Breakfast (6-8:30 AM)
A new morning calls for a new commitment to one's total
being. An essential part of that personal obligation is to nourish the physical
frame that houses the human spirit. That makes a nurturing breakfast the most
important meal of the day. Two essential components of that nourishment are the
correction of dehydration and hypoglycemia created by sleep hours during the
night. Fruit or fresh-squeezed fruit
juice is a fine way to start, but protein is required early in the day to level
blood sugar and fuel immunity.
Following
is the specific dose of water therapy prescribed by Dr. Majid Ali: Please drink
3, 4 or 5 quarts of pure water depending on body weight between morning and 6
PM. Correspondingly, please take 1/3, 1/2
or 2/3 teaspoonful of sea salt daily. (Persons
with history of heart disease need to discuss this with their physicians.)
Organic
vegetable juices and herbal teas are included in the daily water dose. Coffee,
tea, sodas and fruit juices do not qualify as water. Blue-green algae, powdered cereal grasses, lemon
or lime juice may be added to hot or cold water for change of taste. Seltzer
water is acceptable if you like the taste.
Guidelines
for Daily Water Intake According to Body Weight in Pounds:
|
170 and over |
5 quarts |
|
150 |
4 quarts |
|
125 |
3 quarts |
|
100 |
2.5 quarts |
PROTEIN NEEDS FOR BREAKFAST (1/3 to ½ TOTAL
REQUIREMENTS FOR DAY)
Small person (4’11”-5’3”) for breakfast 15-20 grams
protein is ideal, can get by on half, but then have a big lunch.
Medium person (5’4”-5’6”) for breakfast 20-25 grams
protein is ideal, can get by on half, but then have a big lunch..
Large person (5’7’-6’1”) for breakfast 25-30 grams
protein is ideal, can get by on half, but then have a big lunch..
Ages
1 to 3 - between 4-8 grams protein for breakfast.
Ages 4 to 6 - between 6-12 grams protein for breakfast.
Ages 7 to 10 - between 7-14 grams protein for breakfast.
Ingesting
more than 30 grams of protein all at once results in automatic shunting of
calories into adipose tissue fat cells, increasing one’s waist circumference. This is true in normal sized persons or large
sized persons, even 250-pound body builders, because excess calories or protein
always stimulates fat-storage, despite one’s size. Quickly absorbed powders (especially whey) that
deliver more than 30 grams of protein tend to cause increases in fat cell size,
even in elite athletes.
Raw,
fermented, acid-marinated or barely-cooked easily digestible protein is ideally
10-33% of a meal (more protein early and less for dinner), with remainder being
mostly vegetables, germinated seeds, nuts, grains and beans (providing protein,
fiber, polyphenols, fats and carbohydrates). Soaked seeds, nuts and grains send springtime
signals so genetically controlled metabolic responses use fat and food to build
lean muscle, skin and bone.
A simple
overnight soak of 7-8 hours at room temperature is enough for most seeds, grains
and nuts. Most of the mineral-binding
phytic acid is hydrolyzed and so are most of the dry seed’s enzyme inhibitors
(which also inhibit our pancreatic enzymes).
The aflatoxin contaminating most modern stored grains has
disappeared. Energy producing
mitochondria have become reassembled and revitalized.
However
soaking seeds for 12-24 hours usually produces even better results with
development of up to ten times more messenger RNA ‘stem cell’ molecular
messaging of embryonic growth and repair.
Lowering the
pH in the initial soaking mixture, by adding ascorbic acid or by replacing the
water with pineapple juice, keeps gas-producing bacteria from growing and
brings about a timelier and more predictable germination result. Antibacterial acidic liquid increases the
benefits derived from soaking grains.
Green tea is another beneficial antibacterial soaking medium, allowing
less rinsing.
Acidity helps
to more quickly break down anti-nutrients and further predigests the grains. Other acidic soaking mediums are cultured
buttermilk, apple cider vinegar, whey, yogurt and kefir as well as coconut
kefir. Use 1-2 tablespoons acidic medium
per cup of water.
Dried raw
seeds, nuts and grains signal environmental stress of drought and cause mammals
to digest muscle and store fat, especially in the cheeks, arteries, tummy and
upper arms. Just like drought, toasted,
roasted, crisped, caramelized, flaked, fried, chipped or baked foods signals
stress of ‘forest fire’ to our rain forest-genes via their browned advanced
glycation end-products (AGEs), which mimic our messenger molecules of alarm
called heat shock proteins. To lessen AGEs, cook at less than 365 degrees F and
crisp only to a golden-yellow.
