The 10 Best Foods To Eat

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The 10 Best Foods To Eat

This is a collection of foods that I recommend everyone prioritizes in their diets.  Surely there are some missing from this list that people believe should be included.  I’ve collected foods that have nourished humans for all of time- before we had wide-spread health crises of degenerative diseases.  Many mainstream health folks might argue that foods on this list should never be consumed.  But the truth is that ever since we, as a culture, excluded these foods from our daily diets, and replaced them with modern commercially produced alternatives, we’ve become fatter and sicker.  My family has enjoyed nourished, flourishing health by eating diets rich in the foods below.

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1. Raw Milk (REAL Milk)

Nature’s perfect, life-giving food.  As opposed to standard commercial milk, mentioned on the last article, “10 Dumbest Foods to Eat”, raw milk from healthy pasture raised cows has the perfect, energy-boosting balance of fat, protein, and carbohydrates and immune-boosting vitamins A and D.  You’ll get all the green grass nutrition that we can’t digest, but healthy cows can metabolize so that we get an ultimate benefit for humans.  You can also use raw milk to make super nourishing foods like yogurt, quefir, cheese, lact-fermented vegetables, and more.  I wrote a long article all about consuming dairy if you want to read it here. Visit www.realmilk.com to learn more about the safety of raw milk, and find out how you can get deliciously healthy raw milk.

2. Eggs

Nature’s second perfect, life-giving food.  This “seed” is power-packed with energy and nutrients, especially when it’s from pasture-raised hens.  Raw egg yolks (not the whites) are excellent for their high lecithin content, which is good for stabilizing the adrenal glands.  They are also an excellent choice for a baby’s first food, nourishing the developing organs and establishing life-long blood sugar health.  Just make your eggs “sunny-side up” or poached, add the raw yolks to smoothies, or soft-boil and enjoy with a little sea salt! Read more about eggs in an article completely devoted to eggs here.

3. Bone Broth

Mmmmm….”A good broth will raise the dead” says an old African proverb.  Bone broth made with healthy animal bones will provide tons of wonderful nutrients including natural gelatin, glucosamine, chondroiton, which are excellent for digestive and bone health.  One of the first things I recommend to those who suffer from digestive issues or arthritis is to make a good homemade stock weekly to enjoy as a soup or drink throughout the week.  Check out this article with more info, a recipe video and other resources for homemade bone broth.

4. Traditionally Prepared Fermented, Soaked, and Cultured Foods

This includes foods like soaked grains and nuts, lacto-fermented vegetables like real saurkraut, and cultured foods like yogurt and quefir.  Soaking and properly preparing grains and nuts neutralizes naturally occurring anti-nutrients such as enzyme inhibitors, tannins and phytic acid for better digestion and optimum nutrient uptake.  Lacto-fermented and cultured foods contain high levels of enzymes and beneficial bacteria which help maintain homeostasis and balance in the body which means you feel good and prevent disease! Read more about cultured foods here.

5. Cod Liver Oil, Liver and Organ Meats (source, source, source!)

Animal organs- the original superfoods!  Did you know that traditional cultures around the world consider different organs of animals sacred? Modern science tells us that there is a reason for this! Foods from the organs of the healthiest animals are offer nature’s most complete array of naturally-occurring essential fatty acids and (super important) fat-soluble vitamins A and D.  Fat soluble vitamins are essential for cardiovascular health, immunity, cellular regeneration, development, reproduction, and so much more!  Essential fatty acids are needed for the health of almost every system of the body, and are essential for nutrient absorption. Cultures that experience thriving health often have animal organs as a dietary staple. Of course traditional recipes for animal organs are easily found in French cookbooks and things like that, we typically get these superfoods by adding organs to bone broth recipes or using supplements. We aren’t huge fans of a liver and onions dinner, so we use this cod liver oil and this beef liver supplement.

