- Nature Always Right, Cooks Never
- By Tonya Zavasta
Excerpted from the book "Your
Right to Be Beautiful: How to Halt the Train of Aging and Meet
the Most Beautiful You" by Tonya Zavasta. The book is available
at: http://www.beautifulonraw.com
It seems pathetic we aspire to
create a new product as "natural" as possible but destroy
the very natural ingredients in the process. New packaged products
appear on the market every day. Each time you try one of these
new products, you are foregoing the old-fashioned fruits, vegetables,
nuts and seeds. As a result, you will not get enough nutrients
from your meal.
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Researchers are excited whenever
they discover new benefits in produce of particular colors. The
bright vibrant colors of fresh produce, such as the deep green
of leafy vegetables, the lilac of blueberries, or the red of
strawberries are a sign that this produce is packed with antioxidants,
called polyphenols.
The brighter the color of the
fruit or vegetable, the more nutrient combatants it has to prevent
degenerative diseases. Now picture what happens to the original
rainbow of colors after cooking. The colors fade like old laundry.
How can it not be more obvious to us: by tampering with natural
products, we are losing something essential for our health and
beauty. |
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There is a scarcity of nourishment,
but not of meals. In this country, we face unprecedented temptations.
America is preoccupied with eating like no other country in the
world. By giving in to the skillful seductions of the advertisers
to try "new food," our bodies are starving while we
constantly chew and swallow. Ironically, the variety and affordability
of foodstuffs leads us to become overfed and at the same time
undernourished. The best way to resist these temptations is to
develop an attitude towards cooked food in general and adopt
the raw food lifestyle.
Mark Twain wrote: "To eat
is human, to digest divine." We need enzymes to digest food.
Our living body also needs enzymes for every other operation
and chemical reaction to take place. Enzymes constitute the difference
between life and death. Only living organisms can produce enzymes,
but their capacity to make enzymes is limited and exhaustible.
Our body hosts two types of enzymes:
metabolic enzymes, which run our bodies, and digestive enzymes,
which participate in digesting our food. Only raw foods follow
nature's design and come with their own food enzymes to aid digestion.
They are responsible for the release of nutrients out of the
foods we eat.
Dr. Edward Howell writes in his
remarkable book Enzyme Nutrition that heat over 118° F kills
enzymes. If food is cooked, it does not bring enzymes, and the
body is forced to use up its own digestive enzymes.
Only living organisms, be it
a human being, an animal, or a plant, possess enzymes. No one
would ever argue that a dead person is the same as a living one
just because the chemical composition of the body is the same.
And yet we never think twice about allegations that cooked food
is as good as raw or better. The plant world possesses integrity
and the "life factor." From an enzymatic approach,
a picked up fruit or a cut off green is still alive, even though
its own source of nourishment has been cut off. Seeds and nuts
will reproduce if put into the soil, fruits will continue to
ripen even after they have been picked from the tree, a vegetable--be
it a carrot, onion, or potato--when put into the ground will
sprout.
Enzymes are combinations of proteins,
vitamins, and minerals in an active molecular form. Chemists
are able to synthesize some of these nutrients, but they have
not been able to "breath life" into them. The "life
factor" has never been and probably never will be re-created.
Enzymes are very particular.
They cannot tolerate heat, microwave irradiation, or pasteurization.
Cooking always removes or spoils the goodness of food. Cooked
food points down to the grave, because it is dead. Only humans
apply heat to what they eat. Presently, humans apply heat to
most of their food prior to consumption. Humans on average as
a race, die at or below half their potential life span of chronic
illness that is largely diet and lifestyle related. "You
won't be surprised that diseases are innumerable--count the cooks."
-- Seneca (4 BC-AD 65), Epistles
Cooking is the most profound
abuse of food. Cookbooks are full of recipes on how to smother
the life out of a meal. The more creative they are in doing so,
the more honor we attribute to the cooks. The concept of great
cuisine is based on the opinion that plain fruits or vegetables
are not appealing to the eye or satisfying to our taste.
Natural food is seen as an enemy.
The less the dish reminds one of the original ingredients, the
prouder the cooks become. Raw produce is treated not like the
divine food but as something to be mutilated and manipulated.
It is even called "from scratch," as if it is a second-class
product needing an upgrade. And yet, man is not capable of producing
even a simple meal without using the basic ingredients he did
not make. The talent of the cook should be applied elsewhere,
because the basic fruits and vegetables he begins with are nutritionally
superior to the most sophisticated creations he ends up with.
Traditional cooking alters the
taste buds into being incapable of appreciating the flavor and
taste of raw fruits and vegetables. We become more concerned
with pleasing our perverted palate and satisfying our coarse
sensation than with providing nourishment to our body.
By cooking our food, we are killing
nutrients that keep us alive and healthy. After we grill or roast,
bake or boil, sauté or stew, we produce some decadent
matter with no nutritional value and only by using salt or sugar
abundantly can we get it to pass our taste buds. All cooks rely
on salt, sugar, and spices to have their creations appreciated.
Cooking without spices smells awful. Not surprisingly, spices
were originally used to disguise decaying and decomposing food.
How delicious is a fresh apple!
But we put it in an oven and it becomes a squashy, mushy, shriveled
mass requiring a load of sugar so one can eat it. In cooking,
the original colors of fruits and vegetables are dulled and the
initial variety of flavors is altered. Make no mistake, the nutritional
value is gone as well.
It is ironic, but not incidental,
that fresh produce is used for decoration of this bland and dead
food. We decorate this lifeless, tasteless, and shapeless mess
with fresh green leaves and bright colored veggies to deceive
our eyes. We add spices to disguise the smell. We load it with
sugar and salt to cheat our taste buds.
Nowadays, health-conscious people
know processed food is devoid of nutrients and try their best
to avoid it. But somehow, home cooking escapes the stigma of
"processed." Cooking is processing! And the difference
between home cooking and manufactured foodstuffs is the same
difference as between "dead" and "very dead."
We hear everywhere the less food is processed, the better. Why
process it at all?
Most Americans do not eat the
5-9 recommended servings of fruit and vegetables each and every
day. And if you haven't heard yet.in January 2005 these government
recommended allotments have been increased to 9-13 serving. Between
the lines government is telling us in order to be healthy we
need to go on the raw food diet. Since if you eat 13 servings
of fresh fruit and vegetables per day you will not need or want
anything else. |