Our daily
‘incoming tide’ begins at 5AM and finishes at 9:30AM. The body is programmed to build and repair
early. Without a timely and sustaining
breakfast, stress mechanisms take hold early, dissolving muscle and bone, preserving
fat and diminishing cellular immunity while creating metabolic ‘jet lag.’ Waking up hungry for breakfast is easier if
bedtime is around 10PM and we don’t eat much food 2-3 hours before sleep.
One medium egg
(soft cooked) = 6 grams protein
Potato,
medium (1/3pound) = 6 grams protein (low glycemic stress if eaten cold)
One banana =
1 gram protein
Papaya (1
cup) = 1 gram protein
Avocado (1/2
cup pureed) = 2.5 grams protein
Two
tablespoons of chia seeds, soaked = 3 grams protein (mix with oats or triple quantity
as coconut, vanilla or chocolate pudding)
Two
tablespoons flax seeds, soaked / blended = 3 grams protein
Oatmeal
soaked (1 cup) = 6 grams protein
Amaranth (1/2
cup) = 14 grams protein
Barley (1/2
cup) = 10 grams protein
Quinoa (1/2
cup) = 12-14 grams protein
Brown rice,
soaked 36-48 hours (most GABA) and cooked (1 cup) = 5 grams protein
Wild rice (a
marsh grass) (1/2 cup) = 5 grams protein
Cooked
broccoli (1 cup) = 4-5 grams protein
Split peas, ½
cup cooked = 8 grams protein
Almonds, best
soaked two days (#28 or 1oz) = 6 grams protein (1/4 cup = 8 grams)
Peanuts, soaked and boiled best (¼ cup) = 9 grams protein
Cashews, already toasted (¼ cup) = 5 grams protein
Pecans, ¼ cup = 2.5 grams protein
Most beans
(black, pinto, lentils, etc) = 7-10 grams protein per 1/2 cup of cooked beans
Fish,
Ceviche, Salpicon (3oz) = 20-22 grams protein
Turkey breast
(3oz) = 18 grams protein (chicken slightly higher)
Sirloin steak
(3oz) = 26 grams protein
Pumpkin
seeds, ¼ cup = 8 grams protein
Sunflower
seeds, soaked (1/2 cup) = 13 grams protein
Tofu, ½ cup = 20 grams protein (1 oz = 2.3 grams protein)
Walnuts,
soaked (1/2 cup) = 10 grams protein
Pine nuts,
soaked (1/2 cup) = 15 grams protein
Bee pollen (1
tablespoon) = 5 grams protein (great with oatmeal, chia & cinnamon)
Spirulina,
chlorella or other blue-green algae (1 tablespoon) = 6 grams protein
Bee pollen and spirulina are perfect
high-protein concentrated foods to blend with flaxseed oil (or soaked chia or
flax seeds) for breakfast of maximal energy.
Dehydrated
cereal grasses (wheat, rye, barley) (1 tablespoon) = 2 grams protein
Gallo pinto
or black beans (3.2 oz dry) and rice (1 cup dry) = 21 grams protein cooked
Breakfast
burrito with egg, sausage, beans, cheese and tortilla = 20 grams protein
Fermented brown
rice protein as SunWarrior protein product is raw, GMO-free,
vegan, and is 85% pure protein! It is silky smooth, without the grit usually
associated with brown rice protein products. This is accomplished through a high-tech
microfiltration process conducted at very low temperatures (room temperature,
essentially), which keeps the product raw. No chemical solvents whatsoever are used in
the processing of this brown rice protein concentrate. Enzymes
are used during the 100% organic process. One can blend
this powder into any smoothie, fruit, and chocolate, tropical or whatever! The taste would fit right in.
Order by phone at: 800-205-2350 (U.S. only) or look at www.sunwarrior.com.
Rice
& Pea Protein Powder called Nutribody (www.nutribodyprotein.com) is enhanced with
citrulline mallate, a precursor to nitric oxide production, reduces lactic acid
and ammonia build up, and improves ATP and phosphocreatine recovery. Medium chain triglycerides were also added to
provide energy and help better burn fat and build muscle. Natural enzymes are
added in at different stages to break down and separate rice carbohydrate and
fiber from the protein portion of the whole grain. Processing temperatures are kept below 90° F
to preserve natural enzymes. Low
temperature and chemical free processing also prevents denaturing of amino
acids.
