Thought I would share a special moment for all who can attend! Feel free to forward. Much love, light and gratitude! Smile.
Blissings, Ani
Happy Living Foods Year Reconnect Rebuild Rejuvenate Join us for the Living Foods Lifestyle ®
2 Week Program January 4 – 17, 2009
Restore Health and Longevity
Who should attend? Our core two week program is for all students who will benefit in their individual journey toward health, peace, and harmony. What does the program offer?
Enjoy the core Ann Wigmore Program where you will work with certified instructors educating you in learning the Living Foods Lifestyle ® and in preparing healthy living foods. This program provides students with health educational classes and hands-on living food preparation techniques, while experiencing the beauty of tropical Puerto Rico. What is included in the program?
The program consists of the basics of the Living Foods Lifestyle® classes, accommodations and access to healing relaxation therapies. • Lodging at the Institute • All meals o The opportunity to access healing relaxation therapies like yoga, Reiki, myriad massages, chiropractic, psychological and colon therapy for an additional charge. One therapy per participant ($65.00 US$ value) is offered free of charge. • Classes will include the basics of the Ann Wigmore Living Food Lifestyle® • Living foods food preparation interactive classes • Structured exercise and relaxation classes • Airport shuttle • Snacks • Wheatgrass juice • Use of the facilities
What is the cost of the 2 week program? The Ann Wigmore Natural Health Institute is a nonprofit organization dedicated to teaching wellness to as many people as possible. The two week core program fee range is $1715 - $2825 depending on your choice of accommodations. (Please see our rate page for specific accommodation rates.)
Whole Grains Found to Stabilize Blood Sugar For up to Ten Hours
by David Gutierrez
(NewsTarget) When eaten as part of a breakfast with a low glycemic index, whole grains can help control blood sugar all day long, according to a study conducted at Lund University in Sweden. A breakfast with a low glycemic index even appeared to improve alertness and mental function.
Anne Nilsson of the Unit for Applied Nutrition and Food Chemistry tested the effects of four different types of whole grains and found that in a low glycemic index breakfast, whole grains regulated the body's blood sugar for up to 10 hours. The study suggested that the same effect could be gained from eating whole grains before bed.
Nilsson found that of the four grains tested, barley had the best effect on the body. Breads demonstrated a better effect than a hot cereal such as oatmeal.
The research also demonstrated that those who ate a breakfast with a low glycemic index had better concentration and memory skills for the rest of the morning than those whose breakfast had a higher glycemic index. In related findings, participants whose bodies had a higher tolerance for glucose performed better on such tests than those with a low glucose tolerance.
"These findings indicate that people with great fluctuations in their levels of blood sugar run a greater risk of having a generally lower cognitive ability," Nilsson said. Such fluctuations may be caused by a diet with a high glycemic index.
"In other words," remarked consumer health advocate Mike Adams, author of How to Halt Diabetes in 25 Days, "high glycemic index foods make you stupid. Being stupid, it turns out, makes you buy more high glycemic index foods like sugary breakfast cereal or toaster pastries, and then the cycle of stupidity just gets worse." The way to turn it around and regain cognitive function, says Adams, is to avoid eating grains entirely. "I no longer recommend the consumption of grains. Vegetables, fruits, nuts and seeds are the foundations of the diets of the healthiest people. Grains are simply not consumed very much by the healthiest people in society today." Adams is also a proponent of Juice Feasting, described here: http://www.newstarget.com/022367.html
The glycemic index of a food or meal refers to what effect it has on the body's blood sugar. Foods with a low glycemic index, such as those high in complex carbohydrates, cause a slow, sustained rise in blood sugar that does not cause the body's insulin levels to spike. Foods with a high glycemic index, such as those high in refined sugars, cause the body's sugar and insulin levels to rapidly increase and then crash.
Jenna Norwood confesses to having been a "junk-food vegetarian," someone who snarfed down high-calorie, high-fat meatless fare.
That was before her conversion to raw foods.
Today, she's 30 pounds lighter, and a confirmed healthful eater and chef who celebrates food in its natural state. She's made a documentary about it and has just opened a gourmet raw food cafe in Sarasota.
What interests her is the personal transformation she has experienced from eating dishes that are made from fresh, raw ingredients.
"There's nothing like experiencing something first-hand to be convinced," she said. "What happened to me was visually remarkable."
The 41-year-old Sarasota resident was a self-described "junk-food vegetarian."
"I didn't eat meat; (but) . . . lots of pizza and pasta, french fries and desserts, not preparing food for myself, not really thinking much about the fact I wasn't eating fresh fruits and vegetables. . . . Besides the weight, I had chronic aches and pains, was wearing glasses for astigmatism, was low-energy, wasn't sleeping well, not great mental clarity," she said.
At the beginning, she had hoped to lose a little weight, but was surprised to find her whole life had changed after a 30-day "detox" stint at a California health institute dedicated to raw food.
