Real Food for Health and Weight Loss

Real Food for Health and Weight Loss Real food is the newest thing in health and weight loss, and also the oldest! Eat things nature has produced, not the products of profit-hungry companies.

What elephant in the room? I just need a fly swatter! Confused about all the dietary recommendations out there? Meanwhile, time is passing, and we’re not getting any younger! Hint: look for the obvious, but check out the quality of the latest scientific and historical research behind it. So what’s the elephant? In the United States, and now all over the world, people have faithfully followed the advice of health and nutrition professionals, leading medical associations, and the American and other governments for the past 50 years, and yet are fatter and sicker than ever. What’s the main point of all those recommendations? That “eating fat makes you fat” and causes heart disease. The truth is that while butter, salt and egg yolks may or may not be “flies” for some people, the elephant is what industrial farms, the food and beverage industries and (supposedly to mop up the mess), “big pharma” and most of the medical establishment have been stuffing down our throats all this time. Other comparatively minor questions include whether to eat exclusively vegetables (vegetarian/vegan), whether they should be only raw and what we call fruit nowadays (raw vegan, fructivorous), or also (or even mostly – see Dr. Atkins and Paleo) meat, dairy products and eggs. Are healthy food and healthy eating the same thing as “health food”? What is optimum nutrition? Is the Mediterranean diet a model? How important is it to lose belly fat, and what is the best way to lose weight? Nutrition data and facts are needed, not just opinions. And how does all this relate to the prevention and cure of cancer, heart disease and type II diabetes (“adult” diabetes – now also rife among children and adolescents!)? Already in 2016 there have been three major “summits” related to real food, bringing together some of the top authorities in the field (including Mark Hyman, MD, director of the Cleveland Clinic Center for Functional Medicine, at the Cleveland Clinic – one of the largest and most highly reputed heart facilities in the world – and author of the extremely well documented best seller, Eat Fat, Get Thin. These experts’ contributions are discussed in the free regular newsletters sent to people who sign up at www.realfood4healthandweightloss.com. My name is Robert K. Walker, and a lifetime of professional research has prepared me to critically assess research studies. I live on a small farm near Brasilia, with my wife and 98-year old mother, whom I take care of. I’m doing my best to keep us all alive and well eating real food we produce or buy at the coop or farmers’ market, and enjoying the healthy atmosphere and the opportunity for long walks in the woods.

Health experts say ALL sausage and bacon products cause diseases like cancer… is that really true?Tuesday, May 29, 2018 ...
29/05/2018

Health experts say ALL sausage and bacon products cause diseases like cancer… is that really true?

Tuesday, May 29, 2018 by: Vicki Batts
Tags: badcancer, badfood, badhealth, badscience, cancer, cancer causes, food additives, good food, grocery, healthy eating, nitrosamines, Processed Meats, sodium nitrite, toxic ingredients (Natural News) The new cancer guidelines laid out by the World Cancer Research Fund (WCRF) have put bacon, sausage and other meaty treats on blast, declaring that there is no “safe” amount of these favorite foods.

But is it really the meat that’s to blame — or is it the chemicals and other additives Big Food throws in the mix that makes meat so toxic?
WCRF states that processed meats, in particular, raise cancer risk. Dr Giota Mitou, WRCF director of research, said in a recent statement, “The best advice is not to eat processed meat. The risk does increase with consumption.”

The WCRF also adds that when it comes to processed meats, “no level of intake can confidently be associated with a lack of risk of bowel cancer.” But you might argue that processed meats aren’t even really food — at least compared to what a real rack of bacon or fresh, homemade sausage are like anyways. The idea that the vacuum-sealed, sodium nitrite-laden, mass-produced composite meats you buy at the supermarket are in any way the same as grass-fed meats seasoned with care at home is really quite laughable.

While moderation is essential, the blanket banning of all things bacon is once again putting the onus on people instead of the real culprits — the food industry that’s been polluting the food supply with toxic additives for decades.

Toxic additives cause cancer — not food
Writing for The Guardian, Bee Wilson notes there have always been ways to make bacon, sausage and other foods we now call “processed meats” that do not result in a cancer-causing impersonation of food. Wilson astutely contends, “The fact that this is so little known is tribute to the power of the meat industry, which has for the past 40 years been engaged in a campaign of cover-ups and misdirection to rival the dirty tricks of Big Tobacco.”

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As Wilson notes further, many of us choose our meats based on their “pinkness,” but it is this very trait that is our undoing. The pinkness we see in cured meats is not an indicator for the presence of freshness, but rather for the presence of something more sinister: sodium nitrites and sodium nitrates. These chemicals are what’s toxic — not the meat itself. What we call “processed meat” is more carcinogenic than “unprocessed meat” because of these nitrates and nitrites (and the bevy of other unsavory ingredients that get added in).
Nitrates are naturally occurring in a variety of vegetables — but the way nitrates react in meats is far different. Certain components in red meat (haem iron, amines and amides) interact with nitrates to form N-nitroso compounds, which are carcinogenic — even in minute doses.

