Don't eat anything your (great) Grandmother wouldn't recogni

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Just found this article on the times online - very simple - it makes sense

http://www.timesonline.co.uk/tol/life_and_style/food_and_drink/article7133486.ece

Human beings ate well and kept themselves healthy for millenniums before nutritional science came along to tell us how to do it. Eating in our time has become complicated — and needlessly so. Experts of one kind or another tell us how to eat, from doctors and diet books, to the latest findings in nutritional science, to government advisories and food pyramids. But for all the scientific baggage we have taken on in recent years, we still don’t know what we should be eating. Sorting through the long-running fat versus carb wars, the fibre skirmishes and the raging dietary-supplement debates, the picture is actually very simple. There are, basically, two important things you need to know about diet and health:

Fact one: Populations that eat a so-called western diet, consisting of lots of processed food and meat, lots of added fat and sugar, lots of refined grains, lots of everything except vegetables, fruits and wholegrains, invariably suffer most from western diseases: obesity, type 2 diabetes, cardiovascular disease and cancer.

Fact two: Populations eating a remarkably wide range of traditional diets, from diets high in fat, to those high in carbohydrate or protein, generally don’t suffer from these chronic diseases. What this suggests is that the human omnivore is exquisitely adapted to a wide range of food and diets. Except, that is, for one: the relatively new (in evolutionary terms) western diet that most of us are now following.

To get off the western diet and learn to eat real food in moderation again. These are the rules you need to follow:

DON’T EAT ANYTHING YOUR GREAT-GRANDMOTHER WOULDN’T RECOGNISE AS FOOD

Imagine your great-grandmother (or grandmother, depending on your age) at your side as you roll down the aisles of the supermarket. She picks up a packet of Dairylea Dunkers Jumbo Tubes — and hasn’t a clue what this plastic and foil box could possibly be. Is it a food or is it toothpaste? There are now thousands of products in the supermarket that our ancestors simply wouldn’t recognise as food. Today, foods are processed in ways specifically designed to get us to buy and eat more by pushing our evolutionary buttons — our inborn preference for sweetness, fat and salt. Food processing induces us to consume much more of these rarities than is good for us.

AVOID PRODUCTS CONTAINING INGREDIENTS THAT NO ORDINARY HUMAN WOULD KEEP IN THE PANTRY

Xanthan gum? Calcium propionate? Ammonium sulphate? If you wouldn’t cook with them yourself, why let others use these ingredients to cook for you?

AVOID FOOD THAT HAS SOME FORM OF SUGAR (OR SWEETENER) LISTED AMONG THE TOP THREE INGREDIENTS

Labels list ingredients by weight, and any product that has more sugar than other ingredients has too much sugar. (Special-occasion foods are an exception to this rule.) Complicating matters is the fact that, thanks to food science, there are now about 40 types of sugar used in processed food, including barley malt, beet sugar, brown rice syrup, cane juice, corn sweetener, dextrin, dextrose and so on. To repeat: sugar is sugar. And organic sugar is also sugar.

AVOID FOOD PRODUCTS THAT MAKE HEALTH CLAIMS

This sounds counterintuitive, but think about it: for a product to carry a health claim on its packaging, it must first have a package, so, right off the bat, it’s more likely to be a processed food rather than a wholefood. The boldest health claims are often founded on incomplete and bad science. Don’t forget that margarine, one of the first industrial foods to claim it was healthier than the traditional product it replaced, turned out to contain trans fats that give people heart attacks. The healthiest food — the fresh produce — doesn’t boast about its healthfulness, because the growers don’t have the budget and it doesn’t have a packet. Don’t take the silence of the yams as a sign that they have nothing valuable to say about your health.

BUY YOUR SNACKS AT THE FARMERS’ MARKET

You’ll find yourself snacking on fresh or dried fruit and nuts — real food — not crisps and sweets.

