I Ferment My Salad

I have been looking around for other ways to eat sauerkraut besides my normal ways. In the past, when I didn’t eat kraut very often I would either cook it with some form of smoked meat, sausage or pork chops.

To eat fermented kraut with smoked meats is just about as easy a meal as you can imagine. You just have to rinse and drain the kraut (real kraut is salty from the brine), put it in the sauce pan with some sautéed onion or alone, put your smoked meat in and steam the whole pot with the lid on for about 20 minutes. It is a really tasty and quick meal.

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If your sausages are home made local meat sausages and your is kraut home made fermented, then this is about as healthy a meal as you can fix. There are zero carbs here, lots of naturally created vitamins, all of the nutrients you need passed up the food chain to you. The only thing lacking here would be live bacteria from your fermented kraut. To get those you need to eat your kraut raw–cooking kills live culture.

My other favorite kraut recipe is also cooked, but it is a fantastic way to eat kraut. In a nutshell, you grate one potato into one quart of drained and rinsed kraut. You sauté a grated onion in a tablespoon of butter, put the kraut and a half cup of hot water, braise for five or ten minutes, put a lid on and cook for twenty minutes. This dish is a great side. It does contain carbs in the potato and onion, but one potato spread out over a quart of fermented kraut adds up to almost no carbs per serving. Here is a link to the real recipe. Once again, cooked, so no probiotic benefits here.

Now that I know that a big advantage of eating fermented kraut is found in the trillions of bacteria you are eating in each serving, I have begun looking for ways to prepare it raw. So far the best find was in sauerkraut salad. Nothing in this salad has ever been above room temperature, since it was harvested in the farmer’s field. Outside of washing the veggies in the sink to get sand off of them, they have never been exposed to any chemical ingredients. You can do this any way you want, but the most important ingredients are in the dressing, which is one third of a cup of olive oil and half a cup of sugar. The recipe I am going to link to calls for vinegar, but that is because it also calls for canned kraut. We aren’t using canned kraut, so adding vinegar is optional. My fermented kraut is sour through and through, so I won’t be adding any sour anything to it. Just rinse your kraut, toss it, some diced green sweet pepper, diced red sweet pepper, diced fermented jalapeño, and some optional diced onion. If you kraut does not contain caraway seeds, then add some now. You can eat this the day you make it, but it tastes better if cooled overnight. The jalapeño flavor will infuse the dish. Here is the recipe. This dish does contain all of the benefits of fermented foods, because it has never been cooked. It does contain sugar, but there are many servings here, so the actual sugar per serving is not so bad. If you don’t regularly eat sugar it will taste like a treat, if you do eat sugar in every bite of food and drink you take this will taste pretty savory.

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I will keep looking for great ways to eat kraut raw. Don’t forget that you can drain it, rinse it and eat it just like that, too, with nothing added. We like doing it that way too. There is no reason that you wouldn’t be making a couple of quarts of kraut every week. Cabbage is a really inexpensive ingredient and it’s easy to find at the store. Look at the top menu above if you want instructions on how to make kraut at home. Nothing this easy is better for you.

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What’s Ailing America? There is a Drug For That!

I am running the risk of this blog becoming a running commentary on the state of medicine in the US, but this article from Mother Jones at least is peripherally related to food issues.

Doctors Are Prescribing Amphetamines for Binge Eating

Did you know that there is a mental disorder called “Binge Eating Disorder?” Perhaps you didn’t realize it because it is a brand new disorder, appearing in the DSM only in 2013. The new disorder is getting lots of publicity because now there is a drug to prescribe for it, Vyvanse, manufactured by the pharmaceutical company Shire. Vyvanse is the only drug that is currently marketed for this ‘disorder’, and the company is widely publicizing the news that you might just have this–therefore ask your doctor about Vyvanse.

…Shire, a pharmaceutical company that, in January, won FDA approval to market a drug called Vyvanse to treat BED. Vyvanse is a Schedule II federally controlled substance—meaning that it’s acceptable for medical use but has high potential for abuse—and it’s the only drug that the Food and Drug Administration has approved for BED. Last year, Shire spent over $2.5 million on raising awareness among doctors about BED; by 2020, the company expects Vyvanse prescribed for BED to bring in 200 to 300 million dollars per year.

It is a common marketing ploy…develop a drug, then invent a syndrome that it is necessary to take it for. This drug is an amphetamine.

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So what is BED?

BINGE EATING DISORDER was first described in 1990 by a psychiatrist named Robert Spitzer. At a meeting to discuss which diagnoses should be included in the fourth edition of the Diagnostic Statistical Manual of Mental Disorders—the bible of the mental health field that classifies each recognized mental illness and its symptoms—he noted that some patients regularly binged, but didn’t fall into the category of bulimia because they didn’t purge. Over the next two years, Spitzer led a landmark study finding the practice of uncontrollable, distress-inducing binges to be a common, untreated problem among individuals participating in weight loss programs—one that some binge eaters likened to an addiction. The evidence led the DSM committee to include BED, defined as binges featuring “impaired control” at least twice a week for at least six months, as a disorder that was “not otherwise specified.”

