When I was eleven,
all I wanted was a pair of Adidas snap pants. All the cool kids wore them. As
much as I campaigned though, Mum and Dad held their ground; they were too
expensive, I wouldn’t wear them. Then one Saturday we were shopping and I
spotted a stall selling rows of them. They were black and white, had the
snap-sides, and were only a fiver. I convinced my parents. But when I got them
home, something was off. The iconic logo was missing and the label read ‘Sportz
Xtreme’. They had all the elements of the real deal, but something didn’t feel
quite right.
I learnt a
valuable lesson that day; the original is the best. Whether we value a designer’s
trendy branding or an artist’s unique brushstrokes, there’s an aura around the
authentic beyond just what we can see, it is something we feel. The same is
true with food.
Unfortunately, for
the most part we are being sold replicas. Foods that have been taken apart and
put back together, had the popular nutrients of the moment added and demonized
ones removed.
From a quick look
in the supermarket, you would think we are more enlightened about nutrition
than ever. It seems we have food figured out – we’ve engineered it to cut out bad,
add in good. So why are there record levels of obesity and chronic disease? It just
doesn’t add up.
Nutrition as a
science is still relatively young and many things about food aren’t entirely
understood. One thing that is generally agreed, but isn’t as profitable, is
that eating food in its unrefined, original state is best. Nature has devised some
pretty clever systems that mean wholefoods nourish us on a level we can’t
replicate through processing.
So how can we get
more of the real deal onto our plates?
Ask more of your fruit and veggies; consider the skins, cores and seeds. This
won’t work with everything, watermelons I’m looking at you. But there are heaps
of options; adding citrus peel to salads, baking potatoes whole, chomping on
kiwifruit, hairy skin included.
Eat and drink full-fat dairy. It
tastes better, and our bodies can’t properly digest it without the fat. Milk and
yoghurt also contain fat-soluble vitamins, meaning we won’t absorb those
nutrients if it’s been skimmed. Choose real butter and ditch margarines, which
are chemically altered and all round bad for you.
Use real oils. Cook with stable fats such as coconut oil or ghee. Use
olive, sesame and nut oils at very low temperatures only, or better yet just as
dressing, as they release dangerous free-radicals when heated. Avoid easily damaged, processed oils such as canola,
vegetable and sunflower.
Think outside the breast – chicken, that is. Go beyond muscle meats and try
using more of the animal such as liver, offal and marrow. Keep the bones from
your roast to make nutrient-rich, homemade stock.
Choose disease
fighting, immune-boosting and, best of all, delicious wholefoods. Whether
they’re snap pants or snap peas, don’t settle for pale imitations, they just won’t
feel right.
This article was written for my weekly column in The Australian Times, The Whole Meal.
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