“Any time someone eats bacon, ham or other processed meat, their gut receives a dose of nitrosamines, which damage the cells in the lining of the bowel, and can lead to cancer,” explains Wilson.
Scientists have known about this connection between nitrates, nitrites and cancer for nearly 60 years — and yet, rather than hold the food industry responsible for selling toxin-laded food, consumers are simply told to just eat less of it.
As far back as the 1970s, the meat industry has been pushing back against the links between nitrosamines and cancer. As sources note, bacon (and other meats) can be made without the addition of nitrites and nitrates — but the curing process will take a fair bit longer.

And a longer curing process inevitably means less profits for the industry, though it would mean safer food for the rest of us.

While it’s fair to say that exclusively eating homemade nitrate-free bacon and sausage wouldn’t be the healthiest choice you could make, the fact remains that bacon doesn’t have to cause cancer. Like so many other foods (all the foods contaminated with Roundup come to mind), big industry has turned what could be part of a balanced diet into cancer-causing junk.

Indians especially, take note!Today (May 14, 2018), a lead editorial in the New York Times (https://nyti.ms/2GeeBks) com...
14/05/2018

Indians especially, take note!

Today (May 14, 2018), a lead editorial in the New York Times (https://nyti.ms/2GeeBks) commemorates the World Health Organization’s recommendation to stop using trans fats:

“The World Doesn’t Need Trans Fats.”

According to the editorial, “Most of the American food industry stopped using artificial trans fats, a leading cause of heart disease and death globally, well in advance of a federal ban that goes into effect next month...”

[Note: not completely, because in the U.S. it is not required to list a content of less than 0.5 gram of trans fat – a serious loophole. The 2015 regulation by the Food and Drug Administration, which goes into effect in June 2018, does declare that partially hydrogenated oils {PHO} are not Generally Recognized as Safe {GRAS}].

In some other places, notes the New York Times, the situation is even worse: “But these fats are still commonly used in the Middle East, India, Pakistan and elsewhere, which is why it is welcome news that the World Health Organization is calling on countries to phase them out by 2023.”

Trans fats (those with molecules on both sides of a double bond) have the advantage that they cannot easily be broken down by oxygen, which produces compounds that make the oil rancid.

However, “Trans fats are responsible for about 540,000 deaths around the world every year — deaths that could be avoided if countries banned the use of industrially produced partially hydrogenated oils [PHOs]...

It is somewhat misleading to state, as the article does, that PHOs “can be replaced with healthier options like vegetable oil,” considering that most vegetable oil is partially hydrogenated.

The article correctly states that “regular consumption of even a small amount of these oils increases the amount of what is commonly referred to as bad cholesterol, or LDL, in the blood while reducing so-called good cholesterol, or HDL. Experts say removing this additive from foods is one of the easiest and most straightforward ways to reduce the prevalence of heart disease and the deaths related to it.”

However, “many countries have not explained the health risks that these fats pose. In India, for example, researchers have found high concentrations of trans fats in street food and in packaged snacks, many of which have no warning labels.”

What to do? “Experts say that even the relatively modest change of replacing trans fats with saturated fats like butter can reduce the risk of heart disease.”

The article concludes that “Trans fats are a silent killer that many people are not aware of and can easily live without. Banning them should be an easy call for nations around the world, and the W.H.O. is right to push them to do so.”

Too bad it’s only a recommendation, and the suggested “deadline” isn’t until 2023.

The World Health Organization is correct that all nations should eliminate the use of these harmful oils in food.

Have you seen this? From the folks I trust most for reviews of nutrition research:
08/05/2018

Have you seen this? From the folks I trust most for reviews of nutrition research:

Here is everything you need to know about following an Indian diet for weight loss, including which foods to eat, which foods to avoid and a sample menu.

Why not tryA COMMUNITY-WIDE APPROACH TO WELL-BEING,Like “Blue Zones”?
07/05/2018

Why not try
A COMMUNITY-WIDE APPROACH TO WELL-BEING,
Like “Blue Zones”?



Take our 3-minute True Vitality Test to find out your life expectancy and to get customized recommendations on how to live longer.

05/05/2018

Here’s a program that can put you in the top fraction of one percent of dieters that actually lose weight and keep it off.

It’s called The Food Freedom Challenge.

It’s by Dr. Susan Peirce Thompson, Ph.D.

Here are the principles:

1. Add nothing to sweeten your food.
2. Use no flour.
3. Only eat at mealtime
4. Weigh and measure food. Structure produces freedom.
5. Reject the notion that you need to exercise to lose weight.
Don’t burn up your willpower going to the gym, just rest while you diet! (But exercise is good afterwards, for weight loss and control.)

