Healthy breakfasts (for people who hate breakfast)


"Get into the habit of eating breakfast with these simple breakfasts designed to whet the appetite of even the most habitual breakfast skipper.
Not hungry first thing in the morning? Pushed for time? Trying to lose weight? These calorie-counted treats will tempt you to rediscover the pleasure of breakfast.
From an energy-boosting "apple pie" porridge and protein-packed scrambled eggs, to a nutrient-rich green smoothie and sugar-free granola bars, there's something for everyone.
Download our 12-week weight loss guide, which combines advice on healthier eating and physical activity, which combines advice on healthier eating and physical activity
"Creating the habit of eating in the morning is something you can build towards," says dietitian Alison Hornby. "Start off with a light bite such as a piece of fruit or a low-fat yoghurt.
"After a while, your morning appetite will naturally increase and you'll probably find you eat less throughout the day, including snacks."
Research suggests that people who eat breakfast are slimmer because they tend to eat less during the day, especially high-calorie snacks.
If you're short on time in the morning, think about ways of gaining time by keeping breakfast simple, either by waking up 10 minutes earlier or getting other chores out of the way ahead of time.

Energy-boosting breakfasts

'Apple pie' porridge

Serves: one adult 
Preparation time: 10 minutes 
Cooking time: 5 minutes 
Calories per portion: 345kcal (1,443kJ)

Ingredients: 
50g porridge oats 
200ml apple juice (with no added sugar) 
100ml semi-skimmed milk 
1 medium dessert apple, diced 
1 pinch of cinnamon

A warm and comforting porridge spiced up with the classic flavours of a homemade apple pie.
Throw all the ingredients into a saucepan. Heat and stir until boiling, then lower the heat and simmer gently for five minutes, stirring often. Spoon the porridge into a serving bowl and add a sprinkling of cinnamon.
Or you could try:
  • muesli, fresh fruit and low-fat yoghurt – fruit added to your muesli counts towards your 5 A Day. Low-fat yoghurt provides calcium and protein and is low in fat. Watch out for the sugar content in low-fat yoghurt. Go for muesli with no added sugar.
  • porridge with mashed banana and dried blueberries – put oats and a handful of dried blueberries in a bowl and add semi-skimmed milk. Heat in the microwave for 3-4 minutes, stirring every so often. When cooked, stir in the mashed banana. The mashed banana is a healthier substitute for sugar or honey. For best results, use a very ripe banana.
  • baked beans on wholemeal toast – not only are they naturally low in fat, baked beans are also packed with fibre and protein, making them a vegetarian source of protein. Look out for reduced salt and sugar ranges.
  • breakfast cereals can be high in sugar, with some containing up to 37% of the white stuff. Try switching to lower sugar cereals or those with no added sugar, such as plain whole wheat cereal biscuits, plain shredded whole grain pillows and plain porridge. Find out more aboutreducing your breakfast sugar intake.

Protein-packed breakfasts

Scrambled eggs (with optional wholemeal toast)

Serves: one adult 
Preparation time: 5 minutes 
Cooking time: 5 minutes 
Calories per portion: 
scrambled eggs: 247kcal (1,033kJ) 
2 slices of wholemeal toast: 190kcal (795kJ)

Ingredients: 
2 eggs 
4 tbsp semi-skimmed milk 
2 slices wholemeal toast  
2 tsp low-fat spread 
1 pinch of black pepper 
Optional sprinkling of chopped chives (calories nominal)

The secret to perfect scrambled eggs is to fold them gently in the pan to get curds, rather than a dried, quivering mess.
Lightly mix the eggs and milk in a bowl. Melt the low-fat spread in a pan and add the egg mixture. Cook over a medium-high heat, stirring slowly and gently until they're just set with big soft curds. Serve the eggs on the slices of toast, sprinkle over the chives and season with some pepper.
Tips:
  • To make green eggs, scramble your eggs with a handful (40g) of spinach (30kcal/125kJ).
Or you could try:
  • cold meat and cheese platter – for a lower calorie option, go for lean meats such as roast ham or turkey, light cheeses such as 30% less fat mature cheese or "light" medium-hard cheese. Accompany with fresh grapes and crackers.
  • low-fat Greek yoghurt topped with fresh fruit, such as strawberries and mixed nuts – packed with about 10g of protein per 100g, Greek yoghurt boasts almost twice the protein of regular yoghurt.
  • smoked salmon and low-fat cream cheese bagel – halve the bagel and toast it. Spread low-fat cream cheese on one side of the bagel and top it with salmon. Add a squeeze of lemon and a pinch of black pepper.