With her new regimen, she lost more than 30 pounds over three months, dropping from a size 12 to a size 4. Her aches and pains went away.
She documented her transformation in a movie called "Supercharge Me!" The documentary is a take-off on "Supersize Me," by Morgan Spurlock, a popular film that featured the filmmaker dining exclusively at McDonald's and suffering health consequences from its fatty fare.
Norwood's documentary has won numerous awards. It was chosen as an official selection of the Sarasota Film Festival and the Utopia Film Festival; declared "best motivational film" at the Hollywood Raw Film Festival, and "best documentary"at the Tofino Film Festival.
"I just thought it would be interesting to show an opposite take to "Supersize Me," said Norwood. "He (Spurlock) made the devastating effects of fast food clear, but it left people wondering, 'Well, what should we eat?' "
Another screening is slated for Dec. 12 in Sarasota.
Eating raw
"I love any kind of fresh raw fruit and vegetables, nuts, sprouted greens," she explained. "Get creative, how to prepare things, how to do it raw."
"It's so more beneficial because its vitamins, minerals, and enzymes are intact - they are still present in the food," she said.
Once food is heated above about 105 degrees, its delicate contents begin to degrade, robbing the body of subtle benefits, Norwood said.
"It's taxing on the body to process it," she said. "It actually is acting rather than as a fuel as a burden for the body to digest and deal with it. We have a finite amount of digestive enzymes in our bodies and when we are eating food devoid of enzymes, it becomes more difficult to digest food."
She does short cooking demonstrations on her Web site called "Jenna's Healthy Kitchen," and next month, can be seen discussing raw food on the Health Care News Network, broadcast at 35 hospitals in Florida and expanding nationwide next year.
She also teaches cooking classes at Whole Foods Market and with a partner, Evona Poplawski, just opened a new restaurant, Veggie Magic, also in Sarasota.
"We do a lot of gourmet raw foods there," she said. "You can eat really simply with this lifestyle. You can eat an apple or you can eat a raw apple pie. We're all raw chefs. With the cafe, I'm eating the more gourmet variations."
"We do veggie burgers, organic, raw made with nuts, we have a Southwestern version. The Veggie Magic patty - mushrooms, carrots, walnuts, veggies and formed into patties."
She uses low heat, less than 105 degrees, to blow warm air over the food with a dehydrator.
"We have really great soups, a mock-tuna salad, marinated kale salad which is delicious. We have cranberry-pumpkin crumble for the season, starfruit pie, fresh-picked starfruit," said Norwood.
"We make pasta noodles out of raw zucchini, thinly sliced just like pasta noodles. You get same sensation as eating pasta, we have a sauce that goes over it, pesto, tomato, you get all the flavor and all the sensations of eating the cooked variety."
Foods that are not cooked are more satisfying because the "flavors are more intense with raw food as well," said Norwood.
In addition to her busy life as a filmmaker and a chef, she has also been making video shorts that appear on various Internet sites, and plans to hit the road in February. She wants to travel to universities and health festivals marketing "Supercharge Me!"
"I'm into eating simply and I love the gourmet stuff, too," she said. "For breakfast, it's fresh fruit. I can eat as much as I want, it's so delicious, so satisfying. I like to have a green smoothie in the morning, too."
The smoothie sounds less than appealing - its green color comes from spinach, romaine or kale mixed with water and bananas. But Norwood swears it's delish.
"It's amazing, you don't taste the greens at all, can add other fruits in there, but the greens are one of the best things for us to be consuming, they provide amino acids. It's an easy way to get more greens into your diet."
"I love salads with avocado, walnuts, sun-dried tomatoes. I make great dressings with sesame paste, tahini, olive and fresh squeezes lemon juice and garlic."
So, what's next for Norwood?
She has written a recipe book and hopes to get it published. And she's enjoying being in demand as a health educator and speaker.
"It's taken on a life of its own, it's become my life," Norwood laughed. "I didn't expect it would become my life. I'm a health educator asked to speak on radio shows and do all these things, and now, there's the raw food cafe. And now, it's just like, my life is completely different now."
"But I love this life, I love educating people about the benefits of eating this way."
Sara Kennedy, Bradenton Herald business reporter, can be reached at (941) 748-0411, ext. 4500
Jenna Norwood's Web site is at www.supercharge me.com. Her newly-opened cafe, Veggie Magic is at 4428 Bee Ridge Road, in the Palm Plaza Shopping Center, Sarasota. Information: 377-6209, www.veggiemagic.com.
The Power of live foods for healing is being more & more supported by traditional research. Based on recent journal articles, the power of a calorie restricted diet and of upgrading gene expression (which come automatically with live foods) have become keys to understanding the clinical effectiveness of live foods.
"The essence of understanding living foods is ... if it is not broken, don't fix it." Living foods or raw foods are those, which have not been cooked, processed, "pesticided" or "herbicided", micro waved, irradiated, or genetically engineered. They represent an unbroken wholeness that is the original creation and nutritional gift of the Divine. The understanding that the food we eat is an energetic whole greater than the sum of the parts reflects a quantum physics view of nutrition.
