| Naturopathic Physician Missoula Montana
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Anti-Inflammatory
Eating: Some Basics
Organically grown local foods are the best nutrition for you. Organically
grown foods have more available vitamins, minerals and fatty acids
than conventionally farmed and processed foods do. Organically grown
foods offer only good nutrition; conventionally grown foods add damaging
chemistry to your body.
Sweets of any kind, and grains and starchy vegetables like potatoes
increase the inflammatory response in your body. The more muscle you
have and the more you use it, the more of these foods you can use
without having ‘leftover’ in your system to cause inflammation.
Fat cells are factories for inflammatory chemicals. If you have extra
fat, reducing starchy foods and eliminating sweets and offending grains
is a healthy and effective way to use up the energy you have stored
as fat (See Healthy Weight Loss)
Wheat and corn are the starchy foods that are damaging to most people.
Rice, millet and quinoa are good choices for most people.
Serving size of even the best grains matters a lot. Over eating causes
inflammation. If you are not well muscled and don’t exercise
vigorously, about 1/2 cup sized servings of starchy stuff is what
you should have. If you are very fit and exercise regularly and vigorously,
up to one cup sized servings can be fine. More than that and you better
be training for a triathalon!
Animal protein is required for humans to be optimally healthy. Vegetarian
diets will eventually lead to malnourishment and health problems.
(See How to Live with Meat) Except for the rare true allergies, most
people thrive on fish. Eggs and lean, clean poultry is good for most
people as well. Organically raised red meat is excellent for people
who are blood type O (See Diet and
Serotype)
Fruit is great food, and can be over-eaten. Eat more of the less sweet
fruit, less of the starchy or densely sweet, and dried fruit. In order
of desirability examples of best fruits to eat looks like this:
Best-melons, berries
Pretty Good- apricot, peach, papaya, plum, kiwi
Good, but don’t over-do- apple, cherries, pears,
mango, pineapple, pomegranate
Limit- banana, grapes, figs, prunes, any dried (check
dried fruit for added sugars as well)
Avoid fruit juice- it is an unnaturally dense source
of carbohydrate
Nuts and seeds are great for healthy fats and oils. You can over do
in terms of calories if you eat too much. Think in terms of 10 nuts
per serving, or about an ounce. Enjoy raw walnuts, almonds, pumpkin
seeds, hazelnuts, Brazil nuts, cashews etc. (roasting tends to alter
the fats in nuts)
Flax seeds are good medicine. Grind 1 to 2 tablespoons and add to
8 ounces water. Or sprinkle on your salad or in soup. Just be sure
to drink that water soon after. Deer-pellet poop means you are not
getting enough water with your flax.
Organic butter used in moderation is fine. You can also mix 1 pound
of butter with 1cup virgin olive oil, whip together at room temperature
and store in the fridge.
Olive oil is you best all around choice for oil. Small amounts of
nut oils like sesame, walnut, and coconut can add wonderful flavor
to salads and stir-fry.
Drink water! 6 to 8 glasses minimum daily. Use herb teas. Green tea
is also great for many people. A little lemon juice or apple cider
vinegar in your water makes it more refreshing.
Minimize alcohol, coffee, soy, rice or oat milk. These add extra liver
challenging chemistry and carbohydrates that stimulate inflammation.
If dairy foods are appropriate for your blood type, use only products
from organically raised cows.
Fried foods, packaged foods and restaurant foods will all have extra
additives like preservatives, colorings and stabilizers, be less fresh
and more burdensome to your body, Meals made at home from locally
grown, organically raised fresh, frozen or dried food will always
be better for you.
Rev NED 5.07 |
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