Monday, December 26, 2011

Raw Food Diet - Sample Menu

!±8± Raw Food Diet - Sample Menu

The raw food diet is gaining more and more fans, as celebrities and regular people sign up for an eating plan that can change the way you feel, look and how long you live.

If you have been wondering if a raw food diet is for you, keep reading. We will discuss some of the supposed benefits of a raw food diet as well as give some sample recipes and menu plans. If you know ahead of time what to expect, it can help you make a decision about whether or not this diet would be right for you.

Because, except for some dried fruits and vegetables, all the food you eat on a raw diet is, well, raw, there are benefits that proponents cite. They say that people who eat a raw food diet:

1 - Lose weight

2 - Have nicer skin

3 - Reduce their risk of heart disease, stroke and diabetes

4 - Live longer

5 - Have more energy and vitality

6 - Can naturally control their weight without counting calories or fat grams

A raw food diet is essentially a vegetarian diet, so it is important to know going in that you will not be asked to eat steak tartare or pork chops straight from the fridge. On a raw food diet, your daily food choices include fruits, vegetables, raw nuts and seeds, whole grains (unprocessed), unpasteurized dairy products and freshly squeezed fruit and vegetable juices.

Though the options might seem limited, many raw food advocates say they find a good variety of foods to prepare and eat. There is a time commitment involved, however, so keep that in mind.

One popular dish involves vegetables with a raw vegetable sauce on top. One example would be this:

You spiral slice zucchini into long, thin slices resembling spaghetti pasta, then blend in a food processor 1 pound of fresh tomatoes, half a white onion that has been chopped, some basil, a clove of garlic minced, some fresh red pepper that has been chopped and a couple of teaspoons of natural pizza seasoning. Once it is blended, it gets poured over the pasta.

A raw food daily menu plan can be as simple or as complicated as you might like.

Here is a sample of a day of raw food eating.

Breakfast - This might consist of raw fruit juices or whole fruits (as much as 2 pounds of fruit).

If you need a snack in the morning or afternoon, you might snack on a handful or raw nuts or some sliced avocados.

Lunch - Likely a salad, with at least 75% of the salad consisting of quality salad greens and the rest of the vegetables ranging from cucumber to red peppers. The dressing is nothing more than some fresh squeezed lemon.

Dinner - Spinach salad with 10-20 almonds, 1-2 avocados, and an orange squeezed on for a dressing. Plan to have 10-20 ounces of freshly squeezed fruit or vegetable juice with it.

Hopefully you have seen how a raw food diet can work in your life. It might take a bit of planning, but any diet worth eating will take a little care and planning. It is certainly something to consider trying if you are interested in gaining more energy, and improving your overall health at the same time.


Raw Food Diet - Sample Menu

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Tuesday, December 6, 2011

Healthy Eating Habits

!±8± Healthy Eating Habits

I read a lot about the
topics of health and especially diets. I have been experimenting with
diets since 1990 and keep journals about my
observations. Over time I tried several very different diets - ranging
from the politically correct ones to highly controversial, along with diets
of my own design. My general observation is that a healthy diet plays an essential
role in the overall scheme of well being.

Why eat healthy?

Eating the natural foods humans are well adapted at utilizing, enhances
ones ability to cope with the reality of every day life. This in essence
improves the probability of living a longer, healthier life. Quality food consumption becomes
especially important in the present world of high stress and pollution -
making a healthy diet an essential aspect of modern self health care.
(Although food is not the only aspect contributing to health or disease, it
is significant enough to consider it's effects seriously.)

I think anybody who seriously tried living healthier through a better diet,
proper physical activity, adequate rest, and by addressing mental and
spiritual factors have experienced a vast range of natural health benefits.
Common benefits are overall better health and a sense of well being, better sleep,
improved physical endurance and strength, sharper mental abilities and lower
sleep requirements. Further more, no or little time and money and energy is
spend on doctors, hospitals and health insurance bills.

What is a healthy diet?

