Food as Medicine 1. An Unconventional Food Post

in #health7 years ago

This is not a fad-diet post. It is about the land, sea, and the elements- bringing them into our bodies for optimum health.

We are all too familiar with fad diets, and the ever changing advice coming from the "experts" about what to eat, and what not to eat... We are told today that many traditional foods are "bad" causing high cholesterol, etc. and that modern replacements, soy, and "low-fat" labels are our go-tos.

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Over many years I have found that the opposite is true- that traditional foods are our best medicine. Incorporating aspects of our time honored ancestral diets can be a way to optimize health. I encourage all people to seek out information on what their ancestors' ate, and more importantly- how the food was prepared. Many foods today are not prepared properly, which can cause a once-healthy item to become carcinogenic.

But what exactly are traditional foods?

Traditional foods are whole, organic, sometimes raw, sometimes fermented... They are from the earth and not created in a lab. As a general rule in our home, we only eat these types of foods, with few exceptions. Many of you may already know these things so...

Now on to the exciting stuff...

This blog series "Food as Medicine" will confront the misunderstandings and attempt to reveal inspiring truths about traditional foods and how they can benefit our health.

Today I want to speak in particular about some foods that I find to be invaluable to our diets, and how their form has everything to do with their value.

1. Salt

Indeed salt is crucial for the diet, but what kind? Typical table salt is absolutely horrible for you, and this is what the "experts" are referring to when they recommend cutting salt from your diet. Unfortunately "they" are unwilling to admit or do the research to show that their recommendations aren't well-rounded. Essential elements that we need are stripped out, and replaced with synthetic ones. Often it doesn't come from the sea, and is even bleached!

Real salt is sea salt, harvested and gently sun dried, maintaining the delicate and highly valuable minerals. Still others originate and are gathered or mined from ancient sea beds & mountainous regions, such as the salt flats of Utah, United States and Himalayan Pink Salt.

The concentration of salt near Khewra, Punjab is said to have been discovered around 326 BC when the troops led by Alexander the Great stopped to rest there and noticed their horses licking the salty rocks. Salt was probably mined there from that time, but the first records of mining are from the Janjua people in the 1200s. 1

A delicious and simple electrolyte-replenishing beverage can be made by mixing a teaspoon of high quality sea salt in a pint of filtered water, with a squeeze of lemon juice and a dash of real maple syrup. A million times better for you and your health than Gatorade or other fad diet drinks.

Just look at the variety and beauty of real salt from around the world!

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2. Sea Vegetables

It's not yucky, it's delicious! There are many different varieties and forms that can be incorporated into your diet quite simply. Historically, all over the world, many cultures who lived near any sea had seaweed as an important element in their diet. Once I thought deeply about my Irish and Swedish ancestors harvesting the green goods centuries ago, I realized that I should also include this in my diet. There are many edible species of seaweeds and kelp, they should be sourced from clean areas of the ocean, sustainably harvested, and low-temperature sun-dried to preserve the minerals.

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The main species used in Ireland at present are dulse, carrageen moss, and various kelps and wracks. Dulse - also known as Dillisk - is a red alga (Palmaria palmata) that is eaten on both sides of the North Atlantic. Generally only eaten in Ireland after it has been dried, it is frequently sold in small packets, most commonly in the west and north. It is also eaten in Canada, Iceland, Norway, France and Scotland. 2

I eat a variety called Dulse, commonly. I sprinkle the flakes on popcorn, in smoothies and sautés. I snack on the dried slices. One tablespoon of dulse flakes contains 330% Iodine-which is essential for thyroid function; 6% Iron; 15% Vitamin B6; and other decent amounts of Magnesium, Chromium, Riboflavin and B12... Now this is a vitamin-rich food!

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3. Real Butter

That's right. Have you heard the truth about butter? Historically, properly prepared butter was consumed by many traditional cultures all over the world, and for good reason. What is real butter? Real butter is made from the cream of pasture-raised animals. That means the hoofed undulates live and roam on green pastures, eating the nutrient dense grass in the sunshine and fresh air. They may be seasonally supplemented with hay, and if any, only a tiny amount of organic, non-gmo grain.

This butter is rich in antioxidants, Vitamin E and A, Omega 3s, and good cholesterol vs. the cheaply produced, toxic mockery called "Butter" sold in supermarkets which literally causes heart disease, which is produced from the milk of tortured overweight, confinement-raised, infected cows. From The Weston Price Foundation:

......When the fabricated food folks and apologists for the corporate farm realized that they couldn’t block America’s growing interest in diet and nutrition, a movement that would ultimately put an end to America’s biggest and most monopolistic industries, they infiltrated the movement and put a few sinister twists on information going out to the public. Item number one in the disinformation campaign was the assertion that naturally saturated fats from animal sources are the root cause of the current heart disease and cancer plague. Butter bore the brunt of the attack, and was accused of terrible crimes. The Diet Dictocrats told us that it was better to switch to polyunsaturated margarine and most Americans did. Butter all but disappeared from our tables, shunned as a miscreant....... read the rest here

To understand fully the benefits of butter, the above article is excellent in explaining the truth.

Cow_(Fleckvieh_breed)_Oeschinensee_Slaunger_2009-07-07.jpg By Kim Hansen - Own work CC BY-SA 3.0

Where do we go find good quality raw butter?

Unfortunately in many states in the U.S. the retail selling of raw butter has been banned. That's right, in the latter half of the last century, the modern American government has declared one of our most precious ancestral health foods- illegal- imagine that. Fortunately one can still find quality real raw butter from local farms all over the country through legal means such as CSA shares, or purchasing it as "pet food". To find a list of local farms in your area where you might be able to find nutrient-dense vegetables and dairy, check out Local Harvest as well as The Weston Price Foundation

If you can't access raw butter, try making it yourself. Or a second best would be to purchase organic pasteurized, non-homogenized butter. While these aren't going to be as nutritious as raw butter, they are still a million times better than their conventional imitations. We do purchase Organic Valley, Super Kalona, and Kerry Gold brands at our co-op when our local farmer is sold out.

