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The information in this article was originally posted in the Japan Guide, which is a great resource for all things Japanese. The changes I’ve made include the addition of raw food preparation comments. Of course, the full spectrum of veggies available in Nippon is not covered here, but it’s a good start for the uninitiated. Japanese cuisine places a strong emphasis on quality and seasonality of ingredients. This is especially true for vegetables, a fundamental element of Japanese food culture. Apart from a few native types of vegetables, many vegetables used in Japanese cooking today were originally introduced from the Asian mainland. Later waves of new vegetables reached Japan through first contact with Europeans in the 16th century and in more recent decades through a certain Westernization of Japanese eating habits.
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A wide variety of seaweeds are consumed in Japan. The following are just the top three:
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Whenever I tell people I’m vegan (or raw or vegetarian), often the first question I get is, “Ok, so where do you get your protein?”
As soon as I hear this question, I immediately know that I’m dealing with someone who doesn’t know very much about plants. The idea that plant foods are somehow devoid of protein is nothing but a myth.
Plant foods are generally abundant in protein. For example, lettuce gets 34% of its calories from protein, and broccoli gets 45% of its calories from protein. Spinach is 49%. Cauliflower is 40%. Celery is 21%. Beans range from 23% to 54% depending on the variety. Grains are 8% to 31%. Nuts and seeds are 8% to 21%. Fruits are the lowest at around 5-8% on average. While these percentages are high, vegetables are very low in calories, so you do have to eat a lot to get your nutrition’s worth. At the other end of the calorie spectrum are nuts, which are very calorie dense and high in fat, so you should not eat too much!
In fact, if you wanted to suffer from protein deficiency, you’d either have to seriously restrict total calories (starve!), or you’d have to eat a really unbalanced diet with based around processed, low-protein junk foods. But in those cases, protein deficiency probably won’t be your biggest risk. I cannot say I’ve ever met anyone suffering from a protein deficiency, vegan or otherwise. The much greater risk, at least in the western world, is consuming too much protein.
Another myth is the idea that you need to combine different plant foods to form complete proteins. The idea was that most plant foods only contained some of the essential amino acids, so you’d have to combine “incomplete” foods like beans and rice to form meals that contained complete proteins. This food combining idea was put forth in the 1971 book “Diet for a Small Planet “ by Frances Moore Lappé. It was a million-copy bestseller.
Unfortunately, many people still aren’t aware that this theory was later found to be false. Lappé herself recanted her original theory in later works that were far less popular. The truth is that most plant foods do contain all the essential amino acids, but furthermore, your body will store amino acids in a pool between meals, which means you don’t need to get all the essentials in a single meal.
Many people today are still under the mistaken assumption that getting enough protein from plants is difficult or impossible. It’s interesting how so many people really believe this to the core. I haven’t eaten any animal meat protein since 1989 (aside from a fish stint in Japan), and I’ve never had any protein deficiency symptoms. Don’t worry about getting enough protein. Just eat your veggies, and you’ll be fine.
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Prehistoric man learned thousands of years ago that it was a good idea to eat meat that was cooked, rather than raw. Since then, the human race applied this thinking to all foods. However, you can have too much of a good thing! Aside from the occasional salad, most people eat very little in the way of raw food. But in recent years, the focus on healthy eating and lessening the chances of contracting diseases like diabetes, heart disease, and stroke has thrown the focus on raw foods.
What we’re talking about here is eating fruit, vegetables, seeds, and nuts (preferably sprouted) that taste good, just as nature intended them: in their raw state. This is quite a change for most people, so in order to make that change you first need to know why your raw food diet is good for you, and here are 10 great reasons:
1. Foods have a higher nutritional value when they are raw. Cooking food destroys vitamins, protein and fat. It even breaks down the enzymes which are naturally in the foods and would help you digest them.
2. You will get fuller more quickly in eating raw foods because they contain more water and more fiber. Your hunger will be satisfied, so you can eat more on the raw food diet. That is one reason why people find the raw food diet helps them to lose weight.
