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20 Foods That Make You Smarter

Here are some healthy, environmentally friendly ways to kick-start your brain.
August 18, 2009  |  
 
 
 
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Simply put, your brain likes to eat. And it likes powerful fuel: quality fats, antioxidants, and small, steady amounts of the best carbs.

On a deadline? Need to rally? Avoid the soda, vending machine snacks and tempting Starbucks and go for these powerful brain boosters instead. The path to a bigger, better brain is loaded with Omega-3 fats, antioxidants, and fiber. Give your brain a kick start: eat the following foods on a daily or weekly basis for results you will notice.

20 foods that will supercharge your brain:

1. Avocado

Start each day with a mix of high-quality protein and beneficial fats to build the foundation for an energized day. Avocado with scrambled eggs provides both, and the monounsaturated fat helps blood circulate better, which is essential for optimal brain function. Worst alternative: a trans-fat-filled, sugar-laden cream cheese Danish.

Green it: you don’t need to buy an organic avocado – conventional is fine. But make sure your supplementary protein is free range, cage free, or organic.

2. Blueberries

These delicious berries are one of the best foods for you, period, but they’re very good for your brain as well. Since they’re high in fiber and low on the glycemic index, they are safe for diabetics and they do not spike blood sugar. Blueberries are possibly the best brain food on earth: they have been linked to reduced risk for Alzheimer’s, shown to improve learning ability and motor skills in rats, and they are one of the most powerful anti-stress foods you can eat. Avoid: dried, sweetened blueberries.

Green it: buy local and organic, and be mindful of seasonality. When blueberries are out of season, opt for cranberries, grapes, goji berries, blackberries or cherries to get your brain boost.

3. Wild Salmon

Omega-3 fatty acids are essential for your brain. These beneficial fats are linked to improved cognition and alertness, reduced risk of degenerative mental disease (such as dementia), improved memory, improved mood, and reduced depression, anxiety and hyperactivity. Wild salmon is a premium source, but we’ll highlight a few other sources on this list for vegetarians and people who just don’t like salmon. Avoid farmed (read: sea lice infested) salmon.

Green it: the California salmon stock is threatened, so choose wild Alaskan salmon only, and eat small portions no more than twice a week.

4. Nuts

Nuts contain protein, high amounts of fiber, and they are rich in beneficial fats. For getting an immediate energy boost that won’t turn into a spike later, you can’t do better than nuts. The complex carbs will perk you up while the fat and protein will sustain you. Nuts also contain plenty of vitamin E, which is essential to cognitive function. You don’t have to eat raw, plain, unsalted nuts, but do avoid the ones with a lot of sweetening or seasoning blends. Filberts, hazelnuts, cashews, and walnuts are great choices, with almonds being the king of nuts.

For those avoiding carbs, macadamia nuts are much higher in fat than most nuts. By the way, peanuts just aren’t ideal. Aside from the fact that many people are allergic, peanuts have less healthy fat than many other types of nuts…maybe that’s because peanuts are not actually a nut! They’re still much better than a candy bar, however.

Green it: try to choose organic, raw nuts, and if you can’t get those, at least avoid the tins of heavily-seasoned, preservative-laden nuts that may have taken many food miles to get to your mouth.


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Especially after a head injury, omega3 and antioxidants are important
Posted by: Defenestrator on Aug 18, 2009 2:17 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Omega-3 aids recovery after traumatic brain injury. Interestingly, if someone takes Omega-3 BEFORE the brain injury, that will also aid in recovery after the brain injury. So, for example, if you know a soldier in Iraq or Afghanistan, send them Omega-3 supplements. It will help their prognosis if they experience they are among the 15% or so of soldiers in Iraq who end up with a traumatic brain injury (TBI). The military should make these supplements a daily requirement.

Also, antioxidants such as curcumin aid recovery after TBI. Importantly, they may help prevent the common transition from brain injury to Alzheimer's disease. (vitamin E is important as well)

At least as important for your brain (injured or not) than diet? Exercise!

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Do you suppose we could start a food drive
Posted by: marid on Aug 18, 2009 3:12 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
and give it away at these townhall debacles and shouting matches. A lot of those people could use some help with brain functions. Problem is there probably are not enough blueberries on the planet to cure what ails them.

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» You can't fix stupid Posted by: BlueTigress

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Now, what is your brain for?
Posted by: PaulK on Aug 18, 2009 8:13 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
You can develop certain mental skills. You can be a pianist, a writer like Garrison Keeler, or a math professor.

Most people use their brains for making money. Some are quite successful.

However, I recommend solving one of a very few problems in the world. First and foremost, the U.S. Government doesn't work. It's way too corrupted. We need a few people to put their heads together and start government reforms from the ground up, creating a wave which the current government is forced to accept (albeit piecemeal, and of course kicking and screaming like the worst possible infant).

Can you develop various mental skills to help find a partial cure for this problem? The cure may take generations of struggle.

Next, the world is overheating. I have a friend who really wants to label global warming as "natural cycles", but both natually-caused and man-made forest fires ought to be put out before they burn down nearby towns.

Again, can you develop various mental skills to help find a partial cure for this problem? The cure may take generations of struggle.

Most charities ask you for your money, or sometimes for a letter to Congress. I'd like to nudge you to give what only you can give -- yourself.

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Thank goodness
Posted by: soulrebeljc on Aug 18, 2009 8:14 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
My brain is relatively safe. Now tell me what Republicans eat (kittens and puppies, so I've heard), so I can avoid that. Just don't say BACON!!

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» RE: Thank goodness Posted by: MyLeftFoot
» No they don't! Posted by: zigy

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How credible
Posted by: bepa on Aug 18, 2009 8:33 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
is this list?