How big a problem is this? Is it even a real problem? According to the people that make the new drugs it is a problem so severe that they applied for emergency approval of their product.

In January of this year, Shire’s application to the FDA went through an expedited approval process without the usual consultation from an outside advisory board; an FDA spokesman told me this was because Vyvanse had already been approved for ADHD, and there was no existing treatment for BED. The application was based on two studies, both similar in content to the first, and both led by scientists who, between 2013 and 2014, received a combined $60,000 in consulting and travel fees from Shire. A company spokesperson told me that the studies were controlled and double-blinded, and Shire does not “believe the results were in any way compromised.”

Your government is all about speedy relief. The FDA quickly approved this drug because of the lack of drugs for this newly invented disorder. We deserve this kind of rapid action from our regulators, don’t you think? If there are any problems with this drug they will be discovered when large quantities of US citizens begin really testing it for problems.

I have a real problem with the FDA. If you are a long time reader you will know that the Food part of the FDA ‘approves’ every new food additive invented by food manufacturers. They don’t test anything for safety, they let industry do it and report the results. There are no second checks on this approval process. They have even allowed unapproved ingredients into foods and supplements because there were ‘no known’ safety issues. Let the customers test these ingredients for safety. Meanwhile we live our lives innocently assuming that if it is being sold it must be safe. Having a crappy regulator is worse than having no regulator at all. It gives the public a false sense of security. If you knew how little is checked you would know that you should do all of your own checking.

Or, you start boycotting all processed foods, supplements, and drugs the way that I currently do. The only safe processed food, IMHO, is the one you leave on the supermarket shelf. It is not so hard to live on foods you make yourself out of ingredients you can recognize as food. If you have to open a box or bag or bottle to get at the ‘food’ it contains, you are literally placing your health at risk.

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Can It Really Be This Simple?

Yesterday’s news cruise brought me a few related stories to report on today. The Washington Post let me know that there is a drug on the market that caused people who were injected to lose weight:

A study in the New England Journal of Medicine reports that taking daily shots of liraglutide (marketed as Saxenda) can help overweight or obese patients lose weight — a lot of it. Patients taking the medication lost an average of more than 12 pounds, twice as much as those on a placebo, after 56 weeks.

These people were also counseled to exercise 150 minutes more per week and to eat slightly less. The drug mimics a hormone that is released normally that causes a person to feel full. However, I know from all of the research I have done over the last year that losing weight is not as easy as not eating as much, and is negatively influenced by working more. It doesn’t matter how much you eat, it matters what you eat.

When insulin is secreted, or the level of insulin in the circulation is abnormally elevated, fat accumulates in the fat tissue. When insulin levels are low, fat escapes from the fat tissue, and the fat deposits shrink. All other hormones will work to release fatty acids from the fat tissue, but the ability of these hormones to accomplish this job is suppressed almost entirely by the effect of insulin and blood sugar. These hormones can mobilize fat from the adipose tissue only when insulin levels are low— during starvation, or when the diet being consumed is lacking in carbohydrates.

Taubes, Gary (2007-09-25). Good Calories, Bad Calories (Kindle Locations 7913-7917). Knopf Doubleday Publishing Group. Kindle Edition.

Therefore, a drug that causes weight loss by suppressing hunger can only cause weight loss if the patient quits eating carbs because they aren’t hungry. This drug is no solution, since it’s artificial starvation would immediately dissipate when the drug ceases to be delivered. Another ‘solution’ that is no cure. The cure is to quit eating carbs.

Another story that was handed to me by my lovely life partner yesterday was about the growing body of evidence that eating bacteria intentionally may have an effect on your mood, your serotonin levels in your brain, and your attitude toward life–all because of the effect that eating pre-digested foods has on your gut microbes.

This article over at mercola.com is entitled “Social Anxiety Disorder Linked to High Serotonin Levels, throwing Treatment with SSRIs into Serious Doubt”. I know that it doesn’t sound like this has anything to do with gut microbes, but if you read down a ways there is this:

Fermented Foods May Help Social Anxiety Disorder, Study Finds

Now, I don’t really care to get into whether “Social Anxiety Disorder” is really a thing or not. It may well be another way that ‘doctors’ can legitimize selling a pill. There are a lot of cases where once the pill is invented, the disorder must be created that will authorize insurance to pay for it. “Restless Leg Syndrome” comes immediately to mind. Social Anxiety Disorder is currently a reason to prescribe one of the many anti-anxiety selective serotonin reuptake inhibitors (SSRI) drugs, which are designed to reduce the ability of serotonin in the patient’s brain from being brought out of circulation, thus increasing brain serotonin levels. This ‘treatment’ assumes that the symptom is caused by low system serotonin levels. Turns out this is probably not the cause, and that SSRI are just treating a symptom.

The impact of your gut microbiome on your brain function has been confirmed by a number of studies, and research is moving rather swiftly in this area. One of the reasons for why the bacterial makeup of your gut would have an influence on your mental and emotional health relates to the fact that your gut actually works much like a second brain.

