Deep
Nutrition, a book by Catherine Shanahan, MD, and Luke
Shanahan, was not a “blockbuster” by today’s standards, but it is a very
good read, and I highly recommend it. Cate Shanahan comes to her views
on nutrition from her undergraduate studies in epigenetics and biochemistry.
After graduating from medical school, she explains in an Epilogue, she departed
from conventional medicine to develop this approach to “Deep Nutrition”:
“This book describes the diet to end all
diets. The Human Diet,” a phrase she coins to “describe the communalities
between all the most successful nutritional programs people the world over have
depended on for millennia to protect their health and encourage the birth of
healthy children so that the heritage of optimum health can be gifted to the
next generation…” Our genetic heritage, she explains, is heritable and
depends on what we eat.
CONNECTING BIOCHEMISTRY TO EPIGENETICS, SHE
SAYS, “YOUR DIET CHANGES HOW YOUR
GENES WORK.”
“The greatest gift on earth,” Shanahan says,
“is a set of healthy genes.” But, “genes that were once healthy can, at any
point in our lives, start acting sick” by “factors that force good genes
to behave badly, by switching them on and off at the wrong time.”
Epigenetics is about this “genetic expression,” not about genetic
mutation. Long time readers will recall that I wrote about a branch of
epigenetics in #120, “Nutrigenomics -- an emerging new science.”
“Human health depends on traditional foods,”
she avers. “Food is like a language, an unbroken information stream connecting
every cell of your body…” “The better the source and the more undamaged the
message when it arrives to your cells, the better your health will be.” “The
bottom line,” she says, “is clear.” “We control the health of our genes”
because “you…have control over what may be the most powerful class of
gene regulating factors: FOOD.”
“By simply replenishing your body with the
nourishment that facilitates optimal gene expression, it’s possible to
eliminate genetic malfunction and, with it, pretty much all known disease.
No matter what kind of genes you were born with, I know that eating right can
help reprogram them, immunizing you against cancer, premature aging and
dementia, enabling you to control your metabolism, your moods, your weight –
and much more.” That a big claim, but, she says, you owe it to your children
[who inherit your genes] to give them “a shot at reaching for the stars.”
All these quotes are from the Introduction
and Chapter One. The next five chapters, on subjects like “Dynamic Symmetry”
and “A Mother’s Wisdom,” were of less interest to me (I have no kids). Then, in
Chapter Seven, she gets to “the meat” of her ideal “Human Diet”: “The Four
Pillars of World Cuisine.” They are: “meat on the bone, fermented and
sprouted foods, organs and other ‘nasty bits,’ and fresh, unadulterated plant
and animal products.”
With meat, she says, “The secret? Leave it on
the bone. When cooking meat, the more everything stays together – fat, bone,
marrow, skin – and other connective tissue – the better.” And “Rule Number One:
Don’t Overcook It; Rule Number Two: Use Moisture, Time and Parts; Rule Number
Three: Use the Fat; Rule Number Four: Make bone stock.” The other three pillars
are equally good. Personally, I love organ meats and am coming to love some of
the more exotic fermented foods (see #194). And we always eat a fresh, whole vegetable
with supper, every day.
The very best part of the book, though, in my
opinion, are Chapters Eight and Nine: her attack on “vegetable oils and sugar.”
You can see it coming. At the end of Chapter Seven, she says: “Because
vegetable oil and sugar are so nasty and their use in processed foods so
ubiquitous that they have replaced nutrient-rich
ingredients we would otherwise eat, I place vegetable oil and sugar before all
others, on the very top of my don’t eat list.”
Throughout the book she links these two products of industrial food
manufacturing to maladies that she sees in her medical practice.
One of her concluding thoughts: “Vegetable
oils and sugar,” she says, “are the real culprits for diseases most doctors
blame on chance, or – even more absurdly – on the consumption of animal
products that you need to eat to be healthy.” Huzzah, Dr. Shanahan! I wish you
could be MY doctor!
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