Lighter bites

Green smoothie

Serves: one adult 
Preparation time: 5 minutes 
Cooking time: none 
Calories per portion: 140kcal (586kJ)

Ingredients: 
40g tinned mango slices (discard liquid)
40g tinned peach slices (discard liquid)
40g frozen spinach 
1 medium banana 
200ml water (or as required)

Smoothies are a great introduction to breakfast if you don't normally have much of an appetite at the "crack of yawn". They're also a good portable option for your morning commute.
Compared with some hardcore green smoothie recipes, our green smoothie is a softer version that is quite sweet and fruity, while still giving you a healthy serving of greens. Blend all the ingredients together until smooth. Add more water to achieve the desired consistency.
Tips:
  • Instead of tinned fruit, you can also use frozen or fresh fruit.
  • 150ml of this smoothie provides two of your 5 A Day. No matter how much you drink, smoothies can only make up two portions of your 5 A Day.
Or you could try:
  • banana and oats smoothie – transform your speckled bananas into an energy-boosting liquid breakfast. Blend one banana with 2 tablespoons of oats and 100ml of semi-skimmed milk until smooth. Can also be made using a soya drink.
  • 'very berry' smoothie – take one banana, 140g of frozen summer berries or forest fruits, 40g of low-fat natural yoghurt and about 100ml of apple juice. Blend the banana and berries until smooth. With the blades whirring, pour in apple juice to achieve the consistency you like.
  • pimp your toast – tired of your usual toppings? Toast doesn't have to be boring. Brighten up your bread spread with these healthier combos: mashed avocado and hard boiled egg, marmite and grilled 30% less fat mature cheese, or banana slices and peanut butter.

Five-minute breakfasts


'Grab and go' breakfast bar

Makes: 6 bars 
Preparation time: 15 minutes 
Cooking time: 25 minutes 
Calories per portion (one bar): 300kcal (1,255kJ)

Ingredients: 
150g jumbo oats 
2 medium very ripe bananas  
60g melted butter 
60g cherries 
60g cranberries 
40g sunflower seeds  
40g pumpkin seeds

Sometimes mornings can be a bit of a rush. Make a batch of these granola bars, made with no added sugar, in advance for a healthy breakfast on the go.
Preheat the oven to 200°C (fan 180°C, gas mark 6). In a bowl, mix together the oats, cherries, cranberries and seeds. Pour in the melted butter and mix in thoroughly to make sure the oats are well coated. On a separate plate, mash the bananas into a pulp with a fork, add to the oat mixture and mix well. Spread the mixture into a 30cm x 20cm tin. Bake in the oven for 20-25 minutes. Once cooked, transfer to a wire rack to cool, then cut into six bars.
Tips:
  • Press the mixture into the baking tin well to help the binding process, but not too hard or it may affect the flavour.
  • If your first batch is more crumbly than you'd like, try increasing the amount of mashed banana to moisten the mixture before baking.
Or you could try:
  • banana bagel sandwich – mash a ripe banana and serve it between two halves of a toasted (preferably wholemeal) bagel. Mashing instead of slicing the banana gives the filling a creamier texture, meaning you won't need low-fat spread.
  • quick porridge – making porridge is easier than you think. Combine 50g of rolled or instant oats with 200ml (or more for runny porridge) of semi-skimmed milk in a bowl and microwave on full power for two minutes. Top with dried fruit or nuts.
  • one-minute omelette – combine one beaten egg, a few spinach leaves and a some chopped lean roast ham in a bowl. Microwave on full power for a minute or until the egg is set.

Weekend treats

English breakfast muffin

Serves: one adult 
Preparation time: 10 minutes 
Cooking time: 5 minutes 
Calories per portion: 309kcal (1,293kJ)

Ingredients: 
1 wholemeal English muffin, sliced in half
1 poached egg  
1 slice lean roast ham 
20g reduced-fat or "light" medium-hard cheese 
2 tsp low-fat spread 
20g fresh spinach leaves 
1 pinch of ground black pepper

Oozing poached egg on a layer of cheese and roast ham – what's not to love about this lower calorie version of the classic English breakfast muffin?
Preheat the grill. Toast the muffins on the cut sides only. Poach the egg in gently simmering water for 3-4 minutes until the yoke is set but still runny in the middle. Spread the toasted sides with the low-fat spread and lay on the spinach leaves, ham and cheese. Place the poached egg on one muffin half, season with black pepper and top with the other muffin half.
Tips:
  • If you prefer, you can scramble the egg with 4 tablespoons of semi-skimmed milk. Pour the mixture into a heated pan. Cook and stir until the eggs are just set.
Or you could try:
  • overnight oats – combine oats and apple juice and let it sit overnight in the fridge. In the morning, add low-fat yoghurt, honey to taste and fresh fruit such as berries.
  • baked eggs – put an egg (with yolk unbroken) and some crème fraîche in a ramekin. Put the ramekin in a baking dish and fill with hot tap water so it comes 3/4 of the way to the top of the ramekin. Bake for 15 minutes or until the egg yolk is set to your liking.
  • healthy full English breakfast – for a healthy version of the king of the morning meal, combining eggs, bacon, mushrooms, grilled tomatoes and baked beans, go to our Meal Mixer."

The power of a well-packed lunchbox

Caroline's lunch Photograph by Rob Biddulph
"For 26 years Caroline McGivern has saved a fortune by avoiding a pre-packaged sandwich and making her own lunch. Her towers of plastic tubs have inspired real lunchbox envy at the Observer.


