Guest guest Posted October 15, 2009 Report Share Posted October 15, 2009 > > > > Thanks so much for your reply, Bee. I'm struggling with other stuff (non-candida related) and looking at outside info, it's all so ...conflicting! I like the Weston A Price site, the only thing that bothers me about them is they recommend " Really Raw " brand honey when that stuff might be raw but...it is not organic!!! I was shocked: non organic honey, besides fertilizers, herbicides is also extracted with chemical solvents. They do have a non pesticide disclosure on the label, but there's way too many unmentioned chemicals that make the product questionable at best. Anyway, I do know honey is not for candida dieters, I just meant by that that their recommendation made me question the validity of their thinking as to other stuff. Again, there is a ton of conflicting info out there, we're lucky to have you Bee! > > What do you think about a raw meat diet? I'm looking into this as I've heard many good things. Some recommend raw meat, some recommend *only* raw organ meats. Do you have any thoughts as to the author Aajonus Vonderplanitz. Good advice or shun like the plague? > +++Hi . The Weston A. Price foundation isn't perfect but they do provide a very valuable service and most of their information is very good. The word " organic " is not regulated so any company can use it willy nilly even if their product isn't free of pesticides, etc. The only term that is regulated is " certified organic. " I've read a lot of Aajonus Vonderplanitz's information. He believes that Eskimos ate mostly raw animal products that he says made them perfectly healthy, which isn't true; V. Stefansson and others lived amoung the Eskimos for many years and they reported Eskimos only ate raw meat " if " they were not in a position to be able to cook them. They actually preferred meats cooked. He believes cooking alters chemicals and compounds in cooked food so the body must create enzymes that will utilize them to the best of its ability. First, he is wrong that cooking " negatively alters food, " and second he does not understand digestion. Enzymes and nutrients in plant foods are encased inside cellulose cell walls, so they aren't available to humans since we do not have digestive enzymes that break down cellulose. Cooking and fermenting breaks down the cell wall releasing more nutrients and enzymes. Of course meats should not be overcooked, or cooked using high heat, because more moisture is lost and the protein molecules bind closer together making it more difficult for stomach acid to break them apart. However, cooking makes meats more digestible because it starts the denaturing process, meaning it starts breaking apart protein molecules. That's what stomach acid and pancreatic enzymes do too. So there is no need to eat raw meats and eggs; cooked to medium over low heat is just fine. He also writes that meats should be soaked in an acid medium, i.e. chicken in lemon juice - he thinks they are still raw, but they aren't (after soaking chicken you can see the meat is very white just as if it had been cooked). Soaking meats in any kind of acid medium is another way to cook foods, which denatures them, making them more digestible. That's why marinading meats makes them more tender. The best in health, Bee Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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