What are the sources for this information?

Sometimes these lists are started and there is NO scientific back up for the claims.

For example, at the link below, Snopes debunks the 8 glasses of water/day myth

http://www.snopes.com/medical/myths/8glasses.asp

..............

Sara Ost, the writer of this article, says about herself
"have a background in new media, marketing, and editing. I hold a B.A. in Communications and an M.A. in American Studies from Pepperdine University."

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» RE: How credible Posted by: Lady_L
» RE: How credible Posted by: Angie
» RE: How credible Posted by: Angie
» RE: How credible Posted by: Printanor
» RE: How credible Posted by: goeswithness
» RE: How credible Posted by: progressiveview
» RE: How credible Posted by: mandiwrite

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Now I know why I am SO smart!
Posted by: AJR Journal on Aug 18, 2009 9:16 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I have been eating these foods for years and I still love them. Great article.

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Food fantasies
Posted by: hquain on Aug 19, 2009 3:37 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This article cites not a single scientific source for any of its claims. Why should we pay attention to anything it says?

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» RE: Food fantasies Posted by: Obijuan

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Where is the evidence?
Posted by: TomInReston on Aug 19, 2009 4:20 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Advice given on a subject in which one is not a qualified expert should at least be supported by evidence from those who are.

A "background in new media, marketing, and editing", and "a B.A. in Communications and an M.A. in American Studies from Pepperdine University" do not qualify one to give unsupported health advice, without providing a single citation for any of the claims.

One would also expect someone with a background in editing and a degree in Communications to be able to write an article without using weasel words such as "You really needn’t worry about the overblown cholesterol fears. (I have quite a bit to say on this topic but I’ll restrain myself for once.)"

While some of this article does make sense (eating leafy greens, tomatoes, beans; avoiding alcohol and sugar), some of it (such as recommending eggs and olive oil) is not only inaccurate, but downright dangerous. (My citations for these claims are The China Study, by T Colin Campbell and Thomas M Campbell II; Prevent and Reverse Heart Disease, by Caldwell B. Esselstyn, Jr., MD; and The McDougall Program / 12 Days to Dynamic Health, by John McDougall, MD.)


Good health!
Tom

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» RE: Where is the evidence? Posted by: JamieC
» RE: Where is the evidence? Posted by: TomInReston
» RE: Where is the evidence? Posted by: progressiveview
» RE: Where is the evidence? Posted by: TomInReston

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Ha ha
Posted by: Mathew Trisencusean on Aug 19, 2009 4:37 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Does the author need all these brain foods to manage the cognitive strain of watching "really bad sunday night television"?

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These Foods are Costly
Posted by: emen on Aug 19, 2009 5:15 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I love it when nutritionists/doctors/writers/commnications graduates recommend healthy foods which cost 4 times as much as your regular diet. Do these recommendations come with a $100 gift certificate for groceries?

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» RE: These Foods are Costly Posted by: goeswithness
» Not necessarily Posted by: justAnEgg
» RE: Not necessarily Posted by: progressiveview
» RE: These Foods are Costly Posted by: metavurt
» RE: These Foods are Costly Posted by: photon's feather

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good list
Posted by: lindalee on Aug 19, 2009 6:49 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Some of your are just delusional. Why in the world would you need scientific proof that this article is accurate? All you have to do is pick up a magazine in a doctor's office to know that this list is excellent....or just ask your doctor. As for access, most of this stuff is readily available at your supermarket. I'm one of the have-nots and figured all this out a long time ago. I shop creatively, read labels and ask questions. For instance, if you have a food processor you can make your own almond butter. Cheap and easy.

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» RE: good list Posted by: goeswithness

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No red meat listed!
Posted by: xvictor on Aug 19, 2009 7:12 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
That figures. It's no wonder red meat eaters behave like dumbasses.

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Chickens are not vegetarians.
Posted by: greenmulberry on Aug 19, 2009 7:56 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I don't understand the allure of eggs from vegetarian chickens. Chickens are omnivores, and are avid bug eaters, and will eat snakes and baby mice with glee. For a chicken to be a vegetarian means it must have been kept in a confined existence away from natural protein sources, eating an unnatural diet.

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Wild Blueberries
Posted by: brewbaker on Aug 19, 2009 8:03 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Great article and very helpful for those of us who need reminders to stay on track with what we consume everyday. One clarification that could also be helpful is that wild blueberries are available year-round in your supermarket freezer. The frozen variety is actually more nutritious than fresh as they are frozen very soon after being picked, retaining all the good stuff. So no need to woory about seasonality and they're the wild ones--smaller, bursting with flavor and antioxidants! http://www.wildblueberries.com

2. Blueberries

These delicious berries are one of the best foods for you, period, but they’re very good for your brain as well. Since they’re high in fiber and low on the glycemic index, they are safe for diabetics and they do not spike blood sugar. Blueberries are possibly the best brain food on earth: they have been linked to reduced risk for Alzheimer’s, shown to improve learning ability and motor skills in rats, and they are one of the most powerful anti-stress foods you can eat. Avoid: dried, sweetened blueberries.

Green it: buy local and organic, and be mindful of seasonality. When blueberries are out of season, opt for cranberries, grapes, goji berries, blackberries or cherries to get your brain boost.

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hartsmart
Posted by: hartsmart on Aug 19, 2009 8:29 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The brain in charge of nutrition? The brain created the fattening pyramid food guide and an endless stream of idiotic diets. Aside from the eggs there is nothing I would want to ingest. I am a devout extra healthy carnivore atheist.
The brain, addicted to food shows and food ads.

