a delicate balance

January 16th, 2011

Last year, after reading The China Study by T. Colin Campbell,  I was looking up more information about the relationship of consumption of animal protein with disease and stumbled on a movie on You Tube called A Delicate Balance. I started watching and found it to be really informative and well done. Their assertions are backed up by research studies. I was shocked at some of the statistics, and found some new information on a topic on which I had previously considered myself well-versed.

People can’t make well-informed choices if they don’t have information! This film goes a long way to elucidating the connection between disease and diet.

Definitely worth a watch! I’m not sure how long   you can watch it free online, so take a gander while you can!

bok choy joy & ANDI scores

April 5th, 2010

Causes of death in the USI’ve recently been reading Joel Fuhrman’s Eat For Health: Lose Weight, Keep It Off, Look Younger, Live Longer (2 book set), and found his ANDI score system a revelation. He rates the nutrient density of various common foods –  a higher score for foods that deliver the most nutrients with the least amount of calories. He does not discourage fat consumption entirely, just recommends keeping fat intake low and ensuring that the majority of fats consumed are plant-based from nuts, seeds and avocados.

Many of the medical problems faced by Americans today are diseases of diet — we are a nation paradoxically obese and malnourished. This bizarre predicament is the result of over-consumption of foods that lack the nutrients our bodies need to maintain a healthy, balanced system. Heart disease, cancer, stroke and diabetes (the red bars in the pic at right, from Jamie Oliver’s  TED talk) are clearly the big killers in the US, and they are all diseases that can be prevented through a change in dietary habits. An obsession with calories does you no good if the calories you do consume are devoid of nutrients.

The essential change that Fuhrman recommends is to increase the amount of nutrients consumed while keeping the overall calories lower, and that’s where the ANDI scores come in. Since kale, collards, mustard greens and other dark leafy greens have the most nutrients per calorie delivered, they top out the ANDI scale at 1000.  Arugula and radishes score in the 500 range, cabbage a 402, Romaine a 384. Carrots 292, celery124, sweet potato 82, cucumber 49. For fruit, strawberries get a 211, raspberries 146, blueberries 128, cantaloupe 99, apple 75, cherries 68, watermelon 90, avocados 37, grapes 31, bananas 30, dates 19, raisins 16. By comparison, oats score 53, brown rice 40, corn 44, chicken breast and eggs each score a 27. Whole wheat pasta 19, white pasta 18, white rice 12, pizza 18, McDonald’s cheeseburger 16, McD’s fries 10, saltines 11, potato chips 11, pretzels 13 and cola a whopping 0.7. You can find the chart in his Eat For Health books, or see a condensed version online at eatrightamerica.com. On my last few visits to Whole Foods, I noticed that they have started posting ANDI score signs throughout the store.

I find these scores helpful when meal planning to ensure that we’re loading up on the high-nutrient veggies and fruits, and keeping the lower-nutrient grains, corn and potato to a minimum. Fuhrman also redesign the “food pyramid” we all learned about at school, with leafy greens and other foods that score over 100 in the base instead of grains

While we have dropped wheat and dairy from our diets, I noticed that the kids had simply started eating lots of things made from rice and corn instead, still not eating enough fresh fruits and veggies. So last week we started limiting grains or bready foods to one meal a day for a while to break the grain habit. Breakfast usually includes fruit in some form –whole fruit, slices of apples with cinnamon or nut butter, frozen fruit sorbet, banana ice cream, fruit salad, or smoothie. Lunches have been RAT sandwiches (tomato and avocado rolled up in romaine leaves), lemon fennel soup or a big green salad, and dinners have consisted of two salads, with a small portion of grains often mixed with more veggies. Some days they choose to have oatmeal with berries for breakfast, so those days I find myself challenged to serve a dinner that doesn’t include grains, potatoes or corn chips/tortillas.

food journal coverWe also started keeping a food journal, which has been illuminating — we think we eat differently than we actually do. The kids were surprised to see what a large percentage of their overall intake the rice, corn and potatoes were. Keeping the journal has enabled them to see for themselves what they truly consume, rather than taking my word for it. And now we have a record of what we have eaten and liked to use as a reference when meal planning in the future.

One of the vegetables we’ve been exploring lately is bok choy. A member of the brassica family, bok choy provides a similar nutrient profile to other varieties of cabbage: rich in folate, fiber and Vitamin C, it also contains significant amounts of aromatic organic compounds known as indoles, which are linked to lowering the risk of some forms of cancer.  Thanks to the deep green leaves at the top of the stalks, bok choy contains more beta-carotene and significantly more calcium than other members of the cabbage family. I’ve always had bok choy cooked in stir fry, but the stalks have a lovely juicy crunch and the leafy greens a mild mustard flavor — both welcome tastes and textures in a salad.