The end concentrate is 80% or higher
in protein (cooked rice has 5-7% protein content) and unlike dairy, whey, soy,
or egg proteins, is less allergenic. It
is highly soluble and mixes easily into water, juice, or foods. When used in combination, rice protein and
yellow pea protein offer a Protein Efficiency Ratio that begins to rival dairy
and egg, but with less potential to promote allergic response.
Dr. Majid Ali’s favorite breakfast
after his initial hydration is a drink made with two heaping tablespoons of
protein powder and two heaping tablespoons flax oil (better yet, soaked chia or
flax seeds) along with one heaping tablespoon of lecithin mixed with 15 ounces
water and 15 ounces vegetable juices (preferably freshly squeezed).
BREADS – SPROUTED AND/OR FERMENTED
WHEAT IS MORE EASILY DIGESTED
One slice
sourdough sprouted whole wheat bread = 3-4 grams protein
Pancake,
waffle and crepe batters are basically liquid batters of quick-breads, with equivalent
protein to a similar-sized piece of bread, 3-4 grams. Pancakes almost have 1:1 flour to liquid
ratio. Each has different consistencies, even though they are made from similar
ingredients. They all pour, with waffle batters being the thickest, pancake
batter in the middle and crepe batter, thinned with eggs, being the consistency
of heavy cream.
Liquid
might be milk, buttermilk, yogurt, kefir, rice milk, almond milk, oat milk,
hemp milk, coconut water, pineapple or orange juice, beer, egg, bit of vinegar,
maple syrup or vanilla.
Batters
should not be over mixed; rather they should be left slightly lumpy with wisps
of flour showing. A light hand in mixing the batter means a light
pancake or waffle. On the other hand, crepe batters are whisked to incorporate
air into the batter.
Pancakes
and waffles are leavened in many ways: with either baking powder (sometimes
with baking soda) and/or packaged or wild yeast, such as sourdough starters. Pancakes and waffles are made with
sourdough starter for greater digestibility as well as the lightening bubbles.
Lighter
fluffier versions of pancakes and waffles can be made by separating the egg
yolks and whites, beating the whites until a soft peak forms, and then
folding them into the batter at the end of mixing. Crepes
are leavened with eggs and air beaten into the
batter.
All these
batters will improve after standing; so don't be afraid to cover and
refrigerate overnight before cooking. Yeast ensures lightness especially when using heavier
grains and requires an overnight proofing, which also develops flavor.
Recipes are similar,
but waffles need almost double the melted butter, coconut oil or other oil as
pancakes. The more crisp or brown your
‘cakes’ become, the more unfavorable acrylamides or polyacrylamides or advanced
glycation products (AGEs) are formed.
Standard
recommendation for griddle temperature is 350-375 degrees F, so that drops of
water skitter on the oiled surface. Keep
temperature to 365 degrees F or less and cook a bit longer. Instead of ‘browning’ your pancakes or
waffles, remove them from the griddle when they are cooked to more a golden
yellow. That will keep harmful AGES from
forming.
Allow the
pancake to rise and its bubbles to solidify before gingerly turning the cakes
over so they will remain light and fluffy.
Wheat flour taste and texture can be altered with white flour, buckwheat,
coconut flour, oatmeal, nut flours and or chopped nuts as well as ricotta
cheese.
Glycemic
index of this high carbohydrate food (cake) can be reduced by adding
cinnamon. Blueberries, chopped
strawberries or banana can be added. Combining
ground green tea will make colorful green pancakes that pack a powerful
polyphenol punch. Adding vanilla to the
recipe reduces the desire to later add large amounts of amount of honey, syrup
or butter to make the finished product more succulent.
SAY NO TO NON-STICK – REMEMBER THE
CANARY IN THE COAL MINE
Bird owners
should note that using products with Teflon
coating should not be used around birds. Other brand names with this polytetraflouethylene
non-stick coating are Silverstone,
Fluron, Supra, Excalibur, Greblon, Xylon, Duracote, Resistal, Autograph and T-Fal.
Some time
ago, the San Antonio Zoo in Texas lost 21 birds in an outdoor aviary. Their death was attributed to recently
installed lights in an outdoor aviary.
The bulbs had been coated with Polytetraflouethylene (PTFE). PTFE can also be found on cooking and baking
utensils, electric cookers, portable heaters, irons with nonstick plates,
self-cleaning ovens, some hair dryers and curling irons, to name a few.