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Add lemon to your tea
Posted by: happyman on Aug 19, 2009 8:41 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
A study from Purdue University showed that adding citrus juice to your tea, especially lemon juice, greatly increases the amount of beneficial antioxidants that remained after digestion for your body to absorb.

Here's the article:
http://www.purdue.edu/UNS/x/2007b/071113FerruzziTea.html

Enjoy!

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» RE: Add lemon to your tea Posted by: ruehigeAngie

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lindalee...Why do we need scientific studies?
Posted by: bepa on Aug 19, 2009 9:14 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This post is particularly for those of you who rely on lists like this to base your views.

Women for decades were told by authors that taking hormone replacements would protect them from heart disease and even cancer.

The truth scientifically proven now with good studies, is just the opposite.

Women who have taken hormones during menopause are at GREATER RISK for disease than those who did not take those hormones.

How many women have died because of this misinformation that was given out as if it were scientifically sound advice? And the advice came from doctors too.

I am just saying...please be cautious, read widely and be skeptical.

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» Excellent point... Posted by: zigy

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fritzi cohen
Posted by: fritzi cohen on Aug 19, 2009 10:31 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Oysters may be an eco friendly healthy food, but only if they grow in high quality marine areas.
I am an oysterfarmer on willapa bay and I would not eat any oysters from this bay or several others in washington state. The commercial oystermen and others have been spraying this bay with carbaryl since 1965, and glyphosate and imazapyr since 1990. The bay no longer has a natural set which I have been totally dependent on.
Also, my beds were drifted on by the Polaris/Aquaneat(Imazapyr/Glyphosate cocktail and as a result our harvests have been suspended since 2007.
My advice know your waters first, and then choose the oyster.

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» how about Posted by: sophiej

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general principles OK but.....
Posted by: hilaryuk on Aug 19, 2009 11:30 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Ben Goldacre writes an informative column in the UK Guardian (guardian.co.uk/science/series/badscience), a running theme being equipping the reader to evaluate "scientific studies". As always, follow the money to see who is paying for a study, then look at the methodoloy used, then examine the relationship between the actual findings and then decide how credible it is. Of course, his column - 'Bad Science' explains far better than me, but, oddly enough, he's found an awful lot of iffy studies in the field of nutrition.

I'm not arguing with the basic principles underlying this article (except, perhaps, for the efficacy of anti-oxideants), merely urging healthy scepticism in the reader. On the whole, western man gets adequate nutrition from a reasonably healthy diet and no amount of healthy add-ons will nullify a basically bad diet - end of story; and anymore fuss seems a tad self indulgent in view of the looming global food crisis which is already affecting the poorest in the world.

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Regarding Number Four
Posted by: red godowar on Aug 19, 2009 11:47 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There are no carbohydrates in nuts -- just fats and protein.

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» RE: egarding Number Four Posted by: Defenestrator

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pros and cons on article
Posted by: tazdelaney on Aug 19, 2009 5:21 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
most of these we've known are brain food for years. we try to have wild or organic salmon, since we don't tend to like mercury sauce, once a week and you can actually feel it's brain effect in a couple hours. sam, you sent me an article a few years ago about how mice/rats nearly forcefed blueberries and juice were not only shown to have dramatically increased learning skills but were also seen to pass along what they learned to the next generation. however, a few months ago, i read an article which, as i suspected, showed that huckleberries, the smarter wild blueberry that refuss to be domesticated and must still be picked in the wild... has double the brain-building power of mere blueberries – plus its taste is divine. haven't yet been able to afford it but here's a link to the divine huckleberry. {http://www.montanatreasures.com/} when i was a kid and went out to idaho, the grandparents would take us up camping in the lovely mountains where we'd fish, hike and pick hucks for pies, pancakes, syrup and it is the stuff, folks. five of the top ten most nutritious food man can eat are beans... apparently, too many people aren't feeding their puny brains...

but then i get to the end of the article and run into typically disinformational drugwar data damning first alcohol then tobacco.

yes, if you drink vast quantities of alcoholic beverages, you may not play the very best chess, but... too bad for the natives, this nation was built by hard-drinking heavy smoking people. wc fields drank a quart or more of bourbon a day and made millions laugh. humphrey bogart said, "yeah, i quit drinking once: it was the worst afternoon of my life." better yet, mae west said, "never trust a man who doesn't drink or smoke" and later said, "if they haven't got the little vices - watch out." show me a so-called 'drug-free' person (all of whom have something they use, whether jesus, television or prozac to alter their consciousness or just relax), and i'll show you a prohibitionist for anything someone else happens to use for their pursuit of happiness.

thomas edison was merck's poster boy for its trademark cocaine. FDR drank up to 10 martinis a day while chainsmoking. Churchill famously said he was never out of arm's reach of his current drink and he smoked 10 cigars a day and was a user of cocaine and codeine from college on, legal or not. compare prohibitionists' thinking to that of these folks and you'll get the picture of drugwar propaganda's 'truth' level.

i read this bunch of loony limey spychiatrists stated flatly that tobacco, marijuana and too much time spent online all dramatically lowered IQ. then this german bunch who make their living debunking suh psychiatric and pharma rubbish debunked each of these with strictly controlled studies of perople's IQs and compared these with their known IQs from their elementary school IQ tests. they found no difference. nver, ever believe anything a psychiatrist or their pharma people tell you. remember lobotomy, shock treatment and 'therapeutic castration.' meth and steroids and the 'anti-depressants' all had their origins in nazi germany's psychiatric pharma sciences, (mostly exported to them like their eugenics 'philosophy' from hoover's america...)