Since this article deals with healthy eating, a question remains
to be answered: what constitutes a healthy diet? Unfortunately, there are
more opinions about this than there are health experts. To further complicate
the matter, dietary concepts change over time, leaving most people confused and uncertain
about what or whom to trust. One solution to this problem is to become sufficiently
knowledgeable about the relevant subjects and rely on common sense to draw basic
conclusions. Along with personal experimentation, such an approach will
enable one to establish healthy eating habits. This takes time and energy, but considering
the long lasting benefits a healthy diet can provide, the effort is more then well worth it.

In order to determine the minimal basic requirements of a healthy diet, I
concluded that it is safe to start with the following two objectives:

examine human diet over time - the foods humans consumed since the arrival of our species. examine diets of ethnical groups known for their good health.

Looking at the type of diets humans lived on through out pre-history, provides good
insights into the kind of foods human body should be well adapted at utilizing and dealing with.
Further, the diets of certain ethnical groups that are well known for good health -
the people of Okinawa(Japan), traditional cultures in the Mediterranean region and many hunter-gatherer
societies - suggest certain health promoting dietary habits. Upon closer examination, two main
denominators emerged:

diets are based on natural, whole or minimally processed foods in accordance to heritage. diets are lower in calories compared to a typical western diet.

In the context of present time, one can therefore make two general assumptions in regard to
the question of what constitutes a healthy diet: 1) generally, the less a food is processed the better.
2) eat less - eat what is adequate, do not over eat.

Generally, the less a food is processed the better

The reason for this is simple. For 99.9% of human existence, our species
lived on foods that were either raw or minimally processed. The technology
needed to increase food processing did not exist until very recently.
It is therefore reasonable to assume that our bodies are best adapted at
utilizing and dealing with the raw or minimally processed foods which sustained
us for hundreds of thousands of years: fruits, vegetables, meats, nuts and seeds.

Often, the more recent the food is, the more likely it is to be less beneficial
or even directly harmful - possibly due to lack of full adaptation to such foods.
For example, it is estimated that food cooking started about
500 000 - 250 000 years ago (depending on the source, the range may vary). During
this time frame, it is likely that human species have at least adapted in some way to cooked
animal and vegetable foods. On the other hand, the beginnings of grain consumption
are much more recent. Evidence of earliest known, systematical collecting of grains
for food goes back to about 23 000 years ago - giving less time for
adaptation to grain based foods.

Now, let's fast forward to recent times and consider all the new, human invented,
highly processed foods so common today: fast foods, pizza, sweets, chips, convenience
foods, canned foods, etc. along with the dramatic rise in heart attacks, high blood pressure,
stroke, cancers, diabetes, kidney problems (and all the complications that arose from these
conditions) during the past 100 years or so.

Considering the declining health of most western
nations as opposed to good health of the ethnical groups described above, it seems reasonable
that the most recent food inventions are directly harmful to human health.
Further, it has been repeatedly observed that as ethnical groups around the
world adopt the modern western diet, their health dramatically declines and they develop
the same diseases that are so common to westerners. Not to mention the fact that
the above mentioned diseases were far less common among westerners
themselves barely 100 years ago.

The more a food is processed - through excessive cooking, pasteurization,
homogenization, high heat, mechanical processing, etc, - the less natural and nutritious it becomes to a point
of becoming a harmful burden to the body, rather then a useful and health promoting food. Some
industrial processing practices deprive food of their nutrients to such a high degree that the food
has to be "enriched" by artificially adding some nutrients back into the food. This is especially
true of flours where vitamins are added back in after the processing is done.

A good diet is based on natural, whole or minimally processed foods. A large portion
of it should consist of foods that can be eaten raw, such as fruits and vegetables.
Fermented or cultured, unpasteurized foods such as kefir, yogurt, cheeses, miso, sauerkraut and pickles
are considered highly beneficial. Cooking should be minimal and only applied to foods that
must be cooked in order to be edible. Ancestral heritage also plays an important role
as certain foods may need to be excluded or emphasized.

Eat less - eat what is adequate, do not over eat

During the past several decades, food in the western and westernized nations became
increasingly affordable and more readily available then ever before in
human history. This very fact combined with the enjoyment food consumption brings,
results in all too frequent over eating. Which again leads to the above mentioned health
problems.

In the past, as in the traditional way of living among the ethnical groups mentioned
earlier, food consumption has always been significantly lower. Food quality, on the other
hand, has always been higher. Resulting in a lower food intake, but of nutrient dense foods.

