Archive for the ‘Macrobiotic’ Category

Macrobiotic

Wednesday, April 15th, 2009

My opinion is that macrobiotic is one of the most refined systems, that relates to nourishment (regimen generaly). It’s also because it takes to the cooking these factors into the consideration: concrete, given by birth and actual dispozition of individual.
Specific foods (even if not meat) are strongly nonrecommended for everyday consumption, for many vegetarians will be a big surprise, the unbenefical as far as dangerous some of the commonly consumed foods - for example potato, bakery products with yeast, milk products, exotic type of fruits and vegetables, sugar (this probably won’t be such a surprise), classical refined kitchen salt etc.

On the contrary is given advantage to the natural non refined products, as are cooked whole grains, boiled fresh vegetables, legumes + their fermented products, seaweeds. Delicacies are homely type of fruits, nuts.. instead of sugar: natural sweeteners (barley malt, wheat malt, rice malt) etc.

I haven’t yet encountered any system, that would so complexly deal with foods as macrobiotic.

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Macrobiotic cookbooks

Wednesday, April 15th, 2009

Macrobiotic cooking provides a deeply spiritual approach to food, stressing harmonious balancing of yin and yang as well as mindful attention to ingredients and their preparation. Vivian Eggers, who lives on Maui, began her studies at the Omega Institute in Rhinebeck, New York, and continued them at the Kushi Institute in Boston. She often cooks for religious retreats.

Macrobiotic Cookbooks

Macrobiotic cooking

Kimberley: What’s the theory behind macrobiotic cooking?
Vivian Eggers: Basically, it’s the understanding of the principles of yin and yang and its application to food and the condition of the body. Yin is basically expansive energy and yang is contractive energy, and there are many different words to describe the qualities of expansion and contraction: lightness and darkness, male and female. One of the most basic points for understanding this is through the seasons and the transformation of the seasons. Summer is hot, everything is lush and green, the birds are out singing every day. It’s an expansive time. Then this changes and shifts and goes all the way around to its opposite in the winter when the leaves are gone, it’s barren and cold, the land is frozen. We stay inside trying to keep warm and retain heat. Yin and yang are very real, very manifest in daily life. So when you start thinking in terms of yin and yang it’s like being given new tools for seeing.
Within that energy system, there are many correlations with the body, each organ corresponds to each of the five elements–fire, earth, water, air, and metal. And each element has a particular energy. That’s what one studies in acupuncture or shiatsu as well as macrobiotic cooking so that you understand the sensitivity of the organs to a particular time of year, to a particular time of day, to a particular color, to a particular emotion, to a particular food. In macrobiotic cooking, you study the whole body, not just how to cut up carrots.
K: You just spoke of metal energy. What is it?
V: We’re sitting here now in a country setting where there’s a lot of earth energy, but in the background, we hear a truck on the highway. That’s metal energy. It moves very quickly, it cuts through air energy, through earth energy. Look at these scissors, they’re made of energy, strong, solid, cutting. They’re good example of metal energy.
K: What food has metal energy?
V: Brown rice, for instance. It’s strong, and supports metal energy in the human body.
K: Let’s take one day in the life of a macrobiotic cook. How would you approach cooking for a family?
V: First, an assessment of my own condition, by checking in with myself in the morning to see how I feel. What color is my skin? What’s going on with my eyes? How’s my tongue? Are my fingers or toes cold? All those little things. If there’s a complaint–a headache, menstrual cramps–your body will let you know immediately. So this influences what I’m going to ingest throughout the day. If I’m cooking for children, then I go and be with them: Hello, how are you? How did you sleep last night? What’s going on with your body?
K: You have to be conscious of not only what’s being prepared and how it’s presented, but also who is going to eat it and how it effects them on an internal level?
V: Absolutely. Initially, it sounds like a lot of work, but it’s not. It’s as easy as riding a bicycle. When you first teach a child how to ride a bicycle, you tell her that she needs to sit on the seat, to balance, to pedal, to hold onto the handle bars and steer, go at a certain speed, so on and so forth. But doing it is really easy. And of course, the more you do it, the more you learn. This is a study I’ve been involved with for maybe fourteen years now and every time I cook for a group of people or go through a process with my own health, I’m still learning. It’s an expansion process, like being handed a flower that gradually unfolds over a period of years.
K: What all is involved?
V: In addition to nutrition, macrobiotics deals with the energetics of food, the energy of the cook and how important that is. Being aware that you’re not putting anger in the food, and so forth. Plus the style of cutting and how that influences not only the taste of the dish, but it’s energy.
If you’re cutting carrots, for instance, the way you cut creates a particular energetic quality. If I take the carrot and make big diagonal cuts by turning the carrot every inch, I end up with large triangular pieces, suitable for a stew. If I take the carrot and make quick short cuts on the diagonal, say an eighth of an inch, then turn these pieces over and cut them very finely, I end up with long fine match-stick shaped carrots. Now if I put them both into a large stew pot and cook them for an hour, the large pieces will be tender, the skin of the carrot will have lightly separated from it. However, the match-stick carrots will be completely exhausted. On the other hand, if I saute both of them in a skillet, the match-sticks will be done in a matter of minutes, where the others will be somewhat warmed and seared on the outside, but completely raw on the inside. So one of the fundamentals of macrobiotic cooking is knowing how to use a knife to chop vegetables so there is a uniform cut and consistency to them. Also, when you cut, you put your own ki [energy] into them as opposed to using a Cuisinart where you get a consistent cut, but no ki energy. If you want to give someone your ki, then the stronger food is the one you’ve cut by hand and put your energy into.
Food preparation becomes a form of meditation because of your focus and awareness and intention to sustain those you feed, not just to get the meal out of the way. When I’m cooking for retreats, it becomes part of my practice. I try to go into the kitchen and remain centered and aware, creating the most peaceful food that I can, even if it’s for a hundred and fifty or more people.
K: So instead of planning the menu a week in advance, you have to be constantly mindful what you need, of what your body needs, what other people need.
V: Absolutely. You develop that, and it’s quite easy. It just comes. I couldn’t go back to the other way of cooking. Now I always consider who am I cooking for and what is the intention. It has become second nature. When I cook I’m always in a place of joy and pleasure internally.
K: How do you know if food is yin or yang? Does it change depending on how it is prepared?
V: Yin and yang are relative to each other. In the Taoist symbol, one area is predominately black, with a little dot of white, and vice versa. This perfectly depicts yin and yang in that they’re connected to each other and even though a particular thing may have a predominantly yang quality, it still has a little bit of yin. Certain substances are very yang–salt and beef, for instance. But when you want to get into a fine comparison, you have to look at one food in relation to another.
The recommendation in macrobiotics is a grain-based diet. The main food you eat are grains, for they are our most gentle, peaceful, nurturing food, the ones with the most to give to sustain and develop human life. Within grains, brown rice is the focal point, the centering food. The rest branches out and develops around it.
K: Was all this developed before the theories about eating low on the food chain?
V: Long before, but it meshes beautifully with it. A cow is a large animal with its own digestive system, with a heart of its own, a circulatory system, a nervous system and so on. Before you can ingest it, you have to take its life in one way or another, then take the meat from its body in a good clean way and prepare it in a certain way, otherwise it becomes poisonous. Look at the activity that’s involved in all of that. Of course in this modern day and age, we just go to the supermarket and run the cart down the meat aisle and choose a shrink wrapped package. It’s not like it was several generations ago when people were involved in a personal way in taking the lives of the animal they would then eat. The modern meat industry has separated us from that process altogether. It’s yet another way in which we are divorced from our bodies.
K: And perhaps from the sacred. Many native traditions honor the deer for giving its life so that the two-leggeds might eat. And from the way you talk about macrobiotic cooking, even vegetables seem filled with an almost animistic energy.
V: Absolutely, the mundane world becomes very precious. Macrobiotic cooking requires constant mindfulness. The meals that I would feed a troupe of exotic dancers from Armenia wouldn’t be the same food that I would feed to group of nuns on retreat. There would be adjustments of the food, of the preparation, and the cooking technique.
Take grain, for instance. Most people take their grain in the form of bread. Even in whole grained-bread, the grain is crushed, ground into flour. Then it usually sits around a very long time until it is baked. By the time you get it, the grain has gone through quite a process. Where’s the chi energy in it? As opposed to going to the store and buying brown rice, cooking it in your pressure cooker, then eating it by crushing the grain in your own mouth.
Digestion begins in the mouth, so macrobiotics recommends that each mouthful be chewed 25 to 50 times to bring out the sweetness of the grain. Also to really taste the grain. Many people completely miss the experience of truly tasting food. There is a textural change that occurs as well in long chewing so that digestion is much easier since the food liquifies. If you take time to just sit and eat slowly, you’ll find that the food you are eating can be better utilized and that you’ll eat less. You can eat smaller portions of food and be satisfied.
Macrobiotics is about having a rich, full, deep, healthy, independent life. Part of the reason for eating this way is to remove yourself from the dependency of drugstores and doctors or even holistic practitioners. In studying macrobiotics, you are removing yourself from all of this for you are studying your body and its relationship to this earth, to the elements. In choosing your foods with such awareness, many deep and profound changes occur within the body.
K: I think that most people’s idea of macrobiotic food is that it is a very boring diet of brown rice.
V: Yes. Everywhere I travel people will say, “Oh, I did that macrobiotic diet.” When I ask them what they ate, they say they cooked brown rice and miso soup. That’s all I hear. Maybe they add aduki beans. That is pretty boring. But that isn’t what macrobiotics is about and it’s a great misunderstanding. Initially, Michio Kushi, who helped to popularize macrobiotics, promoted a basic macrobiotic diet consisting of a certain proportion of brown rice to beans to a sea vegetable to a root vegetable to a pickle accompanied by miso soup. That’s what I call the training wheel diet. So this is a guideline. The foundation is brown rice and miso soup, but true macrobiotic cooking spins out from there very, very quickly. To prepare a macrobiotic meal is a real spontaneous dance.
K: How would someone learn to cook macrobiotically?
V: They could start by seeking out a macrobiotic cook or center. There are people all over the United States. Also books are an excellent starting place. They provide information, bring up questions. The basic recipe book, Introducing Macrobiotic Cooking by Wendy Esko, is a primer that is very easy to understand; it teaches all the dishes in a straightforward way.
K: When I worked as a chef, I’d find myself having long, non-verbal conversations with food. Do you talk to food? Does it talk to you?
V: Absolutely.
Macrobiotic advocates teach that eating in harmony with your environment creates a balance and peace in your life that can be extended to your family, community, and eventually the world. Keep this in mind the next time you sit down at a table for a meal.
Anyone who has ever been on a strict diet is familiar with the following eating meditation:
Take a small handful of raisins or nuts. Eat them one at a time, paying strict attention to taste, smell, texture. Don’t let your mind wander, but concentrate on each little morsel of food as it enters your mouth, as you chew and swallow, savoring the taste. Let the taste sensation completely disappear before you place another bite in your mouth. Compare this with the way you normally eat a handful of raisins or nuts. Try to eat an entire meal with this type of careful attention to what you are eating, chewing, swallowing.

