12 Steps to Whole Foods

06.03.2015 Views

GreenSmoothieGirl Resource Library For Anyone Wanting to Read the World’s Most Important Books on Nutrition Mike Anderson: The RAVE Diet & Lifestyle This is a fun book that’s fairly quick to read because it pulls no punches. It’s hard hitting and unapologetic in its promotion of the plant-based diet. It’s jam-packed with information (that duplicates Robbins, Fuhrman, and Campbell), is well written, and contains lots of easy recipes at the end. My only slight quibble with Anderson (and Fuhrman) is that I don’t think people in normal weight ranges need to be afraid of fats—the kind found in nuts, seeds, and unprocessed oils. Steven Arlin: Raw Power This book is for anyone who wants to build muscle mass or compete athletically while eating a raw, vegan diet. I’m just a girl who’s not a true bodybuilder, but I love weight training, and this book long ago helped me let go of protein powders and bars and hold my own, strength-wise, with much-younger and carnivorous weightlifting friends. Arlin has eaten a 100% raw vegan diet for 20 years and would be the biggest guy in most gyms’ free-weight rooms. His recipes are interesting and unique. Victoria Boutenko: Green for Life This book documents how Boutenko, a long-time raw foodist, felt there was a missing link in her family’s nutrition, even as good as it was. (They eliminated many chronic diseases from their lives when they went all raw 15 years ago.) She undertook to study the diet of primates, since we humans share 99.4% of our DNA with primates. Of course, what she found is that they eat copiously of greens, and a wide variety of them. Boutenko asks the reader to undertake an experiment: to chew a mouthful of greens and then spit it out right before swallowing. You’ll find it is simply torn up, not creamed and ready for digestion like it needs to be. This is because over several generations of eating increasingly more refined foods, the human body has adapted by developing ever-narrower palates. We no longer chew food to the extent that we need to in order to extract nutrition from denser foods like raw green vegetables, as primates with wide palates do. The Blendtec Total Blender does that breakdown for you, in the green smoothie: all you have to do is “chew” as you drink it, to create saliva for digestion. Greens like kale, collards, mustard greens, arugula, turnip greens, celery, spinach, dandelion greens, beet greens, and chard don’t end up on too many salad plates. But they’re easy in green smoothies. And you don’t have to drizzle them with fattening, chemical-laden salad dressings to get them down in a smoothie. Best of all, in addition to the superior nutrition of dark leafy greens, Boutenko points out that kale fiber, for instance, can remove many times its own weight in toxins from the body. She undertook to study a group of 30 people ranging from the morbidly obese in wheelchairs to people who already ate a fairly healthful diet: every one of the 30 reported excellent improvements in health, some of them very dramatic. Many said they just wished they had more than a quart a day! The top three health benefits were better digestion/elimination, more energy, and weight loss. 342 12 Steps to Whole Foods © Copyright Robyn Openshaw

GreenSmoothieGirl Resource Library Dr. Colin Campbell: The China Study This is the largest and most comprehensive nutrition study in history, conducted jointly by Oxford and Cornell universities. It offers the most empirical evidence ever gathered validating a plant-based diet. Colin Campbell is a professor of nutrition at Cornell University and has sat on the highest nutrition governing boards in the U.S. He is the son of a cattle rancher and believed, in his early nutrition research, that he would find lack of protein to be the cause of childhood liver cancer in the Philippines. He found just the opposite: the wealthier children with good access to meat/milk were dying of liver cancer, not the poor children who could afford only plant food. Time and again, Campbell and many other researchers discovered the same results: that in animals and humans, high consumption of animal protein causes all the modern Western diseases, including cancer, heart disease, autoimmune diseases, and much more. The rodent studies are fascinating: two groups of mice are put on 5% animal protein pellets (casein, from milk) and 20% animal protein pellets, respectively. That parallels an almost-vegan diet versus the typical American diet. At the typical rodent life span, the 5% group were lean and healthy and the 20% group were full of cancerous tumors and many were dead (and all would die prematurely). Even more fascinating is how the researchers could switch the groups’ diets. Lean, healthy rodents develop tumors and die when placed on the 20% animal protein diet, and formerly cancerous rodents lose weight, tumors are eliminated, and they live and thrive when placed on the 5% animal protein diet. These studies were duplicated, with the same results, by other researchers all over the globe. Campbell went on to conduct the largest, most longitudinal, most comprehensive nutrition study in human beings in history, yielding hundreds of statistically significant correlations. He has been studying 360,000 people in China for about 30 years now. Whether or not you completely eliminate animal foods from your diet, this book is so compelling that you will be motivated to make a commitment to a plant-based diet and share the message with others. William Dufty: The Sugar Blues This book was written in the 1950s in a very provocative and engaging style. This seminal book is your chance to get up the motivation to kick the sugar habit. As many nutrition authors have stated, sugar is killing us. And it’s more addictive than cocaine. (I’m not telling you anything you don’t already know, am I?) Even more fascinating is Dufty’s claim that the sugar industry sabotaged his efforts to publish his expose. Sally Fallon: Nourishing Traditions This book provides a massive amount of great information and tons of recipes (newtrendspublishing.com, 877- 707-1776). I mostly disagree with the author about meat and dairy (which she embraces, in fermented and organic forms), in light of The China Study’s implications as well as a large body of other research documenting the virtues of avoiding animal proteins. But I agree with everything else she promotes, and the book is worth owning just for the fermented foods information and recipes, where Fallon is the reigning authority. © Copyright Robyn Openshaw 12 Steps to Whole Foods 343