There’s nothing like a well packed lunch box and I’ve been making mine for 26 years. It was always a great way of saving money and to be honest, there are only so many mayo filled sandwiches that I can eat in one week.
The choice can be overwhelming or even underwhelming depending on how you look at it, and the worst scenario is to pick up a take-out that you were looking forward to only to end up disappointed. You never experience that with a homemade lunch box because you know exactly what you’re getting.
In recent years we’ve been hit by the foodie bug resulting in an enormous amount of choice, but it comes at a price. I tallied up one colleague’s expenses for breakfast and lunch over the eight years that she’s been working at the Observer, and it came to a beautiful £23,000. And no, that's not a typo.
It’s great to experiment with flavours and customise the food to suit your palette and I love the purity of home-made, knowing exactly what’s gone into it. Sometimes I take it day by day and use up any bits and pieces that are hanging around and other times I make a big vat of rice, lentil or mixed bean salad and include an extra ingredient each day so that I don’t get bored. I go out of my way to make a jar of exceptional dressing, something like a classic French because olive oil and balsamic can get boring, and it makes all the difference to a tasty salad.
It’s a lot easier to make a packed lunch than you think. But yes, you do have to get out of bed. Even if I’m adding daily to to something I've prepared earlier, I need more than 5 minutes to dish it out and prepare the other courses. Courses? My Tupperware tower has reached seven storeys before now - I include a small bowl of pretzels, nuts, a couple of pieces of fruit or a slice of tea loaf. Fruit salad with yoghurt is an everyday must but I vary the fruit by season. A small container of mixed dry roasted nuts and seeds, (not the shop bought variety!), dates, grapes and what ever else takes my fancy.
The Scandinavians have got lunch boxes down to a fine art - every shape and size - but I’ll make do with whatever will hold my bounty. Each morning I lift the altar of Tupperware out out the cupboard and make a selection. And everyday around my desk at 1pm there is serious lunch box envy.
Caroline's tips to a successful lunch:
  • You have to be organised and plan ahead. And get up 10 to 15 minutes earlier.
  • Stock up on the ingredients you need.
  • Cook a bit more dinner the night before as leftovers always taste better the following day.
  • Make enough bean/pulse/rice/couscous salad to last you the week and top it up each day with strong flavours - choritzo, goat cheese, tuna or salmon.
  • Nibbles to graze on such as dry roasted seeds and nuts, are great with a sprinkling of sea salt and fresh rosemary.
  • Keep a jar of salad dressing ready mixed to save time.
  • Get inspired with different recipe books or pinch ideas from salads in shops."
Fonte e imagem: http://www.theguardian.com/theobserver/she-said/2014/mar/25/the-power-of-a-well-packed-lunchbox

7 Cancer-Fighting Culinary Spices and Herbs

By Christina T. Loguidice, Maurie Markman, MD, and Carolyn Lammersfeld from Cancer Nutrition and Recipes For Dummies

"Spices and herbs have long been used for medicinal purposes, such as fighting indigestion and other digestive problems. Although science is uncertain about the direct benefits of consuming certain spices and herbs with regard to protecting against and fighting cancer and its side effects, their indirect beneficial effects may be more easily recognized.
One such effect is their unique flavor profile, which ranges from strong to mild, with only small amounts needed to create a whole new taste sensation. When cancer-related loss of appetite and taste changes occur, which can lead to undesirable weight loss, adding herbs and spices to your cooking may help stimulate your taste buds and reinvigorate your appetite.

Ginger

Ginger has long been used in folk medicine to treat everything from colds to constipation. Ginger can be used fresh, in powdered form (ginger spice), or candied. Although the flavor between fresh and ground ginger is significantly different, they can be substituted for one another in many recipes. In general, you can replace 1/8 teaspoon of ground ginger with 1 tablespoon of fresh grated ginger, and vice versa.
Consuming ginger and ginger products, in addition to taking any anti-nausea medications as prescribed, may provide some comfort for a queasy stomach during cancer treatment.

Rosemary

Rosemary is a hearty, woody Mediterranean herb that has needlelike leaves and is a good source of antioxidants. Because of its origin, rosemary is commonly used in Mediterranean cooking and you’ll often see it included as a primary ingredient in Italian seasonings. You can use it to add flavor to soups, tomato-based sauces, bread, and high-protein foods like poultry, beef, and lamb.
Rosemary may help with detoxification; taste changes; indigestion, flatulence, and other digestive problems; and loss of appetite. Try drinking up to 3 cups of rosemary leaf tea daily for help with these problems.

Turmeric

Turmeric is an herb in the ginger family; it's the ingredient that makes many curries yellow and gives it its distinctive flavor. Curcumin appears to be the active compound in turmeric. This compound has demonstrated antioxidant and anti-inflammatory properties, potentially protecting against cancer development.
Turmeric extract supplements are currently being studied to see if they have a role in preventing and treating some cancers, including colon, prostate, breast, and skin cancers. Although results appear promising, they have largely been observed in laboratory and animal studies, so it’s unclear whether these results will ultimately translate to humans.