To learn more about the macrobiotic community contact The International Macrobiotic Directory, 1050 40th Street, Oakland, CA 94608.

Michio and Avaline Kushi, who run the Kushi Institute in Boston, have a number of cookbooks out, including Michio Kushi’s Standard Macrobiotic Diet, 1992, and The Macrobiotic Way, 1985.

Other Macrobiotic Cookbooks:

Kushis Macrobi Ck
by Aveline Kushi (Author) (Paperback )

The Macrobiotic Path to Total Health : A Complete Guide to Preventing and Relieving More Than 200 Chronic Conditionsand Disorders Naturally
by Alex Jack (Author), Michio Kushi (Author) (Hardcover )

Cooking the Whole Foods Way: Your Complete, Everyday Guide to Healthy, Delicious Eating With 500 Recipes, Menus, Techniques, Meal Planning, Buying Tips, Wit & Wisdom
by Christina Pirello (Illustrator), Bill Tara (Paperback - March 1997)

Changing Seasons Macrobiotic Cookbook: Cooking in Harmony With Nature
by Aveline Kushi, Wendy Esko (Paperback - July 2003)

Macrobiotic Diet
by Michio Kushi, et al (Paperback - August 1993)

The Quick and Natural Macrobiotic Cookbook
by Aveline Kushi, et al (Paperback )
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See also Aveline Kushi’s Complete Guide To Macrobiotic Cooking and Lessons of Night and Day. She and Wendy Esko co-authored The Changing Seasons Cookbook and The Macrobiotic Cancer Prevention Cookbook. Cornelia Aihara, who–with her husband Herman–run the George Ohsawa Macrobiotic Foundation and Vega Study Center in Oroville, CA, is the author of The Do of Cooking, Macrobiotic Kitchen, The Calendar Cookbook, and Macrobiotic Childcare. Andrea Bliss Lerman’s The Macrobiotic Community Cookbook features recipes and short sketches of the chefs involved.

For a book from a completely different perspective about the kinds of energy that can be put in food, read Like Water for Chocolate by Lauro Esquirel. Also be sure to see the wonderful film Babette’s Feast which is based on an Isak Dinesen short story.

Food types

Wednesday, April 15th, 2009

Poultry
Chicken Breast (Skinless)
Turkey Breast (Skinless)

Meats
Extra Lean Ground Beef
London Broil
Pork Loin
Top Round
Top Sirloin
Bison
Elk
Ostrich
Deer
Pheasant
Quail
Emu
Veal

Fish
Bass
Catfish
Cod
Flounder
Haddock
Grouper
Halibut
Mahi-Mahi
Salmon
Snapper
Tilapia
Trout
Tuna (water packed)

Eggs/Dairy
Egg Whites (Egg Beaters)
Non-Fat Cheese
Non-Fat Cottage Cheese
Nonfat Milk
Nonfat Plain Yogurt

Complex Carbohydrates
Barley
Beans
Brown Rice
Cream of Wheat
Fiber One Cereal
Oat Bran Cereal
Oatmeal
Red Potatoes
Sweet Potatoes (Yams)
Whole Wheat Bread
Whole Wheat Pasta

Healthy Fats
Flaxseed Oil
Fish Oil
Natural Style Peanut Butter
Nuts (walnuts, peanuts, almonds, cashews)
Extra Virgin Olive Oil
Canola Oil

Natural Sweeteners
Blackstrap Molasses
Cane Juice
Honey
Maple Syrup
Fibrous Carbohydrates (Veggies)
Asparagus
Bell peppers
Broccoli
Brussels sprouts
Cabbage
Carrots
Cauliflower
Celery
Collard greens
Cucumber
Eggplant
Fennel bulb
Garlic
Green beans
Green peas
Kale
Leeks
Mushrooms, Crimini
Mushrooms, Shiitake
Mustard greens
Olives
Onions
Parsley
Romaine lettuce
Sea vegetables
Spinach
Squash, summer
Squash, winter
Swiss chard
Tomato, fresh
Turnip Greens
Zucchini

Fruits
Apples
Avocado
Bananas
Blueberries
Cantaloupe
Grapefruit
Grapes
Kiwifruit
Lemons
Limes
Oranges
Papaya
Peaches
Pears
Pineapple
Plums
Raspberries
Strawberries
Watermelon

Spices & Herbs
Basil
Black pepper
Cayenne pepper
Chili Pepper, Red, dried
Cinnamon, ground
Cloves
Coriander seeds
Cumin seeds
Dill weed, dried
Ginger
Mustard seeds
Oregano
Peppermint leaves, fresh
Rosemary
Sage
Thyme, ground
Turmeric, ground

Is Fidel Castro eating macrobiotic diet?

Wednesday, April 15th, 2009

Is Fidel Castro eating macrobiotic diet? Or is it a joke? Or just bad use of macrobiotic term by the reporter?

According to the article - One hundred hours with Fidel - was/is Fidel eating macrobiotic diet :-)
Isn’t that great? Yeah, it is, if it’s true.
I hope, he is not eating too much on the yang side and is being balanced, preferably with the help of a good macrobiotic chef.
Chew very very well Fidel, so you can start promoting Peace all over the world.
You get better with every chew, with every grain of the brown rice.

Snippet from the article:

Like Fidel’s office, his lifestyle is austere, almost Spartan, says Ramonet who describes him as having the habits and the discipline of a “monk-soldier”. He enjoys no luxury; eats healthy, frugal, macrobiotic meals; works seven days a week and sleeps an average of four hours a night.

“Fidel has a tremendous amount of energy,” says Fernàndez. “I remember a work session with him, where we started at 11pm and finished in the early morning hours. He remained as fresh as a rose, while everybody else was falling over from fatigue.” This kind of energy feeds into his quest for knowledge. “Like no other person I know, Fidel believes in learning, from the cradle to the grave — for him it’s an ongoing process.”

Fermena - Diamond tree

Wednesday, April 15th, 2009

FERMENA

Health and energy start in the gut. If your food and supplements aren’t absorbed properly, you gain weight and lose energy… and ultimately your health. Fermena feeds the gut so it can work the way it was designed… so you can enjoy life the way you want!

Nature has cooked this whole food prebiotic formula
…and created a gift for your body.

  • It takes six months and over 50 organic fruits, herbs and vegetables for Nature to ferment this perfect whole food prebiotic formula for your body.
  • Grown in the “Brazilian Eden” – on a pristine 30,000 acre arbor in the midst of the Matto Grosso, surrounded by deep pure waters from five different lakes and streams, Fermena is the flawless, fermented blend of dozens of enzymes and beneficial bacteria help promote maximum healthy absorption in your system, for better digestion and improved intestinal health
  • A healthy intestine is the gateway to longevity and a better quality of life.
  • Fermena is a powerful prebiotic that promotes healthy probiotic activity in the human system by developing a synergistic interaction between live enzymes from healthy food and friendly bacteria that live in the digestive tract.
  • Fermena is safe for adults and children of all ages.
  • It is 100% natural, contains no preservatives, and yet requires no refrigeration
  • Take Fermena alone or with food two to three times a day.

    Intestinal Balance – The Secret Door to a Healthy System.

    Good intestinal health is the most misunderstood and least appreciated aspect of human wellness. If you have it, you’re better able to fight off disease. You often have increased energy, more stamina and even a better complexion. The problem is that more than 80% of all people in North America are carrying around from 6 to 25 pounds of undigested waste in their colon and small intestines.

    It has now become a truism in alternative health that intestinal health frames the doorway to longevity and a freedom from disease. If that is the case, then Fermena just may be the key that turns the lock. Fermena is a potent prebiotic supplement originally designed and formulated by Dr. Michio Kushi – the man universally acknowledged as the Master of Macrobiotics. In Dr. Kushi’s Fermena formula acts as a nutritional “starter kit” to work with a number of polysaccharides, Oligosaccharrides and other nutrients designed to powerfully activate the probiotic friendly flora in the human system.

    Fermena – Product Summary

  • Taken on a regular basis Fermena works to cleanse unhealthy bacteria from the system.
  • It helps to aid in balancing both bone density and appropriate levels of cholesterol.
  • It is a whole food prebiotic formula.
  • People taking Fermena often have increased energy, more stamina and a better complexion.
  • It promotes a healthy digestive system.
  • A healthy digestive system is now believed the key to increased longevity and a better quality of life.

    Fermena Ingredients / Supplement Facts:

    Calories 20
    Total Carbohydrate 5g, 2% Daily Value*
    Sugar 4g
    Fermented Proprietary Blend 5g, 1% Daily Value

    Fermented Proprietary Blend from Fruit of Orange, Pineapple, Banana, Apple, Papaya, Guava, Melon; Grains of Brown Rice, Oats, Corn, Barley, Pea, Jalo Bean, Roxinho Bean, Black Sesame, Millet, Plum, Azuki Bean, Soy Bean, Carrot, Rye, Black Bean, Lentil, Avocado, Fruit of Acerola, Lemon, Pear, Tomato, Red Grape, Mango, Watermelon, Pumpkin, Sweet Potato, Chick Pea, Carambolat, Cashew Nut, Brazil Nut, Kiwi, Cassava, Green Bell Pepper, Sugar Beet, Leaves of Collard Couve-Manteiga, Cabbage, Passion Fruit, Chicory, West Indian Lemon Grass, Sacred Lotus, Turnip, Seaweed, Leaves of Mate, Cinnamon, Anis, Clove, Ginger, Zedoary, water, sugar, yeast, honey.

  • Detoxication

    Wednesday, April 15th, 2009

    Detoxication

    DETOX

    It is that time of year, folks. I need to lose a few pounds of holiday excess. Anyone else? I like to do fasts and detoxes a couple of times during the year, the most hardcore one being the Master Cleanse I did last spring. It was not what you would characterize as pretty. Or easy. It did work, however. As I do not wish to subsist on lemon water in the middle of winter, I asked my doctor, a detox diet specialist, for the guidelines he uses to achieve a good detox that is not as hallucinogenic (in a bad way) as the Master Cleanse. He actually thinks that the Master Cleanse can be dangerous because the liver is not supported by the nutrients it needs. What it came down to was this: you can detox easily and effectively while you continue to eat as long as you are cutting out the foods and other substances that interfere with the detoxification process. Make sure you check with your doctor before you start any detox. Drink A LOT of water. I created this menu plan for a seven-day elimination diet. The shakes and juices are meant to be liquid meals that help decrease the amount of work your digestive system has to do. I will be suffering along with you to kickstart my year a bit lighter. Good luck to us all!

    — Gwyneth Paltrow

    According to Dr. Alejandro Junger* (our detox specialist) in addition to the above, there are a few more “basic principles of detoxification” that should be kept in mind while following our detox menus.