TREAT MEAT AS A FLAVOURING OR SPECIAL-OCCASION FOOD

While it’s true that vegetarians are generally healthier than carnivores, that doesn’t mean you need to eliminate meat from your diet if you like it. It turns out that near-vegetarians or “flexitarians”— people who eat meat a couple of times a week — are just as healthy as vegetarians. But the average westerner eats meat as part of two or even three meals a day, and there is evidence that the more meat there is in your diet — red meat in particular — the greater your risk of heart disease and cancer.

‘EATING WHAT STANDS ON ONE LEG [MUSHROOMS AND PLANT FOODS] IS BETTER THAN EATING WHAT STANDS ON TWO LEGS [FOWL], WHICH IS BETTER THAN EATING WHAT STANDS ON FOUR LEGS [COWS, PIGS AND OTHER MAMMALS]’

This Chinese proverb offers a good summary of traditional wisdom regarding the relative healthfulness of different kinds of food, though it inexplicably leaves out the very healthful and entirely legless fish.

DON’T EAT BREAKFAST CEREALS THAT CHANGE THE COLOUR OF THE MILK

This should go without saying. Such cereals are highly processed and full of refined carbohydrates as well as chemical additives.

EAT ALL THE JUNK FOOD YOU WANT AS LONG AS YOU COOK IT YOURSELF

There is nothing wrong with eating sweets, fried food, pastries, even having a soft drink every now and then, but food manufacturers have made eating these formerly expensive and hard-to-make treats so cheap and easy that we’re having them every day. The chip did not become so popular until industry took over the jobs of washing, peeling, cutting and frying the potatoes. If you made all the chips you ate, you would eat them less often, if only because they’re so much work. The same holds true for fried chicken, crisps, cakes, pies and ice cream.

HAVE A GLASS OF WINE WITH DINNER

There is considerable scientific evidence for the health benefits of alcohol to go with a few centuries of traditional belief. Mindful of the social and health effects of alcoholism, public health authorities are loath to recommend drinking, but people who drink moderately and regularly live longer and suffer less heart disease than teetotallers. Most experts recommend no more than two drinks a day for men, one for women. Also, a little every day is better than a lot at the weekend, and drinking with food is better than drinking without it.

PAY MORE, EAT LESS

With food, as with so many things, you get what you pay for. There’s no escaping the fact that better food — measured by taste or nutritional quality — costs more because it has been grown or raised less intensively and with more care. If you spend more on better food, you’ll probably eat less of it, and treat it with more care. And if that higher-quality food tastes better, you will need less of it to feel satisfied.

CONSULT YOUR GUT

Most of us allow external, and usually visual, cues to determine how much we eat. The larger the portion, for example, the more we eat; the bigger the container, the more we pour. But when it comes to food, it pays to cultivate the other senses. It can take 20 minutes before your brain gets the word that your belly is full: that means that if you take less than 20 minutes to finish a meal, the sensation of satiety will arrive too late to be of any use.

Avoid food products containing ingredients that no ordinary human would keep in the pantry
Ethoxylated diglycerides? Cellulose? Xanthangum? Calcium propionate? Ammonium sulfate?If you wouldn’t cook with them yourself, why let othersuse these ingredients to cook for you?The food scientists’ chemistry set is designed to extend shelf life,make old food look fresher and more appetizing than it really is, and get you to eat more. Whether or not any of these additives pose a proven hazard to your health, many of them haven’t been eaten by humans for verylong, so they are best avoided.

Eat foods made from ingredients that you can picture in their raw state or growing in nature
Read the ingredients on a package of Twinkies or Pringles and imagine what those ingredients actually look like raw or in the places where theygrow: You can’t do it. This rule will keep all sorts of chemicals and foodlike substances out of your diet.

