation versus the healthy eating side. When I say most people I also refer to myself.

I don’t want to make excuses but how you are raised and “conditioned” to eat can have a profound effect on your dietary habits later in life.

If you were brought up on raw foods, I envy you. Your parents have essentially taught you that healthy foods are the ultimate way to nourish and reward yourself.

The way most of us are brought is unfortunately the complete opposite.

We are brought up eating in a way in which we choose foods that “make us full”, “make us feel comfortable and loved”, and “reward us” for certain things.

Using Food to Feel Happy

The easiest example is food-based conditioning is that of a birthday celebration. We take this yearly opportunity to celebrate by eating cake and other foods that may taste “good” in the moment but don’t provide any value to our body.

Over time, birthdays become Friday nights, or achieving a certain goal, or any other excuse to celebrate something.

It’s no wonder we turn to decadent sweet foods when we want to feel happy. We use food as a trigger for a particular emotion that we want feel. Unfortunately, this never ends well.

Using Food for Full Instead of Fuel

The fact that so many of us eat to feel full could be attributed to a survival mechanism that is inherent in the human condition. Hundreds of thousands of years ago, our hunter and gatherer ancestors never had the certainty that they would have 3 square meals each day. In fact, they probably had 2 if they were lucky.

With time, that inherent uncertainty could have led to dietary behaviours like bingeing. After all, if they didn’t know when their next meal was going to come, they needed to stock up and fill their stomachs with as much food as possible – just in case.

I know it sounds crazy but I believe that we still behave the same way.

Human physiology and behaviour has evolved little since those days. The only thing that has changed is our environment. Perhaps some day we will become better suited for our world.

So our current reality is one in which people are busy and on the go all the time. This is just another reason for people to “fill up” on food. It’s like taking a long road trip where you need to fill your car with a “full tank” before you get started.

You wouldn’t want to feel hungry, now would you?

These type of behaviours means that we eat for FULL instead of FUEL.

Before choosing a food, it is important to ask yourself whether this food will fuel you (or energize your body and do it good) or simply fill you up with calories.

The tough part is that most foods do one or the other.

Eating foods that make you feel full drain your energy.

Conversely, eating foods that fuel you, energize you, keep you alert, and provide incredible nutrients for your body.

But no one wants to feel hungry. That’s a scary thought! What if we never ate a food. What would we do?

Just considering those possibilities probably makes a lot of people nervous.

We eat for security. We eat to feel connected and loved. We eat constantly because we think we need to.

But What If…

We started considering our bodies as the most expensive and luxurious sports car. Let’s say a new Bugatti that retails for $1.2 million dollars!

If you owned this car, would you fill it up with anything but the best gas?

Would you ensure that it had regular maintenance check ups and oil changes?

Wouldn’t you have your car washed and waxed as often as possible to keep it looking shiny and immaculate!

Well, here’s the kicker…

Our body is far more valuable than any sports car!

But why don’t we treat it as such?

You know full well how good you look and feel when eat well (especially if you follow a raw food diet) and exercise each day.

So why is it so tough to eat for health instead of hunger and happiness?

Well, as I’ve mentioned, I think the problem is that we have been conditioned to BELIEVE that healthy is boring, doesn’t taste good, and in a lot cases painful!

Eating cake is pleasurable, eating salad isn’t.

Curling up on the couch with a hot chocolate is comforting, working up a sweat for 45 minute in the gym is not!

That’s what the majority of society has been conditioned to believe.

But deep down, you know what you need to do.

Listen to your intuition and follow the path the works for you!

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I’d love to hear your thoughts on this topic. Let’s a get a good discussion going in the comments.