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Tea
Posted by: oregoncharles on Aug 19, 2009 8:34 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Only green tea is a good source of antioxidants. Black tea is made by oxidizing (don't know why they call it "fermenting": it isn't) green tea. It's the same chemistry that turns cut apples brown, and it destroys antioxidants.

Unfortunately, black tea tastes better (perhaps it contains some yet-unknown wonder nutrient), so I alternate, variety being the spice of life.

More than 2-3 cups a day, but what the hell. You know about addicts.

I'm looking pretty good on the rest of the list; must be why I'm so smart.:)

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What About Hemp Oil?
Posted by: mishawaka on Aug 20, 2009 3:46 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I am a vegetarian and I take a hemp seed oil capsule (1000 mg) twice a day. Hemp seed oil has an almost 3:1 ratio of Omega 6 to Omega 3. You can imagine my concern when I read this line in the article:

"You don’t want Omega 6 fats. Even saturated fat is safer than Omega 6’s"

Can anyone shed more light on this? Should I switch to flax seed oil? I read that flax seed oil can increase the likelihood of prostate problems.

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» RE: What About Hemp Oil? Posted by: TomOfMaine

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I Disagree
Posted by: Althaea on Aug 20, 2009 4:41 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I have been vegetarian and primarily vegan for close to 25 years and I disagree with much of this list. Scientific studies not withstanding, caffeine is bad for the human body. No amount of it is good. This rules out coffee, tea, and chocolate.

Chocolate is a bad idea unless you eat pure cacao nuts (but still there is the caffeine which is not negligible), which most people aren't going to. If you don't, then you eat it in the form of sweetened candy - artificially sweetened. Artificial sweetening of any kind is very bad and should be strictly avoided. There is an enormous difference in the brains of those who never have even a small portion of a tempting sweet, and those who have just small amounts. The brains of those who have even small amounts are set up to engage in powerful cravings. Even tiny amounts of sugary things causes powerful reactions in the body. Better to completely avoid putting oneself through unnecessary hell and abstain from them altogether. Its summer time - fruit is abundant.

The problem with the vast majority of people is not what they eat but what they crave - actually it is not what they crave but what they don't crave. They have lived so long eating an artificial diet that is so completely disconnected from nature and from what their body needs and wants, that their sense of taste and what gives them satisfaction is essentially broken and needs to be radically repaired. Most dietary guides completely ignore this fact and think it is just a matter of selecting some items differently off a store shelf, of substituting one thing for another, that will help. But, fundamentally, the brain needs to be programmed back to its more natural way of associating what is actually good with what actually tastes and feels good to consume.

The author recommends quite a lot of foods without regard to their carbon footprint. They mention that blueberries might be out of season and instead to opt for say goji berries. Goji berries are grown in the Himalayas and have an enormous carbon footprint.

The author's emphasis on Omega-3's and other EFAs for the human diet is correct, but their recommendation of expensive fish is something that won't work for the many who cannot afford such luxuries. A much more affordable alternative is to simply take fish oil supplements along with your meals of healthy grains and beans.

Finally, I disagree with the author's emphasis on nuts as being important. Nuts are actually not that good for human beings. Much better to get those essential amino acids from things like beans. I would say that chickpeas are one of the most important staple foods and put them up there above nuts. They are far more easily digestible, non-allergenic, and combine well with a huge number of dishes. They are also much less expensive.

I also disagree with recommending eggs. Eggs really are not that good for humans and one should learn first how to provide one's protein through proper eating and preparing of grains and legumes so I think emphasizing eggs is inappropriate.

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» Diet resulting in mental infirmity Posted by: guns4everyone

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Nike Dunk
Posted by: Nike Dunk on Aug 23, 2009 11:09 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Thank you for your sharing. Maybe you are interested in Nike Dunk.

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Carol Marsh
Posted by: Catherine42 on Aug 24, 2009 8:09 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The FDA said some years ago that a single can of albacore tuna has enough mercury to cause a pregnant woman to give birth to a deformed child. Tuna is a neurological poison, and it's my understanding that all tuna now contains mercury, often in dangerous levels.

Tea: You can decafinate tea yourself in 30 seconds. Just pour boiling water over the leaves, wait 30 seconds, pour it off and repour over the same leaves, and you've got decaf tea. Caffiene is highly water soluble.

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The premise of this article has a dangerous flaw...
Posted by: zigy on Aug 24, 2009 4:08 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
that being the idea that there is some small group of "superior" foods. Among the worst dietary fallacies is that if one just eats (fill in the blank) all of one's health and weight problems will disappear. As Michael Pollin has stated food science is still primitive. No one can definitively say what should or must be eaten. On the other hand, it can be said what should not be eaten or at least very carefully limited. Things like large quantities of refined sugar and refined carbohydrate are not part of a "natural" diet. Pollen ( a journalist, not a scientist) says (and I paraphrase), eat, not too much; mostly plants and limit the meat.

I would add to that it is perhaps useful to remember that our Paleolithic ancestors (for millions of years) ate mostly fruits, vegetables, tubers, nuts, and seeds along with very lean meat very different from today's artificially corn-feed beef. Note please that grains where NOT a large part of our traditional diet. The Agricultural Revolution (i.e. the beginning of the Neolithic) began a mere 10,000 years ago as our wandering, hunter-gatherer ancestors confronted our first population crises. At this time all over the world the land's carrying capacity for this life style was overextended and people in many regions were forced to settle into permanent, sedentary communities while experimenting (perhaps unconsciously) with plants that would provide a regular, dependable source of food. These "staple" crops were, with one exception (that being Peru where potatoes became the staple) all grains; wheat, rye, and oats in the Mid-east, maize in Mexico, rice in southeast Asia and wheat and millet in east China. The archeological record is unequivocal that the health of these original farmers was inferior to their hunting-gathering predecessors. Based upon this information it is my belief the U.S. government food recommendations are considerably flawed in recommending too much grain. In addition, there is an increasing body of scientific evidence that the pigments in fruits and vegetables provide a plethora of health and disease fighting benefits. One might perhaps add to Pollin's advice, eat an abundance of different colored plants, with a wide variety of colors.