EWG
(Environmental Working Group) finds heated Teflon
pans turn toxic faster than DuPont claims. EWG tests of coated pans found that in 2-5
minutes on a typical household stove, heated pans reach temperatures that
produce toxins that even DuPont acknowledges kill hundreds of pet birds each
year and cause "flu-like polymer fever in humans. Besides the negative environmental impact of
these perchlorofluorates, maybe it is in our own best interest to stop using
non-stick cookware (even if we don’t own birds).
Slow
cookers that have
a metal interior often have a non-stick (Teflon)
coating. Better choices are stockpots
made of ceramic, stainless steel, or other safe metal. Remember, never boil your germinated beans,
but simmer them at 185 degrees F or so for six hours to preserve their delicate
proteins. Similar material choices apply
for your griddle, frying pan or waffle iron.
Learn how to season the surface of the metal with hot oil (and use
enough oil in your recipe).
MICROWAVES – BAD VIBRATIONS
Broccoli
cooked in the microwave with a little water lost up to 97% of the beneficial
antioxidant chemicals it contains. However, steamed broccoli lost only
11% or fewer of its antioxidants.
When
microwaving, carcinogenic toxins are leached from the plastic containers or
plastic wrap used to microwave foods. The combination of fat,
high heat and plastics releases dioxins into microwaved food and ultimately
into the cells of the body. Dioxins are
carcinogens and highly toxic to the cells of our bodies.
Homeopathy and
quantum physics recognize the importance of frequency in harmonizing us with
our environment. Microwaves heat food by
causing the water within it to resonate at very high frequencies. While this effectively heats things
containing water, it also causes a change in the vibrations resonating from the
chemical structure of the food that can lead to compromised nutrition,
increased stress and downstream health issues.
Microwave
energy from the sun and other stars is direct current based. Artificially produced microwaves, including
those in ovens, are produced from alternating current and force a billion or
more polarity reversals per second in the water molecules of every food
molecule they hit. Production of
unnatural molecules is inevitable. Naturally
occurring amino acids undergo isomeric changes (changes in shape morphing) as
well as transformation into toxic forms, under the impact of microwaves.
The violent
change that microwaving causes to food microstructure forms new molecular forms
called radiolytic compounds. These mutations are unknown in the natural world.
Ordinary cooking also causes the formation of some radiolytic compounds (which
is one reason why it is better to eat plenty of raw food), but
microwaving cooking causes many more. This
then causes more coagulation in the blood and immune system stress.
It
was recently announced that all meat is now going to be irradiated. Herbs and spices already are, and many fruits
and vegetables are irradiated to give them a longer shelf life. Try to get
meat from a local farmer who grows it sustainably, organically or free range. Buy fruits and vegetables organically as well
to avoid the contamination of foods by radiation. The texture and taste
of organic fruits and vegetables tend to be superior to the irradiated variety,
and are much better for you.
RADIATED FOOD – A QUESTIONABLE USE FOR
RADIOACTIVE WASTE
According to
the Organic Consumers Association, sterilizing groceries by irradiation damages
molecules and digestive enzymes in food and creates free radicals, leading to
the destruction of as much as 80% of the vitamins present. The radioactive
particles can also combine with existing chemicals in or contaminating food,
including pesticide residue, and create new chemicals called unique radiolytic
products (URPs), which include toxins such as benzene, formaldehyde and lipid
peroxides.
Cats fed a
diet of irradiated food developed severe neurological disorders including
paralysis, movement disabilities, vision problems, cognitive degeneration,
intense pain, loss of feeling and death. Irradiated food also caused the destruction of
myelin, which forms a protective sheath around nerve fibers, as well as in the
central nervous system.
The nasty
truth hiding behind the push for increased food irradiation is the filthy
conditions in which factory food is kept before to being irradiated. The
industrial food lobby pushed for years to relax regulations on food cleanliness,
encouraging the mistaken idea that irradiation would purify the food prior to
distribution.
The sad truth
is that not only does irradiation diminish and destroy the quality of food and
make it unfit for consumption, but that it also fails to completely compensate
for cavalier handling to adequately sterilize the food and can actually
increase the risk of malignant bacterial growth that festers in the compromised
remains.
GM (GENETICALLY MODIFIED) FOOD –
EUROPEANS WON’T HAVE IT
The FDA and food industry claims that
genetically modified (GM) foods are safe, properly tested, and necessary to
feed a hungry world. UNTRUE! Genetically
modified organisms (GMOs) are one of the most insidious, dangerous and
radical changes to our food supply.
These largely unregulated ingredients found in 60-70% of the foods in the USA, are well worth avoiding. Most processed foods in the USA contain derivatives from the four major GM crops: soy, corn, cottonseed and canola. Vote no with your dollar. That is what they did in Europe.
