Extract from Food Is Medicine
Pierre Jean Cousin ( 2001 Duncan Baird Publishing)
One of the most important ways in which we can influence our health
is by monitoring what we eat.
Eating unhealthily – too much animal fat, salt, sugar and
artificial additives – can cause irreparable damage to our bodies,
especially to the cardiovascular system and the kidneys. Eating
healthily can increase vitality, immunity and life expectancy. We
can also influence the health of future generations by teaching our
children healthy eating habits.
Food can be used not only to prevent illness but also to treat it.
Throughout the ages, and in all cultures, food has played an
important role in healing the sick. Yet in contemporary Western
societies the emphasis in healthcare has moved from traditional
methods, such as diet, to modern medical techniques and a reliance
on pharmaceuticals. As a result, self-help dietary remedies are
rarely considered. As an experienced practitioner of a range of
complementary therapies, I firmly believe in bringing the healing
power of foods back to where it belongs – in our homes.
The principles of healthy eating
The mainstay of a healthy diet is plenty of unrefined complex
carbohydrates and fibre. Foods such as beans, lentils, potatoes,
wholemeal pasta, wholegrain bread and cereals should make up –
quite literally – the bulk of our diet. Protein-rich foods, such as
meat or fish, can be added to this carbohydrate base in small
amounts. Contrary to popular belief, we don’t need very much
protein for good health and it is not necessary to eat meat, fish
and dairy products as a daily source of protein. The other
essential ingredients in a heathy diet are vitamins, minerals and
phytochemicals (biologically-active substances in plants) which are
found in abundance in fruit and vegetables, and essential fatty
acids from nuts, seeds, oily fish and oils such as olive oil.
This basic template for healthy eating closely matches the
traditional diet that is – or was – eaten in many cultures.
Civilizations throughout history have relied upon a combination of
cereals and pulses for their staple diet. In Asia this combination
is rice and soya; in America it was corn and beans; in Europe it
was wheat, rye, barley, oats or buckwheat and beans, lentils or
other pulses; and in Africa it is wheat, millet or sorghum and
beans or chickpeas. Traditionally, a variety of fruit and
vegetables (often eaten raw) have complemented this diet, together
with small amounts of meat and fish when available.
Fermented foods, such as cheese, yoghurt, curd, fish sauce, pickled
vegetables, cider, beer and wine – all of which have a beneficial
effect on the gut – also feature in the traditional diet. This diet
is ideally suited to the human body – it is rich in friendly
bacteria, fibre and nutrients and helps to maintain a healthy
biological balance in the gut.
It is very easy to adopt the healthy eating habits that are
characteristic of such diets by following these simple common-sense
measures:
Buy more fresh fruit and vegetables (they are rich in antioxidants
– substances that help to prevent degenerative disease such as
cancer and heart disease), cereals, pulses and fish.
Cut down on meat, dairy products and convenience food.
Replace meat with oily fish.
Tailor food intake to match your actual calorie needs (for most
people this means eating less).
Buy a cook book that emphasizes the Mediterranean diet.
Reduce your intake of sugar, coffee, tea, fizzy drinks and
alcohol.
Eat at regular intervals (up to five times a day if this suits your
needs).
Eat food that is in-season and, ideally, locally produced.
Make sure that your diet is as varied as possible.
Use fresh ingredients as often as possible; avoid canned or dried
food which contains additives.
Be flexible in your eating – aim for balance and enjoyment. Avoid
rigid dietary programmes.
How the modern diet fails
These principles of healthy eating contrast starkly with the diet
that is increasingly common in the West. Whereas the diet of our
pre-industrial ancestors was rich in fresh produce, the modern
diet, which has evolved over the last 50–60 years, is characterized
by food that contains preservatives, colorants, taste enhancers,
sugar, caffeine and even traces of fertilizers, pesticides,
antibiotics, hormones and metals. This leads to a proliferation of
unhealthy bacteria in the gut, an accumulation of toxins in the
body, poor digestion and an increased likelihood of allergies,
cardiovascular disease and cancer of the colon.
In the West, food is abundant (the amount produced far exceeds our
needs) and relatively cheap owing to modern production and
processing techniques. These techniques have created what has been
termed “food industrialization” – the production of large amounts
of food quickly and cheaply at the expense of quality and
nutritional content. Paradoxically, although we now have more
choice in what we can eat, less time is devoted to the selection,
preparation and consumption of food. Our diets often consist of a
limited number of ingredients that we continue eating out of
routine and convenience.
