Thursday, July 7, 2016

Are Juice Cleanses Nonsense

Is the Juice Cleansing Movement All Hype or Are There Real Health Benefits

The impetus to juice is to enjoy the health benefits associated with the consumption of additional vegetables, herbs, roots, and fruit. Juicing, if done correctly, will allow "the juicer" to get many more plant-sourced vitamins, minerals, and phytochemicals into their body than would otherwise not be possible if consumed by traditional mastication (chewing up and swallowing).

Juicing is NOT about getting an additional source of fiber into the diet. It's the exact opposite. Juicing extracts and disposes of the fiber from the produce being juiced, thereby, leaving the liquid portion devoid of time-consuming, need-to-be-digested fiber, in the juicer's catch-cup for speedier digestion upon swallowing. The liquid dispelled by the juice extraction machine contains all of the vitamins, minerals, and beneficial plant compounds of those juiced vegetables, herbs, roots, and fruits. Vitamins, minerals, and plant compounds that would otherwise be missing from a diet that's based upon lean animal-sourced protein and under 50 grams of carbohydrates (the amount of carbs found in 1 cup of long-grain brown rice or ~1 cup of baked sweet potatoes) like the Paleo, Ketogenic, and Atkins-type diets. 

Juicing experts and educated juice advocates recommend juicing primarily green vegetables, a few  root vegetables for their dense mineral content, and very little low-sugar fruit. Most American diets are not lacking in fruit. The Standard American Diet (SAD) is reported in clinical research as being low in green vegetables like broccoli, cabbage, kale, spinach, and Brussel sprouts. Dietary questionnaires and patient interviews show that the majority of Americans are able to eat an apple, an orange, a tomato, or a banana daily, but the average American has difficulty trying to find the time to make a pot of green beans, steam a pan of asparagus, or boil turnip greens for a nutritious side item at mealtime. 

Dark green vegetables are high in protein (though many uninformed critics of juicing say otherwise), vitamins, and minerals and low in glucose unlike root vegetables and fruit which can contain as much sugar as a 1/2 can of Coke to the shock of many a store-bought juice lover (1 cup of green grapes contains 21grams of sugar minus the fiber versus 19.5grams of sugar in a 1/2 can of coke). A ketogenic dieter or a paleo adventure lover wanting to add a clean-burning plant-based protein to their diet could make a green juice that contains 1 bunch of broccoli with its 17.15grams of protein and 1 head of cauliflower with its 16.13grams of protein and wind up with a glass of vegetable juice that contains 33.28grams of total protein which is equivalent to ~4.5 ounces of cooked 93% lean ground beef without the added cholesterol and naturally derived animal hormones. 

There is a science to juicing just as there is a science or method to cooking. Cooking requires some know how and so does juicing. To create a vegetable juice that is nutritious and well balanced, it is advisable to read a few good books on the subject written by dietary chefs who have been educated in juicing or by professional juice therapists. There is a plethora of misinformation on the internet and books published which have been written by overnight authors who do not know the subject matter which they are writing about. There is also an equal number of juice critics that for one reason or another want to put the kibosh on juicing by suggesting that those who juice will become protein deficient. As you can see for yourself from the above-referenced example, adequate protein can be easily had in one glass of vegetable juice if one juices protein-dense vegetables and not primarily sugary fruits that are low in protein. 

Protein, vitamins, minerals, essential fatty acids, and carbohydrates can all be found in a big glass of green juice. Governmental research shows Americans just aren't getting enough vegetables in their daily diet so why not try to consume a single glass of vegetable juice each day. An easy way to do this is to make a glass of vegetable juice for breakfast. A morning glass of green juice will contain just as much protein without the added cholesterol as eating a breakfast egg, sausage, and cheese omelet with the exact same amount of fiber as the extracted vegetable juice -- ZERO.  An egg and sausage or egg and bacon breakfast contains no fiber as does a glass of extracted vegetable juice. Therefore, why are pundits arguing against juicing not realizing that the standard American breakfast is oftentimes devoid of fiber as well is beyond me. 

In conclusion, juicing can be incorporated into ones diet in order to get the recommended daily allowance of vitamins and minerals. Juicing can also add a clean-burning source of plant-based protein to someone's diet whose percentage of dietary protein maybe too rich in animal meat. Juicing can be low in sugar if the amount of juiced fruit is kept to a minimum -- just enough fruit to make a juice palatable for consumption. And, lastly, a great rule of thumb I tell my clients who are about to embark on a juicing program is "juice your vegetables and eat your fruit." 