Finally, as an interesting note, it has been repeatedly confirmed through laboratory experiments on animals,
including monkeys, that cutting down calories considerably lowers their susceptibility
to diseases and prolongs their life up to 50%. It is believed by many,
that life long caloric restriction can have similar effects on humans.

Health promoting eating habits

Over time, through reading and experimenting, I gradually arrived at several
basic health promoting habits that in my experience are the most important:
Avoid or minimize: Avoid all junk, sweets, canned and convenience foods - including all foods with added sugar: most commercial yogurts, kefirs and juices, fruit and soft drinks. Avoid all refined or overly heated fats: margarine, any oil that is not cold pressed, leftover fat from cooking, all foods that contain hydrogenated or partially hydrogenated fats and trans fatty acids (read the labels). Such fats are considered to be among the most health damaging foods. Avoid consumption of fish and water animals unless certain they came from unpolluted waters. Especially predators should be avoided as the toxins accumulate in them in far greater quantities. Keep the intake of foods high in polyunsaturated fatty acids (PUFAs) low - mainly nuts and seeds and any products made from them (mostly oils). PUFAs are unstable, they oxidize readily resulting in harmful free radicals. High PUFA intake have been repeatedly linked with cancer, heart and inflammatory diseases. Do not cook meat or fat at high temperatures while exposed to air. Such practice will avoid fat and cholesterol oxidation - believed to be responsible for build up of arterial plaque and injury to arterial cells. Grilling and frying is especially harmful. Boiling is probably the safest way of cooking meat. Minimize or eliminate consumption of foods frequently contaminated with mycotoxins: alcoholic beverages, wheat, rye, barley, corn and peanuts. Mycotoxins are poisonous substances produced by certain molds and fungi which cause a wide range of health problems including cancer, asthma, multiple sclerosis and diabetes. Emphasize and do: The more natural and less processed the food the better. Emphasize whole, fresh foods. Replace white rice with brown rice; white bread with whole grain bread; sugar with small amounts of raw honey or dry fruit; pasta with millet or whole grain pasta; canned foods with fresh; candy and other sweets with dry or sweet fruit; etc. Organic foods are best as they are higher in nutrients and do not contain harmful pesticides, hormones or antibiotics found in conventional foods. Always choose fresh over frozen, dried or canned foods. Fresh foods taste better, have more nutrients in them, have no added salt, sugar or unhealthy additives. Enjoy simple meals. Generally, the simpler the food preparation the more nutrients are preserved and the easier it is to digest. Simple meals are easy and quick to prepare and use fewer resources like electricity and water - thus are more environmentally friendly and less costly. Only cook foods that need to be cooked in order to be edible (beans, grains and some vegetables). Foods that are edible in a raw state (fruits, most vegetables, sprouts, nuts and seeds) should be consumed on a daily basis and preferably with every meal. Raw foods are higher in nutrients, which to some degree get lost during cooking, and are easier to digest. At least 50% of the diet, by volume, should consist of raw foods. Steam vegetables that need to be cooked - steaming preserves more nutrients which when boiled leech into the water. Do not overcook. Cooked vegetables should be crunchy when you eat them, not soft. Chew food well (simply chew it longer) and eat at a comfortable pace. This improves digestion which already starts in the mouth while saliva gets mixed with the food. Variety in diet is very important - to prevent allergies, malnutrition and to lower exposure to natural and man-made toxins found in many natural foods. Always properly wash fruits and vegetables before consumption. This lowers the exposure to agricultural chemicals (used to cultivate conventional plants) and harmful microorganisms. Peel the skin if washing is not sufficient. Nuts and seeds should be soaked before consumption - to lower or eliminate natural anti nutrients like enzyme inhibitors. Soaking makes them much easier to digest. Do not eat more then a few handfuls a week as they are high in PUFAs and difficult to digest. Grains (except amaranth, millet and rice) and beans must be soaked before consumption. This lowers or eliminates anti nutrients like phytic acid which inhibits mineral absorption that can lead to mineral deficiency. Fruits are best eaten alone as a snack between meals. To improve digestion only eat one type of fruit at a time. Regularly consume unpasteurized fermented/cultured foods like sauerkraut, miso, pickles, kefir, yogurt, etc. These are pre-digested foods that are high in probiotics (friendly bacteria) and enzymes which provide numerous health benefits. Start with what your ancestors consumed and later experiment with other foods as well. Regularly consume enzyme rich foods: sprouts, raw honey, grapes, figs, avocados, bananas, papayas, pineapple, kiwi, mango and fermented/cultured foods (see above). Enzymes obtained from raw foods ease the digestion by reducing the body's need to produce digestive enzymes. Consider the diet your ancestors ate for thousands of years - you will most likely do very well on such a diet due to the long period of adaptation to it. For example, the traditional Chinese diet is high in carbohydrates and low in fat and protein; Europeans, on the other hand, have been eating less carbs and more protein and fat; North American Indians did not eat grains. Drink adequate amounts of liquid through out the day. Water is best. Under normal conditions, most people need 2-3 liters of liquid/day. Unless very hungry, do not eat for 3-4 hours before bedtime. That way the nightly fast can be prolonged considerably. This gives the body more/adequate time and energy to perform the countless nightly tasks that are so essential to good health. (Rather then digesting the just eaten meal) Eat only when hungry and do not overeat regardless of food. I found this to be among the most important of all health promoting habits.
Good sources of protein:

any meat that comes from organic, free range animals that are fed their natural diet (hard to find) when not organic: lean poultry meat (high fat cuts are high in polyunsaturated fatty acids which oxidize readily during cooking and in the body; toxins accumulate in the fat) beans fresh, soaked or sprouted nuts and seeds raw fermented milk products: sour milk, kefir, cheeses, etc (hard to find) wild game eggs

Most commercial meats including pork and beef, unless organic and not fed corn/grains/beans,
contain antibiotics, hormones and too many polyunsaturated fats - thus should be avoided.

Good sources of carbohydrates:

vegetables fruits whole or minimally processed fresh and mold free grains: rice, oat, amaranth, millet, barley, wheat, etc. beans potatoes
Good sources of fats:

avocados butter fresh, soaked or sprouted nuts and seeds (mostly source of omega 6) coconuts or coconut oil full fat raw milk products (cheese, milk, cream, etc) from pasture fed cattle olives or first cold pressed (extra virgin) olive oil
Shopping

I always try to find organic foods to avoid harmful substances like hormones, antibiotics, pesticides, etc.
The most contaminated fruits are: raisins, cherries, peaches, strawberries, mexican
(winter) cantaloupe, apples, apricots, Chilean (winter) grapes. And the most
contaminated vegetables are: spinach, celery, green beans, bell peppers, cucumbers,
cultivated button mushrooms, potatoes and wheat. Lean poultry is probably the safest meat
to eat if not organic.

Meal examples

What follows are weekly meals that closely resemble my diet at the time of this
writing. When planning meals, the key idea is to have variety in diet and to rely on
food combinations that agree with ones digestion.

TBS = table spoon

tsp = tea spoon

/ = or

any fruit eaten alone 0.5L sour milk, 300g potatoes, fennel 0.5L kefir, 50-100g oatmeal, 25g raisins 0.5L plain yogurt, 300g grapes/2-3 bananas 50-100g oatmeal, 1-2TBS honey, cinammon ½ salad head, 1-2 tomatoes/pepper fruit, ½ cucumber/squash, 1-2TBS olive oil medium avocado, 1-2 bananas, cinammon 50-100g brown rice, 1-2 hardboiled eggs, 2-4 radishes, 25-50g leeks, 1-2TBS ground flax seeds, 50g sprouts 50-100g amaranth, 1-2 steamed parsnips, 1 steamed onion, 1-2 steamed carrots, celery stick, 1tsp freshly grated raw ginger, parsley, 1TBS olive oil 200g mung bean sprouts, 1-2 carrots, 25-50g leeks, 25g soaked pumpkin seeds/almonds/sesame seeds ½ steamed broccoli/cauliflower, 1-2 tomatoes/pepper fruit, ½ squash/cucumber, 150g turkey/chicken breast, 2-3 cloves of minced garlic, 1TBS olive oil 100g buckwheat sprouts, 2 carrots, florence fennel stick, 25g sprouted sunflower seeds, 25g raisins 50-100g amaranth, steamed onion, steamed asparagus, florence fennel stick, 1tsp freshly grated raw ginger, parsley, 1TBS coconut oil 50-100g millet, celery stick, 2-4 radishes, 25-50g leeks, 25g pumpkin seeds