Much of the food that we buy is impoverished. For example, when
fresh produce is out of season in one country, it is often imported
from another, and much of its vitamin content is lost during
transit or storage in refrigerators or on supermarket
shelves.
Goodness is also depleted in the process of sterilization: in order
to make fresh food “safe” and prolong shelf-life by eliminating
micro-organisms, it is often sterilized or irradiated – yet this
procedure renders it, quite literally, lifeless.
Although all unhealthy disease-causing bacteria are killed in the
process, all the “good” bacteria and ferments are also
destroyed.
These are important for digestion and in maintaining a healthy and
balanced environment in the gut. Most milk, for example, is
pasteurized, with the result that it does not contain natural
ferments and is difficult for many people to break down and digest.
Milk products that have not been pasteurized, such as live yoghurt
(which is full of lactobacilli bacteria), are well tolerated by
most people.
Another consequence of sterilization is that, if food is left out
of the refrigerator for too long or is reheated too many times,
micro-organisms, such as listeria, will re-establish themselves.
Without competition from good bacteria, the unhealthy ones can
proliferate unchecked and cause disease.
Industrialized food production is partly responsible for a range of
contemporary health problems such as male hormone imbalance (linked
to the misuse of hormones in animals), the advent of
antibiotic-resistant strains of bacteria (linked to the routine
addition of antibiotics to animal feed), salmonella in poultry and
eggs (linked to poor living conditions among animals), and
Creutzfeldt-Jacob disease (linked to bovine spongiform
encephalopathy or BSE, a disease affecting cows that is caused by
contaminated cattle feed).
Genetic modification of food is the latest in a catalogue of
food-production experiments that I believe may have harmful
long-term effects on human health and the environment. The
defensive attitude of scientists who argue that “no evidence exists
that genetically-modified (GM) food is unsafe” needs to be
challenged – this kind of negative statement does not constitute
proof that GM food is safe.
Due to the wide-ranging effects of food industrialization it is
important that, as consumers, we make informed choices about what
we buy – not just favouring foods that are unprocessed and grown
according to organic principles, but also excluding products that
are nutritionally-empty and preserved and enhanced in artificial
ways.
The medicinal value of food
Our knowledge of the healing power of food is based upon thousands
of years of tradition and empirical observation. Modern scientific
research now confirms the curative abilities of foods that have
been used therapeutically through the ages.
A huge variety of foods are known to contain compounds that have
medicinal properties.
For example, the potent antibacterial action of allicin, a
substance found in garlic, is well documented. So too are the
protective and healing properties of antioxidants and essential
oils found in fruit, vegetables, herbs and spices.
Some pharmacologically-active ingredients are extracted from food
and sold in tablet form. Cynarin, for example, is an active
ingredient that is extracted from artichoke. An extensive body of
research has shown that this substance can play an important role
in treating liver disease and help damaged liver tissue to
regenerate. The great advantage of using food as medicine is that
food is readily available to all of us and can be self-administered
with relative safety. Food cures work in a purely holistic way by
enhancing the body’s natural functions and encouraging it to heal
itself.
Selecting and harvesting ingredients
Whenever possible, use organically-grown fruit and vegetables, make
sure they are fresh and avoid keeping them in a refrigerator for
too long. When buying meat, buy organically-produced, free-range or
farm-raised meat; buy small quantities of quality cuts rather than
larger amounts of cheaper meat. Try to buy fish on the same day
that it is delivered to your fishmonger.
If possible, try to harvest wild ingredients from your garden or
local countryside. When picking ingredients, such as borage leaves,
nettles and dandelion leaves, choose young plants that are growing
away from main roads, rail tracks, and paths that are regularly
used by animals.
Make sure that you can confidently identify the plants that you
need and that what you pick is in good condition and fit for
consumption. You can cultivate many herbs, such as camomile, lemon
balm, savoury, mint, basil, thyme and rosemary, in your garden or
in pots on a patio or balcony.
When harvesting wild fruit, such as berries, choose bushes and
trees that are not exposed to pollution from roads. Collect only
undamaged, ripe fruit and don’t be tempted to eat it on the spot –
it must be washed thoroughly, and preferably cooked.