3. Raw food is more flavorful than cooked food. That means that you have less of a need to add flavorings like salt and spice, all of which flavorings can irritate your stomach and other parts of the digestive system, and overstimulate internal organs like the liver. This liver is the organ which valiantly struggles to detoxify the body due to such seasonings it sees as toxic.
4. The raw food diet is low in maintenance. People who hate spending hours in the kitchen preparing meals will love the simplicity of the raw food diet. You can even involve your children in preparing raw food, as that way they are more likely to eat it. This gives you a break and builds the child’s self-esteem.
5. You won’t burn your fingers, mouth, tongue, or lips with raw food. Also, you won’t burn your house down in a kitchen fire because you won’t be cooking much.
6. There is less cleaning up after making a raw food meal. You can put any leftovers right on the compost heap and give back to nature, and you won’t have any greasy dishes with baked on food to deal with.
7. A raw food diet is great for your overall health and has even been shown to have a positive effect on serious chronic diseases like cancer and heart disease. This is because with the raw food diet, you don’t have the problems caused by free radicals, which are created in the cooking process. Fewer free radicals means less risk of cancer.
8. A raw food diet is rich in nutrients and so it gives you great natural protection against common illnesses like colds and flu and even less common illnesses such as measles. Raw food helps to keep your body fit and working well. You are also less likely to suffer from digestive disorders like gas, heartburn, constipation, and indigestion.
9. The raw food diet is environmentally friendly. It encourages organic farming, and the use of fewer energy resources because we wouldn’t be cooking. Eating locally means food isn’t transported as far. If more people went raw, carbon dioxide emissions would be reduced, and there would have to be new orchards planted to keep up with the demand for fresh fruit. This would release more oxygen into the air and would help to minimize the Greenhouse Effect.
10. The raw food diet will enable you to save money. You will not only save money on food bills but also on energy bills, and also stoves, pots, pans, and medical bills!
The raw food diet is a great way to save your body, save your money and save the planet.
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Transform your kitchen from a processed food haven to a healthy kitchen. You don’t have to give up all the foods you love to eat at once to become healthier and to start eating raw, organic, living foods. The best place to start changing your life and your diet is at the grocery store. Even if you don’t need to lose weight and are pretty healthy, take a tip from dieters: Go shopping with a list and don’t go to the shopping for food when you are hungry. Doing so will half you resist all those anpan cakes, pokki sticks, and senbei crackers.
To start detoxifying your kitchen, clean out your refrigerator and your cabinets. Throw out the half-empty bags of snack foods. Put any microwaveable foods in a dark bag and stash them somewhere in the back of the freezer. Or better yet, bin them. Out of sight, out of mind.
It’s a great idea to stock up on dried fruits and nuts for snacking. Invest in a good blender so you can start each day with a nutrient-packed green smoothie. I also recommend an affordable slicing device called a spiralizer (check Raw Rapture’s Amazon stores), so you can exchange your cooked pasta for zucchini angle hair shreds (which taste just as good if not better than cooked flour pasta!) and make other food look beautiful. You can get a juicer, but wait until you’ve incorporated your blender into your daily life. Save a dehydrator (they do not come cheap) for that stage when you rarely use the stove anymore, as then you can store your dehydrator on its new permanent home - on top of the stove! If you have an oven (which means you don’t live in Japan), use it for storage. Clean out those crisper drawers in the fridge to get them ready for an influx of fresh organic, raw foods.
Load up on fresh fruits, vegetables, and potentially sproutable nuts, grains, beans, and seeds. Look around for places you can find raw nuts and seeds. Buy high quality raw, organic condiments such as cold pressed olive oil, apple cider vinegar, and soy sauce. Buying such products in raw and organic form can be tricky at first; you’d be surprised how many nasties are loaded into our daily seasonings! If you eat honey, look for the unpasteurized variety too, as you’ll get more enzymes. Search for healthier sweetening alternatives such as dates, agave syrup and yacon syrup. If you love chocolate, explore the world of raw cacao online. Get genmai (brown rice) if you’re not ready to let go of cooked rice, which is such a staple in Japan. If fish is still on your shopping list, that’s OK, but consider getting super fresh tuna that you can eat raw or just sear and serve with raw sesame seeds and a small amount of soy sauce.
