Chickin Feet

Daily peeks into our simple lives.

A Story of Good Nutrition June 19, 2008

Filed under: Health — patchgirl @ 3:35 am
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In the early 1930s, a Cleveland dentist named Weston A. Price began a series of unique investigations. For over ten years, he traveled to isolated parts of the globe to study the health of populations untouched by western civilization. His goal was to discover the factors responsible for good dental health. His studies revealed that cavities and deformed dental arches resulting in crowded, crooked teeth are the result of nutritional deficiencies, not inherited genetic defects.

The groups Price studied included sequestered villages in Switzerland, Gaelic communities in the Outer Hebrides, indigenous peoples of North and South America, Melanesian and Polynesian South Sea Islanders, African tribes, Australian Aborigines and New Zealand Maori. Wherever he went, Dr. Price found that beautiful straight teeth, freedom from decay, good physiques, resistance to disease and fine characters were typical of native groups on their traditional diets, rich in essential nutrients.

When Dr. Price analyzed the foods used by isolated peoples he found that, in comparison to the American diet of his day, they provided at least four times the water-soluble vitamins, calcium and other minerals, and at least TEN times the fat-soluble vitamins, from animal foods such as butter, fish eggs, shellfish, organ meats, eggs and animal fats–the very cholesterol-rich foods now shunned by the American public as unhealthful. These healthy traditional peoples knew instinctively what scientists of Dr. Price’s day had recently discovered–that these fat-soluble vitamins, vitamins A and D, were vital to health because they acted as catalysts to mineral absorption and protein utilization. Without them, we cannot absorb minerals, no matter how abundant they may be in our food. Dr. Price discovered an additional fat-soluble nutrient, which he labeled Activator X, that is present in fish livers and shellfish, and organ meats and butter from cows eating rapidly growing green grass in the Spring and Fall. All primitive groups had a source of this Activator X, now thought to be vitamin K2, in their diets.

The isolated groups Dr. Price investigated understood the importance of pre-conceptual nutrition for both parents. Many tribes required a period of special feeding before conception, in which nutrient-dense animal foods were given to young men and women. These same foods were considered important for pregnant and lactating women and growing children. Price discovered them to be particularly rich in minerals and in the fat-soluble activators found only in animal fats.

     

Caption: The photographs of Dr. Weston Price illustrate the difference in facial structure between those on native diets and those whose parents had adopted the “civilized” diets of devitalized processed foods. The “primitive” Seminole girl (left) has a wide, handsome face with plenty of room for the dental arches. The “modernized” Seminole girl (right), born to parents who had abandoned their traditional diets, has a narrowed face, crowded teeth and a reduced immunity to disease.

This information about Dr. Price, his research, the dietary guidelines and dangers, and the information about fats was taken from the foundation’s official brochure, published on the website of the Weston A. Price Foundation, www.westonaprice.org.

 

Similarities in Characteristics of Traditional Cultures

  1. The diets of healthy, non-industrialized peoples contain no refined or denatured foods or ingredients, such as refined sugar or high fructose corn syrup; white flour; canned foods; pasteurized, homogenized, skim or lowfat milk; refined or hydrogenated vegetable oils; protein powders; artificial vitamins; or toxic additives and colorings.
  2. All traditional cultures consume some sort of animal food, such as fish and shellfish; land and water fowl; land and sea mammals; eggs; milk and milk products; reptiles; and insects. The whole animal is consumed­–muscle meat, organs, bones and fat, with the organ meats and fats preferred.
  3. The diets of healthy, non-industrialized peoples contain at least four times the minerals and water-soluble vitamins, and TEN times the fat-soluble vitamins found in animal fats (vitamin A, vitamin D and Activator X) as the average American diet.
  4. All traditional cultures cooked some of their food but all consumed a portion of their animal foods raw.
  5. Primitive and traditional diets have a high content of food enzymes and beneficial bacteria from lacto-fermented vegetables, fruits, beverages, dairy products, meats and condiments.
  6. Seeds, grains and nuts are soaked, sprouted, fermented or naturally leavened to neutralize naturally occurring anti-nutrients such as enzyme inhibitors, tannins and phytic acid.
  7. Total fat content of traditional diets varies from 30 percent to 80 percent of calories but only about 4 percent of calories come from polyunsaturated oils naturally occurring in grains, legumes, nuts, fish, animal fats and vegetables. The balance of fat calories is in the form of saturated and monounsaturated fatty acids.
  8. Traditional diets contain nearly equal amounts of omega-6 and omega-3 essential fatty acids.
  9. All traditional diets contain some salt.
  10. All traditional cultures make use of animal bones, usually in the form of gelatin-rich bone broths.
  11. Traditional cultures make provisions for the health of future generations by providing special nutrient-rich animal foods for parents-to-be, pregnant women and growing children; by proper spacing of children; and by teaching the principles of right diet to the young.

Sally Fallon is president of the Weston A. Price foundation and the author of my favorite cookbook, Nourishing Traditions. Here she is explaining alot of this stuff…..she does a much better job than me. http://www.webtalkradio.net/content/view/517/33/

(Ignore all of the new age intro talk……not sure what all of that is about.)