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Delicious Food~~!
Posted by: bossyandrew on Aug 26, 2009 7:45 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]

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News flash: Men do not menstruate
Posted by: Eugenian on Aug 31, 2009 11:09 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
and thus do not tend to be deficient in iron. The author should have written that American premenopausal women tend to be deficient in iron. Premenopausal women lose iron through menstruation.

Except in very rare cases of anemia, men do not need to worry about getting enough iron. The male body stores all the iron it needs, and then some.

Of course, there are very good nutritional reasons to eat your greens, no matter what your gender. Spinach, for example, is a very good source of dietary fiber and also provides niacin; zinc; vitamins A, C, E (alpha tocopherol), K and B6; thiamin; riboflavin; folate; calcium; magnesium; phosphorus; potassium; copper; and manganese, in addition to iron.

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ugg cardy boots
Posted by: sadfa on Sep 6, 2009 1:49 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
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ugg cardy boots
Posted by: sadfa on Sep 6, 2009 1:53 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
ugg cardy boots This is a Australia brand, has a good reputation and the quality of the highest

quality, each used in the production of pairs of ugg boots are the 100% genuine sheepskin, and

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Especially after a head injury, omega3 and antioxidants are important
Posted by: Defenestrator on Aug 18, 2009 2:17 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Omega-3 aids recovery after traumatic brain injury. Interestingly, if someone takes Omega-3 BEFORE the brain injury, that will also aid in recovery after the brain injury. So, for example, if you know a soldier in Iraq or Afghanistan, send them Omega-3 supplements. It will help their prognosis if they experience they are among the 15% or so of soldiers in Iraq who end up with a traumatic brain injury (TBI). The military should make these supplements a daily requirement.

Also, antioxidants such as curcumin aid recovery after TBI. Importantly, they may help prevent the common transition from brain injury to Alzheimer's disease. (vitamin E is important as well)

At least as important for your brain (injured or not) than diet? Exercise!

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Do you suppose we could start a food drive
Posted by: marid on Aug 18, 2009 3:12 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
and give it away at these townhall debacles and shouting matches. A lot of those people could use some help with brain functions. Problem is there probably are not enough blueberries on the planet to cure what ails them.

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» You can't fix stupid Posted by: BlueTigress

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Now, what is your brain for?
Posted by: PaulK on Aug 18, 2009 8:13 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
You can develop certain mental skills. You can be a pianist, a writer like Garrison Keeler, or a math professor.

Most people use their brains for making money. Some are quite successful.

However, I recommend solving one of a very few problems in the world. First and foremost, the U.S. Government doesn't work. It's way too corrupted. We need a few people to put their heads together and start government reforms from the ground up, creating a wave which the current government is forced to accept (albeit piecemeal, and of course kicking and screaming like the worst possible infant).

Can you develop various mental skills to help find a partial cure for this problem? The cure may take generations of struggle.

Next, the world is overheating. I have a friend who really wants to label global warming as "natural cycles", but both natually-caused and man-made forest fires ought to be put out before they burn down nearby towns.

Again, can you develop various mental skills to help find a partial cure for this problem? The cure may take generations of struggle.

Most charities ask you for your money, or sometimes for a letter to Congress. I'd like to nudge you to give what only you can give -- yourself.

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Thank goodness
Posted by: soulrebeljc on Aug 18, 2009 8:14 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
My brain is relatively safe. Now tell me what Republicans eat (kittens and puppies, so I've heard), so I can avoid that. Just don't say BACON!!

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» RE: Thank goodness Posted by: MyLeftFoot
» No they don't! Posted by: zigy

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How credible
Posted by: bepa on Aug 18, 2009 8:33 PM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
is this list?

What are the sources for this information?

Sometimes these lists are started and there is NO scientific back up for the claims.

For example, at the link below, Snopes debunks the 8 glasses of water/day myth

http://www.snopes.com/medical/myths/8glasses.asp

..............

Sara Ost, the writer of this article, says about herself
"have a background in new media, marketing, and editing. I hold a B.A. in Communications and an M.A. in American Studies from Pepperdine University."

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» RE: How credible Posted by: Lady_L
» RE: How credible Posted by: Angie
» RE: How credible Posted by: Angie
» RE: How credible Posted by: Printanor
» RE: How credible Posted by: goeswithness
» RE: How credible Posted by: progressiveview
» RE: How credible Posted by: mandiwrite

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Now I know why I am SO smart!
Posted by: AJR Journal on Aug 18, 2009 9:16 PM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I have been eating these foods for years and I still love them. Great article.

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Food fantasies
Posted by: hquain on Aug 19, 2009 3:37 AM   
Current rating: 2    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This article cites not a single scientific source for any of its claims. Why should we pay attention to anything it says?

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» RE: Food fantasies Posted by: Obijuan

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Where is the evidence?
Posted by: TomInReston on Aug 19, 2009 4:20 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Advice given on a subject in which one is not a qualified expert should at least be supported by evidence from those who are.

A "background in new media, marketing, and editing", and "a B.A. in Communications and an M.A. in American Studies from Pepperdine University" do not qualify one to give unsupported health advice, without providing a single citation for any of the claims.