Research by Dr. Brekhman of the former Soviet Union illustrates a foundational truth about the power of live foods. When he gave whole, live foods to animals, their endurance was 2-3 times greater than if he gave them the same caloric value of food after it had been cooked. Brekhman's results can be explained, however, if we understand the effect of cooking on the whole food. Cooking not only destroys the ecological balance of the food, it makes 50% of the protein unavailable, destroys 60-70% of the vitamins, up to 96% of the B12, and 100% of phytonutrients such as: gibberellins, anthrocyans, polyphenols, nobelitin, and tangeretin which boost the immune system and other body functions. Cooking foods also disrupts the bioelectrical structure, the bioelectricity transfer power, and the bioluminescence. All of these factors are important for building and maintaining our life force energy and health.
The famous European physician, Dr. Bircher-Brenner, who started the first modern live food clinic in 1897, felt that eating raw foods was a way of restoring the diseased body and the mind's ability to heal itself. Many healers have gotten fantastic results using living foods with their clients; Dr. Gerson who healed Dr. Albert Schweitzer of diabetes and Schweitzer's wife of TB, and healed hundreds of documented cancer cases with live foods, and published a book about it in 1958 called A Cancer Therapy: Results of Fifty Cases; Dr. Szekeley who saw over 133,000 clients at his live food clinic in Mexico over a 30 year period from 1940-1970 with impressive results; Ann Wigmore and her clinics; and then the next generation including the Tree of Life Rejuvenation Center ( http://www.treeoflife.nu/ ) which has made the next step by using live foods not only for healing of physical disease, repair mental and emotional imbalances, and as a way to actively enhance spiritual life.
Cooking destroys enzymes in live foods. Enzyme reserve seems to be connected to life force, health, and longevity There are natural enzymes in raw food, which minimize the enzymes that need to be secreted by the body for digestion. The body's enzymes can then be converted and be used for the process of detoxification, repair, and overall healing.
People have been eating live foods for thousands of years. Cultures have eaten primarily live foods such as the Pelegasians (ancient Greeks living in the Peleponesus area in 3000 B.C., were reported by Herodotus to live an average of 200 years). The inner circle Essenes, who were reported to be on live foods seem to have an extended life span, of approximately 120 years and enjoyed higher quality of health, vitality, and joy. In summary Live foods have the highest amount of bioactive food nutrients, phytonutrients, bioelectrical energy, biologically active water, electrons, and most energized and organized SOEF's (subtle organizing energy fields).
The foods that we eat, or don't eat, communicate with our genes – for better or for worse. What we put into our body do not change the genotype, which is the physical structure of the genes, but the foods we eat do change the way the message in the genes is expressed in the phenotype. In other words, the genetic messages of our genes can be either turned off or turned on by the nature of our diet and our lifestyle. What we eat and how we live directly affects our optimal phenotypic expression. An important corollary to this is: genes do not give rise to disease, but disease rises when lifestyle and diet alters the gene expression in a way that creates disease.
What we eat affects how we think and how we feel because it affects the genes that regulate how we think and how we feel Well documented journal research, for example shows that alcohol decreases the healthy expression and production of endorphins, GABA, dopamine, noradrenaline, acetylcholine receptor sites, and various other central nervous system genes.
The basic principle being that not only what we eat, but how we live, and the stresses that we create, directly affects gene expression. The significance of this is that through proper living, diet, fasting, lifestyle, exercise and emotional, mental, and spiritual development, we have the opportunity to activate our youthing genes.
Diets that are high in fruits and vegetables are very high in phytonutrients which include a variety of anti-oxidants, carotenes, vitamin E, vitamin C, phenolic compounds, and terpenoids that specifically turn on not only anti-cancer genes but anti-aging genes, and anti-inflammation genes.
The optimal nutritional practices that will indeed turn on youthing gene expressions. In the author's experience there are three main dietary practices that greatly increase the youthing process – undereating (calorie-restriction), veganism and live-food nutrition, (a natural form of calorie restriction) and Spiritual Fasting
Dr. Stephen R. Spindler, professor of biochemistry at the University of California, Riverside did research with calorie restriction and using gene technology. His results give some deep insight into why live foods are such a powerful healing & rejuvenating dietary approach. He studied the expression of eleven thousand genes in the livers of young, normally-fed, and calorie-restricted mice.He found a 400% increase in the activation of anti-aging with 40% calorie restriction. He found that there was a four-fold increase with short-term caloric restriction and a two-point-five-fold increase with long-term caloric restriction in the activation of anti-aging profile. He was able to reproduce this with ninety-five percent reproducibility. Dr. Spindler's research is perhaps the first to show that caloric restriction could actually turn on the youthing genes and literally reverse the aging process. The research showed calorie restriction seemed to quickly decrease the amount of inflammation and stress, even in older animals and there suggests not only in an increase in anti-aging gene activity, but also anti-cancer, anti-stress, and anti-inflamation. These four points directly apply to the healing rejuvenating effects of live foods.
