Online Encyclopedia Search Tool

Your Online Encyclopedia

 

Online Encylopedia and Dictionary Research Site

Online Encyclopedia Free Search Online Encyclopedia Search    Online Encyclopedia Browse    welcome to our free dictionary for your research of every kind

Online Encyclopedia



Raw food diet

(Redirected from Living foods diet)

The raw food diet (or living foods diet) is a dietary regimen consisting of uncooked and unprocessed organic foods. Most of the foods consumed on this diet are fruits, vegetables, nuts, and seeds. Some followers of the diet also consume raw meat and dairy products, although most follow a vegan regimen, as animal products normally need to be cooked in order to be safe for consumption. (Dairy products are pasteurized, eggs are cooked to avoid salmonella, and many meats need to be cooked in order to avoid parasites or diseases.) The exact definition of raw food varies, but the general consensus is that a food is considered raw if it has not been heated to more than 115 degrees Fahrenheit (46 degrees Celsius).

A raw foodist is a person who consumes only raw food. There is some debate over what quantity of raw food intake actually identifies one as a raw foodist. Most can agree that if someone eats 75% or more of their food as raw, they are a raw foodist.

Contents

History

Proponents of the raw food diet believe it dates to prehistoric eras, before humans discovered fire. The earliest modern examples of the raw food diet date to the 1800s. It gained more prominence throughout the 1900s, as proponents such as Ann Wigmore and Herbert Shelton advocated the belief that a diet of raw fruits and vegetables could cure various diseases. The raw food diet continued to exist as a radical off-shoot of the vegetarian diet until 1975, when computer programmer-turned-nutritionist Viktoras Kulvinskas published Survival Into the 21st Century. It is considered to be the first modern publication that deals with the raw food diet.

The diet has enjoyed recent mainstream success. Several restaurants catering to the diet have opened up in California and New York City, and numerous all-raw cookbooks have been published. It has also received celebrity endorsements from entertainers like Demi Moore and Woody Harrelson, who have been known to follow the diet.

Food preparation

Most foods in the raw food diet are simple in preparation, and can be eaten immediately. However, other foods can require hours, or even days, of preparation to make the food palatable. Rice, for example, must be soaked in water for more than a day to soften it. Depending on the recipe, some food (such as cakes) may also need to be dehydrated. This process, which emulates cooked food, can take days.

Preparation of raw food recipes usually call for a blender, food processor, juicer, and dehydrator.

Care is required in planning a raw foods diet, especially for children. There have been some recent cases in the United States of children on inadequate raw foods diets developing serious health problems and even dying of malnutrition. Unfortunately, little scientific research has been done on how to plan a nutritionally adequate raw foods diet, especially for children.

The Tree of Life Foundation in Arizona, which advocates a vegan raw food diet, is currently conducting a survey of babies and children on a diet of 75% raw foods or more. Raw foodists claim that with sufficient calories, essential fatty acids, variety and density, people of all ages can be successful at eating raw foods.

Beliefs and research

The main idea behind the raw food diet is that cooked food is supposedly toxic, because cooking destroys the enzymes contained in food. This belief is based on the research of Dr. Edward Howell, an Illinois physician who researched how enzymes played a role in a person's diet. The results of his research concluded that eating cooked food leads to health problems. In 1985, Howell conducted further research, and cited a study where laboratory rats that were fed cooked foods had an increased pancreatitis (though rats are particularly susceptible to disease of all kinds). Raw food diet proponents believe this shows that the pancreas is forced to work harder on a diet of cooked foods.

Additional research was conducted by Dr. Francis Pottenger in 1932, who conducted an experiment to determine the effect of cooked foods in cats. For 10 years, Pottenger fed half of the cats a diet of raw foods, the other half a diet of cooked foods. At the conclusion of his study, he reported that the cats who were fed raw foods appeared to be in better health. Research was also conducted by Dr Weston A Price as embodied by the Weston A. Price Foundation and the The Price-Pottenger Nutrition Foundation.

Diet proponents believe a raw food diet consisting of enzyme-rich raw foods will reverse health problems and strengthen the immune system. The benefits of the diet are said to include clear skin, more energy, and the lack of common ailments such as the flu.

While current scientific research does not support the idea that enzymes in foods somehow survive the stomach (pepsin in the stomach quickly breaks down nearly all proteins, including enzymes), it does support that idea that foods cooked at high heat do contain toxins not found in raw or boiled foods, such as acrylamide, benzopyrene, and methylcholanthrene. Whether there toxins that are either introduced or increased in high-heat cooking is not in question. The question is whether the toxins introduced by high-heat cooking methods are cause for alarm.

Raw food movement

David Wolfe in the USA and Shazzie in the UK are two of the leading voices of the current raw food movement. They have helped thousands of people become more aware of raw foodism through their lectures, books and web sites. A leading voice of the RAF diet is Aajonus Vonderplanitz , who claims to have cured himself and many of his patients from cancer.

Latter day proponents include Ann Wigmore (founder of the Hippocrates Health Institute), Arnold Ehret (author and authority on fasting), TC Fry (natural hygienist), and Norman Walker (a man big into juices). It's reported that Walker lived to 118 and died in an accident.

Raw foodists argue that since no other animals cook their foods, and (according to some) they don't get the extensive degenerative diseases that humans do, it's clearly logical to not cook or process food. However, even if it were true that animals don't get degenerative diseases, this could be because animals in the wild are usually killed by predators before they are old enough to develop degenerative diseases.

Criticism

The raw food diet has been criticized by the mainstream medical community as being too harsh and restrictive. Some, but not all, of those who follow the diet ingest under 1,000 calories a day, which is below the caloric intake recommended by the U.S. Department of Agriculture. Additionally, the raw food diet can lack the recommended amounts of several important vitamins and nutrients, including Vitamin B-12, calcium, and protein. When followed for an extended period of time, the diet can lead to severe nutritional deficiency. This is mostly a concern if the diet is purely vegan and the total food intake is inadequate.

In addition, the raw food diet was blamed for the May 2003 death of a five-month-old baby in Florida. The baby died of malnutrition after being fed a diet of raw foods by its parents, who also followed the diet. However, it should be noted that there were many other factors in this situation, including the fact that the baby was born with a heart defect, lacked a thymus gland, and was not breast fed by the mother.

Much of the research advocating the raw food diet has also been criticized for being false. Critics point out that food enzymes cannot be fully utilized by the human body, since they are destroyed during the digestive process. Also, some foods must be cooked to utilize a greater amount of nutrients, including tomatoes, which contain lycopene, and carrots, which contain beta carotene. Critics also note that the research supporting the raw food diet is out-of-date.

In addition, cooking on fire is one of the oldest distinctions of humanity. It has been used by all known human cultures for such a long time that the human body can hardly be said to be ill-adjusted to cooked food. In all likelyhood humans have evolved to be very well adjusted to cooked food.

See also

  • anopsology diet
  • insticto diet
  • Pangaian diet
  • primal diet
  • raw animal foods diet
  • raw Paleolithic diet
  • raw vegetation and animal foods diet
  • Sally Fallon Diet
  • traditional diet


External links


Last updated: 10-24-2004 05:10:45