Thursday, June 9, 2011

Go Green, The Raw Food Way!

I’ve received a handful of emails lately concerned with the amount of sweetness on a low fat, high fruit raw vegan diet. As expected, several of you aren’t quite used to the sweetness of so much fruit
To solve the problem, many beginner raw foodists substitute savory greens and/or nuts, seeds and avocado for sweet fruit.
Big Mistake.
There are 2 problems with this approach:
1. Greens and vegetables have few calories
2. Nuts, seeds, and avocado are high-fat foods
In terms of greens, these foods are simply too low in calories. Even a large salad of 8 ounces of romaine, one large cucumber, a whole bell pepper, and two medium tomatoes is under 200 calories! The only way to increase the calories in this meal would be to add in fruit or fat.
Which brings me to the second problem: fatty nuts, seeds, and avocado. Contrary to what people (raw and cooked foodists alike) like to believe, nuts are NOT a high protein food. Take an ounce of walnuts (14 halves), for instance. With only 9% of calories from protein and whopping 83% from fat, it becomes clear that nuts and seeds are really a high FAT food.
Avocados are in the same boat, with 4% protein and 77% fat.
SIDE NOTE: I’m referring to the Hass avocado here. There are avocados with lower percentages of fat, such as some Florida varieties, but these are not as readily available.
While there’s nothing inherently wrong with this fact, it becomes a problem when these foods are substituted for fruit and eaten in mass quantities. While it is perfectibly acceptable to eat a pound (or two) of fruit in one sitting, this is a recipe for disaster in terms of fat.

Too much fat has been linked to obesity, heart disease, atherosclerosis, and even depression.
To learn more about the problems associated with eating a high fat raw food diet, check out this article.
This is why I side with the numerous doctors and health institutes – including Dr. Joel Fuhrman, Dr. Douglas Graham, Dr. Dean Ornish, and The Pritikin Longevity Center – in recommending a low fat diet for optimal health. This works out to about 1-2 ounces of nuts or ½ – 1/3 of an avocado per day (depending upon your caloric needs).
This means that if you decide to substitute sweet fruit for fat you will need to keep the quantities low. Say you add 1 tbsp of nuts to the salad example above. This still only gives you about 350 calories!
And that’s assuming that you can actually consume such a mountainous salad in one sitting. I’m pretty proud of my eating prowess when it comes to fruit. But 8 ounces of lettuce and a slew of veggies?
No way, Jose!
With the low amount of calories in this dish, you’ll be back in the kitchen looking for more fuel (probably in the form of simple carbohydrates) within the hour.
What to Do?
The easy way out is just to eat more sweet fruit. But you’re sick of sweet!
It seems we’re back at square one, right?
Not quite.
There is a tasty solution.
Go Green!
Green smoothies, that is!
A green smoothie – renowned amongst gourmet and low fat raw foodists alike – is a fruit smoothie with greens added to it. Sure, you’ve probably heard of them. But have you actually tried one?
Here’s a tasty raw recipe:
• 3 bananas
• 1 pint of strawberries
• Handful or two of romaine lettuce
Blend everything together. Add water to achieve the texture you desire. I like my smoothies thin so I tend to add a few cups to the mix.
Why It Works
The green smoothie concept works for (you guessed it) 2 reasons:
1. It’s still fruit-based, providing quality fuel and satiation to your body.
2. The greens help to cut the sweetness.
Even though green (and contrary to the lovely picture in this post, often times pretty gross looking), green smoothies are very much a fruity meal.
As you can see from the recipe above, the smoothie is still mostly fruit. The green comes from only a handful or two of romaine.
It is this small amount of “green-ness” that really adds a nice crisp, clean taste to the meal. The drink will still be sweet, but not sickly so.
And you can easily add more fruit or make more than one smoothie to meet your caloric needs.
For instance, whenever I make smoothies (green or not), I have to make two separate batches because I like them so thin.
*sigh* If only they made 64 ounce blenders…
Long-Term Sweet Sickness?
Almost every beginner raw foodist has a problem eating so much sweet fruit at first.
Even I, the Fruit Queen Goddess that I am, had some troubles. Bananas were especially sickening to me. They were just so thick and sweet. Yuck!
And to think, now I eat multiple bananas EVERYDAY!
If you stick with a high fruit, low fat diet, you will not experience this aversion to sweetness forever. And the transformation generally does not take that long. We’re talkin’ just a few weeks or so, on average.
And eventually, you’ll stop thinking of fruit as sweet altogether. At some point, it just becomes delicious, mouth-watering, satiating food.

By : Swayze

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