The Sunday Post (Inverness)

Food is our best weapon in cancer fight

A new book promises healthy eating will help patients through gruelling treatments

- WORDS SA L LY M CDONA LD

Anyone diagnosed with cancer wants to know how to manage the debilitati­ng side effects of treatment. The answer, according to a new book, lies in food. Nutritioni­sts Sarah Grossman and Tamara Green’s The Living Kitchen is packed with around 100 tasty, stress-free, and freezer-friendly meals, specially designed to relieve specific symptoms and side effects of cancer and treatments including chemothera­py.

But more than that, the recipes contain key nutrients aimed at boosting healing and protecting the body’s healthy cells.

Sarah, 33, tells P.S: “Nutrition is so important before, during and after treatment.

“Proteins help with muscles recovery and staying strong. Vitamins and minerals protect the healthy cells and help the immune system to rebuild. “Food can be comforting and it is something we can do to help our loved ones who are going through treatment. Giving them delicious food with healthy ingredient­s is one of the best ways you can support people emotionall­y.

“Nutrient-rich broths, soups, and smoothies can help when someone is experienci­ng a loss of appetite or when they are not able to eat anything else; with liquid options you don’t have to worry about chewing or the pain of swallowing too much.”

Before treatment:

Fill up on immune-supportive foods

It’s important to support your immune system and to detoxify organs like your colon, liver and kidneys. Eat immune-supportive foods like onions, garlic, ginger, lemons, blueberrie­s, kale, broccoli and turmeric.

Reduce sugar intake

Sugar can interfere with your white blood cell function for up to five hours after ingestion. Eat foods that will keep your blood sugar stable and your insulin levels lower, like whole grains, beans, vegetables and healthy proteins.

Fats and protein

Eating healthy fats and protein will strengthen your body so that you don’t feel weak going into treatment. Eat avocado, seeds and nuts or put a tablespoon of coconut oil, flax oil or hemp oil into your smoothies.

Avoid inflammato­ry foods

Avoid processed meat, alcohol, fizzy drinks, baked goods, most commercial­ly made snacks, crisps, vegetable oils, sugar, refined flour, processed and deep-fried foods, and gluten if you are sensitive. Also limit red meat and unfermente­d dairy. Avoid cooking at high temperatur­es and never reuse cooking oil.

Eat simple foods

Avoid anything that has intense flavours or spices, and foods that are difficult to digest. Easy smoothies, oatmeal, soup, steamed greens, eggs and mashed veggies are all great.

Avoid alcohol

The liver works hard to detoxify everyday substances, including hormones like oestrogen, and has the additional burden of chemothera­py drugs and possible radiation exposure. Alcohol affects its ability to detoxify substances properly.

Drink more water

Aim to drink about 1.5 to 2 litres of water a day to help flush out toxins.

After treatment

Many cancer treatments impact taste, smell, and saliva production. You may notice foods start to taste metallic, like cardboard or just bland. This can be frustratin­g, especially if you are unable to taste flavours that you typically enjoy. Here are some tips to combat these particular side effects.

● If you experience a metallic taste in your mouth, try eating with plastic cutlery.

● Rinse out your mouth before and after meals with warm salt water (avoid this tip if you have mouth sores, as salt water will aggravate them).

● Add extra herbs to meals, for example, The Living Kitchen is published by Robinson on August 22 parsley, basil, dill, coriander, thyme, rosemary or oregano.

● Add spices to enhance the flavour of dishes, like cumin, cinnamon, coriander, sumac, za’atar, chilli powder and paprika.

● Try cuisines like Moroccan, Thai, Mediterran­ean or Indian, which incorporat­e lots of spices and flavours your taste buds may not be used to.

● Add fresh garlic or roasted garlic to savoury meals to bring out flavour.

● If foods tastes metallic, add a bit of acid over the top – for instance, lemon juice, lime juice or orange juice.

● If food tastes bland and dry, add sea salt or drizzle oil (extra-virgin olive oil, flax oil, hemp oil or coconut oil) over your meal.

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 ??  ?? ● Kale, broccoli, onions and turmeric are just some of the foods that can help boost your all-important immune system
● Kale, broccoli, onions and turmeric are just some of the foods that can help boost your all-important immune system
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