    * Do deep breathing or gentle yoga.
    * Take a couple of spoonfuls of extra virgin olive oil at night to help stimulate your liver to eliminate bile and keep its circulation flowing.
    * If your bowel movements get sluggish, you can accelerate things by drinking half a cup of castor oil or using a mild herbal laxative. Bowel elimination is paramount for correct detoxification.
    * The skin gets rid of many toxins so it is important to sweat, either by exercising or taking a sauna.
    * Finally, make sure you eat whole organic foods, which have the best chance of having all the nutrients needed for liver and general detoxification.

    *This is an excerpt from Dr. Junger’s upcoming book Clean, which will be published in May. Be sure to pick up a copy!

    MENUS (bold indicates a recipe)

    Adjust the time to your schedule and the meals to your taste but remember that there can be no dairy, grains with gluten, meat, shellfish, anything processed (including all soy products), fatty nuts, nightshades (potatoes, tomatoes, peppers and eggplant), condiments, sugar and obviously no alcohol, caffeine or soda.
    DAY ONE

    7am (or upon rising): Glass of room temperature lemon water
    8am: Herbal tea
    10am (breakfast): Blueberry and Almond Smoothie
    11:30am: Coconut water*
    1:30pm (lunch): Salad with Carrot and Ginger Dressing
    4pm (snack): A handful of mixed pumpkin and sunflower seeds
    6pm (dinner): Broccoli and Arugula Soup
    *Make sure that the coconut water has no added sugar. Fresh is ideal but the brands Zico or Vita Coco are readily available.
    DAY TWO

    7am (or upon rising): Glass of room temperature lemon water
    8am: Herbal tea
    10am (breakfast): Raspberry and Rice Milk Smoothie (follow method for Blueberry and Almond Smoothie)
    11:30am: Coconut water
    1:30pm (lunch): Detox Teriyaki Chicken and Steamed Greens
    4pm (snack): Miso Soup with Watercress
    6pm (dinner): Pea and Basil Soup (follow method for Broccoli and Arugula Soup)
    DAY THREE

    7am (or upon rising): Glass of room temperature lemon water
    8am: Herbal tea
    10am (breakfast): Oatmeal (make with rice or almond milk instead of water so itӳ a bit more substantial)
    11:30am: Coconut water
    1:30pm (lunch): Blueberry and Almond Smoothie
    4pm (snack): Cucumber, Lime and Basil Juice
    6pm (dinner): Super Greens Juice / Miso Soup with Watercress
    DAY FOUR

    7am (or upon rising): Glass of room temperature lemon water
    8am: Herbal tea
    10am (breakfast): Mango and Coconut Milk Smoothie (follow method for Blueberry and Almond Smoothie)
    11:30am: Coconut water
    1:30pm (lunch): Miso Soup with Watercress
    4pm (snack): A handful of blueberries
    6pm (dinner): Steamed Salmon and Greens
    DAY FIVE

    7am (or upon rising): Glass of room temperature lemon water
    8am: Herbal tea
    10am (breakfast): Peach and Almond Smoothie (follow method for Blueberry and Almond Smoothie)
    11:30am: Coconut water
    1:30pm (lunch): Raw crudite (carrots, green beans, radishes, cucumbers, zucchini) with Carrot and Ginger Dressing
    4pm (snack): Beet, Carrot, Apple and Ginger Juice
    6pm (dinner): Cucumber and Avocado Soup
    DAY SIX

    7am (or upon rising): Glass of room temperature lemon water
    8am: Herbal tea
    10am (breakfast): Blueberry and Almond Smoothie
    11:30am: Coconut water
    1:30pm (lunch): Mixed Greens with Steamed Salmon, Olive Oil & Lemon Juice
    4pm (snack): Super Greens Juice
    6pm (dinner): Detox Teriyaki Chicken, brown rice, steamed zucchini
    DAY SEVEN

    7am (or upon rising): Glass of room temperature lemon water
    8am: Herbal tea
    10am (breakfast): Raspberry and Rice Milk Smoothie (follow method for Blueberry and Almond Smoothie)
    11:30am: Coconut water
    1:30pm (lunch): Miso Soup with Vegetables
    4pm (snack): A handful of almonds
    6pm (dinner): Steamed fish, quinoa, roasted squash
    RECIPES

    Salad with Carrot and Ginger Dressing
    Broccoli and Arugula Soup
    Miso Soup with Watercress
    Detox Teriyaki Chicken
    Blueberry and Almond Smoothie
    Beet, Carrot, Apple and Ginger Juice
    Super Greens Juice
    Cucumber, Basil and Lime Juice
    Steamed Salmon and Greens
    Cucumber and Avocado Soup

    SALAD WITH CARROT AND GINGER DRESSING

    This dressing is the jam! Great on salad and also as a dip for vegetables. This recipe makes enough dressing for two salads, so be sure to save the extra.

    SERVES: 1
    TIME: 5 minutes

    For dressing:

    * 1 large carrot, peeled and roughly chopped
    * 1 large shallot, peeled and roughly chopped
    * 2 tablespoons roughly chopped fresh ginger

    * 1 tablespoon sweet white miso
    * 2 tablespoons rice wine vinegar
    * 1 tablespoon roasted sesame seed oil
    * 1/4 cup grapeseed oil
    * 2 tablespoons water

    For salad:

    * 1 head of baby gem lettuce (or any greens), roughly cut

    * 1/4 red onion, thinly sliced
    * 1/4 avocado, diced

    Pulse the carrot, shallot and ginger in a blender until finely chopped. Scrape down the sides, add the miso, vinegar and sesame seed oil and whiz together. While the blender is going, slowly drizzle in the grapeseed oil and the water.

    Combine the lettuce, onion and avocado in a bowl, drizzle with plenty of dressing and serve.
    BROCCOLI and ARUGULA SOUP

    This is a clean, basic approach to soup that showcases the vegetable. You can make this with nearly anything ֠including peas and basil, zucchini, carrots and ginger. In this case, broccoli is made a bit more dynamic with a handful of peppery arugula. When youӲe detoxing and drinking lots of juices and smoothies, itӳ a nice change to have something warm. This recipe makes enough soup for at least two portions, but itӳ easier to make it once and eat it twice.

    SERVES: 2
    TIME: 15 minutes

    * 1 tablespoon olive oil
    * 1 clove garlic, thinly sliced
    * 1/2 yellow onion, roughly diced
    * 1 head broccoli, cut into small florets (about 2/3 pound)

    * 2 1/2 cups water
    * 1/4 teaspoon each coarse salt and freshly ground black pepper
    * 3/4 cup arugula (watercress would be good, too)
    * 1/2 lemon

    Heat the olive oil in a medium nonstick saucepan over medium heat. Add the garlic and onion and saut顦or just a minute or until fragrant. Add the broccoli and cook for four minutes or until bright green. Add the water, salt and pepper, bring to a boil, lower the heat and cover. Cook for eight minutes or until the broccoli is just tender. Pour the soup into a blender and puree with the arugula until quite smooth. Be very careful when blending hot liquids; start slowly and work in batches if necessary (you donӴ want the steam to blow the lid off). Serve the soup with a bit of fresh lemon.
    MISO SOUP WITH WATERCRESS

    You can make the broth early in the week and add the miso as you eat. Also, you can eat this plain, with the watercress, or bulk it up with other thinly sliced vegetables (mushrooms, zuchinni, carrots, etc.)

    SERVES: 4
    TIME: 30 minutes

    * 6 cups water (filtered is best)
    * 50 grams dried bonito flakes
    * 3 dried shitake mushrooms
    * 4″ piece of dried wakame

    * 6 tablespoons miso paste (whatever kind you likeسweet white miso makes for a nice, light soup while aged barley gives a full, robust flavor)
    * 2 cups watercress leaves

    Heat the water in a small soup pot and when bubbles form around the edge, add the bonito. Turn the heat down and simmer for two minutes. Turn off the heat and let the broth sit for five minutes. Strain the broth into a clean pot, discarding the bonito. Add the shitakes and wakame to the broth and simmer over low heat for 20 minutes. Remove the wakame and mushrooms. Discard the thick stems from the mushrooms, thinly slice the caps and slip them back into the soup. Chop the wakame into small pieces, discarding any thick pieces of stem, and return to the pot.

    In a small bowl, combine the miso paste with a bit of the broth and whisk to combine. Pour the mixture back into the pot and let the soup simmer, being careful not to let it boil. Add the watercress at the last minute, just to wilt it, and serve.
    DETOX TERIYAKI CHICKEN

    This sauce is detox-friendly because it doesnӴ use sugar or soy, but it has a great depth of flavor and is the perfect consistency.

    SERVES: 1
    TIME: 20 minutes + time for marinating

    For Sauce:

    * 1/3 cup balsamic vinegar
    * 1/3 cup agave syrup
    * 1 teaspoon freshly grated ginger
    * 1/4 teaspoon freshly ground black pepper

    * 1 teaspoon barley miso
    * 1 teaspoon mirin
    * 1 tablespoon water

    Combine the balsamic, agave, ginger and pepper in a small saucepan. Bring to a boil, lower to a simmer and cook for ten minutes. Cool and then add the miso, mirin and water.

    For Chicken:

    * 1 chicken breast
    * Detox Teriyaki Sauce

    * 1 finely chopped scallion
    * 4 sprigs cilantro, roughly chopped

    Marinate the chicken in the sauce (reserve a spoonful or two) for at least one hour׵p to overnight.

    Heat your grill to medium heat. Wipe off any excess marinade and grill the chicken for about 3 to 4 minutes per side, or until cooked through. Serve with the reserved, hasnӴ-touched-raw-chicken sauce, cilantro and scallions.
    BLUEBERRY and ALMOND SMOOTHIE

    This could easily be made with any fruitزaspberries, peaches, mango, etc. Also, feel free to substitute rice or coconut milk for almond milk.

    SERVES: 1
    TIME: 5 minutes

    * 1 scoop of a complete nutritional, whey protein fortified powder (not soy protein)
    * 1/2 cup blueberries

    * 1 scoop of a ProGreens type of powder (preferably with probiotics)
    * 1 1/2 cups almond milk

    Blend everything together.
    BEET, CARROT, APPLE and GINGER JUICE

    This juice is the most incredible color and is wonderfully sweet. Beets are said to lower blood pressure, carrots pack a super beta-carotene punch, apples are cancer-fighters and ginger just loves your heart.

    SERVES: 1
    TIME: 5 minutes

    * 1 large or 2 medium beets, cut into wedges
    * 1/2 lemon, zest and pith removed

    * 2 large carrots
    * 1 large apple, cut into wedges
    * 1″ piece of ginger

    Juice everything into a glass, give it a stir and enjoy.
    SUPER GREENS JUICE

    Health in a glass!

    SERVES: 1
    TIME: 5 minutes

    * 1 cup tightly packed kale
    * 4 stalks celery
    * 1 1/2 pears, cut into large pieces

    * 1″ piece of fresh ginger
    * 1/2 lemon, zest and pith removed

    Juice everything into a glass, being sure to alternate the kale with the other ingredients to help it get through the juicer easily (I follow each small bit of kale with a celery stalk). Give the juice a stir before drinking.
    CUCUMBER, BASIL and LIME JUICE

    This juice is especially refreshing when you blend it with a handful of ice cubes (use a whole lime if you do, as the acid is muted when itӳ cold). Think of it as a detox-friendly mojito.