Make eating this way fun. Invest in those big, white square dishes that are good for serving colorful, fresh foods. It’s easier to arrange small portions of different foods that way. Getting new white dishes will be symbolic of this new, purer way of eating. If you are not adept at using chopsticks, start eating with them, as they will slow you down.
Go to a bookstore (likely online if you live in Japanese inaka (countryside)) and get a cookbook (uncook book) or a raw food book so you can learn about eating as raw vegan. Buy a big vase and a bunch of sunflowers to symbolize letting the sun into your diet.
Feel free to copy and paste this article elsewhere, but kindly direct your readers back to my site by adding the following: “For more raw food articles by this author, please visit http://rawrapture.com.” Cheers!
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Ubiquitous in every supermarket and corner store across the country, as well as eateries, street stalls and restaurants, this smelly goop basically consists of fermented soybeans. It is the third most popular soy-based food in Japan, after tofu and miso. Traditionally packed in bamboo leaves, the modern version comes in a white styrofoam packs, more recently in environmentally friendly soft cardboard wrapping. The container needs to be fairly resilient, as this stuff reeks in the same way as durian does. Included with your serving is usually a mild soy-based sauce, and sometimes extra condiments such as liquid nori (a type of seaweed), or yellow mustard for those who like a bit of spice. In line with Japan’s cute, one-serving packaging, these sauces come in tiny, clear plastic bags, perfectly placed on top of the plastic sheet that covers the top of the natto in its nest.
How do you eat this stuff? To enjoy as is, open the pack, take of the plastic sheet, open and pour on the sauce(s), take your chop sticks and whisk the concoction together until it’s all foamy and snot-like. (This whisking action apparently activates more of the already high nutritional content.) Make sure any smell sensitive friends keep their distance, as this stuff smells to some like damp, old, cheesy socks (and does, in fact, look indeed a tad like snot)! To eat, just slurp it up (noises encouraged) with your chopsticks. In addition to savoring on its own, most Japanese tend to pour this stinky mush on their morning rice. You can also find it in kaiten (conveyer belt) sushi shops, and it is often found in varieties of omuraisu (rice omelets). As a raw vegan, I enjoy my natto with nori (dried laver sheets) and/or with another healthy, stinky, fermented concoction that, though popular in Japan as well, is actually Korean. Yes, I speak of kimchee! (warning, however: most commercial kimchees contain fish products and table salt…)
Natto is a fantastic source of protein (not that we actually need as much protein as we think), and as a raw, food made from soybeans fermented by natto bacillus, is chock full of live enzymes and all sorts of other goodies. Natto is a good source of vitamin B2, which keeps skin youthful, and is also rich in vitamin K2, which is helpful against osteoporosis. Furthermore, there is a fibrinolytic enzyme found in natto called nattokinase. Nattokinase is reported to reduce and prevent blood clots, so ultimately it can help prevent heart attacks and strokes. Natto has also been reported to reduce the incidence of cancers, particularly breast cancer in women.
Natto is an acquired taste, however, but once that taste is acquired, like me, you’ll be eating the stuff several times a week! These days in Japan it is easy to get organic varieties, but I would avoid the sauces, as they are likely highly processed and full of table salt. Slop on your own nama shoyu (unpasteurized soy sauce).
For more nutritional information on natto, visit the Benefits of Natto page and Nutrition Science News. The following video is an old commercial for natto. Neba-neba means slimy and sticky (in a good way!).
Feel free to copy and paste this article elsewhere, but kindly direct your readers back to my site by adding the following: “For more raw food articles by this author, please visit http://rawrapture.com.” Cheers!
