A Classic Way to Do The Vegan Diet The WRONG WAY. Excellent Video.
Ex Vegans are experts at doing the Vegan Diet The WRONG WAY.
Ex Vegans are one of the main reasons why I became a Vegan.
To Find The Right Answer, You Have To Ask The Right Question. I Am Always Looking For The Right Question.
Showing posts with label Vegan. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Vegan. Show all posts
Sunday, March 3, 2013
Friday, February 22, 2013
Wednesday, February 13, 2013
Primal Wisdom: Uprooting the Leading Causes of Death | NutritionF...
Primal Wisdom: Uprooting the Leading Causes of Death | NutritionF...: Uprooting the Leading Causes of Death | NutritionFacts.org Dr. Greger presents some of the scientific evidence indicating that plant-base...
Source: http://donmatesz.blogspot.com/2013/02/uprooting-leading-causes-of-death.html
Source: http://donmatesz.blogspot.com/2013/02/uprooting-leading-causes-of-death.html
Tuesday, February 5, 2013
How to cure diseases naturally
Charlotte Gerson of the Gerson Institute explains how you can heal the body naturally from diseases.
How to cure diseases naturally from Jake Conner on Vimeo.
How to cure diseases naturally from Jake Conner on Vimeo.
Saturday, February 2, 2013
Wednesday, January 30, 2013
Engineering a Cure
He did what the Medical System thought was Impossible. He cured himself from Heart Disease. By Saving himself, he saved others from Heart Disease. Saving Lives is what it's all about.
Tuesday, January 29, 2013
Monday, January 28, 2013
Cancer Reversal Through Diet? (HIGH Natural Sugar/Carb Based Diet)
OOOOOOOOPS :-) Cancer Reversal with a HIGH Natural Sugar/Carb Based Diet.
Saturday, January 26, 2013
Tuesday, January 22, 2013
Setting the record straight Vegetables have plenty of protein, and they're complete proteins as well.
This is one of my favorite websites on Protein. Michael Bluejay does an Excellent Job.
http://michaelbluejay.com/veg/protein.html
Amino acid need from the World Health Organization4, food composition from the USDA nutrient database4.1.
Analysis is for each individual food all supplying calorie needs (closest to the "low active" category for a 5'11" 181lb. 25BMI male, as per the FDA).3
http://michaelbluejay.com/veg/protein.html
Here's a quote from this excellent link -
"There's a very easy way to see the completeness of plant proteins, that most nutrition writers haven't bothered to do: Look at what's actually in the food! It's not like this is a secret; that data has been publicly available from the USDA for decades, and now the USDA's database is even online.4.1 Below is what it looks like when you actually look up the numbers.
| |||||||||
Amino acid > | cine | +Tyrosine | |||||||
Need | |||||||||
Brown Rice | |||||||||
Tomatoes | |||||||||
Potatoes | |||||||||
Green Peppers | |||||||||
Corn | |||||||||
Lettuce (iceberg) | |||||||||
Celery | |||||||||
Cucumbers | |||||||||
Oats | |||||||||
Carrots | |||||||||
Broccoli | |||||||||
Pinto Beans |
Analysis is for each individual food all supplying calorie needs (closest to the "low active" category for a 5'11" 181lb. 25BMI male, as per the FDA).3
So when we compare the actual requirements to what plant foods actually contain, we find that basic plant foods aren't incomplete at all. They have every essential amino acid, in excess of what we need. It might not surprise you that beans are a complete protein by themselves, but even carrots are a complete protein. Tomatoes are a complete protein. Celery is a complete protein. Even iceberg lettuce is a complete protein.Source: http://michaelbluejay.com/veg/protein.html
(Those who would object that we can't eat enough lettuce to satisfy our protein needs are wildly missing the point. The point of using a day's worth of calories for a single food is simply to show how the food measures up, not to suggest that anyone could or should eat only a single food. These plant foods are complete no matter how much or how little of them you eat. That is, if only 1% of your diet is lettuce, then lettuce supplies more than 1% of your protein and amino acid requirements.)
Interestingly, the amounts for "Need" in the table are twice what they were until recently. The original recommendations in the WHO's 1973 and 1985 reports were based on William Rose's pioneering work in the 1950's, and were considerably lower.6 Rose determined the levels needed by his subjects by intentionally feeding them diets with a synthetic mixture of declining levels of amino acids until they became deficient. After finding the highest amount needed by any subject, he then doubled that figure to arrive at his recommendation.7 And the current WHO recommendations have doubled their earlier figures again. And even with all these increases, individual plants still measure up as fully complete."
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