    SERVES: 1
    TIME: 5 minutes

    * 1/2 cup fresh basil
    * 1 English cucumber, cut in half lengthwise

    * 1/2 lime, zest and pith removed
    * 1 apple, cut into wedges

    Starting with the basil, juice everything into a glass, give it a stir and enjoy.
    STEAMED SALMON and GREENS

    You could steam the fish on a bed of anythingشhinly sliced fennel, lemon, even scallions or leeks.

    SERVES: 1
    TIME: 20 minutes

    * small handful (roughly 1/4 cup) of your favorite leafy herbs (parsley, basil, chervil, tarragon, etc.)
    * 1 6 oz. organic salmon filet

    * a cup of your favorite fresh greens (kale, spinach, dandelion, chard, etc.)
    * 1 wedge of lemon

    Line your steamer with the herbs and rest the salmon filet on top. Steam for 11 minutes. Put the greens alongside the fish and steam for an additional 7 minutes. Squeeze the lemon over the fish and greens and serve.
    CUCUMBER and AVOCADO SOUP

    Really light and refreshing, this soup is also incredibly satisfying because the avocado makes it so creamy.

    SERVES: 1
    TIME: 2 minutes

    * zest of 1/2 lime
    * juice of an entire lime
    * 1/2 teaspoon salt

    * 1 cucumber, peeled and seeded, roughly chopped
    * 1/2 avocado, peeled and roughly chopped

    Blend everything together until totally creamy and smooth.

    Daikon, kombu, seaweed dish

    Wednesday, April 15th, 2009

    Dish from the daikon and kombu seaweed

    Soak 10 cm long piece of kombu seaweed for 10 minutes. Cut it to long stripes 1/2 cm wide and place it on the bottom of the heavy pot with heavy lid. Clean the daikon root and cut on big chunks. Layer the daikon on top of kombu. Pour over the water from the kombu soaking, so it will cover all the vegetable. Cover the pot, get it boiling, and lower the flame and let it simmer for 30-40 minutes, until the kombu is soft. Check from time to time if the liquid is still there. At the end, add small portion of soya suace and let it warm for 2-3 minutes, until the surplus liquid evaporates. You can serve.

    This food can be consumed daily. It helps with the reduction of fat, that was stored into the body by the long years of butter, cheese and other animal products eating - also by the excess consummation of vegetable oils. If you can’t find/buy fresh daikon, you can use dried one.

    Cruciferous plants

    Wednesday, April 15th, 2009

    CRUCIFEROUS PLANTS
    The cruciferae family of plants has “crosslike” formations on its buds and includes broccoli, cauliflower, brussels sprouts, cabbage, bok choy, kale, kohlrabi, turnips, collards, mustard greens, and rutabaga. High in antioxidant (such as vitamins A and C), calcium, and dietary fiber, the cruciferous plants also include phytochemicals that are protective against cancer and other serious disease. See Broccoli, Cauliflower, Collards, Kale, Vegetables.

    Cropland loss

    Wednesday, April 15th, 2009

    CROPLAND LOSS
    The area of grain land supporting each person on the planet has fallen to less than one sixth the size of a soccer field, according to Shrinking Fields, a study by the Worldwatch Institute. In the U.S., net losses of cropland between 1982 and 1992 covered an area the size of New Jersey. In China during the same period, at least 5 percent of the nation’s cropland was lost to urban expansion and industrialization. Large expanses of Kazakhstan and Iran are also exhausted. Main causes of shrinking cropland are urbanization, depletion or diversion of irrigation water, and degradation of agricultural lands, especially from severe erosion and salination. The shift to nonfood crops such as cotton, coffee, tobacco, corn for ethanol, and commodity crops for the affluent global market, were also cited as contributing factors. “If policymakers do not see cropland as a key strategic resource—no less important than oil reserves or armed forces—then they will not take steps to halt these losses or protect the quality of remaining farmland,” the report concluded.
    Source: Gary Gardner, Shrinking Fields (Washington, D.C.: Worldwatch Institute, 1996)

    Crohn’s disease

    Wednesday, April 15th, 2009

    CROHN’S DISEASE
    Crohn’s disease, a chronic inflammation of the intestinal wall, occurs in both sexes, especially among younger people aged 14 to 24. Medically, Crohn’s disease is considered an irreversible, often fatal disorder that can be treated only by recurrent surgery to remove sections of the small intestine. See Chocolate.

    • Case History - Virginia Harper completely recovered from Crohn’s disease and Takayasu Arteritis after adopting a macrobiotic way of eating. She now teaches and cooks in Tennessee.
    Source: Gale Jack and Wendy Esko, Editors, Women’s Health Guide (Becket, MA: One Peaceful World Press, 1997).

    • High-Fat, High-Sugar Diet Associated with Crohn’s Disease - People with Crohn’s disease eat more sugar and sweets than normal and increased amounts of dietary fat. In a review of nutritional factors associated with this disease, a researcher found that a diet that limits dairy products, yeast, and refined cereals contributed to prolonged remission in some studies.
    Source: J. O. Hunter, “Nutritional Factors in Inflammatory Bowel Disease,” European Journal of Gastroenterology and Hepatology 10(3):235-37, 1998.

    Crime and diet

    Wednesday, April 15th, 2009

    CRIME AND DIET
    In Erewhon, Samuel Butler’s satirical 19th century novel, criminals are sent to the hospital and treated with proper diet, while the sick are put in jail because they have violated the laws of nature and health.
    The wisdom of treating crime and anti-social behavior as an illness has been increasingly demonstrated in macrobiotic and natural foods prison projects around the world and in nutritional studies and research.

    • Sugar and Theft - In a double-blind study, Doris J. Rapp, M.D. reported that four young persons with a history of stealing stopped altogether after being place on a restricted diet. However, when the therapy was discontinued and the former diet high in sugar and other refined carbohydrates was resumed, stealing resumed.
    Source: Doris J. Rapp, M.D., “Food Allergy Treatment for Hyperkinesis,” Journal of Learning Disabilities 12(9):42-50, 1979.

    • Sugar Linked to Violent Behavior - Frank Kern, assistant director at Tidewater Detention Center in Chesapeake, Virginia, a state facility for juvenile offenders, decided to initiate some dietary reforms in a macrobiotic direction. In 1979 he arranged an experiment in which sugar was taken out of the meals and snacks of 24 inmates. The boys, aged 12 to 18, were jailed for offenses that ranged from disorderly conduct, larceny, and burglary to alcohol and narcotics violations. Coke machines were removed from the premises and fruit juice substituted in vending machines for soft drinks, while honey and other milder sweeteners were substituted for refined sugar. The three-month trial was designed as a double-blind case-control study so that neither the detention center personnel nor the inmates knew that they were being tested. At the end of the trial period, the regular staff records on inmates’ behavior were checked against a control group of 34 youngsters who had been institutionalized previously. Researchers found that the youngsters on the modified diet exhibited a 45 percent lower incidence of formal disciplinary actions and antisocial behavior than the control group. Follow-up studies over the next year showed that after limiting sugar there was an 82 percent reduction in assaults, 77 percent reduction in thefts, 65 percent reduction in horseplay, and 55 percent reduction in refusal to obey orders. The researchers also found that “the people most likely to show improvement were those who had committed violent acts on the outside.”
    Source: S. Schoenthaler, Ph.D., “The Effect of Sugar on the Treatment and Control of Antisocial Behavior,” International Journal of Biosocial Research 3(1):1-9, 1982.

    • Macrobiotics in a Portuguese Maximum-Security Prison - In 1979 several inmates at the Central Prison in Linho outside of Lisbon, Portugal, began eating macrobiotically and attending lectures on Oriental philosophy and medicine. Soon 30 prisoners had become macrobiotic, and prison officials allowed them to use a large kitchen where they cooked and ate together several times a week. Linho, a maximum security institution, housed Portugal’s most dangerous criminals, including José Joaquim (known as “Al Capone”), a celebrated safecracker, and Antonio (To Zé) José Aréal, mastermind of a gang of armed robbers and kidnappers that had been the object of a nation-wide manhunt. As a result of attitude and behavioral changes, To Zé and most of the other prisoners attending classes received commutations and were released early. “[T]here is a great difference in them, especially in those who have left the prison,” Senhor Alfonso, a prison administrator, noted, commenting on the macrobiotic group. “It is not easy to describe—for one thing I can say that now they take more initiative. Actually, there is no problem here with anyone who is macrobiotic; this way of life enjoys a very good reputation. I believe the food and the outside stimulus both helped. The food can change people.” To Zé went on to study at the Kushi Institute in Boston and taught macrobiotics in New Bedford, site of a large Portuguese-speaking population, before returning to teach and help other prisoners in Portugal.
    Source: Meg Seaker, “Fighting Crime with Diet: Report from a Portuguese Prison,” East West Journal, July, 1982, pp. 26-34.

    • Diet Reduces Recidivism - A Cleveland probation official reported a low rate of recidivism among youthful offenders given nutritionally balanced meals. Barbara Reed of the Cuyahoga Falls Municipal Probation Department reported that of 318 offenders, 252 required attention to their diet, and “we have not had one single person back in court for trouble who has maintained and stayed on the nutritional diet.”
    Later, Reed reported that more than a thousand ex-offenders had completed her dietary program, and of those who remained on the diet, 89 percent had not been rearrested over the past five years.
    Sources: Barbara Reed, statement before the Select Committee on Nutrition and Human Needs of the U.S. Senate, June 22, 1977 and in Michio Kushi et al., Crime and Diet (Tokyo and New York: Japan Publications, 1987), p. 149.

    • Milk Consumption Linked to Juvenile Delinquency - High milk consumption was connected with juvenile delinquency in a study by criminologists. Researchers at the University of Washington monitored the die-tary intake of 30 chronic youthful offenders and compared them to a group of behaviorally disordered children from the local school district in Tacoma, Wash. They found that the male offenders consumed an average of 64 ounces of milk a day, while the control group rank an average of 30 ounces. For girls, the figures were 35 and 17 ounces respectively. “In some situations,” they concluded, “eliminating milk from the diet can result in dramatic improvements in behavior, especially in hyperactive children.” They cited other studies showing that up to 90 percent of offenders had a history of milk intolerance or allergy.
    Source: Alexander Schauss, Diet, Crime, and Delinquency (Berkeley, Calif.: Parker House, 1981), pp. 13-14.

    Cornaro Luigi

    Wednesday, April 15th, 2009

    CORNARO, LUIGI
    In 1558 Luigi Cornaro, a Venetian-born architect and counselor, wrote The Art of Living Long, an essay on health and diet describing how he suffered from a terminal stomach disorder in middle-age which he overcame by adopting a grain-based diet and avoiding certain kinds of animal food, raw salads, fruit, pastries, and sweets. Stating that we cannot partake of a “more natural food” than plain dark bread, Cornaro lived to age 102, and his book became one of the most influential books on health and diet during the Renaissance.
    Source: Luigi Cornaro, The Art of Living Long (Milwaukee: William F. Butler, 1935).