It takes just 14 days, and is cheap.

See foodfreedom.brightlineeating.com.

Bottom line: eat real food!

Sellos de Comida Chatarra: “¡Pobre México, tan lejos de Dios y tan cerca de Estados Unidos!” (Presidente Porfirio Díaz)....
29/04/2018

Sellos de Comida Chatarra:

“¡Pobre México, tan lejos de Dios y tan cerca de Estados Unidos!” (Presidente Porfirio Díaz).

Y Chile, lejos de los EEUU - ¿bendito?

“Comida chatarra” (junk food) se refiere a alimentos procesados que tienen poco valor nutritivo, y pueden tener ingredientes dañosos. Típicamente son sabrosos, baratos y fácilmente disponibles. Pueden viciar y llevar a excesos, obesidad y diabetes.

El opuesto es la comida real, o “de verdad”. En Facebook, ver comida de verdad / verdade, grupo del real food for health and weight loss.

Uno de los reportajes del New York Times sobre nuestro “Planet Fat” afirma que “El gobierno chileno, en respuesta a un aumento en las tasas de sobrepeso y obesidad, ha emitido restricciones que los expertos dicen son de las más ambiciosas en el mundo, enfocadas principalmente en el etiquetado de alimentos poco saludables”.

Por otro lado, en relación a México (y Canadá), otro reportaje afirma que “Las complicadas negociaciones sobre el futuro del Tratado de Libre Comercio de América del Norte (TLCAN, o NAFTA) han alcanzado uno de los temas de salud más importantes: el combate a la obesidad” (https://nyti.ms/2HYMFpL).

Observa que “La obesidad se ha duplicado en por lo menos 73 países desde 1980”, y que México es uno de los peores casos.

“La propuesta estadounidense está en conflicto con las guías el Instituto Nacional de Salud Pública mexicano (INSP) y de la Organización Mundial de la Salud. Ambos han recomendado que México instaure regulaciones para combatir la diabetes, que cobra 80.000 vidas al año. Es una de las tasas más altas en todo el mundo”.

“Expertos en salud pública han enaltecido las reglas chilenas como un nuevo estándar... El sistema actual en México permite, pero no requiere, que se muestren recomendaciones de ingesta diaria de sales, azúcares y grasas. Pero son prácticamente ‘indescifrables para los consumidores’ y ‘completamente inútiles para muchas personas’”.

¿El TLCAN impedirá México de seguir el buen ejemplo chileno?

Una propuesta del gobierno estadounidense en la renegociación del pacto comercial restringiría las posibilidades de que México y Canadá impulsen medidas como advertencias a los consumidores respecto a los altos niveles de azúcar o grasas saturadas de un producto.

Do New York Times: https://www.nytimes.com/es/2017/09/16/comida-chatarra-obesidad-alimentacion-brasil/Como as multinacio...
27/04/2018

Do New York Times:

https://www.nytimes.com/es/2017/09/16/comida-chatarra-obesidad-alimentacion-brasil/

Como as multinacionais conseguiram viciar o Brasil na porcaria da alimentação industrializada: Agora que está diminuindo o ritmo das vendas nos países industrializados, as empresas alimentícias ocidentais ampliam agressivamente seus esforços nos países em vias de desenvolvimento, provocando a obesidade e os problemas de saúde.

"How Big Business got Brazil Hooked on Junk food: As growth slows in wealthy countries, Western food companies are aggressively expanding in developing nations, contributing to obesity and health problems."

“Cómo las grandes empresas engancharon a Brasil con la comida chatarra: Conforme el crecimiento de los países adinerados se desacelera, las empresas multinacionales se están expandiendo vigorosamente en países en vías de desarrollo gracias a su venta de comida chatarra y bebidas azucaradas”.

Vamos debater isso em nosso grupo trilingue, Comida de Verdad / Verdade, Grupo del Real Food for Health and Weight Loss.

Venham participar!

Conforme el crecimiento de los países adinerados se desacelera, las empresas multinacionales se están expandiendo vigorosamente en países en vías de desarrollo gracias a su venta de comida chatarra y bebidas azucaradas.

From the New York Times: https://www.nytimes.com/es/2017/09/16/comida-chatarra-obesidad-alimentacion-brasil/"How Big Bus...
27/04/2018

From the New York Times:

https://www.nytimes.com/es/2017/09/16/comida-chatarra-obesidad-alimentacion-brasil/

"How Big Business got Brazil Hooked on Junk food: As growth slows in wealthy countries, Western food companies are aggressively expanding in developing nations, contributing to obesity and health problems."

