If
I were asked, "What is the first major cause of most
illness?", I would have to say incomplete
digestion. If your food does not break down
through the enzymes provided by fresh and raw food
in your body, then putrefaction (rotting and decay)
will take place. The result? Your body absorbs its
own toxic waste before it can be eliminated.
Have you ever tried doing two things at once? I know
I have, and still do, and if you are anything like
me these tasks are usually rushed and incomplete.
The same applies to your digestive process. If you
combine the wrong foods together in a single meal,
your body is required to process incompatible food
substances at the same time. This results in
"incomplete digestion", discomfort, and
putrefaction. Eating your meals as if they were a
smorgasbord can only lead to disaster.
Food breaks down in the body with the aid of enzymes
or bacteria. Enzyme breakdown is the natural course,
while bacterial breakdown is quite destructive.
Bacterial breakdown creates toxic gases
which manifest in the body as bloating, burping,
flatulence, candida, fatigue, headaches,
constipation, diarrhea, low back pain, and
so on. Your digestive tract will either be your
highway to health, or to pain and suffering. You
choose the road you want to take.
We have been educated via media advertising to
compromise our health for the heavenly tastes in the
mouth with no concern for the following thirty feet
of discomfort and/or pain that follows in our
intestinal tract. Let's take a look at the concept
of logical eating known as Food Combining.
THE REASON FOR PROPER FOOD COMBINING?
- to make digestion easier
and more efficient!
If you are
going to eat more than one food at a meal,
you can greatly improve digestion (and avoid
indigestion)
by eating foods that require
the same gastric juices for digestion and are
compatible.
Proper combining leads to good digestion and to
better health.
"THE SIMPLER THE MEAL THE BETTER YOU FEEL."
PROTEINS
Protein foods are those that contain a high
percentage of protein in their makeup. Protein
foods require an ACID DIGESTIVE ENVIRONMENT. Chief
among these are the following:
|
Nuts, Seeds |
All flesh foods* (except fat) |
|
Dry Beans |
Dry Peas (combined as starches) |
|
Eggs* |
Cheese* and other dairy products* |
|
Soy Beans |
Peanuts |
|
Margarine* |
Chicken/Fish/Red Meat - AVOID PORK |
|
Olives |
Avocados |
|
* These substances are not recommended, but
included for clarity. |
CARBOHYDRATES
The carbohydrates are the starches and sugars. These
we break up into three distinct classifications:
Starches, Sugars, and Sweet Fruits . . . all require
an ALKALINE DIGESTIVE ENVIRONMENT.
STARCHES:
-
All Cereals
-
Dry Beans (except soy beans) Dry Peas
Potatoes Pumpkin Yams Chestnuts Squash Corn
-
Coconut**
|
SWEET FRUITS:
-
Prunes
Persimmons
Dried Fruits
Bananas
Dates
Figs
-
Raisins
|
SUGARS:
-
Pure Honey*
-
Pure Maple Syrup*
|
MILDLY STARCHY:
-
Carrots
Artichokes
Rutabaga
Parsnips
-
Beets
|
* These foods are not recommended.
** Coconuts are a starch/protein combination
and also a saturated fat. |
GENERAL FOOD COMBINING GUIDELINES
| Avoid
eating carbohydrates with acid fruits |
This combination
may neutralize your enzymes causing your food
to putrefy. |
| Avoid
eating concentrated proteins with concentrated
carbohydrates |
Remember the
pizza? How it made you feel? Especially when
you were tired? |
| Do not
consume two concentrated proteins at the same
meal |
Two concentrated
proteins of different character and
composition (such as nuts and cheese) should
not be combined. Gastric acidity, type,
strength, and timing of secretions for various
proteins is not uniform. Since concentrated
protein is more difficult to digest than other
food elements, incompatible combinations of
two different concentrated proteins should be
avoided. |
| Do not
consume fats with proteins |
Our need for
concentrated fat is small and most protein
foods already contain a good deal of fat. Fat
has an inhibiting effect on digestive
secretions and lessens the amount and activity
of pepsin and hydrochloric acid necessary for
the digestion of protein. Fat may lower the
entire digestive tone more than 50%. |
| Use fats
sparingly |
Fats inhibit the
secretion of gastric juice. Except with
avocado, fats used with starch delay the
passage of the starch from the stomach into
the intestine. When fats such as avocados or
nuts are eaten with raw green vegetables,
their inhibiting effect on gastric secretion
is counteracted and digestion proceeds
normally.