GreenSmoothieGirl Resource Library<br />

For Anyone Wanting <strong>to</strong> Read the World’s Most Important<br />

Books on Nutrition<br />

Mike Anderson: The RAVE Diet & Lifestyle<br />

This is a fun book that’s fairly quick <strong>to</strong> read because it pulls no punches. It’s hard hitting and unapologetic in its<br />

promotion of the plant-based diet. It’s jam-packed with information (that duplicates Robbins, Fuhrman, and<br />

Campbell), is well written, and contains lots of easy recipes at the end. My only slight quibble with Anderson<br />

(and Fuhrman) is that I don’t think people in normal weight ranges need <strong>to</strong> be afraid of fats—the kind found in<br />

nuts, seeds, and unprocessed oils.<br />

Steven Arlin: Raw Power<br />

This book is for anyone who wants <strong>to</strong> build muscle mass or compete athletically while eating a raw, vegan diet.<br />

I’m just a girl who’s not a true bodybuilder, but I love weight training, and this book long ago helped me let go<br />

of protein powders and bars and hold my own, strength-wise, with much-younger and carnivorous<br />

weightlifting friends. Arlin has eaten a 100% raw vegan diet for 20 years and would be the biggest guy in most<br />

gyms’ free-weight rooms. His recipes are interesting and unique.<br />

Vic<strong>to</strong>ria Boutenko: Green for Life<br />

This book documents how Boutenko, a long-time raw foodist, felt there was a missing link in her family’s<br />

nutrition, even as good as it was. (They eliminated many chronic diseases from their lives when they went all<br />

raw 15 years ago.) She under<strong>to</strong>ok <strong>to</strong> study the diet of primates, since we humans share 99.4% of our DNA with<br />

primates. Of course, what she found is that they eat copiously of greens, and a wide variety of them.<br />

Boutenko asks the reader <strong>to</strong> undertake an experiment: <strong>to</strong> chew a mouthful of greens and then spit it out right<br />

before swallowing. You’ll find it is simply <strong>to</strong>rn up, not creamed and ready for digestion like it needs <strong>to</strong> be. This<br />

is because over several generations of eating increasingly more refined foods, the human body has adapted by<br />

developing ever-narrower palates. We no longer chew food <strong>to</strong> the extent that we need <strong>to</strong> in order <strong>to</strong> extract<br />

nutrition from denser foods like raw green vegetables, as primates with wide palates do. The Blendtec Total<br />

Blender does that breakdown for you, in the green smoothie: all you have <strong>to</strong> do is “chew” as you drink it, <strong>to</strong><br />

create saliva for digestion.<br />

Greens like kale, collards, mustard greens, arugula, turnip greens, celery, spinach, dandelion greens, beet<br />

greens, and chard don’t end up on <strong>to</strong>o many salad plates. But they’re easy in green smoothies. And you don’t<br />

have <strong>to</strong> drizzle them with fattening, chemical-laden salad dressings <strong>to</strong> get them down in a smoothie.<br />

Best of all, in addition <strong>to</strong> the superior nutrition of dark leafy greens, Boutenko points out that kale fiber, for<br />

instance, can remove many times its own weight in <strong>to</strong>xins from the body. She under<strong>to</strong>ok <strong>to</strong> study a group of 30<br />

people ranging from the morbidly obese in wheelchairs <strong>to</strong> people who already ate a fairly healthful diet: every<br />

one of the 30 reported excellent improvements in health, some of them very dramatic. Many said they just<br />

wished they had more than a quart a day! The <strong>to</strong>p three health benefits were better digestion/elimination, more<br />

energy, and weight loss.<br />

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

© Copyright Robyn Openshaw

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