One would also expect someone with a background in editing and a degree in Communications to be able to write an article without using weasel words such as "You really needn’t worry about the overblown cholesterol fears. (I have quite a bit to say on this topic but I’ll restrain myself for once.)"

While some of this article does make sense (eating leafy greens, tomatoes, beans; avoiding alcohol and sugar), some of it (such as recommending eggs and olive oil) is not only inaccurate, but downright dangerous. (My citations for these claims are The China Study, by T Colin Campbell and Thomas M Campbell II; Prevent and Reverse Heart Disease, by Caldwell B. Esselstyn, Jr., MD; and The McDougall Program / 12 Days to Dynamic Health, by John McDougall, MD.)


Good health!
Tom

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» RE: Where is the evidence? Posted by: JamieC
» RE: Where is the evidence? Posted by: TomInReston
» RE: Where is the evidence? Posted by: progressiveview
» RE: Where is the evidence? Posted by: TomInReston

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Ha ha
Posted by: Mathew Trisencusean on Aug 19, 2009 4:37 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Does the author need all these brain foods to manage the cognitive strain of watching "really bad sunday night television"?

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These Foods are Costly
Posted by: emen on Aug 19, 2009 5:15 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I love it when nutritionists/doctors/writers/commnications graduates recommend healthy foods which cost 4 times as much as your regular diet. Do these recommendations come with a $100 gift certificate for groceries?

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» RE: These Foods are Costly Posted by: goeswithness
» Not necessarily Posted by: justAnEgg
» RE: Not necessarily Posted by: progressiveview
» RE: These Foods are Costly Posted by: metavurt
» RE: These Foods are Costly Posted by: photon's feather

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good list
Posted by: lindalee on Aug 19, 2009 6:49 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Some of your are just delusional. Why in the world would you need scientific proof that this article is accurate? All you have to do is pick up a magazine in a doctor's office to know that this list is excellent....or just ask your doctor. As for access, most of this stuff is readily available at your supermarket. I'm one of the have-nots and figured all this out a long time ago. I shop creatively, read labels and ask questions. For instance, if you have a food processor you can make your own almond butter. Cheap and easy.

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» RE: good list Posted by: goeswithness

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No red meat listed!
Posted by: xvictor on Aug 19, 2009 7:12 AM   
Current rating: 3    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
That figures. It's no wonder red meat eaters behave like dumbasses.

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Chickens are not vegetarians.
Posted by: greenmulberry on Aug 19, 2009 7:56 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I don't understand the allure of eggs from vegetarian chickens. Chickens are omnivores, and are avid bug eaters, and will eat snakes and baby mice with glee. For a chicken to be a vegetarian means it must have been kept in a confined existence away from natural protein sources, eating an unnatural diet.

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Wild Blueberries
Posted by: brewbaker on Aug 19, 2009 8:03 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Great article and very helpful for those of us who need reminders to stay on track with what we consume everyday. One clarification that could also be helpful is that wild blueberries are available year-round in your supermarket freezer. The frozen variety is actually more nutritious than fresh as they are frozen very soon after being picked, retaining all the good stuff. So no need to woory about seasonality and they're the wild ones--smaller, bursting with flavor and antioxidants! http://www.wildblueberries.com

2. Blueberries

These delicious berries are one of the best foods for you, period, but they’re very good for your brain as well. Since they’re high in fiber and low on the glycemic index, they are safe for diabetics and they do not spike blood sugar. Blueberries are possibly the best brain food on earth: they have been linked to reduced risk for Alzheimer’s, shown to improve learning ability and motor skills in rats, and they are one of the most powerful anti-stress foods you can eat. Avoid: dried, sweetened blueberries.

Green it: buy local and organic, and be mindful of seasonality. When blueberries are out of season, opt for cranberries, grapes, goji berries, blackberries or cherries to get your brain boost.

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hartsmart
Posted by: hartsmart on Aug 19, 2009 8:29 AM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The brain in charge of nutrition? The brain created the fattening pyramid food guide and an endless stream of idiotic diets. Aside from the eggs there is nothing I would want to ingest. I am a devout extra healthy carnivore atheist.
The brain, addicted to food shows and food ads.

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Add lemon to your tea
Posted by: happyman on Aug 19, 2009 8:41 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
A study from Purdue University showed that adding citrus juice to your tea, especially lemon juice, greatly increases the amount of beneficial antioxidants that remained after digestion for your body to absorb.

Here's the article:
http://www.purdue.edu/UNS/x/2007b/071113FerruzziTea.html

Enjoy!

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» RE: Add lemon to your tea Posted by: ruehigeAngie

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lindalee...Why do we need scientific studies?
Posted by: bepa on Aug 19, 2009 9:14 AM   
Current rating: 4    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
This post is particularly for those of you who rely on lists like this to base your views.

Women for decades were told by authors that taking hormone replacements would protect them from heart disease and even cancer.

The truth scientifically proven now with good studies, is just the opposite.

Women who have taken hormones during menopause are at GREATER RISK for disease than those who did not take those hormones.

How many women have died because of this misinformation that was given out as if it were scientifically sound advice? And the advice came from doctors too.

I am just saying...please be cautious, read widely and be skeptical.

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» Excellent point... Posted by: zigy

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fritzi cohen
Posted by: fritzi cohen on Aug 19, 2009 10:31 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Oysters may be an eco friendly healthy food, but only if they grow in high quality marine areas.
I am an oysterfarmer on willapa bay and I would not eat any oysters from this bay or several others in washington state. The commercial oystermen and others have been spraying this bay with carbaryl since 1965, and glyphosate and imazapyr since 1990. The bay no longer has a natural set which I have been totally dependent on.
Also, my beds were drifted on by the Polaris/Aquaneat(Imazapyr/Glyphosate cocktail and as a result our harvests have been suspended since 2007.
My advice know your waters first, and then choose the oyster.