Your digestive system also creates serotonin. Or, should I say, something in your gut creates serotonin, and it ends up affecting your mood. There are so many things that point to eating more natural and less processed and chemical laced foods. The effect on your weight, mental health, and overall health is profound. I have found that my own mood and reactions to the world are influenced by what I eat during the week.

It’s important to realize that your diet and general lifestyle are foundational factors that must be optimized if you want to resolve mental health problems such as depression or anxiety, because your body and mind are so closely interrelated. Compelling research demonstrates just how interconnected your mental health is with your gastrointestinal health for example. While many think of their brain as the organ in charge of their mental health, your gut may actually play a far more significant role. The drug treatments available today for depression are no better than they were 50 years ago.

Eating fermented foods is good for you in a host of ways. Factory produced pickles or sauerkraut are not fermented foods . Those foods are dead. Fermented foods are alive when you eat them. Fermented foods are not going to last on a store shelf for years, because the most beneficial parts of them are actually living inside the food. Cooking these foods kills them and you lose that benefit. Eating raw fermented cucumbers is a different thing that eating raw vinegar pickles.

Making fermented foods at home is easy. It must be easy, because people have been storing food this way for longer than they have known how to write about it. The tools required to do it successfully are few, and the ways to mess it up to the point where the results are dangerous are just about nonexistent. I am selling some bottles that make this simple process even simpler. If you click this email link you can order a one quart swing-top glass jar, complete with fermentation airlock to make creating your own anti-depressants at home stupidly easy.

https://www.paypal.com/cgi-bin/webscr?cmd=_s-xclick&hosted_button_id=BT7P8FG3VTPRG

Click the link above and I will send you a jar, and the shipping is on me.

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We Should Eliminate Them…

In the New York Times this morning I find that a study has been published that places the blame for 25,000 deaths per year in the US at the feet of sugary drinks. The Times article is here.

The study that they are reporting on is here. The Global Burden of Diseases Nutrition and Chronic Diseases Expert Group (NutriCoDE) examined mortality data from dietary surveys and pooled it with data on the health effects of sugar sweetened beverages with regard to diabetes, cancer and overall mortality. As you can imagine the effects were notable.

According to this report the deaths from sweet drinks is almost at 200,000 per year.

What is special about sweet drinks, you might ask? Is there any difference between the sugar in a Pepsi and the sugar in a Go-Gurt? Nope. There is nothing special about the sugar in a Pepsi, and the problem that this study cites in regards to drinks also applies to every bite of processed foods that we take in the US. I exaggerate, but eight out of ten processed foods on store shelves in the US contain added sugar.

The sugar added to your food is not necessary, except that food makers are trying to replace fats, and they have to replace them with something. Perhaps now that saturated fats are no longer the Ultimate Bag Guy of foods makers can now begin flavoring foods with genuinely natural ingredients. Perhaps now food makers can replace the sugars with succulent fats.

The study makers and the New York Times think we should eliminate sweet drinks from the food supply. I think we should eliminate processed foods from the food supply. We disagree in the fundamental identity of who “we” are. They believe that “WE” are the collective power of the government, forcing makers to quit making. I believe that “WE” is each individual family deciding that they can not trust the food maker or the government to protect them and keep their food safe. When we stop buying, as the market dries up, they quit making. In my world the market drives the marketer. If the government would advise that we all quit eating sugar, like they have, and the market quits eating it, the maker will quit making it. Put the percentage of the US Daily Allowance of sugar on every processed food label.

In my opinion, we owe it to ourselves and our families to make our own food. Convenience is killing us. I truly feel sorry for food makers, because their government long ago recommended that they quit putting a perfectly good natural ingredient into foods, forcing them to make adjustments that were dangerous, as it turns out. I wish I could advise them to just turn back the clock. Go back to the recipes of 1950. Unfortunately, the existing markets and moneys are entrenched, and there is only one safe food, the one I make in my kitchen.

So, to eliminate sugar from my diet I have to eliminate sweet drinks and processed foods. I have done this. Having done this, I now look and feel many years younger. My youthful mojo is back, and I am not counting on my government to help me. Help yourself.

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Rotten Cabbage

My fermentation journey continues. We are building our fermentation knowledge up a little bit at a time. This week we are making kimchi, which is fermented korean cabbage salad. Just like when we made sauerkraut, this one is super easy to to.IMG_3808

Isn’t that a beautiful looking thing! I love how the red cabbage has colored the entire thing, so that the white cabbage, cauliflower and carrots are all crimson. One head each of red and white cabbage made three jars this size of kimchi.

This is how I made it, I shredded the cabbage up in half inch shreds, sprinkled three tablespoons of sea salt and massaged it in. I put it all in a two gallon zip top bag and waited for the moisture to begin coming out. Oh yeah, I threw the rest of a vegetable platter in there, too, some carrots and cauliflower.

I put four ounces of chopped ginger, two tablespoons of fish sauce, and salt water in the blender and made a paste. I put the paste in the zip top bag.