Calorie restriction happens naturally and safely with a live food diet. When we cook foods, we lose 50% of the protein according to the max plank institute; 70-80% of vitamins & minerals and 95% or more of the phytonutrients are destroyed. By simple mathematics, we only need to eat 50% of the calories on a live food diet versus a cooked diet. Therefore a live food diet is a natural form of calorie restriction which turns on the antiaging, anti-cancer, and anti-inflamation genes. This is a powerful insight and scientific explanation for the youthing and health effect of a properly eaten live food diet which the author has observed in 1000's of patients since 1983.
Conclusion
The are many levels to understand the healing & rejuvenating power of live foods but the simplest way is to understand raw foods is...If it is not broken, don't fix it.
The ultimate fringe food culture sexes it up for the mainstream
By Becca Campbell and Ritzy Ryciak
(Click on photos for descriptions)
Even within the natural food movement’s inner core, Raw foodists can’t get no love. Tell most folks you limit your diet to just fresh, uncooked fruits, veggies, nuts and seeds, and responses range from bewildered admiration (“Wow. You do that?!? I could never deal&rdquo to bemused skepticism (“uh, whatever floats your boat, I guess&rdquo to snark bordering on hostility (“what are you, a f’ing rabbit?&rdquo. Even the possibility of “increased energy and vitality” — the raw foodie’s beckoning promise — couldn’t persuade most of us to consign to a lifetime of carrots and celery. And so the “Raw Way” has largely remained a path for only the most disciplined zealot and/or narcissistic celebrity with the disposable funds to bankroll a personal chef.
But like any great idea whose time is nigh, raw food is maturing beyond its uncooked beginnings to a lifestyle choice that allows for flexibility, creativity, and above all — (dare we say?) great taste. Glossy cookbooks, fresh new restaurants, raw chocolate smoothies and healthy, happy raw enthusiasts — who are anything but cultish or militant — are moving Raw out of the fringe and into the mainstream.
What Percent Are You? “The raw food movement is dynamically changing,” observes David Wolfe, author of raw food bibles Naked Chocolate, Eating For Beauty and The Sunfood Diet Success System. With his twinkling eyes, exuberant curls and fondness for embroidered hemp pajamas, Wolfe, a foremost living foods leader, has the Rico Suavocado countenance of a hippie rockstar and the enthusiasm of a five-year-old hopped up on Hawaiian Punch (or, in Wolfe’s case, raw cacao beans).
“It is becoming much more sophisticated in its appeal. Not only in the flavor and texture of the food itself, but also in its ability to appeal to different people. The barriers are falling away.”
One of the more insurmountable barriers has been the idea that to “do raw food” you have to go all the way, eating all raw — all the time.
“We have found that you have to eat 70 to 80 percent raw food to really reap the real health benefits,” offers Wolfe, who supports any raw percentage that people commit to — especially in the beginning. This loosening of the reins has opened the door for the raw-curious to commit to a certain percent of uncooked foods in their diet. “People tap in the way that feels best to them,” he says, and cites raw chocolate, Spirulina and hemp seeds as great entry foods into the raw diet.
“They get into juices — celery and apple juice — then boom, the whole thing starts rolling. Before they know it they are eating seaweed and sprouting.”
Raw Momentum builds
Recognizing the emerging raw trend, restaurants have started to offer more uncooked options on the menu, with everything from raw appetizers, smoothies and desserts to full tasting menus. After discovering the raw food movement, world-renowned chef Charlie Trotter co-authored the top-selling RAW cookbook with chef Roxanne Klein. He now offers regular raw tasting menus at his five star eponymously named Chicago restaurant and foresees big things for raw food’s fine dining future. “I think, in the future, all chefs will need to have an awareness of how to prepare raw food,” Trotter told online gourmet network Epicurious. “It will be just another component of a well-rounded culinary education, like learning about butchering or pastry.” Chicago-based Lisa Persico, chief mixologist of The Amazing Starr Barr, a raw elixir bar-for-hire, has found her services increasingly requested to replace the usual alcohol cash bars at art galleries, fundraisers and weddings. Using exotic superfoods like maça, goji berries, spirulina, and raw cacao, she creates smoothies and cocktails that uplift the spirit without alcohol.
Persico recently spun her craft at a special preview party for the new eco-friendly Butterfly Social Club, the windy city’s first “raw bar” (as in saloon). Nightclub owner and raw enthusiast Mark Kleman opened Butterfly to showcase raw food creations, clean drinks and superfood elixirs, many of his own secret design (hint: he’s all about the maça).
Natalia Rose, author of The Raw Food Detox Diet and a nutritionist in New York, finds more clients interested in raw food from a cosmetic and physical point of view, but also witnesses added benefits. “Some people get into raw food to drop a few pounds or reverse aging, but they come out a better person. They become a more enlightened, conscious person.” That certainly was the case for Chicago-based Kokopaulli, an energetic raw food activist, who says he experiences a deeper sense of spirituality on the raw food diet.
