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Nicky Park: The raw food phenomenon

By Nicky Park @Nicky_Park
2:25 PM Wednesday Sep 26, 2012
Beetroot, balsamic and macadamia ravioli made by the Little Bird team.Photo / Supplied

Beetroot, balsamic and macadamia ravioli made by the Little Bird team.Photo / Supplied

About six months ago I was feeling a bit all over the place. My body was sluggish and my head was erratic and distracted. I was easily overwhelmed and battling to get out of bed in the morning. That's when I decided to give sugar the boot (mostly) and turn to the ancient Indian healing method of Ayurveda . The principles made a lot of sense to me. And when I began practising what my Ayurvedic doctor, Dr Ajit, suggested, I got my mojo back. I found sackfuls of energy, my insides were nourished and my head was (generally) pretty clear.

One of the things Dr Ajit suggested to me was to avoid raw food. He said my busy life hindered my metabolism. Raw food is harder to metabolise, he said, and would leave me feeling toxic, tired and with an unsettled belly. I've been eating all my meals warm - breakfast, lunch and dinner. I have a few uncooked snacks, but aside from that I've been rejecting the raw.

These days, I still embrace most of what Dr Ajit said. However, I like to listen to my body, try new things and fuel myself with what feels right. So when one of my favourite organic snack producers, Little Bird, started up "uncooking" classes at their Auckland cafe recently, I wanted in.

The raw food phenomenon has been happening overseas for a long time - with RAWsome restaurants all over the US and major advocates in Gwyneth Paltrow and Demi Moore. The belief is that heating food above 46C destroys the enzymes and diminishes nutritional value.

Christine Smith is a New Zealand raw food consultant. The Go More Raw creator became "high raw" about three-and-a-half-years ago. She admits a raw life sounded "weird and extreme" to her at first, but after a fortnight of uncooked eating, she was a convert.

"My head felt clearer... I didn't suffer the tiredness, especially during the afternoon and evening, I could think more clearly, my skin and hair all started to improve," 50-year-old Smith says.

She explains her passion for raw food: "Nothing has been denatured, everything is available for your body to use in a specific way. The enzymes are in tact and alive and vibrant... your body starts to feel that way too."

The brains behind Little Bird feel the same.

"Raw foods naturally provide an abundance of nutrients that will make every cell in your body sparkle," the website claims.

During my "uncooking class" Little Bird's founder and chef, Megan May, showed us how to make beetroot ravioli stuffed with macadamia nut cheese. For desert, we ate an apple crumble cake with cashew cream. (Delicious!) I took these skills home and survived on raw food alone for four days. It was more expensive than my usual grocery run which tends to be packed with plenty of seasonal vegies that I can throw around in a wok - quick, easy, after-work eating. I also had to be a lot more prepared in order to feel satisfied and energised. However, snacks were super easy - oats, walnuts, dates blitzed up with a bit of water make a great base for DIY bars and balls. (I added chia seeds, pepitas and some shredded coconut - then refrigerated).

Nutritionist Kath Fouhy says eating raw can encourage people to get more fruit and veg goodness in their lives.

"When you start to eat raw food there's not really a whole lot of other things you can eat so your intake of fresh produce goes up," Fouhy says.

Also, vegies are packed with water soluable vitamins B and C, so the minute you put them in water the goodness starts to fade.

"The more water you cook vegies in the more then nutrients leach out," the Auckland-based expert says.

However, there are some foods that become better for you after cooking. For instance, throwing tomatoes under a bit of heat trebles the amount of lycopene, a powerful antioxidant that can assist in the prevention of some cancers. And Fouhy warns a raw diet can leave you lacking iron.

She also says any changes you make to your lifestyle need to be sustainable (which I totally back up).

"If we can get more New Zealanders eating more fruit and vegetables - great. But if it means in 12 weeks time they go back to eating pies its not that great."

The key for me is eating what your body needs to feel balanced and happy. I felt fresh and had plenty of energy while eating all raw. Plus it was fun getting creative in the kitchen. Socially, it was a bit tricky - I'm not one to order the side salad when dining out. But now that it's heating up, I'd be keen to keep on RAWing every now and again.

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By Nicky Park @Nicky_Park
Meta (Auckland Central) | 02:15PM Thursday, 27 Sep 2012
The raw food diet, the paleodiet, the low carb diet, the "sugar is poison" diet, low fat diets, reduced calorie diets, detox diets, vegetarianism, veganism, etc etc. Think about it - what is the one common denominator in all of these popular fad diets from over the years?
Eating REAL FOOD in its natural state (plus perhaps minimising foods introduced relatively recently in human history, such as milk and grain products).
So simple isn't it?
Jason yeah right (Manawatu-Whanganui) | 02:16PM Thursday, 27 Sep 2012
Its great to see you going to see a true genius in Ayurvedic medicine Nicky. I studied under Dr Ajit for 4 years and another 3 years at well park college and 2 years TCM. Why did I do all that. Because after a mega botch up by conventional medicine on myself for a minor knee operation, I was left for dead with serious health issues from wrong medications used and wrong procedures preformed. The only fix was to avoid the moronic GP drug prescriptions, and to do it the right way. Instead of simply going to see Dr Ajit only, I enrolled into a course with him and other PHD doctors of authentic medicine, and studied for 7 years full time in a row, all the while leading a semi perfect life of "genuine correct eating habits", and side effect free Ayurvedic medicines. Very simple, yet slowly, every day , like night follows day, a little bit more health returned, then a little bit more, up until I had more energy than anyone I knew, and more than most people I ever met. I have been a Naturopath now for a decade with 1000+ clients. Very happy chappy indeed! About 95% OF ALL my clients knew almost nothing about diet, even after reading "many" books. The saying goes: Ayurveda will help you!
Fiacre (New Zealand) | 10:03AM Friday, 28 Sep 2012
I have started eating a largely raw diet; an easy recipe is banana 'ice-cream.' Ingredients = bananas. Cut into chunks and freeze. Whizz in a food processor until creamy. You can also add frozen mango, or berries, to the bananas for different flavours. It sounds lame, but this 'ice-cream' really is delicious.
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