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» how about Posted by: sophiej

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general principles OK but.....
Posted by: hilaryuk on Aug 19, 2009 11:30 AM   
Current rating: 5    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Ben Goldacre writes an informative column in the UK Guardian (guardian.co.uk/science/series/badscience), a running theme being equipping the reader to evaluate "scientific studies". As always, follow the money to see who is paying for a study, then look at the methodoloy used, then examine the relationship between the actual findings and then decide how credible it is. Of course, his column - 'Bad Science' explains far better than me, but, oddly enough, he's found an awful lot of iffy studies in the field of nutrition.

I'm not arguing with the basic principles underlying this article (except, perhaps, for the efficacy of anti-oxideants), merely urging healthy scepticism in the reader. On the whole, western man gets adequate nutrition from a reasonably healthy diet and no amount of healthy add-ons will nullify a basically bad diet - end of story; and anymore fuss seems a tad self indulgent in view of the looming global food crisis which is already affecting the poorest in the world.

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Regarding Number Four
Posted by: red godowar on Aug 19, 2009 11:47 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
There are no carbohydrates in nuts -- just fats and protein.

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» RE: egarding Number Four Posted by: Defenestrator

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pros and cons on article
Posted by: tazdelaney on Aug 19, 2009 5:21 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
most of these we've known are brain food for years. we try to have wild or organic salmon, since we don't tend to like mercury sauce, once a week and you can actually feel it's brain effect in a couple hours. sam, you sent me an article a few years ago about how mice/rats nearly forcefed blueberries and juice were not only shown to have dramatically increased learning skills but were also seen to pass along what they learned to the next generation. however, a few months ago, i read an article which, as i suspected, showed that huckleberries, the smarter wild blueberry that refuss to be domesticated and must still be picked in the wild... has double the brain-building power of mere blueberries – plus its taste is divine. haven't yet been able to afford it but here's a link to the divine huckleberry. {http://www.montanatreasures.com/} when i was a kid and went out to idaho, the grandparents would take us up camping in the lovely mountains where we'd fish, hike and pick hucks for pies, pancakes, syrup and it is the stuff, folks. five of the top ten most nutritious food man can eat are beans... apparently, too many people aren't feeding their puny brains...

but then i get to the end of the article and run into typically disinformational drugwar data damning first alcohol then tobacco.

yes, if you drink vast quantities of alcoholic beverages, you may not play the very best chess, but... too bad for the natives, this nation was built by hard-drinking heavy smoking people. wc fields drank a quart or more of bourbon a day and made millions laugh. humphrey bogart said, "yeah, i quit drinking once: it was the worst afternoon of my life." better yet, mae west said, "never trust a man who doesn't drink or smoke" and later said, "if they haven't got the little vices - watch out." show me a so-called 'drug-free' person (all of whom have something they use, whether jesus, television or prozac to alter their consciousness or just relax), and i'll show you a prohibitionist for anything someone else happens to use for their pursuit of happiness.

thomas edison was merck's poster boy for its trademark cocaine. FDR drank up to 10 martinis a day while chainsmoking. Churchill famously said he was never out of arm's reach of his current drink and he smoked 10 cigars a day and was a user of cocaine and codeine from college on, legal or not. compare prohibitionists' thinking to that of these folks and you'll get the picture of drugwar propaganda's 'truth' level.

i read this bunch of loony limey spychiatrists stated flatly that tobacco, marijuana and too much time spent online all dramatically lowered IQ. then this german bunch who make their living debunking suh psychiatric and pharma rubbish debunked each of these with strictly controlled studies of perople's IQs and compared these with their known IQs from their elementary school IQ tests. they found no difference. nver, ever believe anything a psychiatrist or their pharma people tell you. remember lobotomy, shock treatment and 'therapeutic castration.' meth and steroids and the 'anti-depressants' all had their origins in nazi germany's psychiatric pharma sciences, (mostly exported to them like their eugenics 'philosophy' from hoover's america...)

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Tea
Posted by: oregoncharles on Aug 19, 2009 8:34 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Only green tea is a good source of antioxidants. Black tea is made by oxidizing (don't know why they call it "fermenting": it isn't) green tea. It's the same chemistry that turns cut apples brown, and it destroys antioxidants.

Unfortunately, black tea tastes better (perhaps it contains some yet-unknown wonder nutrient), so I alternate, variety being the spice of life.

More than 2-3 cups a day, but what the hell. You know about addicts.

I'm looking pretty good on the rest of the list; must be why I'm so smart.:)

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What About Hemp Oil?
Posted by: mishawaka on Aug 20, 2009 3:46 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I am a vegetarian and I take a hemp seed oil capsule (1000 mg) twice a day. Hemp seed oil has an almost 3:1 ratio of Omega 6 to Omega 3. You can imagine my concern when I read this line in the article:

"You don’t want Omega 6 fats. Even saturated fat is safer than Omega 6’s"

Can anyone shed more light on this? Should I switch to flax seed oil? I read that flax seed oil can increase the likelihood of prostate problems.

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» RE: What About Hemp Oil? Posted by: TomOfMaine

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I Disagree
Posted by: Althaea on Aug 20, 2009 4:41 PM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
I have been vegetarian and primarily vegan for close to 25 years and I disagree with much of this list. Scientific studies not withstanding, caffeine is bad for the human body. No amount of it is good. This rules out coffee, tea, and chocolate.