Eat mostly plants, especially leaves
Scientists may disagree on what’s so good about plants—the antioxidants? the fiber? theomega-3 fatty acids?—but they do agree that they’reprobably really good for you and certainly can’t hurt.There are scores of studies demonstrating that a dietrich in vegetables and fruits reduces the risk of dyingfrom all the Western diseases; in countries where people eat a pound or more of vegetables and fruits aday, the rate of cancer is half what it is in the United States. Also, by eating a diet that is primarily plantbased, you’ll be consuming far fewer calories, sinceplant foods—with the exception of seeds, includinggrains and nuts—are typically less “energy dense” than the other things you eat. (And consuming fewer calories protects against many chronic diseases.) Vegetarians are notably healthier than carnivores, and they live longer.

Eat wild foods when you can
Two of the most nutritious plants in the world — lamb’s quarters and purslane — are weeds, and some of the healthiest traditional diets, like the Mediterranean, make frequent use of wild greens. The fields and forests are crowded with plants containing higher levels of various phytochemicals than their domesticatedcousins. Why? Because these plants have to defend themselves against pests and diseases without any helpfrom us, and because historically we’ve tended to selectand breed crop plants for sweetness; many of the defensive compounds plants produce are bitter. We also breedfor shelf life, and so have unwittingly selected for plants with low levels of omega-3 fatty acids, since these fats quickly oxidize — turn rancid. Wild animals and fish too are worth adding to your diet when you have the opportunity. Wild game generally has less saturated and morehealthy fats than domesticated animals, because most of these wild animals themselves eat a diverse diet of plants rather than grain.

Regard non-traditional foods with scepticism
Innovation is always interesting, but when it comes to food, it pays to approach new creations with caution. If diets are the products of an evolutionary process in which groups of people adapt to the plants, animals, and fungi a particular place has to offer, then a novel food or culinary innovation resembles a mutation: It might represent an evolutionary improvement, but chances are it doesn’t. Soy products offer a good case in point. People have been eating soy in the form of tofu, soy sauce, and tempeh for many generations, but today we’re eating novelties like “soy protein isolate,” “soy isoflavones,” and “textured vegetable protein” from soy and partially hydrogenated soy oils, and there are questions about the healthfulness of these new food products. As a senior FDA scientist has written, “Confidence that soy products are safe is clearly based more on belief than hard data.”* Until we have that data, you’re probably better off eating soy prepared in the traditional Asian manner than according to the novel recipes dreamed up by food scientists.

Eat when you are hungry not when you are bored
For many of us, eating has surprisingly little to do with hunger. We eat out of boredom, for entertainment, to comfort or reward ourselves. Try to be aware of why you’re eating, and ask yourself if you’re really hungry—before you eat and then again along the way. (One old wives’ test: If you’re not hungry enough to eat an apple, then you’re not hungry.) Food is a costly antidepressant.

Break the rules once in a while
Obsessing over food rules is bad for your happiness, and probably for your health too. Our experience over the past few decades suggests that dieting and worrying too much about nutrition has made us no healthier or slimmer; cultivating a relaxed attitude toward food is important. There will be special occasions when you will want to throw these rules out the window. All will not be lost. What matters is not the special occasion but the everyday practice—the default habits that govern your eating on a typical day. “All things in moderation,” it is often said, but we should never forget the wise addendum, sometimes attributed to Oscar Wilde: “Including moderation.”

Extracted and adapted from Food Rules: An Eater’s Manual by Michael Pollan (Penguin £4.99). © Michael Pollan 2010. Find more from Food Rules by registering for a preview of the new Sunday Times website at thesundaytimes.co.uk. To order a copy at the discounted price of £4.74 (inc p&p), call the Sunday Times Bookshop on 0845 271 2135, or visit timesonline.co.uk/bookshop

Replies

  • shannie_lou
    shannie_lou Posts: 32 Member
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    Thanks Scotty! This is a principle of healthy eating that so many of us didn't grow up knowing. If you can incorporate this idea into your life, it makes the struggle for health so much easier. You and your fiance are just toooo cute!
  • KiriKiriKiri
    KiriKiriKiri Posts: 227 Member
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    AMEN!