    Corn

    Wednesday, April 15th, 2009

    CORN
    Native to Central and South America, corn (or maize) is enjoyed eaten on the cob, ground into whole corn dough (masa), or made into grits, flour, or oil. Corn provides light, expansive energy and is especially strengthening for the heart and small intestine.

    • Corn Protects Against Colorectal Cancer - In a case-control study on the risk of colorectal cancer, researchers at the University of Hawaii Cancer Research Center reported that consumption of corn, as well as other plant-quality foods, reduced risk for this disease independent of its fiber content, which is also a protective factor.
    Source: L. Le Marchand et al., “Dietary Fiber and Colorectal Cancer Risk,” Epidemiology 8(6):658-65, 1997.

    Cooking

    Wednesday, April 15th, 2009

    COOKING
    Cooking, the highest art, is found in all cultures and cuisines. It is essential to digestion and helps the body assimilate and metabolize food more smoothly.

    • Light Cooking Reduces Harmful Acids in Raw Vegetables - In a study on the effect of lightly cooking green leafy vegetables, researchers in Tanzania reported that blanching significantly reduced the level of phytic and tannic acid in collard, cabbage, turnip, sweet potato, and peanut greens. “In general, blanching is recommended as an effective method for reducing the antinutritional factors in green vegetables,” the scientists concluded.
    Source: T. C. Mosha, “Effect of Blanching on the Content of Antinutritional Factors in Selected Vegetables,” Plant Foods and Human Nutrition 47(4):361-67, 1995.

    Complex carbohydrates

    Wednesday, April 15th, 2009

    COMPLEX CARBOHYDRATES
    Complex carbohydrates (polysaccharides), found in whole grains, beans, vegetables, and sea vegetables, enter the bloodstream gradually and contribute to overall health and balance. Because of their protective effect in the development of cardiovascular disease, cancer, and other serious disorders, scientific and medical guidelines all call for substantial increases in complex carbohydrates and corresponding decreases in intake of simple carbohydrates such as sugar, white flour, and white rice. See Paleolithic Diet, Premenstrual Syndrome, Whole Grains, World Health Organization.

    • Saturated Fat and Cholesterol - Comparing the blood values of middle-aged Irishmen living in Ireland, their brothers who had migrated to Boston, and unrelated men of Irish descent living in Boston, researchers at Harvard School of Public Health found that mean total blood cholesterol levels were strongly correlated with intake of saturated fatty acid and dietary cholesterol from meat and other animal food. Fiber intake and vegetable consumption were also lower among those who died from coronary heart disease, leading the researchers to speculate that a decrease in complex carbohydrates rather than a change in fat consumption was the main causative factor in increased mortality from heart disease.
    “Although the risk of coronary heart disease has been reported to be related to the intake of dietary lipids, an equally consistent finding has been the relation with starches and complex carbohydrates,” the scientists noted. “. . . The principal nutritional change that has occurred since the early 1900s has been a decrease in the consumption of dietary carbohydrates, not including sugar, of about 45 percent during the period from 1909 to 1976. In contrast, changes in the consumption of dietary lipids have been much smaller.”
    Source: L. H. Kushi et al., “Diet and 20-Year Mortality from Coronary Heart Disease. The Ireland-Boston Diet-Heart Study,” New England Journal of Medicine 312:811-18, 1985.

    • Complex Carbohydrates Stimulate Mental Development - At Massachusetts Institute of Technology (MIT), researchers have investigated the effects of food on the brain and nervous system. “It is becoming increasingly clear that brain chemistry and function can be influenced by a single meal. That is, in well-nourished individuals consuming normal amounts of food, short-term changes in food composition can rapidly affect brain function,” explained Dr. John Fernstrom. According to scientists, whole grains and other foods high in complex carbohydrates have the capacity to increase the brain’s intake of tryptophan, an amino acid that aids in relief of pain and in lowering blood pressure. Tryptophan has also been associated in studies with lifting depression and improving sleep. In contrast to grains and vegetables, meals high in animal protein lower levels of tryptophan reaching the brain. This “growing body of information now points to new clinically useful applications of tryptophan and thus also for the use of specific meals that would increase tryptophan levels,” Fernstrom concluded.
    Source: Tom Monte, “A Nutritional Approach to Mental Health,” Michio Kushi et al., Crime and Diet (Tokyo & New York: Japan Publications, 1987), pp. 146-47.

    Colon cancer

    Wednesday, April 15th, 2009

    COLON CANCER
    Colon cancer is the second leading cause of cancer mortality in the United States, accounting for 56,000 deaths each year. Consumption of foods high in saturated fat and cholesterol increase the risk for this disease. Alcohol and smoking are associated with causing polyps, benign growths in the large intestine that may become malignant. Low intake of whole grains, high in fiber, and vegetables, especially those high in folate, are also linked to colon cancer. See Broccoli, Cabbage,
    Polyps, Water, Whole Grains, Women’s Health.

    • Meat Raises Risk of Colon Cancer - Women who eat beef, lamb, or pork as a daily main dish are at two and a half times the risk for developing colon cancer as women who eat meat less than once a month. The conclusion, drawn from a study of 88,751 nurses, over a ten-year period, found that the more fish and poultry in the diet the less chances of getting colon cancer. “The substitution of other protein sources, such as beans or lentils, for red meat might also be associated with a reduced risk of colon cancer in populations that consume more legumes,” researchers concluded. Investigators also found that eating the fiber from fruit appeared to reduce the risk of colon cancer. The fruits mentioned as possibly protective included apples and pears.
    “The less red meat the better,” recommended Dr. Walter Willett, professor of epidemiology and nutrition at the Harvard School of Public Health, who directed the study. “At most, it should be eaten only occasionally. And it may be maximally effective not to eat red meat at all.”
    Sources: Walter C. Willett et al., “Relation of Meat, Fat, and Fiber Intake to the Risk of Colon Cancer in a Prospective Study among Women,” New England Journal of Medicine 323:1664-72, 1990 and Anastasia Toufexis, “Red Alert on Red Meat,” Time, December 24, 1990.

    • Whole Grains Protective Against Colon Cancer - In a population-based case-control study of over 4000 people in California, Utah, and Minnesota, cancer researchers reported that high whole grain intake was associated with up to 60 percent less risk for this disease, while intake of refined grains increased the risk one and a half to two times. Foods high in fiber, vitamin B-6, thiamine, and niacin were also protective.
    Source: M. L. Slattery, “Plant Foods and Colon Cancer; An Assessment of Specific Foods and Their Related Nutrients,” Cancer Causes Control 8(4):575-90, 1997.

    Collard greens

    Wednesday, April 15th, 2009

    COLLARD GREENS
    Collard greens, a traditional Native American, African-American, and Southern delicacy, are popular in the natural foods community and modern health-conscious society. Tender, sweet, and mild, the freshest varieties melt in the mouth. High in antioxidants as well as calcium and other minerals, collards are especially strengthening for the liver, gallbladder, heart, and small intestine. Like other green leafy vegetables, they help reduce the risk of cardiovascular disease, cancer, osteoporosis, and other disorders.

    • Home Remedies - In his book on home remedies, Michio Kushi explains how to use collards to make Leafy Greens Juice to treat liver disorders and dissolve heavy, stagnated protein, animal fat, or cholesterol. Their large greens leaves are also used in a Cholorophyll Plaster to reduce fever, sooth inflammation, or relieve burns.
    Source: Michio Kushi, Basic Home Remedies (Becket, MA: One Peaceful World Press, 1994).

    Colitis

    Wednesday, April 15th, 2009

    COLITIS
    Colitis, a prevalent intestinal disorder, is often incurable. Dietary therapy has proven beneficial for some people with this persistent, fatiguing disease. See Sugar.

    • Fat and Colitis - In a study of dietary factors associated with the risk of ulcerative colitis, researchers in Japan found that consumption of Western foods, including bread for breakfast, butter, margarine, cheese, meats, and ham/sausage, was related to the disease, while no appreciable association was found for consumption of Japanese foods, vegetables, and fruits. The scientists concluded that margarine or chemically modified fat could play a causative role in the development of colitis.
    Source: “A Case-Control Study of Ulcerative Colitis in Relation to Dietary and Other Factors in Japan,” Journal of Gastroenterology 30 Supplement 8:9-12, 1995.

    • Case History - Andrew Weil mentions the case of a woman with ulcerative colitis for many years who was taking prednisone and other suppressive drugs. After starting macrobiotics, the colitis promptly disappeared.
    Source: by Andrew Weil, M.D., Spontaneous Healing, (New York: Knopf, 1995).

    Coffee

    Wednesday, April 15th, 2009

    COFFEE
    Caffeine, the active ingredient in coffee, is a stimulant associated with affecting the nervous system. In medical studies, coffee is generally not associated with cardiovascular disease or most cancers, except possibly pancreatic cancer, but it may affect blood pressure and decrease infertility in women. See Caffeine, Myopia.

    • Coffee Raises Blood Pressure and Heart Rate - In a study of the effects of caffeine, researchers at the University of Iowa reported that coffee raised systolic and diastolic blood pressure 3.6 and 5.6 mm/Hg respectively, most notably shortly after ingestion, and heart rate was higher overnight following caffeine consumption.
    Source: P. J. Green and J. Suis, “The Effects of Coffeine on Ambulatory Blood Prfessure, Heart Rate, and Moon in Coffee Drinkers,” Journal of Behavioral Medicine 19(2):111-28, 1996.

    • Unfiltered Coffee Raises Cholesterol - In a study of different brewing methods, researchers in the Netherlands reported that boiling coffee in the Turkish or Scandinavian way raises LDL cholesterol, the “bad” cholesterol, while filtered coffee does not affect cholesterol. The scientists identi-fied cafestol and kahweol, diterpene lipids, in coffee beans as the cholesterol-raising ingredients, which are retained by a paper filter but extracted by hot water.
    Source: R. Urgert and M. B. Katan, “The Cholesterol-Raising Factor from Coffee Beans,” Annual Reveiw of Nutrition 17:305-24, 1997.

    • Coffee and Lifestyle - In a study associating lifestyle factors with coffee and tea consumption, researchers reported that coffee drinking is “positively associated with factors that promote coronary heart disease, while drinking tea is associated with a preventive lifestyle.” The survey of 2,400 men and women aged 25 to 64 found that coffee intake was associated with a higher frequency of meat dinners including more fat, more sausages, and more eggs and less fruit. Tea drinking was linked to higher fish, salad, vegetable and fruit consumption. Coffee drinks also exercised less, while tea drinkers exercised more.
    Source: Bernhard Schwarz, M.D., et al. “Coffee, Tea, and Lifestyle,” Preventive Medicine 23: 377-384, 1994.