(Como as multinacionais conseguiram viciar o Brasil na porcaria da alimentação industrializada: Agora que está diminuindo o ritmo das vendas nos países industrializados, as empresas alimentícias ocidentais ampliam agressivamente seus esforços nos países em vias de desenvolvimento, provocando a obesidade e os problemas de saúde).

“Cómo las grandes empresas engancharon a Brasil con la comida chatarra: Conforme el crecimiento de los países adinerados se desacelera, las empresas multinacionales se están expandiendo vigorosamente en países en vías de desarrollo gracias a su venta de comida chatarra y bebidas azucaradas”.

Let’s discuss this in our trilingual group, Comida de Verdad / Verdade, Grupo del Real Food for Health and Weight Loss. Come and join!

Conforme el crecimiento de los países adinerados se desacelera, las empresas multinacionales se están expandiendo vigorosamente en países en vías de desarrollo gracias a su venta de comida chatarra y bebidas azucaradas.

¿No pasó de una tempestad en una taza de gaseosa?El New York Times (https://www.nytimes.com/es/2017/11/13/colombia-impue...
23/04/2018

¿No pasó de una tempestad en una taza de gaseosa?

El New York Times (https://www.nytimes.com/es/2017/11/13/colombia-impuesto-bebidas-azucaradas-obesidad/ -continues-8) denunció que Colombia es un “país con una tasa de obesidad que se había triplicado desde 1980 y ahora ronda el 19 por ciento entre los adultos. El ministerio estima que, al año, mueren cuatro mil personas de entre 30 y 70 años de enfermedades relacionadas con la obesidad como cardiopatías y diabetes”.

¡Mucho mas que murrieron en los años de la violencia o la guerrilla!

El periódico observa que “las organizaciones de salud pública, incluyendo a la OMS, citan a los impuestos a los refrescos como una de las herramientas políticas más eficaces para reducir el consumo de lo que los nutricionistas llaman el ‘dulce líquido’ que ha contribuido a la epidemia de obesidad y enfermedades relacionadas en todo el mundo”.

El titular del reportaje denuncia que la lucha en Colombia por gravar las bebidas azucaradas fué “silenciado”. Que tragedia, ¿no?

Consideremos: En 06/04/2018, el Reino Unido pasó a gravar gaseosas con mas de 5 g de azucar por 100ml en £0.18 por litro, y con mas de 8g, en £0.24 por litro.

Esa gravación diferenciada está “funcionando” - en parte: Coca Cola le cambiaron la receta a la gaseosa Fanta, que antes tenía 14.4 gramos de azúcar y ahora tiene 10.9.

Que bien si el contenido de una dosis de co***na también se redujera en 32%. ¡Poderíamos todos usar sin preocupaciones!

Absurdo, ¿no?

¿Que tal, entonces, adotar las gaseosas diet o light?

Lastimablemente, una investigación con 3,682 indivíduos de San Antonio, Texas, mostró que ¡el consumo de gaseosas dietéticas estava asociado con un rísico dos veces mayor de exceso de peso o obesidad!

Pensando bien, no es solamente el consumo de gaseosas que disparó en las últimas décadas. Disparó principalmente el consumo de alimentos procesados y comida chatarra.

Hoy la solución está clara: ¡la comida real, de verdad!

La ciencia muestra que el secreto está en nuestras hormonas - como se puede ver en el nuevo video en Comida de Verdad / Verdade, Grupo del Real Food for Health and Weight Loss (en Facebook).

El imponer impuestos a refrescos y otras bebidas con mucha azúcar como medida para combatir a la obesidad se ha vuelto una de las más feroces refriegas alrededor del mundo. Colombia no es la excepción: un grupo que abogaba por implementar el impuesto en ese país recibió amenazas y el gobierno l...

15/04/2018

app.mobileoptin.com/c7360/4semanasDieta de 4 Semanas / The 4 Week Diet. A Spanish video with English subtitles, about the four key hormones for weight (fat) loss, and how to get them working for you, not against you! Click app.mobileoptin.com/c7360/4semanas

02/04/2018

Here are 14 of the best documented ways to burn fat quickly and promote weight loss, from Authority Nutrition (Healthline).

1. Start Strength Training
2. Follow a High-Protein Diet
3. Squeeze in More Sleep
4. Add Vinegar to Your Diet
5. Eat More Healthy Fats
6. Drink Healthier Beverages
7. Fill up on Fiber
8. Cut Down on Refined Carbs
10. Drink Coffee
11. Try High-Intensity Interval Training (HIIT)
12. Add Probiotics to Your Diet (such as certain strains of probiotics in the genus Lactobacillus, to be found in home made yogurt).
13. Increase Your Iron Intake
14. Give Intermittent Fasting a Shot

The Bottom Line

Be sure to pair these simple tips with a nutritious, well-rounded diet and active lifestyle to simultaneously boost fat breakdown and improve your overall health.

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