I loaded the lot into two two quart mason jars, but it didn’t fill them up enough for my liking, so I transferred it into the fido jars pictured above. I love the swing top jars. The necks are bigger diameter than a wide mouth mason jar so it is easier to pack the cabbage into the jar tight enough to get the liquid level above the cabbage level. I didn’t need a wooden dowel or other implement to pack it, just my fist. The Fido jar is always nice and air tight, too.

This batch fermented for about five days before we ate the first quart, which was last night, while eating some grilled beef steaks. The nice thing about fermented vegetables is that whatever carbohydrates are in them are consumed by the bacteria during fermentation. This is a way that I can get all of the benefits of eating plants with none of the drawbacks. This is a way that I can satisfy my desire for bulk in my food without compromising my hatred for carbohydrates. A bonus to eating raw kimchi is that all of the probiotics, and there are trillions, that are alive in the food are put directly into me as reinforcements for my own biologic army. Eating this ‘pre-digested’ food gives me the products of cabbage fermentation, which includes vitamin C. There is nothing in it to feed my own carb-loving bacteria so I don’t get gas, and they don’t get fed.

So, I have made some of the fido jars pictured here, and I am going to be selling them. The jar will include the grommet in the lid and the airlock, plus an optional glass or ceramic stone to weight down the foods (to keep them under water). I have also made a pamphlet to explain how and why we ferment foods, that I will include. Shipping is included in the basic price of 25 dollars. If you want a few of these (I have four in rotation), then you can pay for one through paypal, my account is at dcarmack@kc.rr.com and I will ship yours to you. Select either the one with the weight, three piece or S-airlock. Get to fermenting!!

https://www.paypal.com/cgi-bin/webscr?cmd=_s-xclick&hosted_button_id=BT7P8FG3VTPRG

CLICK THE LINK ABOVE TO ORDER YOUR FERMENTING JARS

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When is a Ban not a Ban?

I used to be the kind of person that assumed that products for sale in the grocery store were safe to eat. That didn’t change until recently. After I went on the 21 Day Sugar Detox last spring I began to read up on foods. I wasn’t looking for things to hate on, I was looking for food news to write about in my blog, this blog.

The books I found and the documentaries that I watched all added to a general feeling that my trust in the food regulations in the US was misplaced. The recent news that the FDA will be ‘banning’ trans fats is a great piece to analyze, because it perfectly illustrates all that is wrong with food regulation in this great nation.

When food regulation was in it’s formative years, when the first nutrition guidelines were being created in the US, back in the 60’s, there was a lively debate occurring about what could be the cause of the increase in heart disease among middle aged men. One camp held that there seemed to be a correlation between eating saturated fats and the existence of fatty deposits in heart arteries. The other camp held that not enough was known to make a wholesale recommendation concerning diet change. That was the status of the debate, one side said we know enough to do something and the other side said that doing something would lead to unexpected results without further analysis.

The ‘do anything’ crowd shouted down the ‘proceed with caution’ crowd and it led to a world that recommended low fat diets to fight heart disease, and replacing saturated fats with partially hydrogenated oils (PHO). The difference, the main difference, is that saturated fats came from natural sources, and PHO came from food science factories. Liquid vegetable oils could be chemically treated to force them to be solids at room temperature. The logic went that they were vegetable liquid oils before, and that essentially they still were vegetable oil, and therefore not saturated fats. The product already existed, having been invented decades earlier, but they never caught on as a substitute for lard or butter. Now, with the force of government dietary regulations behind them, America switched from butter to margarine. Vegetable shortening and margarine were given a pass as far as food safety went. Nobody ever had tested them long term to see if they were actually safe to eat. They were assumed to be “Generally Regarded As Safe” GRAS.

GRAS is a legal definition in the law controlling foods and additives to foods. Foods that are old enough and been around a long time, like margarine, get to be foods regarded as safe because people are not known to have issues, despite the food being around so long. It keeps the FDA from having to approve things like table salt, for instance. That makes sense.

It turns out, though, that PHOs are not safe to eat. Having the entire population switch from natural fats to artificial fats revealed a problem with the entire GRAS construct. Trans fats got grandfathered into our diet without any kind of safety testing, and they caused the very issue they were promoted to correct. It turns out that saturated fats were unfairly maligned by the government as playing a role in heart health. It turns out that they fingered the wrong suspect, that they recommended we eat something that causes heart disease to correct heart disease.

Enough history…the government is finally getting it’s act together, and ‘banning’ trans fats in foods–three years from now. Already our annual dose of trans fats has decreased 78% from it’s peak, since the first public proclamations that it is not safe to eat. If you wondered why I keep putting the air quotes around the word banning, there is this, from an article at takeapart.com :

But thanks in part to lobbying efforts by the Grocery Manufacturers of America, an industry group consisting mainly of food companies and food retailers, manufacturers will be allowed to use ingredients aside from partially hydrogenated oils that contain trans fats, and, as is the case today, they won’t be obligated to disclose trans fat content if it’s below half a gram per serving. That’s because the ban is of PHOs, not trans fats per se. That means if the industry can come up with another ingredient that—like butter, PHOs, and palm oil—performs the magic of adding fat’s mouthfeel while remaining solid at room temperature, and if said ingredient contains trans fats—like some meat and dairy products—well, it will be the food zombie of 2018.