    Cerebral palsy

    Wednesday, April 15th, 2009

    CEREBRAL PALSY
    Cerebral palsy, a childhood neurological disease, is characterized by poor muscle control, paralysis, spasticity, and other symptoms associated with prenatal or postnatal brain injury.

    • Cereals Protect Against CP, Meat Increases Risk - In a study of the role of maternal diet in the development of the brain, researchers at Athens University Medical School in Greece reported that in a nutritional study of over 300 children, consumption of cereal grains and fish were associated with lower risk of cerebral palsy while consumption of meat was associated with increased risk.
    Source: E. Petridou, “Diet During Pregnancy and the Risk of Cerebral Palsy,” British Journal of Nutrition 79(5):407-12, 1998.

    Cauliflower

    Wednesday, April 15th, 2009

    CAULIFLOWER
    Cauliflower has a crispy texture, sweet taste, and mild, calming energy. Its healing properties are widely recognized in medical and scientific reports.
    In Far Eastern medicine, it is particularly good for the lungs and large intestine. See Broccoli, Vegetables.

    • Cauliflower and Broccoli Sprouts Strong Anticancer Foods - Cauliflower and broccoli sprouts contain substantial quantities of phytochemicals that protect against carcinogenesis, mutagenesis, and other forms of toxicity and free radicals. In a study of the effects of brassica vegetables, researchers at Johns Hopkins University School of Medicine reported that 3-day old sprouts of cauliflower and broccoli contain 10 to 100 times higher levels of glucoraphanin than mature plants. This naturally occurring chemical in the foods helps induce enzymes that protect against tumors. “Small quantities of crucifer sprouts may protect against the risk of cancer as effectively as much larger quantities of mature vegetables of the same variety,” the researchers concluded.
    Source: J. W. Fahey et al., “Broccoli Sprouts: An Exceptionally Rich Source of Inducers of Enzymes That Protect Against Chemical Carcinogens,” Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences U.S. A. 94(19)10367-72, 1997.

    Cataracts

    Wednesday, April 15th, 2009

    CATARACTS
    Blindness due to cataracts afflicts 50 million persons worldwide. In the U.S. over 541,000 cataract operations are performed annually at a cost of almost $4 billion.

    • Vegetables and Fruits Protect Against Cataracts - Older people who eat a lot of vegetables, fruits, and other nutritious foods have a lower risk of developing cataracts, the leading cause of blindness, according to doctors at Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston. Studies of 1380 people forty to seventy-nine years old showed that those who received nutritional supplements of vitamins A, B, C, and E found in garden vegetables were 37 percent less likely to have cataracts.
    Source: M. C. Leske et al., “The Lens Opacities Case-Control Study: Risk Factors for Cataract,” Archives of Optha109(2):244-51, 1991.

    Carrots

    Wednesday, April 15th, 2009

    CARROTS
    Like other orange and yellow vegetables high in beta-carotene, carrots have been associated with lower rates of heart disease, cancer, and other disorders. In Oriental medicine, they are especially good for the lungs and large intestine and their sweet taste nourishes the pancreas. See Carotenoids, Vegetables.

    • Carrots Associated with Lower Cervical Cancer - An Italian case-control study found that 191 women with invasive cervical cancer consumed less carrots and green vegetables than healthy women. Both foods were highly protective, with almost a fivefold increased risk associated with eating carrots less often than once a week or green vegetables less often than once a day.
    Source: C. La Vecchia et al., “Dietary Vitamin A and the Risk of Invasive Cervical Cancer,” International Journal of Cancer 34:319-22, 1984.

    • Carrots Reduce Risk of Breast Cancer - Carrots may help protect against breast cancer. Scientists at the National Institute of Environmental Health Sciences reported that eating carrots more than twice weekly, compared with no intake, was associated with 44 percent less breast cancer in a case-control study of 13,000 women conducted in Maine, Massachusetts, New Hampshire, and Wisconsin.
    Meanwhile, in a study of the effect of 26 types or groups of vegetables and fruit on cancer development, Italian researchers reported that most vegetables protected against cancer of the colon and rectum, but only carrots lowered breast cancer risk.
    Sources:: M. P. Longnecker, “Intake of Carrots, Spinach, and Supplements Containing Vitamin A in Relation to Risk of Breast Cancer,” Cancer Epidemiol Biomarkers Prev 6(11):887-92, 1997; S. Franceschi et al., “Role of Different Types of Vegetables and Fruit in the Prevention of Cancer of the Colon, Rectum, and Breast,” Epidemiology 9(3):338-41, 1998.

    • Carrots Protect Against Vulvar Cancer - Italian researchers reported that in a study of 125 women with invasive vulvar cancer and 541 controls in the Milan area, women who ate high amounts of carrots had about half the risk of contacting the disease.
    Source: F. Parazzini et al., “Selected Food Intake and Risk of Vulvar Cancer,” Cancer 76(11):2291-96, 1995.

    • Carrots Protect Against Lung Cancer - In a case-control study involving over 300 women in Spain, scientists found that intake of yellow/orange vegetables, principally carrots, reduced the risk of lung cancer by almost two-thirds.
    Source: A. Agudo et al., “Vegetable and Fruit Intake and the Risk of Lung Cancer in Women in Barcelona, Spain,” European Journal of Cancer 33(8):1256-61, 1997.

    • Carrots Improve Liver Function - In laboratory studies, scientists in India reported that carrot extracts reduced acute liver damage in mice.
    Source: A. Bishayee et al., “Hepatoprotective Activity of Carrot Against Carbon Tetrachloride Intoxification in Mouse Liver,” Journal of Ethnopharmacology 47(2):69-74, 1995.

    Carotenoids

    Wednesday, April 15th, 2009

    CAROTENOIDS
    Carotenoids are a family of nutrients in plants that are associated with increased health and less disease. Altogether there are nearly 600 types of carotenoids, of which beta-carotene, which makes up about 25 percent of edible varieties, is the most well known. It is efficiently converted by the body into vitamin A and as an antioxidant blocks free radicals which can damage cell membranes and protects against cancer.
    In the 1980s, dozens of studies reported that increased intake of beta carotene was associated with a decreased risk of many cancers of the respiratory and digestive tracts, including lung, oral cavity, throat, stomach, colon, and rectum. Taking beta-carotene in the form of supplements, however, has been linked with increased incidence of lung cancer. Scientists strongly recommend that the carotenoids be taken in whole foods. See Immune Function, Lung Cancer, Macular Degeneration, Olestra, Polyps, Smoking, Vegetables.

    • Carotenoid Rich Vegetables Protect Against Heart Disease - In a study of middle aged men at risk of heart disease, those who had the highest carotenoid levels in their blood were one third less likely to suffer a heart attack. Nonsmokers consistently show the strongest benefits. In another study of nurses, Boston researchers reported that those who ate five or more servings of carrots a week had 68 percent less strokes than those who ate one or less a month.
    Source: Jane E. Brody, “Health Factor in Vegetables Still Elusive,” New York Times, Feb. 21, 1995.

    Canola oil

    Wednesday, April 15th, 2009

    CANOLA OIL
    Canola oil, produced from the rapeseed plant, spread throughout modern society in the 1990s. As a monosaturated oil, it helps reduce the risk of cardiovascular disease, and its light taste makes it a favorite in natural foods stores and restaurants. However, concerns have been raised about its safety. Moreover, the majority of canola oil sold today is genetically engineered and like other GEFs is unlabeled. Macrobiotic dietary guidelines call for avoiding or minimizing its use.

    • Canola as a Source of Trans Fatty Acids in Mother’s Milk - In a study of 198 samples of breast milk in nine Canadian provinces, researchers found the concentration of trans fatty acids in mother’s milk remarkably similar to that in hydrogenated soybean and canola oils “suggesting that partially hydrogenated vegetable oils are the major source of these trans fatty acids.” Trans fatty acids are associated with elevated risk of cardiovascular and other diseases.
    Source: Z. Y. Chen et al., “Trans Fatty Acid Isomers in Canadian Human Milk,” Lipids 30(1):15-21, 1995.

    • Potential Dangers of Canola Oil - Oil from the rapeseed plant has been used as a lubricant, soap, fuel, synthetic rubber, and illuminant to make slick color pages in magazines, but is not a traditional cooking oil. In human tissues, it forms latex-like corpuscles that cause red blood cells to clump, leading to glaucoma and other symptoms, according to health researcher John Thomas. Added to animal feeds in Europe between 1986 and 1991, he reports, it caused blindness in cows, pigs, and sheep and may be implicated in the mad cow epidemic. Thomas asserts that rape oil was the source for mustard gas, the infamous poison that blistered the lungs and skin of soldiers during World War I. Canola oil contains large amounts of isothiocyanates, compounds that contain cyanide and inhibit energy production and cell regeneration. In addition to pesticides, canola oil may be contributing to the increase in systemic lupus, multiple sclerosis, cerebral palsy, pulmonary hypertension, and nervous disorders.
    Source: John Thomas, “Blindness, Mad Cow Disease, and Canola Oil,” Perceptions, March/April 1995, p. 28-29.

    Candida

    Wednesday, April 15th, 2009

    CANDIDA
    Candida albicans is a fungal microorganism that exists naturally in the linings of the digestive, respiratory, and reproductive organs in low concentrations. However, high concentrations can cause a variety of symptoms including fatigue, depression, food allergies, chemical sensitivity, and other symptoms. “Candida”—the popular name for this yeast-related illness (YRI)—has been associated with immune deficiency, and researchers have linked it with excessive use of antibiotics, oral contraceptives, treatment with corticosteroids, and a diet high in sugar and simple carbohydrates. Whole grains, high in lignans and other phytochemicals that inhibit yeasts and other anaerobic growth, may be taken to help restore beneficial microflora in the intestines, as well as aduki beans and other legumes. Small amounts of miso, tempeh, shoyu, and other fermented foods may also be taken.

    • Whole Grains Beneficial for Candida - In a review of candida, Elmer Cranton, M.D., a former president of the American Holistic Medical Association, recommended dietary treatment including avoidance of simple sugars that promote the growth of yeast, soft drinks, and alcohol. He also recommended temporary minimization of breads and baked goods and some cereals which may trigger symptoms as part of the healing response. “As improvement occurs, intake of complex carbohydrate [rice, oats, barley, etc.] may be increased to a more desirable level,” he emphasized.
    Source: E. M. Cranton, “Candida Albicans: A Common Cause of Fatigue and Depression,” Journal of Holistic Medicine 8:3-14, 1986.

    Cancer rates

    Wednesday, April 15th, 2009

    CANCER RATES
    More healthful diets, exercise, and other lifestyle changes are credited with bringing down the overall rate of new cases of cancer for the first time, researchers reported in 1998. In the last six years, cancer incidence dropped by about 6 percent, the first decline in national malignancy rates since statistics began to be tracked 25 years ago.
    Also in 1997, the number of cancer deaths declined in the U.S. for the first time. Dr. David S. Rosenthal, president of the American Cancer Society and a Harvard Medical School professor, noted that Americans increased their vegetable and fruit intake from the late 1980s to the mid-1990s, contributing to the decline.
    Source: D. S. Rosenthal, “Changing Trends,” CA Cancer Journal Clin 48(1):3-4, 1998.