Chile peppers

Chile peppers contain capsaicin, a compound that can relieve pain. When capsaicin is applied topically to the skin, it causes the release of a chemical called substance P. Upon continued use, the amount of substance P eventually produced in that area decreases, reducing pain in the area.
But this doesn’t mean you should go rubbing chile peppers where you have pain. Chile peppers need to be handled very carefully, because they can cause burns if they come in contact with the skin.
Therefore, if you have pain and want to harness the power of chile peppers, ask your oncologist or physician about prescribing a capsaicin cream. It has shown pretty good results with regard to treating neuropathic pain (sharp, shocking pain that follows the path of a nerve) after surgery for cancer.
Another benefit of chile peppers is that they may help with indigestion. Seems counterintuitive, right? But some studies have shown that ingesting small amounts of cayenne may reduce indigestion.
 

Garlic

Garlic belongs to the Allium class of bulb-shaped plants, which also includes chives, leeks, onions, shallots, and scallions. Garlic has a high sulfur content and is also a good source of arginine, oligosaccharides, flavonoids, and selenium, all of which may be beneficial to health. Garlic’s active compound, called allicin, gives it its characteristic odor and is produced when garlic bulbs are chopped, crushed, or otherwise damaged.
Several studies suggest that increased garlic intake reduces the risk of cancers of the stomach, colon, esophagus, pancreas, and breast. It appears that garlic may protect against cancer through numerous mechanisms, including by inhibiting bacterial infections and the formation of cancer-causing substances, promoting DNA repair, and inducing cell death. Garlic supports detoxification and may also support the immune system and help reduce blood pressure.

Peppermint

Peppermint is a natural hybrid cross between water mint and spearmint. It has been used for thousands of years as a digestive aid to relieve gas, indigestion, cramps, and diarrhea. It may also help with symptoms of irritable bowel syndrome and food poisoning. Peppermint appears to calm the muscles of the stomach and improve the flow of bile, enabling food to pass through the stomach more quickly.
If your cancer or treatment is causing an upset stomach, try drinking a cup of peppermint tea. Many commercial varieties are on the market, or you can make your own by boiling dried peppermint leaves in water or adding fresh leaves to boiled water and letting them steep for a few minutes until the tea reaches the desired strength.
Peppermint can also soothe a sore throat. For this reason, it is also sometimes used to relieve the painful mouth sores that can occur from chemotherapy and radiation, or is a key ingredient in treatments for this condition.

Chamomile

Chamomile is thought to have medicinal benefits and has been used throughout history to treat a variety of conditions. Chamomile may help with sleep issues; if sleep is a problem for you, try drinking a strong chamomile tea shortly before bedtime.
Chamomile mouthwash has also been studied for preventing and treating mouth sores from chemotherapy and radiation therapy. Although the results are mixed, there is no harm in giving it a try, provided your oncologist is not opposed. If given the green light, simply make the tea, let it cool, and rinse and gargle as often as desired.
Chamomile tea may be another way to manage digestive problems, including stomach cramps. Chamomile appears to help relax muscle contractions, particularly the smooth muscles of the intestines."


Jane Macdougall: What a cancer expert eats for breakfast

February 8, 2014
"Dr. Gerry Krystal was silhouetted by the sweeping vista commanded by the B.C. Cancer Agency building. Behind him, the city was bristling with joggers, cyclists and, even in the dead of winter, kayakers paddling in False Creek. We are a city renowned for its healthy lifestyle.

Jennifer Sygo: Get to the roots of gut health by understanding good and bad bacteria and IBS triggers