Thank you for your continued literary support. It is heaven to be able to write and your readership provides the clouds on which I pen my prose. 

Sincerest Thanks,
- Bell Gia
Nutrition and Fitness Expert






Saturday, July 2, 2016

No Insulin Secretion Means No Stored Calories

What Foods Do Not Cause Insulin Secretion?

Much to the surprise of what many people believe, protein stimulates insulin's release from the pancreas just as sugar and starch do.

Insulin, if you remember, is the hormone whose main job is clearing excessive glucose from the bloodstream and packaging it in the form of fatty acids called triglycerides into your fat cells for later use. Insulin begins to be secreted by the body BEFORE we take our first bite of food. When we start daydreaming about, looking at, or smelling food, our brains release insulin during a process called Cephalic Phase Insulin Release. The body prepares itself to be fed and gets an early jump of what it thinks will be a sudden flood of glucose by releasing the stored insulin tucked away in your cell's vacuoles. The amount of insulin your body keeps stored in these storage organelles called vacuoles is determined by your previous meals' average macronutrient content. If you've made it a habit of eating sugar or complex carbs at mealtime, your body's got your number and it has stored an appropriate amount of insulin in anticipation. Once we start to eat, our bodies kick up its insulin secretion and produce even more of this hormone. 

Insulin does more than control blood glucose levels. It also stimulates the body to absorb most amino acids. Amino acids, as you know, make up protein. Too much protein, just as too many carbs, will have your pancreas pumping out insulin like a gas station attendant on a rainy day. Therefore, if you consume more protein than your body needs, your pancreas is going to produce insulin, causing your body to store those protein calories as glycogen, a/k/a stored carbs, IF you have room in your liver and muscles for the stuff. If there's no room for anymore glycogen in your liver and muscles, then those protein calories ARE going into your fat cells and can increase your body's percentage of total body fat if you've made it a habit of consuming more protein than your body requires from you on a daily basis.

Dietary fat is the only macronutrient that doesn't cause insulin to be secreted. This means that when you eat foods that are entirely composed of fat, or predominantly made of the stuff, your pancreas is able to relax and kick up its proverbial feet and take a break so to speak.

The foods we eat are divided into three categories or macronutrients: protein, fat, and carbohydrates. The predominant or majority macronutrient contained in a food determines its food-category status. For example, beans contain protein, fiber, fat, and carbohydrates. If you turn over a can of kidney, black, chick peas, or white beans you will find out that beans are a carbohydrate and NOT a protein based upon the beans' predominant macronutrient content which is carbohydrates.  

Steak, chicken breast, salmon, veal, bison, and ostrich are all examples of meat. Meat or animal flesh does NOT contain any carbs, only protein and fat. (Please notice that I did not include dairy. Dairy contains milk sugar which is a carbohydrate.) Avocados, butter, and plant oils (oil is another name for fat) like peanut, olive, coconut, sunflower, and sesame for example, do not cause insulin's release. 

If you trying to keep your insulin release to a minimum, perhaps trying to stick to a ketogenic diet and are striving to get under 50 carbohydrates a day, this means you can put butter in your coffee or on top of your bison and still stay in ketogenesis. 

In addition to avocados, butter, the appropriate amount of animal muscle (flesh), and the plant oils mentioned above, pre-diabetics, those striving to minimize insulin secretion, and ketogenic dieters can enjoy an ounce of macadamia nuts and still be okay when finger-stick time comes around because these Hawaiian nuts contain 21 grams of fat, 2 grams of protein, and only 4 grams of carbohydrates. These same folks can also have an ounce of full-fat cream cheese melting on top of their broccoli or perfectly cooked ribeye steak with its 9 grams of fat, 2 grams of protein, and measly 1 gram of carbs and still have high levels of BHB or beta-hydroxybutrate, the key parameter to determine if ketones are being produced by the body in response to fasting or extremely low-carbohydrate consumption.

Controlling ones insulin secretion is starting to catch on. Large universities and private research companies are beginning to invest millions of dollars into the subject. Cancer research studies are going on presently with human-test subjects in hopes of fighting the dreaded disease. There has been some terrific research done on longevity and low insulin secretion. 

I think it might be a great idea to keep ones mind open when it comes to low-carbohydrate diets. Sometimes what was once considered common knowledge has been proven wrong. Remember, people used to believe the world was flat and that the devil caused seizures. 

Thank you for your continued support. I live to write.

-Bell Gia
Nutrition and Fitness Expert