The ban is of one form of trans fats. If the industry has to use trans fats in the new version of cooking oil that is solid at room temperature, then that will be just fine.

When the government bans something industry can always respond by tweaking one molecule in the formula and calling it something else. This gives them another forty year window to make the product until the government can get enough evidence to ban that product as well.

To cut to the chase…trans fats are just one example among many where we can see that food manufacturers do not have our health as the prime interest in what they produce. Not even close. Only one food manufacturer produces food that is known to always be healthy, that can be counted on to have all of the essential vitamins and minerals in the correct proportions, that always agree with our digestive systems–Nature. The only drawback to natural food is that it doesn’t keep on the shelf long enough. It has to be picked before it is ripe in order to make the journey from half a continent away to your grocery shelves. Natural food rots because it is real, and because it is edible. Artificial food does not rot and keeps forever because it actively inhibits life.

Trust your food in your grocery at your own peril. The safest food there is the single ingredient foods found on the outside walls of the store. Vegetables, fruits, dairy, meats. All other food can contain any amount of trans fats up to half a gram per serving. Above that they have to be labeled as containing trans fats. They can be GMO without a label. They can contain artificial ingredients and food colorings that cause dietary and allergic issues without labeling. Newly formulated chemicals can be added as ‘artificial flavors’ and these chemicals will have only been ‘tested’ by the manufacturer, who informs the FDA that they find it safe to sell and add to foods. The FDA doesn’t approve anything, they stamp the maker’s approval with the ‘Duly Noted’ stamp. You get to test these things on your family.

At my house we just don’t eat processed foods any more. I no longer trust the ‘process’ the FDA uses to approve things. Heck, now I don’t even trust the process by which they yank approval away from items once GRAS–at glacial speed. I trust Nature. Let the food industry do what it wants, it can’t get to me or mine any more. Quit buying their products and they will quit making them. It doesn’t matter how cheaply they can make things or how long they last on the shelf if we all avoid them. It is really the only thing that gets their attention–your attention.

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No Rumen? No Problem!

If you are the kind of person that has trouble eating dairy products, it is still possible for you to get all of the value of eating dairy without any of the issues. Most of the time when people are lactose intolerant, the problem lies in their inability to process the sugar in milk, which is lactose. If you don’t process it, then it is up to microbes that are in your intestines to do the work, which they happily do, creating gasses that cause you pain, creating chemicals that cause your stool to be loose, etc. It’s much better to have that sugar digested before you eat it. Turns out that if you pre-digest it; if you turn the milk into yogurt, kefir, or cheese before you eat it, all of the sugar is gone, all of the problems are gone.

There are some people that have the same digestive issue with some plants. Cucumbers have a lot of carbohydrate in them. When you eat a cucumber you can taste a hint of sweetness, and some people get gassy when they eat them. It is a big enough problem that they have bred a type of cucumber called ‘burpless’. For some people the vegetable they can’t eat is cabbage, and the issue is the same, the food causes gas. The solution is similar to the milk solution, turn the cucumber into pickle or turn the cabbage into sauerkraut. Fermenting foods is like pre-digesting them.

500px-Abomasum_(PSF)

A ruminant is an animal that when it eats it’s food it stores it in a first stomach where it is reacted on by bacteria, then regurgitated and chewed a second time, swallowed then into a second stomach where it begins its final passage through the rest of the animal’s digestive tract. This is a description, a basic one, of the digestive system of most grass-eating animals–cattle, deer, goats. I find it fascinating that a cow can eat something like grass that we cannot eat, because they have evolved to take advantage of the bacteria found on grass that will decompose it while it is in the animal. The cow’s bacteria actually makes the grasses edible, changing the cellulose that makes the grass stand erect into energy sources and nutrients not even found in grass. If we ate grass it would come out the other end pretty much the way it went in our mouths.

Of course, we have evolved to take advantage of our own bacteria. A human eating his or her natural diet would never have anything like ‘heartburn’ or ‘acid reflux’, because these things are caused by our stomach and intestinal bacteria being disrupted by the things we eat these days. When we eat dead foods, foods laced with artificial ingredients, foods containing ‘preservatives’ that inhibit bacteria growth on the shelf, we do harm to our natural allies with respect to food. Nature expects us to eat bacteria when we eat food, it expects that some of the bacteria on our vegetables will be replenishing some of the same bacteria that exists in our gut to digest or meal. When we eat things that are poisonous to the bacteria on our foods instead, then we end up with unexpected and less than optimal results.

When we eat natural foods we enhance the ability of our good bacteria to do their work. We increase their numbers, even if we are eating fresh raw foods, there are colonies of good bacteria living on the food, and when we eat them they do not die. They take up residence inside us, joining the ranks of those already there. When we eat fermented foods there is the same effect multiplied by 1000.

