GREAT article. Please continue reading for my comments:
>Answer (Published 08/16/2005)
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>The raw foods diet is exactly what it appears to be - a diet in which
>you eat only foods that can be consumed raw or after minimal heating.
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>danger that you'll consume too much protein or fat or the wrong kind
>of fat.
Those are all huge bonuses.
>However, I'm not a proponent of the raw foods diet. First of all,
>when you eat everything raw, you lose much of the best flavor, texture
>and appearance of food.
This is spoken like a true cooked fooder. :) Ask a raw foodist and they'll
tell you differently. I LOVE the flavors of raw food. When I eat cooked food,
I have to add spices and salt or else the food tastes very bland. So, this is a
misconception that cooked fooders have. Raw fooders know better.
>More importantly, however, is the fact that
>many of the vitamins and minerals found in vegetables are less
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>The carotenoids in carrots are more bioavailable from cooked carrots
>than they are from raw ones.
This is a good point. Except that when you eat more raw food, your chances of
getting cancer diminish. So, we don't need cooked tomatoes. It's not an
either/or thing. It's a "look at the total picture" thing.
>Another disadvantage stems from the fact that many of the natural
>toxins in edible roots, seeds, stems and leaves are destroyed by
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>defenses against these toxins, a raw food diet can add to advertisement
>the toxic load we're already dealing with.
This is true. And, the basic fact is, we don't eat these foods raw. People
think that raw foodists will eat all the foods raw. That's not true. There are
foods we don't eat because it isn't healthy.
>The latest word on raw food diets comes from a new study which shows
>that vegetarians who eat only raw foods have abnormally low bone mass,
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>348 units of vitamin D among a control group that ate a typical
>American diet.
This I take very seriously. However, there's more to it. The best way to build
bone mass is weight bearing exercise and vitamin D - which you can get from the
sun. Many raw foodists live in sunny locations in order to combat this. I
moved back to Florida from Vermont and this was one of the reasons. Also, there
are raw foodists who don't exercise and there are those that do. Exercise is
the biggest part of a healthy diet - ANY healthy diet. I know lots of raw
foodists with healthy bone mass. I, however, was diagnosed with the beginning
stages of osteopenia. I also eat a little cheese and yogurt to make sure I get
a bit of calcium here and there along with weight bearing exercise and sunlight.
>The raw foods group consumed fewer calories than the control group and
>had a body mass index (BMI) averaging 20 (in the normal range) compared
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>are at risk of low bone mineral density because their bones aren't
>bearing enough weight, a factor that contributes to bone strength.
I have yet to meet a too skinny raw foodist. I know they're out there because
I've seen their pictures. But I'm carrying 40 pounds of extra weight and it
seems to not be going anywhere. My raw food friends are all healthy and have no
underweight issues as well.
>This recent study adds new information to the risks a raw foods diet
>presents. If a vegetarian diet appeals to you, I think you'll do
>better if you follow the Mediterranean diet but eliminate meat, poultry
>and fish.
I don't think the study actually shows any risk at all, actually. As with all
diets, there is a good way to do it and a bad way to do it. There are a lot of
people out there eating an unhealthy raw food diet, I'm sure. These people also
stay away from fruit, which is kind of weird to me.
>By the way, I've gone to a few upscale raw food restaurants on the east
>and west coasts. The food was tasty but seemed to me very
>labor-intensive to prepare and contained way too many nuts.
That's the truth! Raw foodists don't eat like that normally. That food is
basically for cooked fooders who want to try something raw. We don't make fancy
recipes and we actually can't eat at raw food restaurants because the food
combining makes us a little unwell feeling. Which is why I question much of
what this man was saying - he really doesn't have a good understanding of what
raw fooders actually eat.
Thanks for posting that, Perl.
ar
Perl Molson - 03 Nov 2005 19:03 GMT
> GREAT article. Please continue reading for my comments:
>
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>
> Those are all huge bonuses.
Well, you know, about those "contaminants". In the day to day life, we
encounter
I would say way more contaminants that enter our bodies, via skin, air
we breath, etc.
It is almost impossible to stay away from the pollutants.
I mean, how much contamination can be entering your body through
eating fish, for example? Mercury, led, etc.
A person may be exposed to a greater ammount of contaminants
in their workplace and it may seem neglijable the contaminants from
foods.
> >However, I'm not a proponent of the raw foods diet. First of all,
> >when you eat everything raw, you lose much of the best flavor, texture
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> I have to add spices and salt or else the food tastes very bland. So, this is a
> misconception that cooked fooders have. Raw fooders know better.
As long as you know what you're doing ;-) Probably it's harder when you
begin this type of lifestyle, you don't have the knowledge and
experience.
> >More importantly, however, is the fact that
> >many of the vitamins and minerals found in vegetables are less
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> getting cancer diminish. So, we don't need cooked tomatoes. It's not an
> either/or thing. It's a "look at the total picture" thing.
> >Another disadvantage stems from the fact that many of the natural
> >toxins in edible roots, seeds, stems and leaves are destroyed by
[quoted text clipped - 9 lines]
> think that raw foodists will eat all the foods raw. That's not true. There are
> foods we don't eat because it isn't healthy.
Not considering that their may be (and I'm sure there are) way more
factors needed
to be discovered (rediscovered) regarding the negative effects. These
examples about
lycopene, carotenoids, canavaline, are just a few that need to be taken
in consideration.
I would have to point out the benefits of the well-known fish/fish
oils, that seem to be
extremely important for a healthy diet. How do you replace these?
> >The latest word on raw food diets comes from a new study which shows
> >that vegetarians who eat only raw foods have abnormally low bone mass,
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> stages of osteopenia. I also eat a little cheese and yogurt to make sure I get
> a bit of calcium here and there along with weight bearing exercise and sunlight.
It is not easy to stay perfectly healthy.
> >The raw foods group consumed fewer calories than the control group and
> >had a body mass index (BMI) averaging 20 (in the normal range) compared
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> seems to not be going anywhere. My raw food friends are all healthy and have no
> underweight issues as well.
I would suggest trying yoga for that purpose, but I know you cannot
do yoga because of your skin related problem (you do pilates, I reckon)
> >This recent study adds new information to the risks a raw foods diet
> >presents. If a vegetarian diet appeals to you, I think you'll do
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> people out there eating an unhealthy raw food diet, I'm sure. These people also
> stay away from fruit, which is kind of weird to me.
Not only that, every person is a different individual, and
even for a regular diet it would require a specific ideal diet, not
to say when you are raw-foodist; it's probably a huge ammount of
knowledge
you need to have in order to compensate the nutritional defficiencies,
and you seem to know what your're doing for the most part.
> >By the way, I've gone to a few upscale raw food restaurants on the east
> >and west coasts. The food was tasty but seemed to me very
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> what this man was saying - he really doesn't have a good understanding of what
> raw fooders actually eat.
All I know, it is very difficult to renounce to such a diet, once
you've been going through
restrictions that would give you a hard time for awhile.
It is a personal choice and it's up to every individual to choose.
It's also relative to other things, whether or not you can become a
vegetarian or
raw-foodist. Sometimes it is hard to find any food at all in some
circumstances.
It's definitelly a different lifestyle alltogether.
I think the pluses are more then the minuses and I admire those that
have choosen
to follow it.
> Thanks for posting that, Perl.
My pleasure. Thanks for answering.
> ar