6. Anti-Oxidant Foods

Do you really understand what an anti-oxidant is and why you need them?  (It’s okay if you don’t.)  In fact, I’d rather that you don’t “understand” it.  In the past decade, the general population has been droned into believing that they need high doses of “anti-oxidants” to avoid cancer and other diseases caused by free-radical damage, which has been great for the anti-oxidant supplement industry.  The truth is that you need to help the body produce the anti-oxidants needed to balance the amount of free radicals in the body.  You actually do need free radicals in your body.  (This article explains this point well.) The whole story is that you need a balance- you can have too many or too little.  The same idea is true for anti-oxidants.  So, the bottom line is that you should eat a diet that avoids the proliferation of oxidized molecules, and supports the balance of anti-oxidants and free radicals for optimum health.  The typical American diet promotes oxidative stress and the proliferation of free radicals.  This means avoid all highly heated, processed foods and fast foods, reduced fat and dry milk products, and eat a good amount of dark colored organic vegetables and berries daily.  Organic organ meats can also be high in anti-oxidants, and essential oils such as clove oil are extremely high in anti-oxidants. Fortunately because of doTERRA’s level of quality, we can safely consume (in very small diluted amounts) the oils that offer dietary anti-oxidants! 

7. Sea Salt

Unrefined salt is an excellent, traditional source of nearly 80 trace minerals. In fact, this natural bacteria-inhibiting preservative can be considered a mineral “supplement” that is essential to life. On the other hand, pristine white refined varieties are heated to excessive temperatures (some up to 1200 degrees F), stripped of all nutrients, and combined with a myriad of undesirable substances, such as aluminum, sugar and anti-caking agents. Replace these over-refined varieties with mineral-rich, properly harvested salts, such as Celtic, Himalayan, RealSalt and Lima. They offer an abundance of healing qualities and their high moisture and trace mineral content are evident by their subtle grey to pink mineral hues. Most health food stores stock one or more of these selections, but here is a Celtic sea salt I love to recommend.

8. Lard…that’s right…Lard and Coconut Oil

The much-maligned saturated fats—which Americans are trying to avoid—are not the cause of our modern diseases. In fact, they play many important roles in heart health and the body chemistry:

Saturated fatty acids constitute at least 50% of the cell membranes. They are what gives our cells necessary stiffness and integrity. They play a vital role in the health of our bones. For calcium to be effectively incorporated into the skeletal structure, at least 50% of the dietary fats should be saturated.  They lower Lp(a), a substance in the blood that indicates proneness to heart disease. They protect the liver from alcohol and other toxins, such as Tylenol.  They enhance the immune system. They are needed for the proper utilization of essential fatty acids.

Elongated omega-3 fatty acids are better retained in the tissues when the diet is rich in saturated fats.

Saturated 18-carbon stearic acid and 16-carbon palmitic acid are the preferred foods for the heart, which is why the fat around the heart muscle is highly saturated. The heart draws on this reserve of fat in times of stress.

Short- and medium-chain saturated fatty acids have important antimicrobial properties. They protect us against harmful microorganisms in the digestive tract.

The scientific evidence, honestly evaluated, does not support the assertion that “artery-clogging” saturated fats cause heart disease.  Actually, evaluation of the fat in artery clogs reveals that only about 26% is saturated. The rest is unsaturated, of which more than half is polyunsaturated.

Visit Thrive Market and search “lard” or “coconut oil” to find great options online.

*Information from this point extracted from this must-read article, “The Skinny On Fats” Written by Mary G. Enig, PhD and Sally Fallon: http://westonaprice.org/know-your-fats/526-skinny-on-fats

9. Organically Produced Meat and Wild Fish

Meats can offer nutrition only as good as the feed the animals consume. The meat of cows roaming on pasture, munching away on their natural diet of fresh grass have approximately four times the amounts vitamins A and E as their commercial grain-fed, feedlot cousins.  By design, cows are meant to eat fibrous grasses, plants, and shrubs, which give their meat a nutrient profile similar to healthful wild game, like antelope, deer, and elk. A leisurely life on pasture also keeps cows disease-free from such bacterial contamination as E. coli and Campylobacter, unlike their feedlot cousins who have a much higher risk of contamination.