When we ferment food it is like we have created a rumen that we can set on a countertop. If you put cabbage in salt water, the beneficial bacteria that reside there are not killed by it. The other bacteria, the ones that make your cabbage turn brown, turn into goo eventually, they cannot live in salty water, and therefore don’t compete for the carbohydrates in the cabbage. The bacteria that survive the briny bath consume the carbohydrates and starches in the cabbage, and they make vitamins. In cabbage they make vitamin C. Did you know that this is how vitamin C is made industrially? They ferment it into existence in a fermenter. These bacteria make an incredible amount of beneficial products, and they breed to the point that when we eat raw fermented foods we get billions of probiotic bacteria.

When you take a probiotic you will get a dose of a strain of bacteria. It may or may not actually be alive, who knows. When you eat a plate full of home made, fresh, fermented sauerkraut, your plate is alive with trillions of bacteria, of countless variety, and all of the vitamins and nutrients that they have created by fermenting your cabbage. You will not suffer any of the reactions that you normally would to the cabbage. Your intestinal health will be instantly transformed into something inhospitable to damaging microbes that may be setting up colonies there. Every benefit you have ever heard of from eating probiotic supplements is multiplied by one thousand when you eat raw fermented foods.

It is possible for you to eat things you could not normally eat, if you only pre-digest them. Pre-digesting them turns out to be as easy as dissolving salt in water and submerging them for a week. The list of hardware you need is short–a non-reactive vessel to hold the food in, and a cover to keep bugs out but that will let gasses of fermentation out. Go buy yourself a rumen, also known as a mason jar.

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Allergy Symptoms?

This morning a friend was complaining that after eating his dinner last night he got a histamine reaction. His nose and sinuses all plugged up quickly. The dish, “Sweet and Spicy Orange Zest Chicken–Healthy Choice” contained lima beans. He rarely eats lima beans so he speculated that there must me something in them that caused him to have an allergic reaction.

feature-4-gluten-free

I looked up what is in this “Healthy Choice” to see what might be included in dinner that is not visible to the naked eye:

Ingredients

Cooked Rice, Cooked Chicken Tenderloins (Chicken Tenderloin, Water, Olive Oil, Contains 2% or Less of: Isolated Soy Protein Product [Isolated Soy Protein, Modified Food Starch, Starch, Carrageenan, Soy Lecithin], Dextrose, Salt, Sodium Phosphate, Potassium Chloride, Paprika, Flavoring, Caramel Color), Sugar Snap Peas, Water, Orange Marmalade (High Fructose Corn Syrup, Corn Syrup, Orange Juice, Orange Peel, Natural Fruit Pectin, Citric Acid, May Contain Natural Flavor), Red Peppers, Scallions, Brown Sugar, Contains 2% or Less of: Soy Sauce (Water, Wheat, Soybeans, Salt, Alcohol, Vinegar, Lactic Acid), Vinegar, Modified Corn Starch, Ginger, Lemon Juice Concentrate, Garlic, Soybean Oil, Salt, Oleoresin Paprika, Crushed Red Pepper.

I put the bold emphasis on places where lots of mysterious things can get put into your foods. Natural flavors, flavors, and similar innocent sounding ‘ingredients’ are added to foods to enhance your dining experience. These things go through the rigorous FDA approval process of being tested by their manufacturer for safety and informing the FDA of the results. If a product proves to not actually be safe, as in the case of Trans Fats, then the poor results in the real world may sometimes result in the FDA removing the safe designation–sometimes as long as forty years later. (See Fats, Trans)

The Washington Post has a good article yesterday, “Getting rid of trans fats is a good move, but the nutrition battle isn’t over“. The article goes into the sorry state of health related to diet in the US. The final paragraph sums up what is really wrong with nutrition in the US:

As a general matter, however, we believe that taxing things the government wants to discourage is a way to achieve legitimate national goals with minimal economic disruption and individual coercion. A tax of appropriate size on added sugars, for example, would discourage consumption and encourage food- and beverage-makers to develop new recipes.

That might work. However, I believe that demonizing processed foods like cigarettes were demonized in the 80s and 90s will be a lot easier to do. If news outlets like the Washington Post would start trumpeting the message that processed foods are not manufactured with your health even in the top ten considerations, then maybe people would stop eating processed foods.

Us all eating real food would be the kind of actual incentive for food manufacturers to stop putting mysterious ingredients into food. The FDA already has the power to stop dangerous and poorly tested ingredients from being added, including sugar. They don’t. Manufacturers could stop putting sugar in yesterday, if they wanted. They don’t. Trans fats were known to be dangerous, even by the FDA back in 2006, but manufacturers still put them into foods, “where needed”. Nine years have passed, and the FDA just gave them a few more years to make the changes to get them completely out.

Eat processed foods, if you want. It’s your life.

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One Thousand Kinds of Fat

I know that organic chemistry can be confusing. The fact that it is confusing makes dietary fat advice confusing as well. For instance, you might hear news outlets saying that fats are bad for you, which is true. You may also hear the same news outlets saying that fats are good for you, which is also true. Both statements can be true because there are so many different kinds of fat.