    • Global Rates Rise - Food, Nutrition, and the Prevention of Cancer: A Global Perspective, the most comprehensive review and evaluation of scientific evidence on diet and cancer in the 1990s, concluded that 3 to 4 million cases of cancer per year could be prevented by appropriate diet and lifestyle changes.
    Prepared by a 15-member panel with the support of the American Institute for Cancer Research and the World Cancer Research Fund, the report made 14 dietary recommendations that “are likely to prevent cancer and are consistent with the prevention of other diseases.” The report noted that worldwide 10 million people developed some form of cancer in 1996, and at least 6 million died of the disease. Source: Charles Marwick, “Global Review of Diet and Cancer Links Available,” Journal of the American Medical Association 278: 1650-51, 1997.

    • 22% Australian Patients Using Alternative Methods - In Australia, a cancer clinic at the Royal North Shore Hospital in Sydney reported that 22 percent of its patients were using alternative methods, especially diet and psychological approaches, with a “very high” degree of expectation and satisfaction.
    Source: S. D. Begbie et al., “Patterns of Alternative Medicine Use by Cancer Patients,” Medical Journal of Australia 165(10):545-48, 1996.

    Cancer case histories

    Wednesday, April 15th, 2009

    CANCER CASE HISTORIES
    Over the last 20 years, many individuals have recovered from cancer after following a more balanced diet. The most popular anticancer diet, as the American Cancer Society notes on its Internet site, is the macrobiotic diet. The following case histories are drawn from publications of the East West Foundation, the Kushi Foundation, and One Peaceful World.
    Note abbreviations below: CPD = The Cancer Prevention Diet by Michio Kushi and Alex Jack (St. Martin’s Press, 1993); CF = Cancer-Free by Ann Fawcett (Japan Publications, 1992) ; MAC = Macrobiotic Approach to Cancer by Michio Kushi (Avery, 1992); WHG = Women’s Health Guide by Gale Jack and Wendy Esko (One Peaceful World Press, 1997); OPWJ = One Peaceful World Journal. Other sources are listed in full.

    Brain Tumor
    • Dean Todd, a college student with a brain tumor, who recovered with the help of his mother, in Double Vision by Alexandra Todd, (New England University Press, 1995).
    • Mona Sanders, a young woman from Columbus, Miss., with a brain tumor, in CF, CPD, and OPWJ 6: Spring, 1990.
    • Brian Bonaventura, an auto worker in Columbus, Ohio, in CF and CPD.
    • Melissa Hatch, a yoga teacher and wife living in Maine, in OPWJ 14: Summer 1993.
    • Betty Sidoryk, a civil servant in the Canadian government, with inoperable brain stem tumor, in OPWJ 34: Spring 1998.

    Breast Cancer
    • Christine Akbar, a physicist who recovered from terminal inflammatory breast chapter; included in WHG.
    • Phyllis W. Crabtree, an educator with two adult children, who had uterine cancer that had metastasized to the breast, in CF and summarized in CPD.
    • Magdaline Cronley, a homemaker in Montauk, N.Y., with breast and lung cancer that had spread to the bones, in CF.
    • Anne Kramer, a mother and grandmother in Washington, Mich., in CPD.
    • Bonnie Kramer, a young mother from Torrington, Conn., with breast cancer metastasized to the bone, in CF, CPD, and OPWJ 4: Spring 1990.
    • Sally Weil, a mother and schoolteacher living in New Jersey, in OPWJ 17: Winter 1994.
    • Macrobiotics and Cancer Recovery Experience Video with Bonnie Kramer and Chris Akbar, Kushi Institute. Short interviews with two breast cancer survivors, 1997.

    Colon Cancer
    • Osbon Woodford, currently a macrobiotic teacher in Cleveland, in CF and CPD.
    • Cecil Dudley, a senior from Columbus, Ohio, in CF and CFD.
    • Vivien Newbold, M.D., a Philadelphia physician, relates the story of her husband who had colon cancer in CF and MAC.

    Hodgkin’s Disease
    • Maureen Duney of Belle Mead, N.J. in CPD.
    • Emily Bellew, a young mother in Columbus, Ohio, in CF and CPD.

    Kaposi’s Sarcoma
    • Frank, a copywriter for a market research company in New York, with AIDS, in AIDS, Macrobiotics, and Natural Immunity by Michio Kushi and Martha Cottrell, M.D. (Japan Publications, 1990). Also in CPD.

    Kidney Cancer
    • Shinichiro Terayama, a physicist and management consultant, who had renal cell carcinoma that had metastasized to the lungs, in Spontaneous Healing by Andrew Weil, M.D. (Knopf, 1995).

    Leukemia
    • Christina Pirello, a young woman from Florida, who married her counselor, Bob Pirello, and went on to become a macrobiotic teacher and chef with her own cooking program, Christina Cooks!, on educational TV, in CF, CPD, and OPWJ 7: Spring 1991.
    • Doug Blampied, a New Hampshire insurance executive, in CF and OPWJ 5: Summer 1990.
    • Paul Marks, who developed leukemia as a child and after recovering went on to become an acupuncturist in Arlington, Mass. in Michio Kushi, Cancer and Heart Disease (Japan Publications, 1985).

    Liver Cancer
    • Hilda Sorhagen, a Pennsylvania yoga teacher and mother of three, in CPD.
    • Patient D, a middle aged man suffering from colon cancer that had spread to the liver, in a medical study reported by Vivien Newbold, M.D., in CF.

    Lung Cancer
    • Elizabeth Masters, a mother and an ex-cattle rancher who is now teaching macrobiotics in Kansas, in CPD and OPWJ 8: Summer 1991.
    • Janet E. Vitt, R.N., a nurse in Cleveland who overcame lung cancer, Stage IV, which had spread to the liver, pancreas, abdomen, and lymph system, in OPWJ 37: Winter 1999.

    Lymphoma
    • Kathleen Raeder, in WHG and OPWJ 27: Summer 1996.
    • Al Kapuler, a biologist, with cancer of the lymphatic system, in Spontaneous Healing by Andrew Weil, M.D. Knopf, 1995.
    • Joanne Villano-Napoli, a young woman from Brooklyn, in OPWJ 19: Summer 1994.
    • Judy MacKenney, a Massachusetts housewife with inoperable, metastatic, Stage IV lymphoma, in OPWJ 33: Winter 1998.

    Melanoma
    • Virginia Brown, R..N, a nurse, in Virginia Brown, R.N., with Susan Stayman, Macrobiotic Miracle (Japan Publications, 1985). Also summarized in CF and CPD.
    • Kin Liversidge, a Massachusetts father and mountain climber, in “From Melanoma to the Matterhorn,” OPWJ 31: Summer 1997.
    • Marlene McKenna, a mother of four and investment broker in Providence, R.I., in CPD and CF.
    • Betty Metzger, a homemaker in Shelby, Ohio, in CF and MAC.
    • Michael Shanik, a Florida businessman living in Sarasota, in CF.
    • Bill Templeton, a Dallas entrepreneur, in CF.
    • Thomas Marron, a Rhode Island executive, in OPWJ #21: Winter 1995.
    • Carter Breland, a retired school administrator in West Columbia, S.C. in OPWJ 15: Summer 1993.

    Ovarian Tumors
    • Milenka Dobic, a mother from Yugoslavia with ovarian and lymph cancer who is now a macrobiotic teacher and cook in Costa Mesa, Calif., in CPD and in Return to Paradise 2, OPW Press, Spring 1989.
    • Gale Jack, a Texas schoolteacher, in Gale Jack, Promenade Home (Japan Publications, 1987).

    Pancreatic Cancer
    • Dr. Hugh Faulkner, a British physician, who reversed terminal pancreatic cancer in Hugh Faulkner, Physician Heal Thyself (One Peaceful World Press, 1992). Also summarized in CPD and CF.
    • Jean Kohler, a music professor in Indiana, in Jean and Marie Ann Kohler, Healing Miracles from Macrobiotics (Parker Publishing, 1979). Also summarized in CPD.
    • Norman Arnold, a businessman from Columbia, S.C., in CF and CPD.
    • Jean Bailey, a homemaker in Ontario, Canada, who had pancreatic cancer and a bile duct tumor, in CF.
    • Mary McDade, a homemaker in Leeds, England in OPWJ 20: Autumn 1994.

    Prostate Cancer
    • Dirk Benedict, the actor, in Dirk Benedict, Confessions of a Kamikaze Cowboy (Avery, 1993).
    • Herb Walley, who is retired in Manchester, N.H., in CF and CPD.
    • Bill Garnell, a telephone executive in Morristown, N.J., in CF.
    • Edmund Hanley, a manufacturing executive from Muskegon, Mich., with prostate cancer which had metastasized to the bone, in CF and OPWJ 4: Spring 1990.
    • Harold L. Harriman, a career Naval officer and aerospace executive, living in Merritt Island, Florida, in OPWJ 17: Winter 1994.
    • J. R. Lee, an airline pilot in Dallas, in CF.
    • Anthony Sattilaro, M.D., president of the Methodist Hospital in Philadelphia who had inoperable prostate cancer that had spread throughout his body, in Anthony Sallilaro with Tom Monte, Recalled by Life (Avon Books, 1982).

    Skin Cancer
    • Roger Randolph, a lawyer from Tulsa, in CPD.

    Stomach Cancer
    • Katsuhide Kitatani, former Deputy Secretary-General of the United Nations who went on to found the U.N. Macrobiotic Society, in CF and CPD.

    Thyroid Cancer
    • Diane Silver Hassell, a Canadian who suffered from thyroid tumors and fibroids and who is now a macrobiotic teacher, in CF.
    • Yuri Stavitsky, M.D., a Russian medical doctor working on the Chernobyl clean up with radiation sickness, including thyroid tumors, in CPD.

    Uterine Cancer
    • Elaine Nussbaum, a mother from New Jersey with an inoperable uterine tumor, who went on to become a nutritionist and macrobiotic teacher and counselor, Elaine Nussbaum, Recovery from Cancer (Avery, 1992. Also summarized in CF and CPD.
    • Gladys Abeashie of Ghana in WHG and OPWJ 23: Summer 1995.
    • Gloria Swanson, the film star, in CPD.
    • Patient C, suffering from uterine and endometrial cancer, in a medical study reported by Vivien Newbold, M.D., in CF.

    Vocal Tumor
    • Laura Anne Fitzpatrick, a college student with a granular myoblastoma, currently teaching in Maine, in CPD.

