Your whole food, plant-based life.

Why Eat Raw

Why Eat Raw

Food sustains us,… Yet what we eat may affect our risk for several of the leading causes of death for Americans, notably, coronary heart disease, stroke, arteriosclerosis, diabetes, and some types of cancer. These disorders together now account for more than two-thirds of all deaths in the United States.” -former Surgeon General Dr. C. Everett Koop

It is estimated that 60% of disease is caused by the SAD diet (Standard American Diet). If food is the culprit, I believe that food can be the answer. As we become mindful about what we eat, we can start to make choices that promote our health over illness. Food is consumed for nutrition but it is also consumed for pleasure. What happens if we learn how to satisfy our pleasure receptors with healthy food? Our lives improve.

veggies

What do our bodies need to eat raw?

What are the building blocks that our bodies need to function? Enzymes, vitamins, minerals, phytonutrients, protein, essential fats and fiber. These are all provided by our food and are involved in growth, repair and maintenance of the body. Let’s take a quick look at each of these and what they do for you.

Enzymes

Enzymes convert the food we eat into chemical structures that can pass though the membranes of the cells lining the digestive tract and into the blood stream. Their job doesn’t end there. Enzymes are the living proteins that direct the life force into our biochemical and metabolic processes. They help transform and store energy, make active hormones, dissolve fiber and prevent clotting. They have anti-inflammatory effects. Enzymes help balance and restore the immune system, and heal many diseases. Enzymes even help repair our DNA and our RNA.

When we cook food, we destroy many of the enzymes that help us naturally digest it.

Vitamins

Without vitamins our cells would not function properly and thus our organs would suffer and eventually we would no longer be able to survive. Vitamins help regulate metabolism, help convert fat and carbohydrates into energy, and assist in forming bone and tissue. Guess what happens when you cook food? You got it, a large percentage of the vitamins are destroyed.

Viktoras Kulvinskas in his book, Survival into the 21st Century, estimates that the overall nutrient destruction is as high as 80%. Tests have shown that we will lose 50% of the B vitamins while B1 and B12 can lose up to 96%. 97% of folic acid is destroyed as well as 70-80 % of vitamin C.

Minerals

Seventeen of the thirty elements known to be essential to life are metals. Mineral deficiencies cause disease in humans. Minerals also have a synergistic relationship with vitamins. They help each other help us. When foods are cooked, many of the minerals are destroyed, or altered, rendering them useless and also unable to assist our friends the vitamins.

Phytonutrients

Phytonutrients are what give fruits and vegetables their color. Phytos protect the body and fight disease. They also fight cancer and help your heart. Phytonutrient are at leading edge of research on nutrition. They provide medicine for cell health. And once again, Phytonutrients in freshly harvested plant foods can be destroyed or removed by cooking.

Why Eat Raw?

It just starts to make sense. If cooking destroys the vital and essential nutrients that we need to stay healthy, eating our food raw does the opposite. It provides us with what we need for our health and well being. I know from experience that when I am eating at least 80% raw, I have more energy, more mental focus, and all of the pesky things that irritate me on a daily basis, like acid reflux and my daily aches and pains, dissipate. I also know that I am feeding my body what it needs to thrive, not just survive.






Share Via
Share on Pinterest
Share with your friends










Submit

125 Comments

  1. emma wrote on February 28, 2013

    THIS IS THE BEST SITE EVER!!!!!!!!!!!!!! EVER!

    Reply
  2. Stacey wrote on January 29, 2013

    Hi there! Love this info! I am putting together a raw challenge, can I use this article?

    Reply
    • Susan wrote on January 29, 2013

      Please feel free to link to the article.

      Reply
  3. Debra Benfer wrote on October 8, 2012

    I’m very excited I came across your website. These recipes look amazing and so much simpler than cooking. I have a 1 yr old so anything that is easier is better. I noticed a lot of recipes call for a dehydrator. Do you have one you recommend? We are on a tight budget as I stay home with our daughter so a good, inexpensive one would be great and I don’t know anything about them. Thanks again for this terrific website! It’s been added to my favorites list.