    Not to go into a rant and rave, BUT...

    My youngest child diagnosed with a disorder that was greatly affected the foods that he was eating. Little did we know. We put him on the Feingold diet. (I encourage everyone to check it out, because it is really interesting). Anyway, it is truly amazing what is NOT regulated by the FDA. Most people do not understand what we are putting into our bodies...

    Food dyes are made from petroleum. Jello...petroleum. MSG is in everything, INCLUDING name brand products which we use on a day to day basis such as Gold Medal flour! It's not just the things that are difficult to pronounce, there are also hidden dangers in our foods that we are so oblivious too...

    Anyway, after putting my son on an organic diet, free of all these toxins, he has been asymptomatic and has not required medication, baffling his doctor! There is truth behind the science. This is also how I have lost a lot of weight myself...back to basics. It works!

    Thanks for posting this article...
  • scotty_81
    scotty_81 Posts: 59
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    Just added the last part of the article.

    Thanks for your comments. Its just common sense but we're bombarded with so much junk that its easy to forget it.
  • Michellerw1
    Michellerw1 Posts: 367
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    There is a whole movement of "Real Foods" that I have been reading up on. Some of the things on this website are a little out of my realm (making your own yogurt, eating raw milk) but still useful information:

    nourishedkitchen.com

    I have recently stop eating fat free or low fat foods because I have a funny feeling about what is done to them to make them low fat. I just eat a smaller portion of full fat butter, cheese, etc.

    I also think that cutting down on prepackaged foods is a great way to do a little to eliminate waste and better the environment. :)
  • Michellerw1
    Michellerw1 Posts: 367
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    The last part is key!! So many people think they have to take an "all or nothing" aproach to changing their eating, so just don't do it. Every little change helps.
  • liz72
    liz72 Posts: 35 Member
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    I have to piggyback on what Michellerw1 said..

    "I have recently stop eating fat free or low fat foods because I have a funny feeling about what is done to them to make them low fat. I just eat a smaller portion of full fat butter, cheese, etc."

    That's why I stopped eating low fat/non fat foods. If there was something wrong with whole milk, cheese, eggs, etc... then why did God make them that way. If we were supposed to eat low fat, we never should've had to alter them through processing. We actually need the saturated fat to digest the fat-soluble vitamins found in milk, cheese, etc... Otherwise, we do not get the full health benefits of those foods.
  • nsking83
    nsking83 Posts: 145
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    Thanks for sharing! This is a great reminder to me, and all of us I'm sure!
  • Lisa0711
    Lisa0711 Posts: 1,405 Member
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    Great article. Thanks for sharing!
  • Michellerw1
    Michellerw1 Posts: 367
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    The last part is key!! So many people think they have to take an "all or nothing" aproach to changing their eating, so just don't do it. Every little change helps.

    i'm that "all or nothing" person!!

    That is good for you if you can put your all into things. I just know for me in the past I have avoided reforming my diet because i couldn't eat ALL organic or couldn't eat ALL vegan, etc. etc (yeah I have tried almost everything hahahaha). and I realized that as long as I do SOMETHING it is better than NOTHING.
  • Ryhenblue
    Ryhenblue Posts: 390 Member
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    Thanks for the article. My Great Grandmother lived on a farm and the closes town only had a couple hundred people living around it. She only bought fruits and vegi's that were in season or grew her own. She canned all the extras for winter and made everything from scratch. She also had a freezer and bought all her meat for the year from the butcher. The food was always delicious and we were always full until the next meal was ready. There was even a homemade desert to eat every Sunday.
  • lovelypen50
    lovelypen50 Posts: 192 Member
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    I love the article, it is so true. I grew up in the country and my grandparents raised everything (all our vegetables) We had a couple of cows, some chickens. W edid not go to thestore a lot except for staples and that was not a every week thing. How times have changed. I did'nt even notice it. Thanks for the article.