Using butter as an example of food as medicine, it is true that it will tend to be a bit more expensive than cheap butter. But, you get what you pay for. The farmer is handcrafting a traditional food from animals they have sustainably and lovingly raised, and keeping an essential traditional skill and community element alive.

If you're like us and tend to be frugal- use the raw butter as a medicinal food; don't waste the nutrients by baking or cooking with it on high heat. I use the store bought brands for that. The raw butter is best on a baked potato, a piece of toast, or patted on roasted vegetables, etc.
Antoine_Vollon_-_Mound_of_Butter_-_National_Gallery_of_Art.jpg (By Antoine Vollon - National Gallery of Art, Public Domain, Link)

I hope you enjoyed this post and perhaps feel inspired to research deeper into these foods.

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You have received an upvote from @livesustainably. I promote and curate content that encourages and educates others in living sustainably.

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Thank you! I will!

Great information. My family has been drinking raw milk for about six months now. We have really noticed a difference.

Thank you! Awesome, same here. It has helped a lot with dental problems.

Great stuff. Looking forward to your next articles! Having lived in France (where there are at least four different chains of 100% organic supermarkets and you can buy raw milk readily) and now in Nagano, Japan (the Japanese prefecture best known for fermented foods as also, not surprisingly, for having the longest average life expectancy in the country - we overtook Okinawa a few years ago, and therefore probably the rest of the world), it's great to see other people writing about the subject!

Wow you really have done quite a bit of traveling, eh? Oh the food you must have seen! Wonderful the organic supermarkets in France, they must be lovely...

I’m so glad you’re doing this series! It’s always been painfully obvious to me that most of the food in the grocery store is not food. I don’t think it’s an exaggeration to compare it to poison. Over the last decade or so, it’s occured to me that the food that grows out of the ground will not only keep you healthy, but repair our bodies, and prevent and treat sickness and ailments! Real food IS medicine!! Thank you, again, for this series.

Oh good I am glad you like the series... I am really going to enjoy writing on this topic, it is dear to me... Apparently we have some things in common. Thanks for stopping by!

Good info thanks for sharing!

Thank you for stopping by!!

Love this so much....followed and looking forward to future posts

Oh good! Thank you for taking the time to read my work!

We are conscious about eating healthy foods as well and steer clear of mainstream advice and food guides. We've noticed the revised Canada food guide still gives preference to food groups that are subsidized. Of course the guide isn't marketed to highlight these subsidies and the general public won't often make the connection. When it comes to food, I think the goverment needs to but out. What I find interesting is that we can be trusted to purchase raw meat and eggs and but not raw dairy. We can't even get Kerry Gold butter in Canada. When family visits frim the States we always request as much butter as possible. We also enhoy adding sea salt to our food as well. Plenty ofnour friends and family think we're reckless with out consumption of dairy, eggs, salt, and fats but we are also in great health which leaves them scratching their heads. Great article! -Aimee

@canadianrenegade I got feels for you guys up there with no Kerry Gold, :( and hard butter times...
That is great you can have fam bring you butter from the states, I almost laughed picturing butter smugglers.... hehe. I love that we have commonalities with food! It is painful sometimes- there's an old man I know, he's in his 8o's, and told me one day " Oh, I had a heart scare, Doc says no more butter, eggs, or fatty meat..." I wanted to try to explain to him so badly the difference between those items at the supermarket today, vs. those items at the grocery when he was a child... I wanted to give him fresh pastured eggs and raw butter. :(

Ha ha! Butter smugglers doesn't seem too far fetched. We often refer to our government as the butter mafia. That poor man, like so many others, is getting terrible advice! I often have to have that same conversation with my mom, about how industry and processing has changed because she often asks, "but why is it bad now?"
-Aimee

another very good post that goes directly to my heart!

At this time of life I am in a dilemma to become either vegan either meat eater because vegetarian is an hypocritical excuse. I totally agree with the first part of the post where you said that now everything is replaced with law calories, low fats artificial food. The best food we can have is the one close to us and the littlest processed as possible! I am not buying packed food. Although, I must admit I enjoy it a lot when somebody has it in their home - is like a treat for me!

Great post once again! My friend @mamasteem has just joined steemit today. She is also irish. Have you met her already? She is from our world :)

Very interesting this butter story also!

Hello and thank you for stopping by again and for your thoughtful comment! I can understand the difficult decision. We decided that since we are consuming meat and ancestral diet, that we would try to only purchase from local farms that which we can't produce ourselves, as much as possible, when it comes to meat and dairy. I can understand treating ourselves occasionally! I will check out your friend's blog too!

of course, meat only from local grown. diary I don't really buy, but if it occasionally in cakes, I will take it! I also wrote today about my dilemma of consuming meat or becoming a vegan https://steemit.com/nature/@purplemoon/to-be-or-not-to-be-a-vegetarian-this-is-the-question

We are only a few of us that take this eating thing consciously, but we do make a difference! Well done on you! :)

Excellent!, and I could not agree more. "Let food be thy medicine and medicine be thy food?" - Hippocrates. I also like much of the information from the Weston-Price Foundation, and the work of Dr. Wallach. Very important stuff.

Thank you! Indeed. I will also check out Dr. Wallach, have not heard of him...

Yes, it is Joel Wallach, and I have no doubt that you would find it interesting. https://www.youngevity.net/category/dwj.html (I don't have any interest in the company, by the way, other than using some of the products).

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