    Reply
  4. Jenny wrote on September 15, 2012

    I agree with Gail ^^ it seems extremely time consuming. It would probably be best to stick with green smoothies, salads and whole fruit.. Nuts seeds etc..instead of the complex recipes. Those can be saved for special ocassions maybe.

    Reply
    • Susan wrote on September 16, 2012

      It doesn’t have to be time-consuming. It does require some advanced planning. I actually spend much less time in the kitchen than I did when I cooked everything. No cooking time, even clean-up is much easier. If you are doing one of the recipes that require advanced planning, plan for it. Cheers!

      Reply
  5. Jessica wrote on July 9, 2012

    hI,

    Question: Have you ever read any books by Dr. Bruker or Dr. Vogel? The things you mention about raw food sound exactly like what they would teach.

    Great site. Thanks

    Reply
  6. Gail wrote on May 14, 2012

    Thank you for this web site, your recipes look amazing. I’ve been trying a raw diet for 2 months now, although not 100% because I’m struggling with scheduling food prep. Do raw foodists not work? For example, I want to try the Falafel recipe. I’ve sprouted the chickpeas, but now i have to figure out when to dehydrate. If I put them in on a timer for 6 hours before I go to bed do I have to get up at 4 am to take them out and put them in the fridge? If I put them in before I go to work can they sit in the dehydrator for another 3 hours after the timer has shut it off? I spend weekends with my daughter watching my grandkids so weekend food prep marathons are not happening then. thanks for any suggestions you may have.

    Reply
  7. Nisha wrote on March 23, 2012

    @Kimberly – I am not a raw foodist, though probably eat raw for about 50% of my diet, with the rest being mostly home-cooked, plant-based, organic (no pesticides or genetically modified organisms!), as locally grown as possible, whole foods (like lentils, quinoa, veggies, whole grains, etc.) minimally cooked. I used to have (and still do a little bit) some MAJOR dietary problems. Was hospitalized for gut problems, had horrible skin, and other health issues. Changing my diet has helped me TREMENDOUSLY. I say, do your research into foods and food health. The website World’s Healthiest Foods gave me a lot of info about nutrients in foods and how they relate to different body parts. Good luck on your food journey. 🙂

    @Susan, I’m really glad you wrote this break-down. I am printing it to share with the middle schoolers I teach. I am also going to give them some raw celery with raw almond butter that I made from your recipe. Thanks! 🙂

    Reply
  8. Kimberly Bonham wrote on March 7, 2012

    Susan,
    Thank you so much for this. I stumbled across your website from Pinterest.
    This is great information. I have been sick now for over a year with stomach problems and have been to numerous doctors. I had an endoscopy done and they found chronic inflamation in my stomach and my esophagus. He prescried me Zegrid and OTC acid reducer. I am not one for taking pills, I try to go the natural way.
    I decided to take my health into my own hands and watched some documentaries about the raw diet.
    I love food! Who doesn’t right!??!
    It’s amazing how most of us dont even think about what we are eating, but when you really think about it, it all just makes sense.

    I am trying to incorporate more fruits, veggies, oats, nuts, etc into my diet to see if I can heal my gut and reduce all my inflamation. When switching to a raw food diet, do you have an idea how long it will take to see any results?

    Reply
    • Susan wrote on March 7, 2012

      Everyone is different. I would suggest finding a good integrative medicine doctor who can work with you on this.

      Reply
  9. Tania wrote on February 26, 2012

    Thankyou for clarifying! That makes a lot of sense. I have the 9 tray excalibur dehydrator and I’ve always been leary of going over 106 degrees. What temperature so you suggest for dehydrating fruit?

    Thanks again!

    Tania

    Reply

Post a Comment

This site uses Akismet to reduce spam. Learn how your comment data is processed.