“When you eat raw food it’s like standing under the sun and getting everything you need,” he muses. “It is effortless.” Kokopaulli grew up Catholic and began altering his diet by giving up meat for Lent. He shifted from eating vegetarian to vegan and finally landed at living food because he wanted to feel “more vibrant.”
“The world can get more out of me if I eat something vital and alive.”
Weekend Rawriors
“Raw food used to be an exotic diet and lifestyle for people really hardcore into health food,” says David Wolfe, who put up the first raw food website in November of ’94. “Now it has opened up and is more accessible.” The Internet remains a key tool in the development of Raw culture, where raw foodies meet, swap recipes, share tips and offer support through the rough periods.
Still, legions of online Raws cannot match the tangible transformative power of a real face-to-face community, like the one that has grown up around California’s Café Gratitude. Max O’Neil, a regular, expresses sincere gratitude for the sense of connection the café brings. “I go to Cafe Gratitude to be with others who care about the earth and their bodies,” he says warmly.
With four locations in the Bay Area, and plans to open an LA restaurant in the coming year, Café Gratitude welcomes the newbie, the raw-curious and the weekend rawrior with open arms. “We invite people to come in and try [the living foods lifestyle] on,” says Matthew Engelhart, who co-owns the café with his wife Terces. Engelhart believes this can best be accomplished through a “transition diet” into raw, explaining, “if [going raw] is austere and regimented, people are just going to give up and not have the breakthrough.” Or breakdown... Jennifer Adler, a Washington-based nutritionist, natural foods chef and adjunct faculty at Bastyr University contends that there are very real health reasons for finding your own way — and comfortable percentage — to do the raw food diet. “Any of these extreme diets, whether you are pushing vegetables or protein shakes, is going to affect each body differently,” says Adler. “Many nutrients like protein, biologically available fatty acids and zinc are hard to get while on the raw diet. And some nutrients are better absorbed if they are cooked.”
Adler cautions emergent Raws to pay close attention to their calorie and nutrient intake. “Especially in a lot of women, there can be an underlying eating disorder,” Adler points out. “The raw food movement can lend a structure to that.”
She relates a story about a client who was very protein deficient. The client discussed the deficiency with Adler and decided to eat raw, organic eggs to get more protein in her diet.
But she didn’t feel comfortable telling her Raw boyfriend about her decision. “She ended up hiding the eggs,” remembers Adler. “That type of stuff gets to me. But I do think that the movement itself has a lot of very positive components.” An increased sense of community and support were just a few of the &ldquoositive components” that attracted Monika Kinsman, executive director of the Raw Network of Washington, a non-profit clearinghouse. Kinsmen is one of the many raw foodists who came to the movement after a profound health scare — in her case, a weight of 220 pounds and cholesterol level of 300 that convinced her to get serious about her health.
“I had to throw out my pots and pans, and find others on a similar path,” says Kinsman, who attributes her new 160-pound physique and 200 cholesterol level to eating raw. “I had to make a commitment. I needed to find support.”
What began as a quest for community ultimately turned into a mission to spread the Raw gospel. “It’s not enough to just have a restaurant or a store,” Kinsman enthuses. “We want to educate, provide resources and support people through the emotional transition of going raw.” She now assists with Raw NOW’s area potlucks (rawwashington.org), and has seen a great turnout of people and inspired raw creations like banana crepes, green smoothies and cacao desserts.
“When I was invited to this gathering, I thought there would be a lot of hippies or people I couldn’t relate to,” admits a Raw NOW first-timer. “Now I see that there are all different kinds of people, in a similar place as me.”
Green Plate Special
That “similar place” in which burgeoning Raws are finding themselves includes the realization that personal health and habits affect the larger world.
Rod Rotondi, owner of LA’s trail-blazing Leaf Cuisine is convinced raw restaurants are pushing the eco agenda. “Every time you eat something, there’s a whole chain that you’re accessing going back to the farm, says Rotondi, a 13-year raw veteran. “What we eat has a huge environmental influence. As people demand change in what they eat, their dollars will shift the economy, the agricultural market and, ultimately, our environment.”
Leaf features tasty, affordable raw dishes along with to-go materials that are compostable, non-toxic cleaning products and a delivery truck that runs on biodiesel.
While Rotondi adheres to a 100 percent raw diet himself, he meets customers where they are. “I don’t think being tight and strict is healthy, in general,” he says, adding that if you are going to eat a Big Mac, at least be conscious and enjoy yourself while you are doing it.
“As you transition from cooked food to raw food, you’ll be drawn to more and more living foods. You’ll eat that way because you want to, not because you think you want to. The change will just happen. You don’t have to try because it’s not about willpower.”
Rotundi envisions raw restaurants replacing convenience stores. “Where you used to see pickles, ketchup, potato chips, and doughnuts, you’ll see raw foods. Every supermarket will have a large raw foods section.”
