
Don’t ask Dr. Kellogg
Fifteen years ago, when my wife began thinking about teaching cooking classes, she asked me to help her come up with a name for her new cooking school. I asked her what she wanted to accomplish. Did she want to teach people how to cook fancy “gourmet” foods? She pondered my question and responded: “No…what I really want to do is teach people how to cook from scratch without having to rely on processed foods.” “Then you need a name that expresses this philosophy,” I responded. “How about RealCuisine?” Over the years my wife invited hundreds of people into her kitchen and taught them how to cook. Upon retirement from teaching, she began her 10-year career as an Illinois Times food columnist. The RealCuisine name was resurrected when our daughter, Ashley, moved back to Springfield and opened RealCuisine Catering.
Nowadays there’s much confusion over “real” versus “processed” food. Real or “whole” food is food that has not been processed, refined, stripped, polished, fortified, enriched or otherwise modified. Real foods have names that your greatgrandmother would recognize. If it’s not real food, then it’s manufactured calories and there’s a big difference between real food and manufactured calories. Manufactured calories cause all kinds of serious medical problems such as diabetes, obesity and heart disease.
Wheat, for example, when harvested, is composed of a bran fiber coat, an endosperm composed primarily of starch, and the wheat germ, which contains nutritious oils. Processing removes the bran fiber coat and the wheat germ, leaving a pellet of white starch, which we know as flour. When ingested, the resultant starch chains break down and are absorbed quickly. Foods that are easily broken down and quickly absorbed (like white flour and sugar) cause a rapid rise in blood sugar. Foods that are broken down slowly (such as vegetables, nuts, whole grains, beans, eggs, meats) get absorbed slowly and blood sugars remain stable.
After the broken-down food crosses the walls of your gut and enters your bloodstream, your body releases insulin to escort the sugar molecules into the cells of your body. The faster the sugar is absorbed, the greater the amount of insulin is needed. The slower the absorption, the less insulin is required. High levels of insulin lead to insulin resistance. Insulin resistance leads to pre-diabetes and obesity.
Nutrients that are absorbed slowly include fiber, proteins (found in whole grains, seeds, nuts, eggs and nonstarchy vegetables). Nutrients that are absorbed quickly are sugar and “stripped” carbohydrates found in processed foods: soda, breakfast cereal, doughnuts, bagels, cookies and pasta.
I am always amazed when I
walk through the cereal and juice aisles of the grocery store. The
shelves are filled with brilliantly colored packages. If you squint, you
might think you were in the aisle of a toy store rather than a grocery
store. There are hundreds and hundreds of products competing for shelf
space. Well-meaning parents, not wanting their children to drink soda,
shop for “healthier” alternatives such as fruit juices, which
unfortunately are just as “unhealthy” as soda. And obesity and diabetes
rates keep climbing.
How
did we arrive at this point? Our story begins back in the late 1800s in
Battle Creek, Michigan. Dr. John Harvey Kellogg opened a sanitarium and
wanted to provide his patients nutritious breakfast options and
developed a flaked cereal. Dr. Kellogg took a leave of absence to
continue his medical studies in Europe and left the management of his
business interests to his brother, Will Kellogg, who was more interested
in making money than Dr. Kellogg. Will realized that the addition of
sugar to the breakfast flakes (which his brother strongly opposed)
increased acceptance. One of the patients at the sanitarium was a
marketing whiz named C.W. Post. Post, from Springfield, Illinois, later
opened up his own sanitarium and line of cereals in competition with the
Kelloggs. And the processed food industry was born.
During
World War II, foodmanufacturing emphasis shifted to creating food for
the troops. Rations with a long shelf life requiring little preparation
were developed: MREs -- Meals Ready to Eat. Fearing that our soldiers
would not maintain adequate nutrition if the foods were bland and
boring, the food industry hired chemists to devise ways of enhancing
taste while maintaining portability and long shelf life. They found that
by manipulating proportions of sugar, salt and fat, an optimal taste
could be achieved, which they dubbed the “bliss point.”
The
postwar boom saw an increase in homemakers leaving the kitchen and
entering the workplace. The processed food industry, which had ramped up
production for the war, needed to find new markets and stepped in to
provide “convenience” foods for working households. The food giants
assigned their chemists the task of developing food products that
stimulate the taste buds, diminish the feeling of fullness and entice
you to keep eating. To further this goal, psychologists were hired to
evaluate which product formulations created the greatest acceptance.
After the “bliss point” of the product was achieved, marketing firms
were hired to create product appeal and prominent grocery store shelf
space.
The processed
food industry felt pushback from home economics teachers and responded
by creating Betty Crocker, a fictitious character who took over the
reins of consumer education. Betty put a human face on food corporations
bidding for the attention of consumers. Meal preparation shifted from
cooking meals from “scratch” to meals created by combining ready-made
products. With each successive generation, the knowledge and skills
required to prepare meals from unprocessed ingredients diminished. It’s
no accident that we have become a society of snackers. That’s what
happens when your body isn’t nourished by real food.
In
my efforts to break my own dependency on processed foods, I have
learned to make delicious, nutritious dips and spreads. But my strategy
falls apart when I enjoy my dips and spreads on a cracker. Most crackers
have a high sugar content and contain surprisingly little fiber.
Keebler Club Crackers, Ritz Crackers and Wheat Thins are very high in
sugar/high fructose corn syrup. Surprisingly, 10 Ritz Whole Wheat
Crackers or 10 Nabisco Wheatsworth Stone Ground Wheat crackers contain
less than a single gram of fiber.
Making
your own nutritious crackers is surprisingly easy. The following recipe
was given to me by my friend Molly Suhadolnik, co-owner of CrossFit
Instinct. These crackers are tender and crisp because the seeds
contribute their own natural oils.
Molly’s Crackers
Ingredients
• 3/4 cup water
• ½ cup almond meal
• 1/2 cup ground flax seeds + 3 tablespoons whole flax seeds
• ¼ cup sunflower seeds
• ¼ cup sesame seeds
• 2 tablespoons chia seeds
Preparation
• Heat oven to 350 degrees.
• Combine dry ingredients, and then add water.
Mixture will be slightly runny.
• Spread evenly onto parchment paper lined baking sheet.
• Bake for 30-40 minutes
The
next public informational seminar presenting the experiences of the
CrossFit Instinct intermittent fasting study, including a new podcast by
Peter Glatz, will be held on Tuesday, Jan. 23, at 6 p.m. at Springfield
Clinic at 900 N. First St. Free parking is available in the adjoining
parking garage to the north. Enter into the first floor and turn left
into the first hallway to the media room.