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12 Steps to Whole Foods

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

I personally asked Colin Campbell, author and lead researcher of The<br />

China Study, about the beneficial properties of yogurt or kefir, since the<br />

protein consumed in his animal studies was casein derived from cow’s<br />

milk. He acknowledged that his studies have not examined fermented<br />

products and people’s or animals’ reactions <strong>to</strong> them. Chemical changes<br />

occur in dairy products when lac<strong>to</strong>-fermentation takes place that may<br />

mean a place is warranted in the human diet for these types of animal<br />

products. Keep in mind that Campbell’s studies involved 20% animal<br />

protein diets and 5% animal protein diets (not 0%). That said, pure<br />

vegans can also make kefir out of raw coconut liquid (or canned, though<br />

raw is more nutritious) using water kefir grains (shown at right).<br />

I made a gallon of yogurt every week for many years until I learned that<br />

kefir has a wider variety of probiotic organisms, both bacteria and<br />

friendly yeasts, than yogurt does. These colonize the digestive tract well<br />

(and also the birth canal, which is important for expectant mothers).<br />

Kefir is also easier <strong>to</strong> make once you acquire infinitely reusable kefir<br />

grains (as starter) and it does not require cooking the milk, thereby preserving its enzyme content. Kefir is<br />

more liquid, whereas yogurt is firmer. Yogurt will support the probiotic strains in your gut that keep it clean,<br />

but kefir will actually colonize the gut proactively.<br />

Now I make a gallon of yogurt or kefir every week. I serve it every morning <strong>to</strong> my kids as a smoothie, blended<br />

with bananas and other fruit (along with a bowl of granola and sprouts). You can also make delicious, creamy<br />

popsicles with yogurt/kefir blended with fruit. Keeping the gastrointestinal tract colonized with healthy<br />

bacteria from daily kefir or yogurt dramatically boosts your body’s ability <strong>to</strong> fight bad bacteria. I believe it <strong>to</strong><br />

be the reason none of my children has ever had strep, the flu, or any infection in well over 10 years—nothing<br />

requiring an antibiotic.<br />

“Antibiotic” literally means “against life,” and “probiotic” means “for life”! Taking an antibiotic kills all the<br />

good bacteria as well as the bad, leaving your body wide open <strong>to</strong> the next infection that comes along. So if you<br />

or your child takes a course of antibiotics, you can replenish the good microorganisms killed in your gut by the<br />

antibiotics with about 30 days of eating live, fermented probiotic foods such as kefir or yogurt, raw cultured<br />

vegetables, and/or kombucha.<br />

Unfortunately, antibiotics are so powerful and devastating, often children will become ill again before that<br />

significant amount of time needed for good bacteria <strong>to</strong> regain a foothold has passed. Therefore, my family<br />

avoids antibiotics except in absolute crisis, as a once- or twice-in-a-lifetime event.<br />

Many people take expensive probiotics, which are dried and dormant. These probiotics are inferior <strong>to</strong> the<br />

growing and thriving bacteria in live yogurt or kefir—a very inexpensive, effective probiotic!<br />

Kefir—which originated in the Caucasus region and is still a daily staple there, as well as having become<br />

popular in parts of Europe and the Middle East—is less familiar <strong>to</strong> Americans than yogurt. Some research<br />

suggests that the right-turning, active, live bacteria in kefir are far superior and more beneficial <strong>to</strong> the digestive<br />

tract than left-turning, transient yogurt cultures. Kefir actively populates the gastrointestinal tract with more<br />

species of natural flora, whereas yogurt merely supports that colonization of the gut. The lac<strong>to</strong>se in kefir is<br />

digested by the time you eat it, with the proteins broken down, so it can be used by many people with milk<br />

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

© Copyright Robyn Openshaw

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