Let me make it easy for you. Fats created in a lab are artificial fats. Fats created in a living creature are natural fats. Artificial fats are bad, natural fats are good. It really is that simple. For example, lard comes from the natural fat deposits found in pigs. Lard is perfectly healthy when eaten.

Today in every newspaper and online there is the news that the FDA, that tireless watchdog of food safety, has come down hard on one kind of fat, trans fat. Here is one example. You may have heard of transfat, it has been in the news a great deal of late…it is manufactured by companies to make liquid oils into solid oils–think vegetable shortening. A couple of years ago the FDA took the bold step of making food makers indicate how much trans fat was in their products on food labels. Doing so has seemingly caused the consumption of trans fat to fall by 78% since that change. Now they are going to ban trans fat use all together–three years from now.

Like the title above says though, there are a thousand kinds of dietary fats. Trans fats occur in nature, are a component of lard and tallow (pork and beef). So are trans fats all bad? Are trans fats all equal in the damage they cause to hearts and veins? No. From Wikipedia:

Trans fats also occur naturally in a limited number of cases. Vaccenyl and conjugated linoleyl (CLA) containing trans fats occur naturally in trace amounts in meat and dairy products from ruminants. Most artificial trans fats are chemically different from natural trans fats. Two Canadian studies[9][10] have shown that the natural trans fat vaccenic acid, found in beef and dairy products, could actually be beneficial compared to hydrogenated vegetable shortening, or a mixture of pork lard and soy fat,[10] by lowering total and LDL and triglyceride levels.[11][12][13] A study by the US Department of Agriculture showed that vaccenic acid raises both HDL and LDL cholesterol, whereas industrial trans fats only raise LDL without any beneficial effect on HDL.

(Bold bits are my emphasis)

You can still go to a thousand different sources and find cautions against eating saturated fats (lard, butter, tallow, coconut oil). Are saturated fats proven to be bad? No.

Despite the original good intentions behind getting rid of saturated fats, and the subsequent good intentions behind getting rid of trans fats, it seems that the reality, in terms of our health, has been that we’ve been repeatedly jumping from the frying pan into the fire. The solution may be to return to stable, solid animal fats, like lard and butter, which don’t contain any mystery isomers or clog up cell membranes, as trans fats do, and don’t oxidize, as do liquid oils.

Teicholz, Nina (2014-05-13). The Big Fat Surprise: Why Butter, Meat and Cheese Belong in a Healthy Diet (Kindle Locations 4970-4973). Simon & Schuster. Kindle Edition.

The book that I just quoted from, “The Big Fat Surprise” by Nina Teicholz tracks down the origins of the cautions against saturated fats. It is a tutorial on the damage that pseudoscience can cause. It is a lesson in unintended effects. Eating less fat, especially natural fat, is a national disaster. Just about every negative health trend can be traced to switching the diet of the US from natural foods to processed foods. Trans fats are but one example of this.

They led us to believe that we could eat reconstituted foods, supplement them with the nutrients that are lost in the process and it would be the same as eating the real thing. Such arrogance never goes unpunished. Eating an egg from a chicken that is raised naturally passes up the food chain every nutrient needed by the animals above the chicken on the chain. This includes nutrients that we have not yet even identified. Once eaten, the natural egg feeds the man, and his naturally occurring bacteria within him. There are reactions and processes that have been taking place since time immemorial. Nobody yet knows how to catalog the chemical natural processes that occur between man and his food. Yet, the food scientist thinks he can create a food that is just as good in the lab–add a few known nutrients, and call it equivalent. Folly.

For the next three years food makers are going to go to great lengths to find a fat that is solid at room temperature to use in baking, frosting, for frying foods. They will be looking to food science laboratories for a white knight. Too bad, the white knight lives in the lard tub. Food makers think that we won’t eat lard and butter because the authorities gave it a bad name. Just like everything else, it is up to us to show food makers what we will and will not eat.

Throw away your vegetable oil, shortening and margarine. Don’t wait three years for them to remove the option you have now of buying it. It is bad for you, you should treat it like your salmonella tainted ground beef.

Buy a tub of lard to fry with, to bake with, to eat. It is easy to find lard at the store. Tallow is harder to find, I will be making my own. Why do I need two kinds of animal fat? Lard smokes at 350 or so degrees, while tallow smokes above 400.

BalancedBites_CookingFats2

Cooking above 400 is great for deep frying. The crust that forms on foods is much better, and the amount of oil that is absorbed in food is lower, the higher the starting temperature. Tallow and lard make foods that taste better, they never leave a greasy taste in the eater’s mouth. Chefs and grandmothers know that lard makes the best pie crusts. they know that the flavor is best if the fat is best. We have been on the wrong track for a long time.

Show the food makers you don’t hate lard, butter and tallow any more, by buying them. Use them and show McDonalds that they can use tallow again to make the tastiest french fries and they can get rid of all of the artificial things they put in their potatoes to make them taste like they were fried in tallow. Life will be much easier for food makers and restaurants if we would encourage them to go back to natural oils.