How much do our everyday choices affect the health of our digestive system? Perhaps more than we ever imagined, actually. After a recent symposium on the effects of stress on our health (full disclosure: the symposium was sponsored by Jamieson, the supplements company), I had the opportunity to speak with Alexandra Anca, (Master’s of Health Science), who is a registered dietitian and author specializing in medical nutrition therapy for digestive diseases, celiac disease and food allergies. We spoke on the topic of gut health, and IBS specifically.
In addition to being a Distinguished Scientist at the Terry Fox Lab at the B.C. Cancer Agency, Krystal is a professor of Pathology and Laboratory Sciences at the University of British Columbia. He cycles to work. He smiles a lot. His diet is pristine. If Krystal were sushi, he’d be premium grade bluefin tuna.
The doctor and I were talking further about the role of nutrition in disease prevention. The bucket of coffee — two sugars — I’d perched on his desk had me feeling like I was blowing smoke rings in the maternity ward. Coffee — cherished elixir of life — is acidifying and that causes nasty inflammation. Sugar? Well, as we learned last week, sugar is the handmaiden to the undertaker.
We’d already discussed the findings from his studies with mice on high carb, low protein, Western-style diets. The high rates of cancer and the truncated lifespans that accompany a diet that induces spikes in blood glucose levels were clearly illustrated. To recap: cancer craves carbs and metastasis is encouraged by the pH changes that accompany high cellular glucose combustion. Food matters.
Emerging science is revealing that our bodies are far more complicated than we’d imagined. In the years ahead, you’ll be hearing a lot about the human microbiome, that community of microbes that co-evolves within your body, exerting significant influence on your immune system. Part of the co-evolution of these on-board bacteria is based on what you feed them. Just as there was the Human Genome Project, there is now the Human Microbiome Project, which is attempting to identify and characterize the micro-organisms abundant in both healthy and diseased humans. How abundant? Well, wash your hands all you want; numerically speaking, we are more microbes than we are human cells: a ratio of 10 to one. There is even talk of declaring the microbiome as a new organ of the human body and classifying people by their enterotypes, which is to say, according to which bugs live in their guts.
Microbiota can be friendly, benign or pathogenic
Microbiota can be friendly, benign or pathogenic. Some of these micro-organisms are now suspected of playing a role in chronic diseases, like multiple sclerosis, diabetes, rheumatoid arthritis, fibromyalgia, cancer, and even neuro-chemical imbalances. Many of the microbiota respond to our lifestyle choices. Food, of course, is amongst the most major of lifestyle variables. Bad food gives bad bugs ammo.
As Krystal rhapsodized about adenosine triphosphate, peptide chains and our fellow traveller, the microbiome, my eyes glazed over. I found myself wondering what he’d had for breakfast.
I mean, if you had insider information on the complex interactions between our cells, food, our microscopic bugs, and the consequences, what would you eat? If you’d seen with your own eyes the damage caused by poor choices, what choices would you make on a daily basis?
Well, apparently, it’s all about unsweetened protein. The basis of Krystal’s breakfast is plain gelatin powder and whey powder isolate. Yes: yum! He mixes these two ingredients together, using it as a base for a nut and cereal mix composed of oats — both rolled and bran — almonds; ground flax seed; pecans; plus pumpkin and sesame seeds. Over a bowl full of this, he sprinkles All Bran cereal, then instead of milk, adds whey isolate mixed with water. He recommends whey isolate because the fats and lactose — milk sugar — are removed.
He favours protein-rich almonds — slivered so as to be easier on tooth surfaces — for snacking where necessary
Sugar intake is carefully monitored.
This high protein meal usually holds him until midday. If it doesn’t, he favours protein-rich almonds — slivered so as to be easier on incisal and occlusal tooth surfaces. The doctor thinks of everything.
Lunch and dinner are likely either pink salmon or chicken, and salad with canola oil due to its preferable omega 3/6 ratio over other vegetable oils, quinoa or brown rice, and a wide variety of vegetables. He’ll also have either a pear, an apple or a grapefruit, as they sit lower on the glycemic index than other fruit.
One thing a cancer researcher will never have is soda pop or juice. In fact, Krystal says if you do nothing else, renounce juice and soda pop. Pop usually contains about 200 sugar calories. The body doesn’t properly recognize them as food calories dissolved in water and, therefore, doesn’t signal leptin secretions from fat cells to tell the brain the body has just been reloaded with 200 calories. You can surf a Coca-Cola sugar high all day and still actually be hungry, despite ingesting hundreds of calories. If you must have juice, have it with pulp, as pulp is insoluble fibre, which moves more quickly through the alimentary canal, somewhat limiting the spike in blood glucose and insulin. Best bet? Whole fruit, or plain tap water.
Come the weekend, however, Gerry eats whatever Gerry wants. Chocolate cake? Pizza? Bring it (moderately) on! But here’s a cancer cognoscenti’s trick for reducing ill effects from these indulgences. It’s based on his well-considered conjecture that, by lowering the pH of your food — making it more acidic — you can lower the glycemic index by as much as half. He does this by finding ways of adding four teaspoons of vinegar or lemon juice to his meal.
He cautions that this isn’t proven science yet, but he feels it’s a defensible deduction. He also warns not to brush your teeth for a half hour afterwards to avoid abrading softened tooth enamel. Like I said, the doctor thinks of everything!
Out the window I could still see people in breathless pursuit of the longevity and health. Exercise is essential, but if we don’t figure out how to properly feed ourselves, just watch as our socialized medical system collapses under the metabolic effects of the pitiful, standard Western diet."

Toast was toast, or how Wheat Belly and its author changed my diet

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It began, as many misadventures do, innocently enough.
I had baked a loaf of bread. A simple, honest bread made from the best of simple, honest ingredients. Nonetheless, several dinner guests declined the bread. My friends, it turned out, were boycotting gluten. Hadn’t I heard? Gluten was the new great Satan. It was as if I were offering cocktails of Red Dye No. 2 served with asbestos straws in leaded crystal tumblers.
I had misguidedly thought that homemade bread had placed me in the vanguard of healthy living. Apparently I was wrong. I’d inadvertently played into the hands of the industrial baking complex and their evil agenda.
This led me to an inquiry into the gluten gripe, that led to poking about the subject of commercial baking, that led to examining the GMO debacle that deposited me on a sofa opposite Dr. William Davis, author of the massively bestselling book, Wheat Belly, and now the Wheat Belly Cookbook.
The simple loaf of bread quickly became a can of worms. Food, it turns out, is really complicated these days.

