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12 Steps to Whole Foods

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Preserving Raw <strong>Foods</strong> with Natural Probiotics<br />

I suggest a goal of trying all of the fermented foods in this chapter in the coming month. Then, adopt your<br />

favorites as habits and eat at least two different fermented foods every day.<br />

Fermented Vegetables<br />

Perhaps you grew up, as I did, preserving fruits and vegetables by putting them in jars with lots of sugar and<br />

boiling or pressure-cooking them <strong>to</strong> death (literally). Until I began studying nutrition, I got a lot of satisfaction<br />

out of “putting up” fruits from my trees and vegetables from my garden this way.<br />

Unfortunately, by heavily cooking our produce, we kill all the enzymes and most of the vitamins and minerals<br />

as well—which are the reasons <strong>to</strong> eat produce in the first place. The more I studied about nutrition, the less I<br />

was willing <strong>to</strong> can at the end of the summer. I chopped and froze many things, and still do, but the freezer can<br />

hold only so much.<br />

Imagine my excitement <strong>to</strong> learn that ancient cultures, without canning methods or freezers, preserved<br />

vegetables for long periods of time, using lac<strong>to</strong>-fermentation. Europeans, Asians, and Russians use fermented<br />

foods such as sauerkraut and kimchi <strong>to</strong>day, and the U.S. is almost alone in not regularly eating fermented<br />

foods. Although we have pickles and sauerkraut on our grocery s<strong>to</strong>re shelves, unfortunately, they are heattreated<br />

and chemically processed <strong>to</strong> the point that the benefits of natural, raw fermentation are gone.<br />

Lactic acid is a natural substance, present everywhere, that inhibits the bacteria that cause plant foods <strong>to</strong> rot.<br />

But lac<strong>to</strong>-fermenting has more significant advantages beyond simply preserving summer garden produce<br />

throughout the winter. Fermented vegetables have much higher vitamin content. They also promote healthy<br />

microorganisms populating the gastrointestinal tract <strong>to</strong> protect against harmful bacteria that cause illness,<br />

discussed in more detail below. Cultured foods are more digestible than regular vegetables, and they make the<br />

other foods eaten with the fermented product more easily digested as well. Some of the byproducts of the lac<strong>to</strong>fermentation<br />

process are antibiotic and anti-carcinogenic in nature.<br />

The process of lac<strong>to</strong>-fermentation begins when lids are placed tightly on jars, and the salt preserves the<br />

vegetables long enough for the microorganisms <strong>to</strong> begin <strong>to</strong> proliferate enough for more long-term preservation<br />

<strong>to</strong> occur. Using whey from your yogurt or kefir (discussed below) or a culture starter you can purchase are<br />

ways <strong>to</strong> minimize the amount of salt in a sauerkraut recipe, since the whey or culture introduces live,<br />

multiplying organisms. So I recommend starting your fermented-food experiments this month with kefir or<br />

yogurt, and then you can branch out using the whey/culture <strong>to</strong> ferment veggies.<br />

Fermented vegetables, including homemade sauerkraut, should be used as a condiment at meals. Sauerkraut is<br />

easy <strong>to</strong> make from your garden cabbage—and if you don’t have a garden, cabbage is widely available for a<br />

good price at grocery s<strong>to</strong>res in the late summer and early fall. You don’t even need new canning lids! Used lids,<br />

and canning jars run through the dishwasher, are just fine.<br />

Fermented Dairy Products<br />

This step is very possibly the most important step since Chapter 1’s green smoothies in terms of the potential<br />

positive impact on your health for very little effort. Some evidence shows that fermented milk products prevent<br />

224 <strong>12</strong> <strong>Steps</strong> <strong>to</strong> <strong>Whole</strong> <strong>Foods</strong><br />

© Copyright Robyn Openshaw

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