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Reply | Forward Message #607 of 8298 |

I'm not on my home computer, so am not able to do my usual 'flairy' posts- nor
to retrieve the URL of the info I am posting here- 'two steppers' tend to lose
the first part! --"Cheyenne Cin"


Food Combining




The principle behind food combining is that different food classes require
different enzymes, different rates of digestion, and different digestive pHs for
proper digestion. If the foods of the different food classes are combined
incorrectly, the specific requirements for their proper digestion tend to cancel
each other. For example, flesh foods require an acid media for digestion,
whereas milk is highly alkaline, so it can neutralize the acid required for
digesting the flesh foods. Fruit digestion results in the release of an alkaline
secretion, which neutralizes the acid secretions, needed for protein digestion.
Because of this, it is not a good idea to eat fruits and proteins at the same
meals. Some foods are digested faster than others. If fast-digesting foods like
fruits are held up in the digestive system for a longer time than necessary
through being combined with foods that digest more slowly, fermentation takes
place. For this reason, it is good for digestion to eat fruit and starches,
which are digested slowly at different meals. Fruits and vegetables require
different digestive enzymes, which tend to neutralize each other, so these too
are best taken at separate meals. The simplest rule of food combining is to eat
foods or combinations of foods that in our direct experience are easiest to
digest. It is usually easy to digest foods from the same food group or from two
compatible food groups. Vegetables should be eaten with protein meals and carbo
meals. However, too much of even a single food is taxing on the digestive
system. Easy to digest combinations include predigested proteins with vegetables
or sweet or sub acid fruits.


Sprouted grains and vegetables, vegetables and low starches, and high and low
starches are all generally easy to digest. Relatively easy to digest food
combinations to explore are protein and leafy greens, and avacado combined with
leafy greens, acid, or sub acid fruits. Combinations that are likely to produce
purification and fermentation are protein and starches, oil and protein, protein
and sweet or sub acid fruit, oil and sweet or sub acid fruit, fruit and
vegetables, and melons with any other type of food. For some people these
combinations may not be a problem if eaten in small amounts. Papaya and lemons
go well with any other foods. The timing of eating foods is also important. If
you are having a salad and a protein, by eating the salad first, the
hydrochloric acid needed for digesting the protein is blocked. There is better
digestion if we eat the salad after the protein or while eating the protein.
Also, it is best to not drink cold liquids with your meals, as this causes the
blood vessels in the stomach to constrict, resulting in indigestion. The way we
tell if our combinations or timing are good for us is through results. If we get
gas, constipation, diarrhea, and feel bloated, nauseated, and enervated after
eating, we have a clue that what we are eating is not digesting easily and that
we need to pay more attention to food combining or food excesses. It is hard to
enjoy the flow of the cosmic energies and the peace of meditation when
fermentative indigestion is raging inside our stomach and bowels. The key to an
easy time with food combining awareness is to experiment in developing a routine
of eating in which we eat what is easy to digest. In other words, trust your own
experience and use your intelligence to make life easy.


Mixing starches and proteins leads to disease states. Simple rules follow:


Sugars and starches cannot be eaten with proteins and acid fruits at the same
meal.


The large part of the diet should consist of vegetables, salads and fruit.
Proteins, fats and starches should be eaten in small amounts


All refined and processed foods should be eliminated, and only whole grains
should be used.


An interval of at least four hours should elapse between meals.


The first rule of good digestion and assimilation of protein is: Do not mix
major portions of protein and starch at the same meal.


If protein is eaten with too many carbohydrates (bread, crackers, potato, rice,
pasta) or with fruit (sugar), digestion is severely compromised. Consequently,
the body becomes a breeding ground for bacteria in the gastro-intestinal tract.
Moreover, such a combination contributes to higher levels of cholesterol. Eating
Proteins with carbohydrates is a major cause of cholesterol problems. Perhaps
one reason why cow's milk causes so many allergies is that it is a protein and
carbohydrate (sugar) combination.


Separating these two types of food is one of the first steps to being free of
allergies. The digestion of protein and carbohydrates are physiologically
separate and conflicting functions. The protein is digested in an acid medium
which means that the enzymes function in an acid environment. Combining protein
and carbohydrates (digested in an alkaline medium) impairs the proper digestion
of one or the other food. Historical and current observations show that the body
opts for the digestion of the carbohydrates if both foods are present, perhaps
after the principle of a "path of least resistance." Or the body opts for the
digestion of the carbohydrates in mixed meals to meet immediate energy and
survival needs. In this way, the body will function effectively and will be able
to obtain proteins at another time.


When carbohydrates (starches) are eaten, the digestive system sends forth
alkaline or neutral gastric juices, such as amylase which is most efficient at
an alkaline pH of 7.1 - 7.2. However, when proteins are eaten, the digestive
system sends out acid gastric juices at a pH of 3, for example. If these food
groups are eaten simultaneously, the gastric juices (if both are provided)
cancel each other out and poor digestion results. Anything that inhibits
digestion is an enemy of health. But the body is concerned with conservation of
energy and does not send for conflicting digestive enzymes. Protein digestive
enzymes are much more costly to the body to manufacture. If both protein and
carbohydrate are eaten simultaneously, the body may only respond to the easier
carbohydrate digestive process and let the protein pass through. This results in
poor absorption of amino acids and poisoning of the body due to
putrefying/decaying protein (i.e. rotting meat in the intestines). When a food
is chewed, the ptylin or amylase enzymes in the saliva begin processing the
carbohydrates.