Bok Choy Salad

  • 1 head bok choy
  • 1/2-1 cup mung bean sprouts
  • 1/2 cup rice vinegar
  • 1/4 cup lemon juice
  • 1/3 cup olive oil
  • 2 Tbs sesame oil
  • 1 Tbs tamari
  • salt to taste
  • 2 Tbs sesame seeds
  1. Chop bok choy in thin slices. Put into a large salad bowl.
  2. Add mung bean sprouts. I start mine 2-3 days ahead, soaking then sprouting the mung beans in a jar near the sink. When the tail is about as long as the mung bean itself, the sprouts are ready to eat. If you aren’t ready to pop them in a salad yet, rinse them again, drain well and pop them in the fridge for up to a week until you are ready.
  3. I used to mix the dressing separately to emulsify, but these days I just pour the dressing ingredients on the veggies and toss. I add the black and unhulled sesame seeds to garnish.

I have made this dressing when I don’t have bok choy on hand — it’s great with broccoli, carrots, celery, kale, mustard greens, etc. Sometimes I add raisins to bring on the sweetness, sometimes I get the longer mung bean sprouts from the store since the kids prefer them to the smaller, home sprouted version. Either way, we’re really enjoying our salads around here!

FYI, if you’re wondering what criteria were used by Dr. Fuhrman to develop the ANDI (aggregate nutrient density index) scores, here’s a list of what was analyzed for each item:

Calcium, Carotenoids: Beta Carotene, Alpha Carotene, Lutein & Zeaxanthin, Lycopene, Fiber, Folate, Glucosinolates, Iron, Magnesium, Niacin, Selenium, Vitamin B1 (Thiamin) Vitamin B2 (Riboflavin), Vitamin B6, Vitamin B12, Vitamin C, Vitamin E, Zinc, plus ORAC score X 2 (Oxygen Radical Absorbance Capacity is a method of measuring the antioxidant or radical scavenging capacity of foods).

Viva la revolucion!

March 1st, 2010

The always awesome celebrity chef Jamie Oliver is starting a food revolution!

Watch his impassioned speech upon receiving the 2010 TED Prize, which is awarded annually to an exceptional individual who receives $100,000 and, much more important, “One Wish to Change the World.” Visit his TED Prize page to offer your support.

TED: Ideas worth spreading is a series of “riveting talks by remarkable people”. So much here to watch, so little time. I put it on while I make dinner, clean, or sit down to do something that doesn’t require my full attention, like knitting or crocheting. If you haven’t checked it out, give it a whirl.

You can help initiate change on the smallest of levels — in your own home.

  1. Ask yourself: Where does this food come from? How did it get here in our home — how far did it travel, what was it exposed to (chemical fertilizer, pesticides, irradiation, etc). How was it produced? Opt for the least amount of processing whenever possible.
  2. Look at the ingredients on the food packaging. In general try to avoid things that aren’t food — preservatives, artificial colors and flavors. (see our Resources section for the CSPI’s Safety of Food Additives to learn more)
  3. If you have children, teach your kids how to read labels as well. And bring them into the kitchen when you cook! Have a  special “kitchen date” once a week where they pick the meal they want to learn to make.
  4. Eat a variety of fruit and vegetables from local, sustainable farms and from the ocean. As Michael Pollan says “Eat food. Not too much. Mostly plants.”
  5. Support your local farmers. We’re so lucky in CT to have CTFarmFreshExpress.com which makes doing so a breeze. Don’t forget the hidden costs of shipping food from long distances when comparing the prices to the corporate grocery store. Produce begins to lose nutrients from the moment it is picked, and the fossil fuel required to get it from far away to your door has a cost beyond the price per gallon.
  6. Explore wild foods – many “weeds” are higher in nutrients than the plants you grow in your garden. Nettles, chickweed, lambsquarters and dandelion just to name some common in our area.
  7. Nutrition is one of the most important factors for health. Be mindful of what you put in and on your body! Add more and more fresh fruit and vegetables in, crowding out the less healthy choices.
  8. Grow some of your own food. During the food shortages of WWII, people across America rallied and started Victory Gardens. Let’s revive the Victory Garden!

As long as we’re on the topic of revolution, have you seen the Homegrown Revolution? Look at what this family has done with 1/5th an acre (1/10th is cultivated). No space is too small! Get your seeds today!