    Cancer

    Wednesday, April 15th, 2009

    CANCER
    The word “cancer” comes from the Greek term karkinos, which means crab. Hippocrates, who first applied it to medicine, evidently likened tumors to the crablike properties or spread of the disease. He taught a dietary approach to cancer, and through the ages there have been many reported recoveries using natural means.
    In the modern era, health reformers have linked cancer with diet since the early 1800s. Modern medicine, however, generally ignored this relationship until the 1970s. One of the 20th century pioneers in nutritional research was Dr. Albert Tannebaum, director of the department of cancer research at Michael Reese Hospital in Chicago. In an address before the American Association for the Advancement of Science on August 4, 1944, he stated: “At the present time there is widespread interest in the relationship of nutrition to tumors . . . It is likely that a natural diet contains a more adequate quality, quantity, and balance of essential components than our present day synthetic diets. Nutritionists are beginning to believe that synthetic diets may give effects quite different from natural diets. Fundamentally, it is the natural diet that is of interest in human nutrition and disease.”
    See Brain Tumors, Breast Cancer, Colon Cancer, Leukemia, Lung Cancer, Lymphoma, Pancreatic Cancer, Prostate Cancer, Stomach Cancer.
    See American Cancer Society, Carotenoids, Carrots, Chewing, Ginger, Green Tea, Hiziki, Immune Function, Japanese Diet, Lentils, Macrobiotics, Microwave, Millet, Miso, Natto, Phytochemicals, Phytoestrogens, Rice, Sea Vegetables, Shiitake, Soy Foods, Sugar, Tempeh, Vegetables, Vegetarians, War-Restricted Diet, Water, Whole Grains, World Health Organization.

    • Protective Mechanisms of Plant-Quality Foods - In a review of the epidemiological data, including both cohort and case-control studies, researchers at Fred Hutchinson Cancer Research Center in Seattle reported that plant-quality foods have preventive potential at all cancer sites and that consumption of the following groups and types of vegetables and fruits is lower in those who subsequently develop cancer: raw and fresh vegetables, leafy green vegetables, Cruciferous vegetables, carrots, broccoli, cabbage, lettuce, and raw and fresh fruit, including citrus fruit and tomatoes.
    Foods high in phytoestrogens, particularly soybean foods (high in isoflavones) or grains and fibrous vegetables high in precursor compounds that can be metabolized by bacteria in the intestines into active agents are associated with a lower risk of sex-hormone-related cancers.
    Biologically, plant foods may slow or prevent the appearance of cancer because of anticarcinogenic substances including: carotenoids, vitamin C, vitamin E, selenium, dietary fiber (and its components), dithiolthiones, isothiocyanates, indoles, phenols, protease inhibitors, allium compounds, plant sterols, and limonene.
    “At almost every one of the stages of the cancer process, identified phytochemicals are known to be able to alter the likelihood of carcinogenesis,” the researchers concluded. “For example, glucosinolates and indoles, thiocyanates and isothiocyanates, phenols, and coumarins can induce a multiplicity of phase II (solubilizing and usually inactivating) enzymes; ascorbate and phenols block the formation of carcinogens such as nitrosamines; flavonoids and carotenoids act as antioxidants, essentially disabling the carcin-ogenic potential of specific compounds; lipid-soluble compounds such as carotenoids and sterols may alter membrane structure or integrity; some sulphur-containing compounds suppress DNA and protein synthesis; carotenoids can suppress DNA synthesis and enhance differentiation; and phytoestrogens compete with estradiol for estrogen receptors in a way that is generally antiproliferative.”
    “Consumption of diets low in plant foods results in a reduced intake of a wide variety of those substances that can plausibly lower cancer risk,” the researchers concluded. “In the presence of a diet and lifestyle high in potential carcinogens (whether derived from fungal contamination, cooking, or tobacco) or high in promoters (such as salt and alcohol), overall risk of cancer at many epithelial sites is elevated. Plant foods appear to exert a general risk-lowering effect; the patterns of exposure to cancer initiators and promoters and of genetic susceptibility may determine the variations in the site-specific risks of cancer seen across populations.”
    Source: J. D. Potter et al., “Vegetables, Fruit, and Phytoestrogens as Preventive Agents,” IARC Science Publications 139:61-90, 1996.

    • The Cancer Prevention Diet - In The Cancer-Prevention Diet, Michio Kushi introduces the macrobiotic approach to cancer, including complete dietary and way of life guidelines for 25 major types of malignancies. The book includes summaries of hundreds of nutritionally oriented medical studies, including many dietary observations from the Renaissance through the 19th and early 20th centuries, as well as contemporary recovery stories.
    “From the macrobiotic view, cancer is the final stage in a sequence of events in an illness through which individuals in the modern world tend to pass because they fail to appreciate the beneficial nature of disease symptoms. A healthy organism can deal with a limited amount of excess nutrients or toxic materials taken in the form of daily food. This imbalance can be naturally eliminated through daily activity, sweating, urination, bowel movement, or other means. However, if the person continues to overconsume, the body begins to fall back upon abnormal measures for elimination including colds, fever, coughing, skin disease, and other symptoms. From the macrobiotic perspective, such sickness is a natural adjustment, the result of the wisdom of the body trying to keep us in natural balance.
    “However, in modern society these symptoms are generally suppressed or controlled with drugs, surgery, and other methods which separate people from the natural workings of their own bodies. If minor ailments are treated in this symptomatic way with no adjustment in what we eat, the excess held in the body eventually begins to accumulate in the form of fatty-acid deposits and chronically troublesome mucus, and manifests in vaginal discharges, breast or ovarian cysts, kidney stones, or other worrisome conditions. In this state, the body is still able to localize the excess and toxins consumed. By gathering the unwanted material in local areas, the rest of the body is maintained in a relatively clean and smooth functioning condition. From the macrobiotic view, the process of localization is part of our natural healing power, saving us from complete break-down. In contrast, the modern view looks on those localizations as invasive enemies that have to be destroyed and removed.
    “As long as excess continues to accumulate and exceeds the body’s normal or abnormal discharge ability, it must be stored somewhere. These storage depots gradually grow and become tumors, and when they are filled they spread and overflow into new areas, or what are called metastases.
    “As long as we continue to take in excessive nutrients, chemicals, and other factors that serve no purpose in the body, they must continue to accumulate somewhere in order to continue our normal living functions. If we don’t allow them to accumulate in limited areas and form tumors, they will spread throughout the body, resulting in a total collapse of our vital functions and death by toxemia. Cancer is only the terminal stage of a long process. Cancer is the body’s healthy attempt to isolate toxins ingested and accumulated through years of eating the modern unnatural diet and living in an artificial environment. Cancer is the body’s last drastic effort to prolong life, even a few more months or years.”
    Source: Michio Kushi with Alex Jack, The Cancer-Prevention Diet, (New York: St. Martin’s Press, 1993).

    • Diet Linked to 30% of Cancers - In a report on diet, lifestyle, and cancer, a Harvard School of Public Health study attributed 30 percent of cancer deaths to diet and obesity, 30 percent to smoking, and 5 percent to lack of exercise. Carcinogens in the workplace, family history of cancer, and viruses were responsible for 5 percent of cancer deaths, while alcohol, socioeconomic status, and reproductive factors each were associated with 3 percent. The report recommended eating more vegetables and fruits to reduce the risk of cancer of the lungs, esophagus, and larynx; eating more beans and grains to reduce cancer of the stomach and pancreas; eating less red meat to prevent colorectal cancers; eating less animal fat which is associated with prostate cancer; exercising daily and avoiding ultraviolet light from the sun.
    Source: “Harvard Report on Cancer Prevention, “ Cancer Causes & Control 7 Supplement 1:S7-9, 1996.

    • Diet vs. Conventional Treatment - The National Cancer Institute reported that radiation therapy and chemotherapy were ineffective and in some cases produced toxic side-effects as follow-ups to surgery in the treatment of cancer. “Except possibly in selected patients with cancer of the stomach, there has been no demonstrated improvement in the survival of patients with the ten most common cancers when radiation therapy, chemotherapy, or both have been added to surgical resection.” In an autopsy study, researchers reported that 44 percent of 250 cancers examined had been undiagnosed or misdiagnosed, and 57 percent of the people with the missed diagnoses died as a result of the malignancy or its complications.
    Source: Steven A. Rosenberg, “Combined-Modality Therapy of Cancer,” New England Journal of Medicine 312:1512-14; Elizabeth C. Burton, M.D., et al, “Autopsy Diagnoses of Malignant Neoplasms,” Journal of the American Medical Association 280:1245-48, 1998.

    • Fruit and Vegetable Consumption Reduces Cancer Risk - In a review of 200 studies that examined the relationship between fruit and vegetable intake and cancer at selected sites, researchers found that consumption of these foods offered a significantly protective effect in 128 of 156 dietary studies in which results were expressed in terms of relative risk. For lung cancer, these foods were protective in 24 of 25 studies after control for smoking in most instances. Fruit was protective for tumors of the esophagus, oral cavity, and larynx in 28 of 29 studies. Vegetables and fruit were protective in 26 of 30 studies for the pancreas and stomach, as well as in colorectal and bladder cancers (23 of 38 studies). For malignancies of the cervix, ovary, and endometrium, a significant protective effect was shown in 11 of 13 studies. In breast cancer, a protective effect was found to be strong and consistent in meta analysis. Overall, the relative risk of cancer was about twice as high for those eating few fruits and vegetables compared to those who ate plenty of these foods. “In 1854, John Snow stopped a cholera epidemic simply by taking the handle off the pump. The research presented above suggests that consumption of fruits and vegetables may be a handle that, if manipulated by public policy, clinical advice, and public education, could have a substantial impact on a wide range of cancers,” the researchers concluded.
    Source: Gladys Block et al., “Fruits, Vegetables, and Cancer Prevention: A Review of the Epidemiological Evidence,” Nutrition and Cancer 18:1-29, 1992.

    Calcium

    Wednesday, April 15th, 2009

    CALCIUM
    Calcium is a major mineral constituent of teeth and bones. In addition to dairy products, green leafy vegetables such as collards, kale, and turnip greens, as well as beans, sea vegetables, seeds and nuts, and other plant quality foods are high in this mineral. Current medical research suggests that calcium from animal sources is processed differently in the body than that from plant sources. The relation between dietary calcium and the calcium in bones appears to be the result of many synergetic factors, so that simply taking in more calcium, especially from dairy products and calcium supplements, may not strengthen the skeletal structure and, in fact, may weaken it. See Dental Health, Kale, Osteoporosis, Protein, Vitamin D.

    • Calcium Intake Unrelated to Bone Development - Calcium intake is not linked to strong bones, according to British researchers. In a study of mothers in England and Gambia, scientists found that the Africans, who ate a diet low in calcium and had as many as ten babies and breast-fed each one, had comparable bone masses as English mothers who ate a high calcium diet and had had on average two children and breast-fed them little or not at all. The researchers found that the En-glish women on a high-calcium diet, from dairy foods, were more likely to get osteoporosis later in life than the Gambians. Calcium supplements proved useless in boosting the bone mass of women of childbearing age.
    Source: T. J. Aspray et al., “Low Bone Mineral Content Is Common But Osteoporotic Fractures Are Rare in Elderly Rural Gambian Women,” Journal of Bone Mineral Research 11(7):1019-25, 1996.