What grains and gluten mean (or don’t mean) for weight loss

Are grains helpful or harmful to our health and our waistline? Last week we took a look at some of the nutritional pluses and minuses that come with eating whole grains, as well as some of the effects of whole versus refined grains on our health. This week, we’ll take a closer look at the role that grains, and especially gluten, play (or don’t play) in weight loss.
When it comes to weight loss, gluten-free diets are all the rage. Unfortunately, despite the claims that gluten, a protein found in wheat, barley, and rye foods promotes weight gain, there are no published clinical trials to date comparing a gluten-free versus gluten-containing diets for weight loss.
We do, however, have data on gluten-free diets for those with celiac disease, an auto-immune condition whereby the small intestine is damaged by exposure to gluten, and the news might surprise you: patients with celiac disease actually tend to have higher body mass indexes (BMIs, or a measure of height versus weight) than those without the disease.


Where to begin? It turns out that bread isn’t what it used to be because flour isn’t what it used to be because wheat isn’t what it used to be.
Historically, bread is made from four ingredients: Flour, water, salt and yeast. Bread is so natural, that by combining just two of these ingredients — flour and water — bread will sometimes make itself.
Most people buy their bread off a grocery store shelf. Mass produced store-bought bread is delightfully squishy, uniform and imperishable.
Bread needs time to rise. Time is money so industrial bakers add enzymes to hasten this process. People like certain appearances so various colourants are added to appease that aesthetic. The issue of “fresh” is challenged as bread now has to travel great distances to market, so preservatives are added. The humble loaf of bread thus morphs into something much more complex.
Denatured is the word that crops up time and time again when contemporary wheat flour is mentioned. It used to be that your bag of all-purpose flour was flecked with brown pips — the germ of the wheat. That’s milled out now as wheat germ goes rancid quickly. What do they do with the wheat germ? Millers sell it to vitamin manufacturers who sell it back to us as Vitamin E. Go figure.
There is, as they say, more grist for this mill but we need to move along.
The core issue here is with wheat. Yes, those amber waves of grain that comprise the backbone of contemporary agriculture are where things gets really complicated.
What we call wheat is a distant relative to what our grandparents called wheat
What we call wheat is a distant relative to what our grandparents called wheat. I’m going to hazard to say that there was no nefarious agenda to transform wheat into the Franken-grain many believe it’s become. Instead, it appears that a series of well-intentioned adjustments were made to address world hunger. If we could increase the yield per acre of wheat, fewer people might starve to death. A noble objective, no? The complexity at play between humans and our natural world, however, isn’t very tolerant of certain changes.
Old wheat was four feet high with seeds that clung to the stem. They were adaptable and hardy plants. Crop yield was dictated by climate and natural growing seasons. New wheat, however, is dwarf or semi-dwarf varieties of about two feet height, relying on a steady diet of nitrates, irrigation and pest control. This combination means a field can produce 10-fold the yield. Threshing is easier as the grain is exposed and engineered for more expedient harvest. I have a postcard in my office that reads: “Cheap. Fast. Good. Choose two.” Apparently, we chose cheap and fast. In many ways, it was a defensible choice.
Dr. William Davis sums it up this way: ‘Celiac disease is the canary in the coal mine’
This is the stuff you can see. On a genetic level, new wheat is different altogether. The evidence is mounting that humans are having an especially hard time with the new strains of wheat. The hybridized or genetically modified wheat protein — the infamous gluten — is something completely new. It’s these new wheat proteins that are associated with the four-fold upswing in celiac disease over the past half-century. It can be argued that all this tinkering with wheat is giving rise to the upswing in gluten intolerances as well as celiac disease. Dr. William Davis sums it up this way:
“Celiac disease is the canary in the coal mine” where wheat is concerned.
The bestseller Wheat Belly pivots upon these issues. Most are led to the book by vague complaints associated with ill effects associated with wheat consumption. Davis, a cardiologist, began his own inquiry began as he explored ways to manage his patients’ diabetic issues. Bread, it turns out, has a whopping glycemic index. A glycemic index is the comparative effect of carbohydrates on blood sugar. Table sugar has a GI of 59; a slice of whole grain bread has a GI of 72. The culprit here is the highly digestible carbohydrate, amylopectin A, which Davis says is more detrimental to the body than white sugar. New science suggests avoiding blood sugar surges is essential to good health. A high GI number will spike your blood sugar. Diabetes is providing the clues here. According to Davis, diabetes is “a proving ground for accelerated aging.” Mismanaged blood sugar issues take a hideous toll on diabetics and non-diabetics alike. What you want to avoid are advanced glycation end-products.
Glucose-protein combinations — useless debris — muck up the body in just about every way imaginable: Cataracts, dementia, wrinkles, coronary artery disease, cancer, arthritis
These are the glucose-protein combinations — useless debris — that muck up the body in just about every way imaginable. Cataracts, dementia, wrinkles, coronary artery disease, cancer, arthritis: glycemic index figures are tied to all these. Wheat is uniquely positioned because of its unique blood glucose-increasing effects to be a catalyst for this laundry list of nasty developments.
Oh my.
This, I figured, is how heavy smokers must have felt when doctor’s reversed their opinion on the health benefits of cigarettes. To my mind, there is no greater love story than that of soup and sandwich. I am helpless to resist the plain-spoken charms of the humble muffin.
If you go to the gym and wear sunscreen and find a way to hide kale in just about everything your family eats, all of the foregoing would set off alarm bells. And it did.