He may be on to something.
“One of the things that we are looking at is a more designated section in a higher profile area of the store,” says Justin Jackson, executive coordinator of purchasing for Whole Foods in Northern California, describing the “more dramatic” raw food launch the natural food chain has in the works.
While Jackson couldn’t elaborate in great detail on the new raw products headed to shelves (as early as June), he did admit Whole Foods plans to introduce some new “raw food concepts” — frozen, refrigerated and room temperature foods — in the very near future, adding that it is the responsibility of businesses like Whole Foods to help people through the challenges of eating raw by providing easy access to a variety of quality products.
“We have recognized that raw foods are something that our customers want,” says Jackson. “And we don’t think [the demand] is going to go away.”
For the true believers, though, raw food’s permanence lies not in motive or market share, but in the simple altruism that good in equals good out.
“There are very few universals out there, but all people respond well to clean air, water, and high nutrient foods,” concludes Butterfly Social Club’s Mark Klemen. “If we, as a people, all ingest more nutritive foods in their cleanest, freshest and most complete form, this entire planet changes for the better. Each individual receives greater health and the benefits of actions that support the good works and practices of many. It’s the ultimate in fair trade.”
Since writing “We Like it Raw” Becca Campbell and Ritzy Ryciak have gone fifty-percent raw and become devoted “weekend rawriors.” Raw chocolate smoothies and Spirulina shakes are their new Sunday staples.
Photos, top to bottom: At raw chef Karyn Calabrese’s self-named Chicago restaurant, there’s no skimping on presentation — or taste. 1. Tiramisu layered with carob puree, strawberries and a mixture of nuts. 2. Karyn’s Stuffed Pizza peppers, cashews, pine nuts, lemon juice, garlic, sea salt, crimini mushrooms, olives, basil, asparagus, onion, zucchini. The crust is Karyn’s mixture of cashes and barley. 3. Karyn’s Raw Ravioli basil scented ravioli (made from turnips with a creamy macadamia nut filling) served with macadamia whipped crème and a side of sun-dried tomato puree. 4. Stuffed Crimini Mushrooms filled with a nut pate.
Get your greens at Leaf Cuisine 5. Who needs tortillas when you’ve got collard greens? Sprouted chickpea falafel croquettes take the place of fried in Leaf Cuisine’s Flying Falafel wrap, bursting with marinated onions, creamy tahini sauce, mixed greens, tomatoes and sprouts, and served with a creamy sunflower seed-cheese “Raw Slaw.” 6. Salad Daze The Trinity Salad at LA’s Leaf Cuisine boasts a holy medley of coconut curry lentils, veggie seed croquettes with tangy tomato sauce, and sprouted falafel with tahini.
Café Gratitude’s... 7. I Am Bliss Raw cacao, hazelnut creme pie (Photo by Cary Mosier) 8. Raw Drinks I Am Splendid Mojito (left): Sparkling wine and water with fresh mint and agave. I Am Worthy (right): kale, beets, celery, apple and ginger. (Photos by Hero)
I Am Woman, Hear Me Raw Photo: 60-years young, Karyn Calabrese
“I have the longest standing raw food restaurant in the country,” states Karyn Calabrese, owner of Karyn’s Inner Beauty Center, Raw Vegan Gourmet and Fresh Corner Café. “I’m so proud of that because I’m in Chicago, a meat-packing town.”
Through private diet counseling sessions and raw food prep classes out of her home, Calabrese supported her restaurant until it could stand on its own. 20 years later, Karyn’s, a gorgeous 7500 square foot raw mecca in Lincoln Park, provides nutritional counseling, food preparation classes, detoxifying services and mouthwatering living food everyday. “It was just a dream and I stuck to it.”
But Calabrese — a svelte and upbeat 60-going-on-30 known for her 5-inch heels and miniskirts — is the first to admit that the raw road has not always been easy, especially in a breadbasket state like Illinois. Calabrese built her claim to fame on an uncanny ability to recreate beloved foods from “the cooked world” out of raw ingredients — in dishes like raw lasagna, deep-dish pizza and brownies. “Anything that you eat in the other world, I can make in this one,” she asserts.
Calabrese attributes raw foods’ shift in popularity from radical extremists to everyday health and wellness seekers to the trend of “major companies and businesses starting to realize that there’s a market here, and they have to address it. They don’t necessarily have to believe in it, but they’re seeing where the dollars are.” High profile uncooking evangelists like Alicia Silverstone, Woody Harrelson and “Lord of the Dance” Michael Flatley show companies that there is a caché and a dollar value, and industry follows, which make raw food options more varied and widespread.
But while raw’s growing caché might be new, the concept of eating garden-fresh foods is as old as dirt. While humankind discovered fire 400,000 years ago, we didn’t start using it to cook our food until 390,000 years later. “[Raw] is the way God intended us to eat,” says Calabrese, who studied the work of early 1900’s raw foodists Dr. Ann Wigmore and Herbert Shelton.
