Sunday, August 25, 2024

Raw Versus Cooked Foods




Wise Traditions with Hilda.  

11 Principles of Traditional Diets.  

#4 In all the traditional cultures, some of the animal foods were eaten raw.  

  • Foods typically eaten raw and those typically cooked
  • The science that explains why traditional cultures ate raw foods
  • Benefits of vitamin B 6 (found in raw animal products)
  • Why it’s important to eat both raw and cooked foods
  • Raw food vegetables and grains can strain the body
  • Cooking is good, even if it destroys some enzymes
  • Fermented foods are considered “super” raw foods
  • how raw, cooked, and fermented foods can complement each other in your diet
  • Get started eating raw
  • Prepare raw food in such a way as to avoid parasites or sickness
  • Sally recommends avoiding raw egg whites: allergies.
  • Raw foods enjoyed in Japan and Iran, Italy, France, and the Middle East
  • Raw oysters are a “powerhouse” of nutrients
  • B vitamins, particularly A and B, help combat fatigue, anxiety, & brain fog
  • Sally’s favorite raw meat recipe for an instant energy boost, is tar-tar, raw egg yoke, and onion. 
  • We can better access the protein from meat that is cooked
  • People with the thickest skulls ate the most seafood
  • Selenium in seafood protects us against mercury toxicity
  • Kale is indigestible unless it’s cooked (smoothie alert!)
  • how often we should include raw animal foods in the diet
  • why we should avoid some popular raw foods, like pressed juices and grains

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