If carbohydrates are prevalent, a signal is sent via the hypothalamus to the
pancreas to produce more alkaline amylase enzymes to further process
carbohydrate food. If protein is prevalent, the signal is sent to the pancreas
to produce more protease enzymes to process the protein. The pancreas
mass-produces one or the other enzyme at a time. if both proteins and
carbohydrates are eaten simultaneously. The pancreas opts for pancreatic amylase
(the easier enzyme to produce) for the digestion of carbohydrates and neglects
the protein digestion. Usually, some carbohydrates will be eaten in any protein
meal, because the vegetables so strongly advocated as absolutely essential in a
protein meal contain carbohydrates. We can also add a tortilla or a few croutons
to the meal and not exceed the body's ability to digest the protein. If the
carbohydrates are less than 18% by volume, the body can still recognize the
focus of the meal as protein and digest it accordingly. Some protein foods and
some vegetables become starches when cooked for an extended period of time or at
high temperatures, particularly above 200° F. Those foods include beans, corn
and peas. Although dry or sprouted beans and peas are proteins, they become
starches when cooked. Always have vegetables with a protein meal. In fact, if
you wish to live long and vitally, you will have organic vegetables with every
meal.


Fruit
Fruit, more than any other food, brings to the body the "essence of the seasons"
or the particular minerals and enzymes for the body to adapt to the change of
seasons. Fruit is considered by many health experts to be the ideal food because
of its ease of digestion, high water content, rich supply of living enzymes and
organic minerals, and general cleansing effect. Fruit can add a vital dimension
to a person's diet. As a rule, fruit for breakfast as a way of life is
detrimental in the long run. The reason is as follows: During the latter part of
a person's sleep cycle the body is in an alkaline state. During this alkaline pH
state, the best sleep, best dreaming and best body repairs take place. Then the
body heads for its acid pH swing, which brings the activity and productivity of
morning. The acid side is required for enthusiasm and energy, just as the day
follows the night. But if fruit is eaten first thing in the morning, it pushes
the body back toward an alkaline pH when the natural body cycle is heading for a
more acid swing. This inhibits the digestive activity of future meals. It
tranquilizes the brain leading to low productivity and the use of stimulants
(coffee, tea, tobacco, refined carbohydrates) to bring energy to the body. And
by inhibiting the acid pH cycle, fruit pushes the alkaline cycle further into
alkalosis, thus contributing to greater stress on the blood sugar. Because of
its high sugar content, fruit generally appears in the carbohydrate family, but
it actually falls into a class of its own dietarily. A general dietary rule
regarding fruit is to eat it by itself.


Categories
The food combining plans divide fruit into subcategories of sweet, acid,
sub-acid, and melon, a tedious division for general use. But for those people
who want to work with the subcategories, they are listed here. Separating
fruits, however, is not a major factor in health. The following are suggestions
on how to use fruit: Eat fruits alone or as a meal, not with a meal of other
foods (proteins, carbohydrates, oils). If eating several fruits, it is best to
mix fruits within their own subcategory, but this is not a major concern. The
main concern is that most people do better eating melon by itself. Use fresh
fruits when your urinary pH registers excessively acid (5.5 or below) since most
fruits are alkalizing (some excessively so) and balances the acid pH. Even
though fruit may taste acid due to the citric acids, to the body's metabolism
they are mostly alkalizers. Cranberry is an exception and is an acidifier. This
is why people often drink cranberry juice to overcome bladder infections. The
acids discourage bacteria proliferation, which occurs best in alkaline urine.
Fresh fruit meals are great for supper, particularly in summer, or in the
fruit's natural season. Using fruit "in the season thereof" works with the
natural, seasonal cycle of nutrition.


Acid
Blueberry, cherimoya, grapefruit, lemon, lime, loquat, orange, pineapple,
pomegranate, sour plum, sour cherries, strawberry, tangerine, tangelo


Sub-acid
Apple, apricot, blackberry, cherry, grape, kumquat, mango, nectarine, papaya,
peach, pear, plum, prune, kiwi


Sweet
Bananna, dates, dried fruit, raisins, persimmon


Melon
Bananna melon, cantaloupe, casaba, crenshaw, honeydew, musk, Persian, watermelon




Sun Oct 3, 2004 12:08 am

cheyennecin
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Message #607 of 8298 |
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I'm not on my home computer, so am not able to do my usual 'flairy' posts- nor to retrieve the URL of the info I am posting here- 'two steppers' tend to lose...
Lee and Cindy
cheyennecin
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Oct 2, 2004
5:10 pm

peppermint leaf or peppermint oil, ginger root and papaya fruit are some of the best foods to assist in digestion- chew food thoroughly, too. --'Cheyenne Cin'...
CINDY
cheyennecin
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Oct 3, 2004
5:49 pm

Actually- this is for pets or animals, but looks appropriate for humans, too- I didn't put the URL: A nutritional formula for proper digestion and bowel...
CINDY
cheyennecin
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Oct 4, 2004
2:12 am

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