MILK PRODUCTS – ONE SEVENTH OF
OUR FOOD DOLLAR (MOSTLY RUINED)
Pasteurization
is another misguided government mandate that reduces probability of politically
embarrassing epidemic infection in an industrialized food chain, but its heat destroys
the very vitality of the food. Even
organic milk must be pasteurized according to legislation, destroying many of
the benefits of milk, making it a damaged and incomplete food that encourages
disease.
Culturing pasteurized
milk into cheese, yogurt or kefir somewhat salvages it as a food, partially
digesting denatured proteins and adding back beneficial microorganisms. Raw milk (although difficult to obtain) is an
outstanding source of nutrients including beneficial bacteria such as
lactobacillus acidophilus, vitamins and enzymes, and is a fine source of absorbable
calcium.
The
pasteurization process heats milk to a temperature of 145-150 degrees F and
keeps it there for at least half an hour and then reduces the temperature to
not more than 55 degrees F. This heating
process changes the structure of the milk proteins (denaturization) into
something far less than healthy. While
the process destroys some germs and bad bacteria, it also destroys the milk's
beneficial bacteria along with many of its nutritious components.
Pasteurizing
milk destroys enzymes, diminishes vitamin, denatures fragile milk proteins,
destroys vitamin C, vitamin B12 and vitamin B6, kills beneficial bacteria and
promotes pathogens. Raw milk left out
will sour naturally but pasteurized milk rots. This is because the beneficial bacteria in raw
milk help to keep putrefactive bacteria under control. Pasteurized milk, however, does not contain
beneficial bacteria necessary to keep it from rotting.
Powdered
milk (low fat has more milk powder added) or pasteurized cow's milk is the
number one allergic food in this country.
Raw milk, however, is not associated with allergies and associated increases
in auto-immune diseases. Even people who
have been allergic to pasteurized milk for many years typically tolerate and
even thrive on raw milk. (Powdered, hard
cooked, fried or scrambled eggs are also a very common allergy. Soft cooking eggs or eating them raw often
eliminates egg allergy.)
To find raw
milk, find a trustworthy local farmer or check out rawmilk.com or
westonaprice.org.
What about
consuming homogenized milk? Work by Kurt
A. Oster, M.D. in the 1960s-1980s proposed a link between homogenized milk and
arteriosclerosis, due to damage to plasmalogen due to the release of bovine
xanthine oxidase (BXO) from the milk fat globular membrane (MFGM) during
homogenization. While Oster's work has been widely criticized, homogenization does
introduce changes to the MFGM and exposes its proteins, and the effects of
these changes have not been thoroughly investigated.
Homogenization
causes the fat globules in milk to be reduced in size and encapsulated into
liposomes. Liposomes are protected from
digestive acids and they pass through the stomach undigested. Because of the tiny size of the fat globules
after milk has been homogenized, the liposomes are then able to pass directly into
the bloodstream through the walls of the intestines, and damage readily occurs
on the intimal walls of the vascular system.
The
liposomes contain altered BXO enzyme. XO
is typically only found in the liver, unless a person drinks homogenized milk. Then it is found in the liposomes that enter
the bloodstream, where it begins to attack plasmalogen. (Plasmalogen makes up
30% of the membrane system in human heart muscle cells.)
XO can only
either use the plasmalogen or destroy it.
In most autopsies of people who have died from heart and circulatory
disease, plasmalogen is missing, arterial inner linings are eaten away, and
mineral deposits covered in fat and cholesterol create an incomplete bandage of
inflammatory deadly plaque in the arteries. The addition of synthetic vitamin D
in the milk actually enhances the activity of XO.
Perhaps 30-50
million Americans are lactose (milk sugar) intolerant, including 75% of Native Americans
and African-Americans and 90% of Asian Americans. Lactose intolerance is less common among those
descended from northern Europeans.
Lactose
intolerance (with diarrhea, cramps, bloating and indigestion) is caused by lack
of lactase production and can be somewhat relieved by establishing friendly
bacteria in the bowels such as acidophilus which make lactase.
Lactase is
readily available in pill form, and individuals can also use it to briefly
increase their tolerance for dairy products.
Cultured milk products usually have little or no remaining lactose.
