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Main Page » Hygiene & Health » Heath & Nutrition
 

Healthy Whole Foods Eating - The Basics

 

I encourage my patients to live in a way that supports life. To that end I advocate a whole food, clean food diet. The general principles are quite simple. Our food needs to be minimally processed, and free of antibiotics, hormones, pesticides, flavor enhancers and other additives.

Here are some questions to ask to tell if a food is whole or not (with help from Cynthia Lair, author of Feeding the Whole Family):

Does the food look like it once lived on this planet? Lettuce, eggs, yes. Marshmallows, NutraSweet, no.

How many ingredients does it have? Whole foods have one ingredientitself.

What has been done to the food since it was harvested? Read the label. If the label reads more like chemistry, dont eat it.

Is this product part of a food or the whole food? Juice is only part of a fruit. Oil is only part of the olive. When you eat partial foods, your body craves the part it didnt get, because for millennia, the whole food has been the only food it has known.

The cleanest food is organic food, period. We all need to eat organic whenever possible. But start with the three dirtiest foods: water, meat/fish and cows milk.

Cleaning up water is easy. Buy reverse osmosis or distilled water, or get a purifier using one of these methods for your home. Spring water is just someone elses tap water.

Eat pasture fed and finished, antibiotic and hormone free meat and eggs. Add plant protein sources to your diet, such as tempeh or beans to offset the cost. Most of us are eating way too much meat anyway.

Eat only ocean fish. Farm raised fish are the dirtiest. The Environmental Working Group keeps an up-to-date list of fish to avoid.

Cows milk products, including yoghurt, cheese, and ice cream must be avoided altogether with the exception of small amounts of organic butter or ghee. However, stopping all at once will cause uncomfortable withdrawal symptoms. Take at least two weeks, working meal by meal.

After these foods have been cleaned up, then start with fruits and vegetables. Soft thin skins absorb pesticides best. Buy these organic next. Always wash fruits and vegetables, even organic ones, in vegetable soap and water. By now, the difference between organic and conventional will be very clear, and you will be seeking out organic food whenever possible. In Kansas City where I live, we are fortunate to have the Kansas City Food Circle. They keep a directory of local organic and natural food producers. Look for a similar organization near you.

Dont dirty up clean food by cooking it in aluminum or plastic cookware. Aluminum, a known brain toxin, leaches into the food from the cookware. Plastic leaches hormone-like compounds into our food. Use cast iron, stainless steel, glass, ceramic or clay instead.

Author: Bethany Klug
 
Author Bio:

Bethany Klug

Bethany Klug, DO practices holistic medicine at the Kansas City Holistic Centre. She recovered her own health with whole foods nutrition and has developed extensive expertise in the healing power of whole foods cooking. Dr. Klug founded Heartland Sangha, devoted to the mindfulness meditation practices of Thich Nhat Hanh and teaches regularly. An avid yoga practitioner since the late 1980s, she is currently exploring yoga therapy. Dr. Klug offers bioidentical hormone replacement, whole foods nutrition, nutritional supplementation, homeopathy and biodynamic cranial osteopathic treatment to her patients. She is boarded in family medicine and osteopathic manipulative medicine. The Latin meaning for doctor, ?teacher,? inspires her to write for general audiences to empower them to discover their self-healing ability through holistic health. She writes the monthly column ?The Doctor Cooks? for the Kansas City Wellness Magazine. She lives in Kansas City with her husband David and their Birman cat Shanti.

 
 
 

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