“Humans are the only animals that voluntarily cook their food, and I do believe this is the way the human spirit is meant to be nourished,” says Calabrese. “I believe that because we walk around so full, with so many chemicals, and toxins and fillers, it can break our connection to spirituality.”
She adds, that with such huge food servings people become accustomed to feeling full and stuffed. “When you eat raw foods, you have room for other stuff to come in,” she says. “Your whole world isn’t about food, and there is a lightness that you feel in body, mind and spirit.”
For most of their lives they've heard warnings about unsafe drinking water, environmental pollution and pesticide-laced food.
So it doesn't take much prodding for Sarah Lohmeier and Kristen Snyder to seek out healthier ways of living - including detoxing their bodies on a regular basis.
"It's definitely part of everyday life as far as avoiding things I know will add to the toxins in my body," Snyder, 24, said. "My husband and I buy only organic, and we drink mineral-filled bottled water."
Lohmeier, 23, drinks four juiced carrots a day and uses Metagenics products under the supervision of her boss, Tucson chiropractor David Hancock, who offers the service to clients. "Carrots are really good for detoxing the liver, and it helps with my acne. I still have scars but no breakouts" since she's been on a program, she said.
Detox diets have become big business. There are hundreds of books, pills and supplements that make up this multimillion dollar industry. Among the most popular detox books are those by Anne Louise Gittleman, "The Fat Flush Plan" and "The Fast Track One-day Detox Diet."
So just what is a detox diet, and is it healthy?
"Detoxification is giving the body permission and space and the ability to be able to move out matter that's in the body that is actually poisonous to it," said David Rainoshek, a fasting coach at the Tree of Life Rejuvenation Center in Patagonia, who holds a master's degree in live food nutrition. It supports the organs of elimination and that includes lungs, the kidneys, the liver, the gallbladder and the colon.
While the Tree of Life programs are not geared toward weight loss, it is often a side effect, Rainoshek said.
Some people try these programs for weight loss, but many others consider it an alternative way to treat digestive problems, muscle and joint pain, fatigue, skin conditions and allergies, among other things.
"I feel good," Lohmeier said. "Since I started detoxing, I haven't been sick. I used to get sinus infections all of the time, and I haven't gotten any colds or flus. You feel like brain fog is gone, and you have so much more energy."
(See how Body Plus reporter Sandra Valdez Gerdes did on her fruit fast, How I Did It, Page 4)
While popular among users, however, critics say detox diets are "unnecessary" and hogwash because there is no scientific evidence to support the use of a detox diet.
Wanda Howell of the Nutritional Sciences Department at the University of Arizona said, "There is no such thing as a detox diet. It is not a standard of practice among dietitians and nutritional scientists. No credible source will promote a detox diet. It is not legitimate."
Often it can lead to a loss of lean muscle tissue, and any weight lost comes right back. Many users report discomfort with fasting plans and drinks they've done during their hectic schedules and find it's easier to do a plan through a naturopathic doctor, who will guide them toward a more healthful eating plan.
Erika Jaramillo, a firefighter with the Air National Guard, tried a "fat flush" diet in November and lost about nine pounds but stopped after a few weeks. The low-carb diet didn't agree with her strenuous schedule. Instead, she watches her eating and has switched from bad carbohydrates to good ones.
"Anything that promotes eliminating a food group or endorses eating only one food is dangerous," Howell said. "I don't agree with the notion that processed foods stay in the body. The kidneys and liver clean out that stuff through bile or urine."
Rainoshek disagrees: "If that's true, if the processed food doesn't stay in our bodies and we're not getting toxic, why is it that the country that eats the most processed conventionally grown food in the world has the highest rates of cancer, heart disease, obesity and Type 2 diabetes?
"Why are we the sickest nation in the world," spending $2.2 trillion on medical care every year? she asked.
Despite the ongoing debate, Jason Aberbach, 37, credits juice fasting and intestinal cleansing with clearing his eczema more than 10 years ago during a stay at the Tree of Life Rejuvenation Center. He went on supervised spiritual fasting retreats and learned the value of juice fasting, which he still does.
"When those things are removed from the system, it creates an overall self sense of renewed energy and allows your system to focus on healing and allows your body to function more efficiently."
THOSE IN FAVOR
DO OR DON'T
Tree of Life Rejuvenation Center
Viewpoint: Physical toxins accumulate in many ways: The food we eat, the environment we live in and daily emotional stresses all contribute to stored toxins in our system. We have found juice fasting to be the best and safest method to allow for cleansing while still maintaining energy and rejuvenation levels. These programs promote autolysis, which involves the body digesting its own dead and dying cells. Juice feasting (green juice) can help people who are overweight, have arthritis, acid reflux, chronic pain, high cholesterol, hypertension and heart disease.
Detox method: It specializes in vegan live food nutrition, spiritual fasts and meditation. It also offers Personal Detoxification Programs where guests can do medically supervised juice fasts and feasts.