From known raw organic sources:
Milk, 1 cup = 8 grams protein
Cottage cheese, ½ cup = 15 grams protein
Kefir, Yogurt, 1 cup = usually 8-12 grams protein, check
label
Soft cheeses (Mozzarella, Brie, Camembert) = 6 grams protein
per oz
Medium cheeses (Cheddar, Swiss) = 7-8 grams protein per oz
Hard cheeses
(Parmesan) = 10 grams protein per oz
Dr. Johanna Budwig Mix:
Put this energizing ‘cancer cure’ in your blender:
1cup Organic cottage cheese (low fat,
not too hard a one; best to make your own from raw milk) (or today, use goat’s milk yogurt, with fermentation partially digesting
heat-damaged proteins).
2-5Tbsp. of flaxseed oil.
1-3Tbsp. of freshly ground up flaxseed (coffee grinder works fine) plus
enough water to make it soft. (We prefer overnight soaked flax or chia seeds
blended with goat yogurt and/or Green’s First powder or even Red Alert berry
powder, for a berry flavor.)
optional: little garlic
little red pepper
(cayenne)
little champagne
GOAT’S MILK
Unlike cow's milk, goat's milk does not
contain agglutinin. As a result, protein
and fat globules in goat's milk do not cluster together, making them easier to
digest. Goat milk protein induces less
mucus and helps many children and adults who suffer from cow, dairy and/or soy
allergies.
Goat milk contains only
trace amounts of the allergenic casein protein, alpha-S1, richly found in cow’s
milk. By contrast the major casein in
goat milk is ß-casein, and mainly alpha-S2 casein, which is more like human
casein. Goat milk also contains slightly
lower levels of lactose, providing mild advantages to lactose-intolerant
individuals.
Although it generally
contains more selenium, goat milk contains only about 20% of the vitamin B12
and less than 10% of the amount of folic acid contained in cow milk. This means that it must be fortified with
folic acid in order to be adequate as a formula or milk substitute for infants
and toddlers. Popular brands of goat
milk may advertise "fortified with folic acid" on the carton. Vanilla and chocolate goat milk formulas for
toddlers (and others) are nicely formulated (from www.GenesisOrganics.com).
WHEY
Less
allergenic than casein and the other major protein found in milks, whey is a
rich source of branched chain amino acids (BCAAs), containing the highest known
levels of any natural food. BCAAs are
important since unlike the other essential amino acids, they are metabolized
directly into muscle tissue and are the first ones used for gluconeogenesis during
intensive demand.
Whey protein
provides the body with BCAAs to replenish depleted levels and start repairing
and rebuilding lean muscle tissue.
Cold-processed whey protein also boosts glutathione levels, one of the
most important molecules for energy production as well as detoxification.
Whey protein
powder solo is digested quickly (typically within 30 minutes). Large portions of whey (more than 30 grams) can
easily create metabolic stress consumed on an empty stomach or by itself at any
other time of the day.
Whey would
ideally be mixed with foods as a supplement or primarily be used post workout. At any other time (when it is taken by itself)
your body only uses about 30% of the amino acids for building muscle protein. Whey powder gives your body such a quick flood
of available amino acids that the body sends the "excess" to the
liver, where it is oxidized, turned into glucose and used as energy.
Pro-Colos (www.web-outpatients.com)
is a whey protein powder combined with 20% colostrum. This powder provides 15 grams protein per
serving. Colostrum
is the first lacteal secretions produced by a mammal prior to and just after
giving birth. Colostrum is rich in immunoglobulins
(identical in all mammals), which bind and mark invading microorganisms to aid
in cell killing, prevent bacterial and viral attachment and modulate
inflammation.
One of my
favorite breakfasts is created by soaking a mix of oatmeal and chia seeds in
water, coconut water, almond, hemp or rice milk covered on the counter
overnight so that it germinates into a gelatinous mass. In the morning, add a scoop of Pro-Colos and enough liquid to achieve
an appetizing consistency.
Intact®
(www.tncolostrum.com/intact.asp) is low fat, low
lactose, high protein colostrum powder with clinical data on athletes. A patented process ensures that bioactive
components of colostrum (including immunoglobulins, lactoferrin,
lactoperoxidase and growth factors) are present in the product, and retain
their activity in the digestive system.
One can create the ultimate proportioned protein shake by mixing intact® with your
favorite whey or other protein supplement.
For a different taste, try blending soaked seeds and nuts, mixed fresh
fruit or frozen yogurt.
Steven N.
Green, DDS, 10261 SW 72 St., #106, Miami, FL 33173, October 8, 2009
305-273-7779,
antiagingdentist.com or sngreen.com, ddsgreen@bellsouth.net