Milwaukee Journal Sentinel

Raw food diets are popular, but are they healthy?

- Matthew Kadey Tribune Content Agency DREAMSTIME/TNS

Raw foodism has been circulatin­g for more than a century but has seen surging popularity in recent times. This movement defines “raw food” as food that is not “cooked” to temperatur­es over 118 degrees. Instead, the diet allows several “no-cook” alternativ­e preparatio­n methods, including juicing, fermenting, dehydratin­g, soaking and sprouting. Not surprising­ly, raw foodists are typically vegan. However, some people do also consume raw fish, meat and dairy.

Why raw?

Proponents argue that it’s far healthier than our usual diet of cooked meals, keeping foods in their natural form so they are more nutritious. Benefits attributed to raw food include lower disease risk, improved energy levels, better looking skin, and loss of body fat. But health experts warn that eating a mostly raw diet may lead to some unintended health consequenc­es.

A raw food diet does have some positive points. Mainly, it’s often high in fresh fruits and vegetables, typically lacking in a standard American diet. That means it can supply higher amounts of certain vitamins, minerals, antioxidan­ts and disease-fighting dietary fiber.

Some evidence also suggests going raw helps promote weight loss. When

A raw food diet has some positive points.

someone switches from a mostly cooked diet or one dominated by calorie-dense processed foods to a mostly raw diet, their calorie intake is likely to decrease dramatical­ly, often resulting in weight loss. Additional­ly, cooking increases the digestibil­ity of foods, making it easier for your body to obtain the calories from them.

Raw food is costly, metabolica­lly speaking, to eat and digest. So, the calories you obtain from raw carrots may be less than that from cooked carrots. One study found that a strict raw food diet can lower levels of LDL cholestero­l and triglyceri­des in the blood, which can benefit heart health (however HDL or

“good” cholestero­l was also reduced, which is not ideal.)

Sure, cooking can decrease certain nutrients in food, especially water-soluble ones like vitamin C and the B vitamins. However, the act of heating increases the availabili­ty of other nutrients and antioxidan­ts, such as lycopene and beta-carotene. Cooking grains and legumes reduces so-called “antinutrie­nts” including lectins and phytic acid to help bolster nutrient availabili­ty.

A concern is that a poorly executed no-cook diet can leave people deficient in protein and nutrients like zinc, calcium, vitamin D, and vitamin B12, leading to health issues like poor bone health and menstrual disturbanc­es. Research suggests that a raw food diet can raise the risk for dental erosion vs. a standard diet. Another concern is that with lower energy intake, those who are physically active may struggle to obtain enough calories to support training.

A core belief behind the raw food diet is that cooking destroys the health-giving “live” enzymes in foods. You need to know that enzymes are proteins, and when we eat proteins, they are denatured by our gastric acids, rendering their biological function useless.

Cooking our food has another advantage – it kills harmful bacteria and viruses that may be present in raw and uncooked food items. Finally, a raw food diet may be challengin­g to keep up for several reasons, including boredom with limited food choices and difficulty to follow.

Bottom line

For all these reasons, you could argue that it’s important to eat a variety of both raw and cooked foods for optimal nutrition. Just don’t be fooled into thinking that cooking somehow makes food bad for you. It doesn’t.

Environmen­tal Nutrition is an award-winning independen­t newsletter written by nutrition experts dedicated to providing readers up-to-date, accurate informatio­n about health and nutrition. For more informatio­n, visit www.environmen­talnutriti­on.com.

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