Have you started hearing about the Raw Food Diet? It’s gaining popularity and buzz, not just as a diet to lose weight, but a diet for a long and healthy life. We eat so much in the way of processed food that we don’t even stop to think about what we’re putting into our bodies, and how far we’ve come nutritionally from our ancestral, agrarian roots.
A raw food diet
means consuming food in its natural, unprocessed form. There are several
common-sense rationales for why this is a good idea. Processing and cooking
food can take so much of the basic nutritional value away. Think of some of the
conventional wisdom you’ve heard about for years, such as: If you cook pasta
just to the al dente (or medium)
stage, it will have more calories, yes, but it will have more the nutritional
value in it than if you cooked it to a well-done stage. Or you probably
remember hearing not to peel carrots or potatoes too deeply, because most of
the nutrients and values are just under the surface.
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Doesn’t it just
make sense that this is how our bodies were meant to eat? It’s a way of eating
that’s in harmony with the planet and in harmony with our own metabolisms. Our
bodies were meant to work, and need to work to be efficient. That means
exercise, certainly, but it also means eating natural, raw foods that require
more energy to digest them.
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