Sad feedlot cows are raised on genetically modified grain and soy because it speeds growth and bulk quickly. To help further cut feed costs, producers include other “add-ins,” such as municipal garbage, stale pastry, chicken manure and feathers, as well as candy.  This backward diet causes the animals to suffer various disorders such as bloat, liver abscesses and acidosis. Jo Robinson, author of Pasture Perfect and owner of the online resource www.eatwild.com, tells us that “Cattle with subacute acidosis kick at their bellies, go off their feed, and eat dirt.” Poor things.

On top of an artificial diet and confinement, modern methods of raising cattle also involve considerable amounts of hormones, steroids, and other chemicals. Approximately twenty million pounds of antibiotics are given to animals each year—most to prevent disease and promote growth. Antibacterials, topical antimicrobials, and insecticides are also used in the feed, living quarters, and directly on the animals themselves. Subjecting animals to this chemical abuse is terrible, and the ramifications to your family are also significant.

Non-therapeutic uses of antibiotics in agriculture have created what can be called “super-bugs,” bacteria that have adapted to the overuse of antibiotics over the years and become stronger, more virulent. When researchers tested ground chicken, turkey, beef, and pork bought in supermarkets, they found that 20 percent of them contained Salmonella. Even worse, 84 percent of the contaminated samples were resistant to at least one antibiotic and more than half were resistant to at least three.

Finally, hormone residues in meat and dairy products can disrupt our body’s natural hormone balance. Many experts suspect that consumption of hormone-treated beef and dairy products may contribute to girls reaching puberty earlier, thus making them more susceptible to hormonal conditions later in life.  Interestingly, the European Union has banned the use of hormones in livestock for fear they pose a health risk, and refuses to import hormone-treated Canadian and U.S. meat.

PASTURED CHICKENS AND EGGS vs . FEEDLOT RAISED:

Chickens allowed to forage for bugs and grass and soak up sunshine in the great outdoors produce eggs with greater amounts of vitamin E and vitamin A than their commercial, cooped up, pellet-fed counterparts. The extra nutrients available in the pasture-fed eggs are obvious by the color of the egg’s yolk. The more yellow/orange the yolk, the higher the level of carotenoids. Eggs from pastured hens also contain omega-3 and omega-6 fatty acids in the beneficial ratio of approximately 1:1, unlike commercial eggs, which average an unhealthy 1:19!  Similar to caged cows, battery chickens are squeezed into small cages or sheds, often windowless, and overrun with their own droppings. There is no room for them to do what chickens do—graze, root, dust themselves, or roost, let alone sit.

10. ORGANIC Fruits and Vegetables

Buying organic is in vogue these days, and for good reason. With more nutrients and fewer chemicals, why not buy organic whenever possible? A study published in 2001 The Journal of Alternative and Complementary Medicine found after 1,240 comparisons of 35 vitamins and minerals in organic and conventional produce that the organic versions contained higher amounts of most vitamins and minerals—27 percent more vitamin C, 29 percent more magnesium, 86 percent more chromium and 375 percent more selenium. The chemical-free foods were also lower in cancer-causing nitrates and toxic heavy metals.

Another powerful study published in 2003 Environmental Health Perspectives evaluated the levels of pesticide metabolites in the urine of two groups of children and found that children eating organic fruits and vegetables, consuming organic milk and drinking organic juices had levels of pesticide metabolites six to nine times lower than children eating conventionally grown food.  Bear in mind, pesticides are up to ten times more toxic to children than adults, due to their smaller body size and developing organ systems, so it is especially important to minimize their exposure whenever possible during the growing years.
*This commentary is based on information from the article, “Modernizing Your Diet With Traditional Foods” by Jen Allbritton, CN.  I just couldn’t have said it better.  

 

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The 10 BEST Foods To Eat ~ Real Food Family


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