I plan meals loosely, 1-2 days ahead. The meal preparation is very simple: meat and
eggs are boiled in water, vegetables that need cooking are steamed. Since certain food vitamins
become more bioavailable once exposed to low heat cooking, it is a good idea to alternate
between cooked and raw vegetables. For example,
Bio-carotene found in carrots becomes more absorbable after light steaming.
I adjust the quantity of food according to how physically active I am during the day.

In addition to the above foods I also take vitamin and mineral supplements and
drink bottled water. I use spices and salt. Kefir and sour milk are made at home
from organic full-fat, unhomogenised pasteurized milk. Sprouts are home grown as well
for maximum freshness. Both are very easy to make and require only few minutes of
daily attention.

Final thoughts

Although a healthy diet can enormously improve ones health, it is only one essential part
of healthy living. The other parts are proper and adeqaute physical activity,
mental and spiritual well being, and adequate rest. All need to be addressed in order to
achieve better health.

An important thing I learned while experimenting with diets and other health
related approaches is to always pay attention to the signals from the body. It is essential to
do this - in order to maintain good health - and adjust accordingly. As one gets
better at reading the body, it becomes natural to self diagnose a lot of minor problems (which can
become major if not paid attention to) and remedy them by simply adjusting the diet or other aspects of life.
Finally, we are all different - what works for one person may not work for another - thus it's
important to experiment with ones diet to find out what works and what doesn't.

Disclaimer: This article represents personal views and should
be treated as such. Implementation of any ideas contained
herein can only be done at own risk.

(If you found this article helpful, you may return the favor by buying a poster of one of my images at www.art.eonworks.com/gallery/gallery.html.)

Copyright © 2005 Dawid Michalczyk. All Rights Reserved. This content
may be copied in full, with copyright, contact, creation, information and links intact, without specific permission, when used only in a not-for-profit
format. Author's email: dm@eonworks.com


Healthy Eating Habits

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Friday, December 2, 2011

Diabetes Types and Natural Treatment - How One Can Help the Other

!±8± Diabetes Types and Natural Treatment - How One Can Help the Other

In normal conditions, glucose present inside the blood is absorbed by the cells, undergoes through a series of metabolic processes and releases energy that is essential for the normal functioning of every human cell. And for this entire process to happen, the cells have to respond to insulin, a hormone that is secreted by the pancreas and facilitates glucose absorption inside the human body. Whenever any disturbances occur in this process, it leads to hyperglycemia or presence of excess glucose in the blood, a condition that can be medically termed as diabetes.

Diabetes is one of the most commonly prevalent metabolic disorders that can become extremely complicated if left untreated. However, an important fact one must remember is that diabetes can be best controlled and effectively treated only when one is able to recognize the diabetes early signs. Some of these signs are listed below.

Diabetics suffer with the urge to urinate frequently, a symptom called as polyuria Another important early sign of diabetes is extreme hunger where an individual suffers with uncontrollable tendency to eat anything that is available. Also, individuals suffering with diabetes can never satiate their thirst. Due to this, these people tend to consume loads of water. Other diabetes early signs include fatigue, abnormal weight loss even though one feeds heavily and irritable moods. Some people even complain about blurred vision before they are diagnosed with diabetes.

Interestingly, a majority these diabetes early signs appear when the disease is in its naïve or early stages. However, many tend to ignore these signs because these are neither harmless nor very prominent. As a result of this, the disease gets aggravated to a stage where it needs be controlled using medications and insulin injections. Interestingly, out of all the available diabetes treatment methods available, the most effective safe alternative has been the diabetes types natural treatment.

Fighting diabetes types with natural treatment is one where natural remedies such as herbal products, plant derivatives, and other naturally-available elements are used for treating the symptoms of diabetes thru natural treatment. This is a very safe and effective method of treating diabetes and doesn't cause any major side effects, unlike any of the synthetic drugs. Some effective and commonly used diabetes types natural treatment methods are listed below.