AVOCADOS:
Though not a high protein food, avocados
contain more protein than milk. They are high
in fat and the small percentage of protein
they contain is of high biological value. They
are best used with a salad meal. Eating
avocados with salad enhances their
digestability. The next best combination for
avocado is to take it with subacid or acid
fruit. It is even better when lettuce leaves
and celery are eaten with the fruit and the
avocado. Since the avocado is low in protein,
it may also be used with potatoes or other
starch foods, provided a green salad is
included in the meal. Avocados should never be
used with nuts, which are also high in fat.
Fats other than nuts and avocados are not
recommended for regular use. |
| Do not
eat acid fruits with proteins |
Citrus, tomatoes,
pineapple, strawberries, and other acid fruits
should not be eaten with nuts, cheese, eggs or
meat. If you are ill, avoid acid fruits
especially in juice form - but lemons and
limes are always a great addition due to their
enzyme content. |
| Do not
combine sweet fruits with proteins, starches,
or acid fruits |
The sugars in
sweet fruit should be free to leave the
stomach within twenty minutes, and are apt to
ferment if digestion is delayed by mixing with
other foods. Sugar-starch combinations cause
additional problems. When sugar is taken the
mouth quickly fills with saliva, but no
ptyalin is present. Ptyalin is essential for
starch digestion. If starch is disguised by
sugar, honey, molasses, or sweet fruit,
digestion is impaired. Fermentation is
inevitable if sugars of any kind are delayed
in the stomach by the digestion of starch,
protein, or acid fruit. Sugar also has a
marked inhibiting effect on the flow of
gastric juices. |
| Eat only
one concentrated starch at a meal |
This rule is more
important as a means of avoiding overeating
starches than avoiding a bad combination.
Slightly starchy vegetables may be combined
with more starchy vegetables such as carrots
and potatoes, but not with combination foods
such as grains and legumes. |
| Acid
fruits may be used with subacid fruits |
This combination
is best made with less sweet subacid fruits.
Never use acid fruits with sweet fruits.
Tomatoes should not be combined with subacid
fruit nor with any other kind of fruit. They
are best combined with a salad meal at which
no starches are served. |
| Subacid
fruits may be used with sweet fruits |
It is best to use
the sweeter varieties of subacid fruits when
making this combination. For people with poor
digestion, bananas are best eaten alone. For
others, bananas combine fairly well with
dates, raisins, grapes, and other sweet fruit,
and with green leafy vegetables such as
lettuce and celery. Dried sweet fruits should
be used sparingly, because the sugar
concentration is naturally greater. It is best
to have these fruits at a fruit meal combined
with a salad of lettuce and celery. |
| Combine
fruit only with lettuce and celery |
These uncooked
vegetables with a fruit meal may even enhance
digestion of the fruit. |
| Salads
combine very well with proteins or starches |
Non starchy
vegetables may be combined with proteins or
starch. The green leafy vegetables combine
very well with most other foods, and should
form the major part of one's daily diet.
Through the week, use as wide a variety of
vegetables as possible. Lettuce and other
green and non-starchy vegetables leave the
stomach with little change. They pass through
the stomach rapidly unless delayed by oily
dressing or foods that require a more thorough
gastric digestion. |
| Do not
consume melons with any other foods |
Many people who
have complained that melons did not agree with
them have no trouble when eating only melons
at a meal. Melons are more than 90% liquid and
leave the stomach quickly if not delayed and
fermented by combining with other foods.
Avoid over ripe fruit, this may cause
digestive disturbances. |
| Sprouts |
The best way to eat grains is as sprouts. When
grains are sprouted, they come alive with
enzymes and oxygen. They become a pre-digested
food. Other seeds and legumes may be sprouted
as well. |
| Water\ |
You should drink
alkaline water throughout the day. Do not
allow your thirst to build up. Do not allow
dehydration to occur. Do not drink a large
amount at one time. It is better to have a
smaller but continual flow of water for proper
assimilation and detoxification. Don't dilute
the natural enzymes in your body by drinking
with meals. Water is a food, make it the best
quality you can. Avoid distilled and
chlorinated for health sake. |
References:
For more information we recommend the following
books: "Food Combining Made Easy" and "Superior
Nutrition" by Herbert Shelton D.P., N.D., D.N.T,
D.N.Sc.
Excerpts from the above have been taken from a
document published by The Canadian Natural Health
Association Founded on Natural Hygiene, Toronto
Chapter
|