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Seed, nut, or grain |
Soak time |
Sprout time |
Adzuki
|
12 hours
|
3-5 days
|
Alfalfa
|
8 hours
|
2-5 days
|
Almonds*
|
8-12 hours
|
12 hours
|
Barley
|
6-8 hours
|
2 days
|
Brazil nuts
|
no need to soak
|
N/A
|
Buckwheat
|
6 hours
|
2 days
|
Cabbage
|
4-6 hours
|
4-5 days
|
Cashews
|
2-2 ½ hours
|
N/A
|
Chickpeas
|
12 hours
|
12 hours
|
Clover
|
4-6 hours
|
4-5 days
|
Corn
|
12 hours
|
2-3 days
|
Cow peas
|
12 hours
|
3-6 days
|
Fenugreek
|
8 hours
|
3-5 days
|
Flax
|
8 hours
|
N/A
|
Green peas
|
12 hours
|
2-3 days
|
Hemp seeds
|
no need to soak
|
N/A
|
Kamut
|
7 hours
|
2-3 days
|
Lentils
|
8 hours
|
12 hours
|
Macadamia nuts
|
no need to soak
|
N/A
|
Millet
|
8 hours
|
2-3 days
|
Mung beans
|
1 day
|
2-5 days
|
Mustard
|
8 hours
|
2-7 days
|
Nuts (all others)
|
6 hours
|
N/A
|
Oat groats
|
6 hours
|
2 days
|
Pecans
|
4-6 hours
|
N/A
|
Pine nuts
|
no need to soak
|
N/A
|
Pistachio nuts
|
no need to soak
|
N/A
|
Pumpkin seeds (hulled)
|
8 hours
|
1 day
|
Quinoa
|
2 hours
|
1 day
|
Radish
|
8 hours
|
2-4 days
|
Red clover
|
8 hours
|
2-5 days
|
Rye
|
8 hours
|
3 days
|
Sesame seeds
|
8 hours
|
1-2 days
|
Spelt
|
7 hours
|
2 days
|
Sunflower seeds (hulled)
|
2 hours
|
2-3 days
|
Triticale
|
12 hours
|
2-3 days
|
Walnuts
|
4 hours
|
N/A
|
Watercress
|
4-6 hours
|
4-5 days
|
Wheatberries
|
7 hours
|
2-2½ days
|
Wild rice
|
9 hours
|
3-5 days
|
*Almonds are the only nuts that can easily sprout and like many seeds, nuts, and grains, are most nutritious when sprouted. Interestingly, almonds are the only alkaline nut.
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This concise article has been online for a while, but for me not only does it drive home the fact that literally eating green is better for the environment, but also how distorted information gets as it is passed though to us via controlled media channels. Who thought, just a few years ago, that cow farts were more dangerous than CO2 emissions?
Time Magazine Article from Monday, Mar. 26, 2007 by Bryan Walsh
Which is responsible for more global warming: your BMW or your Big Mac? Believe it or not, it’s the burger. The international meat industry generates roughly 18% of the world’s greenhouse-gas emissions—even more than transportation—according to a report last year from the U.N.’s Food and Agriculture Organization.
Much of that comes from the nitrous oxide in manure and the methane that is, as the New York Times delicately put it, “the natural result of bovine digestion.” Methane has a warming effect that is 23 times as great as that of carbon, while nitrous oxide is 296 times as great.
There are 1.5 billion cattle and buffalo on the planet, along with 1.7 billion sheep and goats. Their populations are rising fast, especially in the developing world. Global meat production is expected to double between 2001 and 2050. Given the amount of energy consumed raising, shipping and selling livestock, a 16-oz.T-bone is like a Hummer on a plate.
If you switch to vegetarianism, you can shrink your carbon footprint by up to 1.5 tons of carbon dioxide a year, according to research by the University of Chicago. Trading a standard car for a hybrid cuts only about one ton—and isn’t as tasty.
The original article can be found in Time Magazine’s Global Warming Survival Guide, in conjunction with CNN.