Exercise regularly - An active and healthy lifestyle is essential for regulating excess glucose levels in the body. Apart from this, exercise helps your heart and other major organs of the body function normally. Have a health diet - Persons suffering with diabetes experience severe protein loss. Hence, their diet must be rich in proteins, fiber, vitamins, minerals and other essential nutrients and must be low in carbohydrates and fats. Ensure that your diet contains fresh vegetables and fruits. Also, avoid processed foods, raw meat, unpasteurized milk, chocolates, ice-creams and sweets. Also, symptoms diabetes natural treatment also involves usage of certain alternatives such as fenugreek seeds and leaves, bitter gourd juice, amla or the Indian gooseberry, neem and the leaves of holy basil. Apart from these, diabetes types natural treatment options that are have been found effective include consuming leaves or fruits of trees like jamun, and mango, spices such as cinnamon and clove, soybean, soaked almonds or black raisins or raw bananas. Monitoring Blood glucose levels - Finally, one more symptoms diabetes natural treatment is to consult your physician regularly and have your blood glucose levels checked regularly.

By keeping this information in mind, you should be well on your way to having a greater understanding of how natural treatments can help.


Diabetes Types and Natural Treatment - How One Can Help the Other

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Thursday, November 24, 2011

Cooking With KLF "Protein Bars"

Tasty high protein, high fiber, no bake oats bar! Ingredients: Oats: 2 cups Protein Powder: 1 cup Crushed Almonds: 1/4 cup Mixed Fruits: 3/4 cup Flax Seed: 1/4 cup Tablespoon Cinnamon: 1/2 Tablespoon Vanilla Extract: 1 Teaspoon Almond Milk : 1/4 cup Dark Chocolate: 1/4 cup Honey (Unpasteurized ) or Agave Nectar: 1/4 cup Apple Sauce: 1/4 cup Organic Peanut Butter: 1/4cup Make sure you Subscribe to the channel! Also be sure to check out Kevin Lisak Fitness on Facebook! www.Facebook.com/KevinLisakFitness www.KevinLisakFitness.com Stay tuned for more awesome videos! Thanks for watching!!!

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Friday, November 4, 2011

What Else is in That Bowl of Milk and Cereal? The Truth About Your Milk

!±8± What Else is in That Bowl of Milk and Cereal? The Truth About Your Milk

Milk is pasteurized.

When milk is pasteurized, it is heated to a temperature that kills off the majority of bacteria that could exist in an unpasteurized milk. However, pasteurization also destroys good bacteria (probiotics), vitamins and minerals. For this reason, we usually see milk on the shelves of our grocers exclaiming: "Fortified with Vitamin ___". This is because, the majority of vitamins and minerals were destroyed during the heating process, and the milk industry needs to add something back to the milk, in order to make it "nutritional."

In addition to this, milk is almost always fortified with Vitamin A, in the form of retinoid. Retinoid is derived from animal sources and has been linked to bone fractures. Do not get me wrong; Vitamin A has many wonderful characteristics. However, Vitamin A, in the form of retinoid, does not. Carrots, on the other hand, contain beta-carotene, which is wonderful and friendly source of Vitamin A. Vitamin A, that has been derived from a plant source, is essential to our well-being.

What else are you pouring into your cereal bowl? I will not even attempt to touch upon the mistreatment of animals raised for milk, meat and eggs. However, I will say, it is NEVER a good idea to buy or ingest dairy products that are inorganic. Why? Unless you are running down the street to your local farmer, "Big Food" Milk Manufacturers are producing milk that are swimming with antibiotics, hormones, potential chemicals, etc.

Ever pick up antibiotic, vitamin or supplement container and see where it says: "Warning, do not use if pregnant or nursing..."? This is because the food, minerals, chemicals and toxins that we ingest, while pregnant and nursing, are the same "nutrients" that will ultimately be used to nourish the offspring being nursed.