Battle over bread: Are wheat and other grains really anathema to healthy eating?

Are grains a nutritional enemy?
According to one increasingly popular line of thinking, grain-based foods trigger undesirable blood sugar fluctuations, tooth decay and inflammation in our body, which in turn may lead to heart disease, type 2 diabetes and even cancer. Of the grains we consume regularly, wheat and its derivatives have been targeted as being particularly harmful, largely due to the presence of gluten, a protein that is known to trigger serious health issues in those with celiac disease and in those who’ve more recently been identified as having non-celiac gluten sensitivity.
By contrast, a second line of thinking argues that it’s not grains, but rather the high intake of animal protein that is the issue with the Western diet, and that a regimen based on whole grains, fruits and vegetables, nuts, seeds, beans and pulses will pave the road to good health.


I decided to take up Davis’s challenge. I undertook a season of living wheatlessly. Toast was toast. I started in mid-September. And again in late September. Then in October, in earnest. Giving up wheat is tougher than you might imagine. One miscalculation, one mindless ingestion, one uninformed choice, and I was off the plan. Wheat is everywhere!
At this point, it was mostly just elimination. I substituted cucumber slices for crackers. I abandoned cereal for smoothies. Salads replaced sandwiches. It was, let me tell you, no fun. I became that person at the dinner party declining artisanal bread, pasta, crusted halibut steaks, dessert; the same person I had cursed while clearing the dishes. And then I got serious. I moved on to the Wheat Belly Cookbook. This entailed a shopping trip for specific provisions. My pantry filled up with subtypes of flour that had previously escaped my notice: chickpea flour, quinoa flour, coconut flour, and others. To address Davis’s warning about advanced glycation end-products, I carted home stevia and Splenda as sugar substitutes. I baked Wheat Belly muffins and thanked God I wasn’t a celiac. One dozen expensive coconut flour, stevia sweetened banana muffins languished on the counter;
nobody wanted them. We found most of the Wheat Belly Cookbook baked goods far too sweet for our taste.
I experimented with my own coconut flour crusted fried chicken and decided boiled chicken was a better option
I experimented with my own coconut flour crusted fried chicken and decided boiled chicken was a better option. Wheat Belly pizza, if you divorced yourself from all previously held concepts of pizza, was a decent vegetarian dish. The cookbook would have you believe that mashed cauliflower duplicates a biscuit crust of a chicken pot pie. It doesn’t. Which is not to say that mashed cauliflower topped with shredded cheddar isn’t tasty, it’s just not chicken pot pie. The Wheat Belly recipes that don’t hinge on wheat flour are completely acceptable recipes, but the baked goods were uniformly not to my liking; nut and seed flours make for leaden baked goods. One way to include allowable wheat-free baking was to get my hands on some non-GMO wheat. I sent away to Heritage Wheat Conservancy in Massachusetts for a bag of einkorn wheat, ground it in my Vitamix and baked a single loaf. Meh. Maybe I milled it badly? Maybe I need to adjust the recipe? I need to keep experimenting, I guess.
Ben Nelms for National Post/files
Ben Nelms for National Post/files 
Wheat Belly author William Davis says the highly digestible 
carbohydrate amylopectin A is more detrimental to
the body than white sugar.

It became a matter of having satisfying alternatives on hand. No doubt you’ll have noticed the gluten-free products flooding the market. Davis expects to see a spike in diabetes from these products as the tapioca, rice, corn and potato starches that replace wheat gluten have sky-high glycemic indexes that will ultimately take their health toll. He’d also advise you to be skeptical of the purported health benefits of whole grains. When we met in Vancouver to discuss his work, Davis spoke of a wide range of food staples that are now subjected to a broad spectrum of chemical- and radiation-based hybridization techniques that are “unleashed on an unwitting public.” His account of the “traditional breeding” methods responsible for Clearfield Wheat had me genuinely worried. But nothing about Davis suggested a strident alarmist. He seemed a soft-spoken, reasonable Midwesterner who had backed into some information he felt the public ought to be aware of, and he was proposing a way to navigate the mess we’re in.
Wheat Belly spoke of a wheat-induced mental fog that would lift as wheat cleared my system; unwanted pounds were supposed to fall off; various physical complaints were expected to subside. This was not my experience. I wasn’t looking to lose weight, and I didn’t. Mental fog wasn’t a chronic complaint of mine so I can’t say I was suddenly beset with clear-thinking punditry. My litany of physical complaints remains pretty much unchanged. Improvements, however, are dependent upon one’s personal degree of wheat intolerance and maybe I’m one of the lucky, tolerant ones. I will say that I found my appetite decreased as Davis said it likely would.
I haven’t kept up my wheat-less experiment; I miss bread too much
I haven’t kept up my wheat-less experiment; I miss bread too much. I’ve made several changes, however, but given the complex chemical issues involved with wheat, half measures offer little benefit. I learned a lot from the Wheat Belly books. The cookbook can’t be judged as a traditional cookbook — it fails miserably — but offers excellent suggestions for navigating what’s starting to look like a very serious public health issue. I’m keeping an eye on the earnest young men and women who are trying to bring pre-GMO wheat back into production and I urge you to support them, too.
And thus ends my Wheat Belly experiment. I’m going to celebrate with one of the happy adjuncts of my wheatless experience: sorghum beer! Delicious! Trust me.