Chocolate is a bad idea unless you eat pure cacao nuts (but still there is the caffeine which is not negligible), which most people aren't going to. If you don't, then you eat it in the form of sweetened candy - artificially sweetened. Artificial sweetening of any kind is very bad and should be strictly avoided. There is an enormous difference in the brains of those who never have even a small portion of a tempting sweet, and those who have just small amounts. The brains of those who have even small amounts are set up to engage in powerful cravings. Even tiny amounts of sugary things causes powerful reactions in the body. Better to completely avoid putting oneself through unnecessary hell and abstain from them altogether. Its summer time - fruit is abundant.

The problem with the vast majority of people is not what they eat but what they crave - actually it is not what they crave but what they don't crave. They have lived so long eating an artificial diet that is so completely disconnected from nature and from what their body needs and wants, that their sense of taste and what gives them satisfaction is essentially broken and needs to be radically repaired. Most dietary guides completely ignore this fact and think it is just a matter of selecting some items differently off a store shelf, of substituting one thing for another, that will help. But, fundamentally, the brain needs to be programmed back to its more natural way of associating what is actually good with what actually tastes and feels good to consume.

The author recommends quite a lot of foods without regard to their carbon footprint. They mention that blueberries might be out of season and instead to opt for say goji berries. Goji berries are grown in the Himalayas and have an enormous carbon footprint.

The author's emphasis on Omega-3's and other EFAs for the human diet is correct, but their recommendation of expensive fish is something that won't work for the many who cannot afford such luxuries. A much more affordable alternative is to simply take fish oil supplements along with your meals of healthy grains and beans.

Finally, I disagree with the author's emphasis on nuts as being important. Nuts are actually not that good for human beings. Much better to get those essential amino acids from things like beans. I would say that chickpeas are one of the most important staple foods and put them up there above nuts. They are far more easily digestible, non-allergenic, and combine well with a huge number of dishes. They are also much less expensive.

I also disagree with recommending eggs. Eggs really are not that good for humans and one should learn first how to provide one's protein through proper eating and preparing of grains and legumes so I think emphasizing eggs is inappropriate.

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» Diet resulting in mental infirmity Posted by: guns4everyone

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Nike Dunk
Posted by: Nike Dunk on Aug 23, 2009 11:09 PM   
Current rating: 1    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
Thank you for your sharing. Maybe you are interested in Nike Dunk.

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Carol Marsh
Posted by: Catherine42 on Aug 24, 2009 8:09 AM   
Current rating: Not yet rated    [1 = poor; 5 = excellent]
The FDA said some years ago that a single can of albacore tuna has enough mercury to cause a pregnant woman to give birth to a deformed child. Tuna is a neurological poison, and it's my understanding that all tuna now contains mercury, often in dangerous levels.

Tea: You can decafinate tea yourself in 30 seconds. Just pour boiling water over the leaves, wait 30 seconds, pour it off and repour over the same leaves, and you've got decaf tea. Caffiene is highly water soluble.

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The premise of this article has a dangerous flaw...
Posted by: zigy on Aug 24, 2009 4:08 PM   
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that being the idea that there is some small group of "superior" foods. Among the worst dietary fallacies is that if one just eats (fill in the blank) all of one's health and weight problems will disappear. As Michael Pollin has stated food science is still primitive. No one can definitively say what should or must be eaten. On the other hand, it can be said what should not be eaten or at least very carefully limited. Things like large quantities of refined sugar and refined carbohydrate are not part of a "natural" diet. Pollen ( a journalist, not a scientist) says (and I paraphrase), eat, not too much; mostly plants and limit the meat.

I would add to that it is perhaps useful to remember that our Paleolithic ancestors (for millions of years) ate mostly fruits, vegetables, tubers, nuts, and seeds along with very lean meat very different from today's artificially corn-feed beef. Note please that grains where NOT a large part of our traditional diet. The Agricultural Revolution (i.e. the beginning of the Neolithic) began a mere 10,000 years ago as our wandering, hunter-gatherer ancestors confronted our first population crises. At this time all over the world the land's carrying capacity for this life style was overextended and people in many regions were forced to settle into permanent, sedentary communities while experimenting (perhaps unconsciously) with plants that would provide a regular, dependable source of food. These "staple" crops were, with one exception (that being Peru where potatoes became the staple) all grains; wheat, rye, and oats in the Mid-east, maize in Mexico, rice in southeast Asia and wheat and millet in east China. The archeological record is unequivocal that the health of these original farmers was inferior to their hunting-gathering predecessors. Based upon this information it is my belief the U.S. government food recommendations are considerably flawed in recommending too much grain. In addition, there is an increasing body of scientific evidence that the pigments in fruits and vegetables provide a plethora of health and disease fighting benefits. One might perhaps add to Pollin's advice, eat an abundance of different colored plants, with a wide variety of colors.

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Delicious Food~~!
Posted by: bossyandrew on Aug 26, 2009 7:45 PM   
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News flash: Men do not menstruate
Posted by: Eugenian on Aug 31, 2009 11:09 PM   
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and thus do not tend to be deficient in iron. The author should have written that American premenopausal women tend to be deficient in iron. Premenopausal women lose iron through menstruation.

Except in very rare cases of anemia, men do not need to worry about getting enough iron. The male body stores all the iron it needs, and then some.

Of course, there are very good nutritional reasons to eat your greens, no matter what your gender. Spinach, for example, is a very good source of dietary fiber and also provides niacin; zinc; vitamins A, C, E (alpha tocopherol), K and B6; thiamin; riboflavin; folate; calcium; magnesium; phosphorus; potassium; copper; and manganese, in addition to iron.

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ugg cardy boots
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