 

 

Favorite cookies June 13, 2008

Filed under: Our World — patchgirl @ 6:21 pm
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We make these alot. Mostly because the recipe calls for homemade cream cheese and we have alot of this around the house because we’re always making whey for our fermented veggies. And our guests always like them.

This is taken from page 488 of Nourishing Traditions, by Sally Fallon.

Rugelach                                                                                                                                                      makes 18-24

  • 1/2 cup butter, softened
  • 1 cup homemade cream cheese
  • 2 cups freshly ground spelt, kamut or whole wheat flour
  • 1/2 cup rapadura sugar
  • 1 tbsp vanilla extract
  • 1 tsp salt
  • 1/4 cup melted butter
  • 2 tsp cinnamon
  • 1/4 cup crispy pecans, finely chopped

You can substitute store bought cream cheese, regular or brown sugar, and raw or roasted pecans, almonds, or walnuts……..but it won’t be as “nourishing”.

Mix butter, cream cheese and flour using an electri beater and leave in a warm place for 12 to 24 hours. Mix in Rapadura, vanilla and salt. Using unbleached white flour to keep from sticking, roll out dough on a pastry cloth to 1/4 inch thickness. Brush with mixture of melted butter and cinnamon and sprinkle with pecans. Roll up 1 1/2 turns and cut dough lengthwise. Roll another 1 1/2 turns and cut lengthwise. Repeat once more. You should now have three long rolls. Cut the rolls crosswise into 1 inch or 1 1/2 inch lengths. Place individual pastries on a buttered cookies sheet and bake at 300 degrees for about 45 minutes. These store well in freezer or refrigerator and the flavor improves with time. Eat cool or reheat before serving.

Made according to the directions, they are free from phytic acid because the flour is soaked and the “crispy nuts” are soaked (pg.512 of Nourishing Traditions), and the rapadura (dehydrated cane sugar juice) is rich in minerals, unlike refined sugar. Plus they’re yummy.

Give them a try and let me know what you think.

 

Our daily bread May 19, 2008

Filed under: Health — patchgirl @ 4:31 am
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We’ve been trying to cut back on our grain intake for various reasons. When we do eat flour products they are either soaked or sprouted. Soaking or sprouting grains before baking breaks down phytic acid, which robs the body of nutrients, it also helps to break down complex starches (something our bodies cannot do well alone), and it breaks down difficult-to-digest proteins. This includes foods like beans, which, when soaked will not cause upset stomach and flatulence.

Another bonus is that when baking with whole grains, this method softens the grain so that the final product is almost indistinguishable from one made with white flour. Also, pre-soaked baked products rise easily with baking soda alone and don’t require baking powder.

Next on my wishlist for the kitchen is a grain mill. Flour goes rancid very quickly. All flour found in the supermarket is rancid! There are some health food stores around here that have freshly ground flours that they keep in the freezer which works or they’ll grind my flour on request. But I think it’d be fun to have a grinder.

We’ve been buying sprouted bread and tortillas from Whole Foods, but they’re pricey and I’ve been wanting to try making my own sourdough using the traditional method. The only ingredients are flour, water and salt. Not only is this less expensive, but it’s the most healthful kind of bread you could eat. Plus it’s fun for Nora and I. Most kids don’t know how the wheat that grows on a field turns into bread. That’s a nice bonus.

First, you make a starter of freshly ground flour and water and cover it with a cheesecloth for 7 days, 

feeding it flour and water daily.

 

 

 

 

It ferments with good bacteria and yeasts from the flour and even from the air. Then on day 7 youadd salt and flour,

 

 kneed,

  let it rise, 

and bake. 

Tada!

Despite the dark color (it looks like a whole wheat bread but it’s actually a combination of rye and spelt) I was surprised that it’s actually got a nice sour taste.

Nora approved as well. Here she is eating a “kid-friendly” traditionally prepared meal: homemade saurkraut, homemade fermented ketchup, locally made grass-fed beef hot dogs, and of course some homemade sourdough bread slathered in organic butter from pastured cows. (no, dispite what some of you would like to believe, that is not a look of disgust)

“In books on baking and even in nutritional/medical writings, the two techniques {for making bread}, natural leaven (sourdough) and baker’s yeast, are often mingled and confounded….baking with natural leaven is in harmony with nature and maintains the integrity and nutrition of the cereal grains used….The process helps to increase and reinforce our body’s absorption of the cereal nutrients. Unlike yeasted bread that diminishes, even destroys, much of the grains nutritional value, naturally leavened bread does not stale and, as it ages, maintains its original moisture much longer. Alot of that information was known pragmatically for centuries; and thus when yeast was first intorduced in France at the court of louis XIV in March 1668, because at that time the scientists already knew that the use of yeast would imperil the peoples health, it was strongly rejected. Today, yeast is used almost universally, without any testing; and the recent scientific evidence and clinical findings are confirming the ancient taboos with biochemical and bioelectronic valid proofs that wholly support that age old common sense decision. ” ~ Jaques DeLangre