Eating nuts tied to lower risk of dying from cancer, heart disease (and a slimmer waist), Harvard study finds

Ebrahim Noroozi/AP files

DALLAS — Help yourself to some nuts this holiday season: Regular nut eaters were less likely to die of cancer or heart disease — in fact, were less likely to die of any cause — during a 30-year Harvard study.

Introducing omega-7s, the new fatty acid on the block

Have you taken your omega-7s today?
If you follow nutrition information even half-heartedly, there’s a good chance you’ve heard of omega-3 fatty acids, the fats derived primarily from fish that are thought to be good for our hearts and brains, and that can reduce inflammation throughout the body. Less well-known, but still relevant are the omega-9 fatty acids, which can be derived from the likes of olive oil. Unlike omega-3s and omega-6s, however, omega-9 fatty acids can be manufactured in our body, and are therefore not actually essential to a healthy diet. So what are omega-7s, and why do they matter? We are only beginning to understand them, but what we know so far is both intriguing and promising.
Nuts have long been called heart-healthy, and the study is the largest ever done on whether eating them affects mortality.
Researchers tracked 119,000 men and women and found that those who ate nuts roughly every day were 20% less likely to die during the study period than those who never ate nuts. Eating nuts less often lowered the death risk too, in direct proportion to consumption.
The risk of dying of heart disease dropped 29% and the risk of dying of cancer fell 11% among those who had nuts seven or more times a week compared with people who never ate them.
The benefits were seen from peanuts as well as from pistachios, almonds, walnuts and other tree nuts. The researchers did not look at how the nuts were prepared — oiled or salted, raw or roasted.
A bonus: Nut eaters stayed slimmer.
“There’s a general perception that if you eat more nuts you’re going to get fat. Our results show the opposite,” said Dr. Ying Bao of Harvard-affiliated Brigham and Women’s Hospital in Boston.
She led the study, published in Thursday’s New England Journal of Medicine. The U.S. National Institutes of Health and the International Tree Nut Council Nutrition Research & Education Foundation sponsored the study, but the nut group had no role in designing it or reporting the results.
Researchers don’t know why nuts may boost health. It could be that their unsaturated fatty acids, minerals and other nutrients lower cholesterol and inflammation and reduce other problems, as earlier studies seemed to show.
‘Sometimes when you eat nuts you eat less of something else like potato chips’
Observational studies like this one can’t prove cause and effect, only suggest a connection. Research on diets is especially tough, because it can be difficult to single out the effects of any one food.
People who eat more nuts may eat them on salads, for example, and some of the benefit may come from the leafy greens, said Dr. Robert Eckel, a University of Colorado cardiologist and former president of the American Heart Association.
Dr. Ralph Sacco, a University of Miami neurologist who also is a former heart association president, agreed.
“Sometimes when you eat nuts you eat less of something else like potato chips,” so the benefit may come from avoiding an unhealthy food, Sacco said.
The Harvard group has long been known for solid science on diets. Its findings build on a major study earlier this year — a rigorous experiment that found a Mediterranean-style diet supplemented with nuts cuts the chance of heart-related problems, especially strokes, in older people at high risk of them.
Many previous studies tie nut consumption to lower risks of heart disease, diabetes, colon cancer and other maladies.
In 2003, the U.S. Food and Drug Administration said a fistful of nuts a day as part of a low-fat diet may reduce the risk of heart disease. The heart association recommends four servings of unsalted, unoiled nuts a week and warns against eating too many, since they are dense in calories.
The new research combines two studies that started in the 1980s on 76,464 female nurses and 42,498 male health professionals. They filled out surveys on food and lifestyle habits every two to four years, including how often they ate a serving (1 ounce) of nuts.
Study participants who often ate nuts were healthier — they weighed less, exercised more and were less likely to smoke, among other things. After taking these and other things into account, researchers still saw a strong benefit from nuts.
We did so many analyses, very sophisticated ones, to eliminate other possible explanations
Compared with people who never ate nuts, those who had them less than once a week reduced their risk of death 7%; once a week, 11%; two to four times a week, 13%; and seven or more times a week, 20%.
“I’m very confident” the observations reflect a true benefit, Bao said. “We did so many analyses, very sophisticated ones,” to eliminate other possible explanations.
For example, they did separate analyses on smokers and non-smokers, heavy and light exercisers, and people with and without diabetes, and saw a consistent benefit from nuts.
‘We’re seeing benefits of nut consumption on cardiovascular disease as well as body weight and diabetes’
At a heart association conference in Dallas this week, Penny Kris-Etheron, a Pennsylvania State University nutrition scientist, reviewed previous studies on this topic.
“We’re seeing benefits of nut consumption on cardiovascular disease as well as body weight and diabetes,” said Kris-Etherton, who has consulted for nut makers and also served on many scientific panels on dietary guidelines.
“We don’t know exactly what it is” about nuts that boosts health or which ones are best, she said. “I tell people to eat mixed nuts.”