This same rule applies to our dear friend, Bessie. Big Food gives her antibiotics to stay alive, in a harsh and overcrowded living environment, and hormones- so that she will able to keep producing more and more milk... and guess what goes into that milk that your pouring into your cereal? Yikes!

While antibiotics can have a number of debilitating affects, including killing off good bacteria, hormones interrupt the normal function of the body. For those women that have been on any type of hormonal pill, you know that is has the ability to change the way your body functions and your mood, swings. Hormones are not something you want to be pouring into your cereal.

dditionally, Milk is highly congesting. As aforementioned, in a previous article, due to milk's potent casein levels, it is extraordinarily difficult to digest. Because of this, the body reacts and creates high levels of mucous. Individuals suffering from consistent sinus infections or asthma related illnesses should NEVER touch milk with a ten-foot pole. Milk will help exacerbate the issue by aggravating the mucous membranes and creating more mucous. Not fun. Not cool. Not good for easy breathing.

Decreasing dairy in your diet does not mean that you have to give up the tastes that you love. Heck! If I had to do that, I would be one unhappy camper. Instead... I get creative in the kitchen. It is amazing the results when real ingredients are involved.


What Else is in That Bowl of Milk and Cereal? The Truth About Your Milk

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Thursday, November 3, 2011

The Hazards of Feeding Soy to Children

!±8± The Hazards of Feeding Soy to Children

Do you feed your baby something besides breast milk? Does it contain soy or Soy Protein Isolate (SPI)? Isoflavones in these soy milk replacers are a serious reason for concern. Approximately 25% of bottle-fed children in the United States receive soy-based formula.

Feeding soy milk replacer began in the 1970's. By 1998, investigators reported that the daily exposure of infants to isoflavones in soy infant formula is six to eleven times higher on a body-weight basis than the dose that has hormonal effects in adults consuming soy foods. Circulating concentrations of isoflavones in infants fed soy-based formula were 13,000 to 22,000 times higher than plasma estradiol concentrations than infants fed cow's milk formula.

Would you feed your baby birth control pills? One researcher estimated that an infant exclusively fed soy formula receives the estrogenic equivalent (based on body weight) of at least five birth control pills per day. Almost no phytoestrogens have been detected in dairy-based infant formula or in human milk, even when the mother consumes soy products. So, what does this do to our children? Read the list below and be concerned if your child is showing any of these signs and symptoms.

In children, soy anecdotes have included:

o Asthma

o Changed patterns of sexual orientation (influenced by the early hormonal environment)

o Extreme emotional behavior

o Immune system problems

o Impairment of spatial perception

o Infantile leukemia

o Irritable bowel

o Learning disabilities--especially in male children

o Pituitary insufficiency

o Precociousness--Male infants undergo a "testosterone surge" during the first few months of life, where testosterone levels may be as high as those of an adult male.

o Thyroid disorders

o Visual discrimination tasks required for reading

Can't have dairy? There are options. Other combinations of formulas that may take a bit more time to make for your baby include mixtures of carrot juice, oat milk, almond milk, goat and rice milk.

If the mother is large-breasted, it also helps to use a breast pump, complete the milking process and combine all three fractions of milk. If the baby only gets the first fraction, which is more watery and has less protein, it makes the baby gassy. Also, if the mother eats lots of raw fruits and vegetables, she will have lots of milk and the milk will be healthier for the baby. I've personally seen a midwife adopt a newborn baby, take milk-producing herbs, and nurse the baby herself for a year using her own breasts! Herbs can be very powerful when you know which ones to use.

Other purists recommend raw, unpasteurized milk, saying that the baby will not be allergic to this since the proteins within the milk have not been modified from the pasteurizing process or from using microwave ovens. You will have to make your own decisions and choices with this (know your source!) as this type of milk is hard to obtain and can be contaminated with Salmonella bacteria if not handled and processed properly. There is nothing wrong with visiting the farm and taking a look at their cleanliness habits and the rooms they process the milk in.

The new Ultra Pasteurized Milks and products that have been microwaved are another issue totally. Ultra Pasteurized milk has been implicated in Crohn's disease and the body cannot process some or most protein that has been microwaved. Heat any milk replacer over a burner to be safe. I do not advocate either of these options either. But, that's for another day.


The Hazards of Feeding Soy to Children

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