I make my own leaf lard. I buy kidney fat from my local pork processor. I heat it up in my crock pot until the fat comes out of it. I put that fat in mason jars and it becomes creamy white lard. Pure lard for a pure diet. I will do the same later this month with beef fat to make my own tallow for deep frying. I will post pictures when I do that, but there is nothing easier than making lard or tallow.

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It’s Not You, Everyone Is Fat!

Don’t take this personal, you and your kids are getting fat. Don’t believe me? Here, read this New York Times Article:

Parents’ Denial Fuels Childhood Obesity Epidemic

Despite widespread publicity about the obesity epidemic, parents increasingly seem to be turning a blind eye as their children put on pounds. In a recent study in Childhood Obesity, more than three-quarters of parents of pre-school-age obese sons and nearly 70 percent of parents of obese daughters described their children as “about the right weight.”

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I can see the actual situation in my mind’s eye, you are gaining weight, but you are getting older, you don’t exercise like you think you should, you are eating too much and you know it–so you expect it. Your kids are growing up and the older one is obviously heavy, but not really too much heavier than the other kids on the block, and your youngest is still a stick-figure, so…no need to change anything just yet.

The thing is, by eating the same foods everyone else in your neighborhood is eating, you are slowly poisoning yourself, and consigning your kids, even the little skinny one, to a life of fighting overweight and obesity. In addition, you are wrong about why you are gaining weight.

No one in your family is eating too much. Counting calories is a waste of time. You are eating too much of foods that you shouldn’t be eating at all. You shouldn’t be eating processed foods. You shouldn’t be eating cooking oils or margarine. You shouldn’t be eating ‘low-fat’ anything. You shouldn’t be drinking sweetened drinks including fruit juices and diet soft drinks. It goes without saying that your kids shouldn’t be either.

You don’t need more exercise. Exercising has nothing to do with losing weight. It’s not possible to ‘burn off’ calories, because increased activity does make your metabolism go up, but that increase calls for more fuel, which means more hunger. You are working up your appetite. Exercising will make you feel like you have earned a second piece of dessert, and you will eat it. Exercise is great for a lot of reasons, but if you are changing your diet, you shouldn’t change your workload at the same time. Don’t think that something that won’t work for you will work for your kids. They don’t need more exercise, either, they need to eat right. Stick to the foods found on the outside walls of your local grocery. Fresh vegetables (low carb ones). Stay away from potatoes and dried rice. Stay out of the inner aisles of the store. Don’t buy boxed or bagged manufactured foods, no matter what the health claim on the label says. NO breakfast cereal is ‘healthy’, including oatmeal.

Your weight gain has very little to do with your age. Older people don’t have to gain weight. It does point out a fact that I need to reemphasize though. When you tell a twenty-something that they won’t always be able to eat like they currently do without gaining weight, you are acknowledging that gaining weight has NOTHING TO DO WITH CALORIES. If you eat ‘too much’ when you are twenty and don’t get visibly fat, and eat the same thing when you are thirty and you do, it is obvious that it’s not a simple calorie eaten versus calorie burned equation. Something else is causing you to slowly put on pounds. It’s not age. It’s not activity. It’s what’s in the food, what effect it has on the germs in your guts, and it is damage that slowly accumulates–for you.

It’s different for your children. They never lived in a time when it was ‘safe’ to eat butter, so they always got margarine. They have always been fed the ‘healthy’ processed cereals for breakfast. You have always picked the ‘low-fat’ food to feed them. They never really got to live on the foods you got when you were a kid. For some reason, though, they are way heavier than you were at that age…hmmm.

The solution to your kids’ diet is the same as the solution for your own. If you would eat right, and feed them right, you would all get better at the same time. We all would. The entire society would get better if we quit eating artificial fats, artificial foods, artificially sweet drinks. Go back to eating foods your great grandma made and you will heal your family without drugs or exercise. Eat fermented foods, eat fresh foods. Eat foods that are alive and contain ‘probiotics’ in their natural form.

What if you are overweight, but you don’t think your kids are, consider this passage:

“Denial can be a coping mechanism,” said Arnaldo Perez, a doctoral candidate at the University of Alberta who researches what motivates families to seek help for their overweight children. Before judging them outright, providers should explore parents’ possible feelings of guilt and failure, he said.

If you are overweight and your kids eat with you, I am telling you, they are being harmed, too. Even if the symptoms are not yet visible. What I am saying is, its not your fault. The fault lies in what is in the boxes of food you are preparing. They are not made to be healthful, they are made to taste great, be inexpensive, and last forever on the shelf. Their purpose is to attract your dollars to the coffers of their makers. There are no foods in boxes or bags whose primary purpose is to promote your health. Heathy foods do not have ingredient labels at all. If they did they would be single words like “meat”, “eggs” or “bacon”. The true health foods don’t have labels that scream some health feature like ‘gluten free’.

Stop believing lying food labels. Don’t fall for the ‘it’s your fault, you are lazy’ line of logic for why two out of three people eating IN AMERICA is overweight…two out of three people are not irresponsible and lazy. Two out of three people in America are overweight and either on a diet or just tried one, and they are still gaining weight, because it has nothing to do with calories. It’s what you are eating that matters, not how much of it. At least save your kids.

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