Web site: www.treeoflife.nu and for more information visit www.nutrientdensenutrition.com
Dr. Bruce Sadilk
Tucson naturopathic physician
Viewpoint: Toxins are stored in fat cells. Detoxing lets some of this toxin burden go and reduces stress on the liver and digestive system. Detoxing without eliminating protein allows you to retain lean muscle.
Detox method: Diet modification by eliminating all common food allergens from the diet, including dairy, gluten or wheat, corn products and syrups and processed foods. Eat organic whenever possible. Patients take a health assessment and body composition test.
Viewpoint: Fresh fruit is nature's perfect cleansing food. It is high in water content, fiber and natural slow-releasing sugars. The nutrients in fruit help dissolve toxins, and the water and fiber helps flush out toxins. The Fruit Flush 3-Day Detox provides a safe way to keep your body fat levels low and energy levels high. Fruit should make up the majority of the diet. The food pyramid should be changed to fresh fruits on the bottom, followed by vegetables, proteins and fats on top. Grains are used to beef up cattle and (Americans) are beefing up on them.
Detox method: Three days of clean fruits and vegetables in limited amounts. A nonaggressive detox compared with herbs or laxatives. It's a semifast (about 900 calories per day) intended for short periods. Otherwise the low caloric intake would slow the metabolism.
Charles Kane author/herbalist, Tucson Clinic of Botanical Medicine
Viewpoint: Dietary lifestyle problems lead to chronic illness. Proper elimination (of waste) means that the colon and intestines, skin and kidneys operate freely. You are not chronically constipated, you sweat appropriately and you drink plenty of fluids and have no urinary tract problems. If someone feels toxic, that's a symptom, not a cause. The root cause is a lifestyle out of order, not getting enough rest, high stress and not dealing with it properly, and poor nutrition such as a high intake of artificial foods, hydrogenated oils, saturated fats and eating on the run.
Detox method: Herbal therapies and products he collects and prepares.
Hancock Chiropractic & Hancock Natural Health Clinics of Tucson & Prescott
Viewpoint: Diet, stress and toxicity directly increase your risk of cancer, heart disease, diabetes, gout, high blood pressure, osteoporosis, weight gain, hormone imbalances and fatigue.
Detox method: Nutritional and diet consulting, body composition analysis and intestinal detoxification programs. Health appraisal to analyze more than 20 body systems. (Radio show, 8:30 a.m. Sundays on KVOI 690-AM or noon Saturdays on KNST 790 AM.)
Arizona spokeswoman, American Dietetic Association,
Viewpoint: The ADA doesn't stand behind any particular detox diet. The ADA considers these fad diets, and many of them prey on people using alarmist pitches. When you eat a balanced healthy diet that includes whole fresh natural foods, your body is getting the nutrients you need to detox. Diseases are often linked to a poor diet, not to toxins. We don't eat grains just for the carbohydrates. They also give us fiber, magnesium, iron, folic acid and vitamin E. It's better to make healthy permanent changes to your diet. Buyer beware when buying herbal remedies and supplements. Colon cleanses add to the risk of dehydration.
Wanda Howell professor of nutritional sciences, University of Arizona
Viewpoint: Food won't build up in toxic levels in the body. It just doesn't happen. Our body isn't made to hoard toxins, and anything that is toxic is naturally removed through bowel movements and urine. If a diet suggests eating a lot of fruits and vegetables, then it promotes good bowel habits, because a good diet has 30 grams of fiber.
Dr. Andrew Weil
Viewpoint: There is no scientific evidence to promote the claims made for detox diets, but there are things you can do to rev up the body's own elimination system. I am not opposed to cleansing regimens such as the Master Cleanse; however, they are not effective as weight-loss tools.
Viewpoint: I don't think people can get all of their nutrition from fruit. I have seen fasting to be helpful with some problems, such as rheumatoid arthritis. Fasting has been in many healing systems and spiritual practices, but then you would have to have a plan of how your diet will look different as you start including more foods. The body is good at detoxing if we are smart about what we put into it. The problem with diets is people go off of them. The real trick is to go on a healthy diet. We recommend the anti-inflammatory diet or Mediterranean diet.
Mary Horn Director of Nutrition and Exercise Science, Miraval Life in Balance
Viewpoint: Detoxing is very stressful on the body. Our internal organs cleanse themselves and have through the ages. If you drink plenty of water, then your body will be cleansed. You need 25 grams of fiber per day, but eat your fiber because you get the nutrients and you get the bulk into your system which cleanses you. Eating clean is one thing, but fasting or cleansing is rapid loss of water and muscle tissue. After deprivation, we will overeat because our bodies are starved. You will put your weight back on and then some because your metabolic rate has slowed down. By restricting foods, the body will metabolize lean tissue, because it's not getting what it needs. Any type of fasting or cleansing is hazardous to chronically ill people, like those with diabetes who need to monitor their blood sugar.
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