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The Doctor’s Kitchen: Supercharge your health with 100 delicious everyday recipes

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Год написания книги
2018
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+ RETHINKING FATS

Fats, including cholesterol, are vital to the functioning of our brains, the composition of cell structures and essential for hormone synthesis. Reducing them to ‘good’ and ‘bad’ fats completely negates the science and lacks an appreciation for how complicated our bodies are. My belief is that a high-sugar, refined-carbohydrate diet in combination with poor-quality fats is the cause of ill health.

This toxic blend causes inflammation and a cascade of medical problems thereafter, but like a lot of topics in nutrition, the explanation is fraught with complexity. Our thinking about how dietary cholesterol affects heart disease is also changing.

Consuming cholesterol, which is only found in animal products, does not necessarily increase the level of cholesterol found in your blood nor increase your risk of heart disease. I know this is quite hard for a lot of people to accept, given the dietary dogma most of us have been subjected to over the last 40 years, but it is based on evidence. Equally, I don’t recommend people actively try to consume more cholesterol. We need to learn from our past mistakes of damning an entire macronutrient to the extent that people are scared into radically removing it, but what I am witnessing now is a swing of the metaphorical pendulum in the opposite direction! Even though butter has been exonerated to some degree, you won’t find me spooning it into my coffee – I like my Americano freshly brewed without lipid-rich particles floating in it, thank you very much. For simplicity’s sake, I stick to the types of fats found in the Mediterranean diet which is packed with nuts, seeds and, of course, extra-virgin olive oil. My simple mantra to patients is: eat whole food and stay away from anything that’s marketed as ‘low fat’ or ‘a healthier alternative to …’ Your body is worth more than those cheap, tasteless alternatives. Some quality fats to enjoy in the context of a whole-foods diet include those found in flaxseeds, nuts, seeds, avocado, extra-virgin olive oil, butter from grass-fed cows, full-fat yoghurt and delicious dark chocolate.

Veganism

In recent times plant-based eating has become exceptionally popular. A number of documentaries have convinced many people of the supposed health benefits of veganism and the health risks of red meat. They do have a lot of successes to feel smug about, that are well documented in the literature. Lower rates of cancer,

diabetes,

cardiovascular disease

… the list goes on. It’s compelling stuff and, obviously, I’m a huge supporter of a diet largely made up of fruits and vegetables, but pure veganism doesn’t come without its caveats. B vitamins are noticeably lacking in vegans, as well as zinc, essential fatty acids and vitamin D.

Careful supplementation with extra nutrients is something I would advise all 100-per-cent plant-based eaters to discuss with their health practitioner.

Also, it’s important to remember that just because you go vegan doesn’t automatically turn you into a dementia-proof, cancer-kicking superhuman with spotless arteries. If I lived on chips and pasta with tomato sauce I could feel pretty ethically minded about not having killed an animal for my dinner, but I probably wouldn’t live for very long to tell people about it.

Ultimately, I have a deep respect for those who choose to live a life on plants alone, whatever their reasons, but my priority would be to make sure everyone is doing it safely.

Wrapping up

What a lot of these diets have in common is a focus on weight loss as a positive outcome, but is this what we should be striving for? Is weight management a reliable biomarker of general health and should this be the common denominator against which we judge the success of a diet? BMI is such a poor predictor of outcomes yet many studies continue to use this as a standard.

Everyone has the ability to lose weight, tone up and feel lighter, but sometimes it’s at the expense of health rather than in pursuit of it. I want you to feel ‘well’. I’m convinced that good health, contrary to popular belief, is independent of size and especially weight.

I think we could all do with a little less emphasis on weight as an outcome and more of a focus on wellbeing. Health and wellness conjure images of slim, vivacious, young 20-somethings, but a focus on this as the ultimate goal detracts from why we are trying to achieve a healthier life. I believe it is for the sum of our daily interactions to be positive in mind and physicality. It is to live a fulfilling and happy life. This doesn’t necessarily correspond to a certain number on a machine, even though an industry, and perhaps even your doctor, is trying to convince you it does. Your focus should be on health goals and habits rather than a physical endpoint.

There are endless ways in which you can add nutrient-dense foods to your diet on a daily basis and I want to encourage people to think along these lines. We have an opportunity to be truly nourished, rather than skip from diet to diet in the hope that we hit the ‘carb-protein-fat ratio jackpot’ and achieve that dazzling ‘perfect weight’.

I’m convinced that good health, contrary to popular belief, is independent of size and especially weight.

Medicinal spices

Growing up in an Indian household, I was constantly surrounded by spices, herbs and folk medicines. Everything from sore throats to constipation seemed treatable with the contents of our kitchen cupboards!

Most second-generation kids will concur: Indian families seem to have an encyclopaedic knowledge for complementary health cures. I have vivid memories of being fed a spoonful of toasted spices and salt whenever I had tummy ache. My father would always make a mixture of almonds, clarified butter and sugar during my exams, claiming it was ‘brain food’. And, of course, my mother was years ahead of the ‘Spiced Turmeric Latte’ trend.

You can imagine the number of ‘I told you so’s’ I got when I started researching the clinical validity of traditional treatments. My Indian heritage is steeped in Ayurvedic tradition and what fascinates me is the premise of ‘alternative therapies’ having the potential to become recognised treatment in the battle against chronic disease. Learning about the marriage of flavour and medicinal property was revolutionary for me.

The positive clinical effects of food are unlikely to be caused by a single ingredient, like a spice or herb, so it’s important to maintain a holistic perspective. Remember that any benefit from the inclusion of an ingredient has to be taken in the context of a ‘good diet’. Reiterating what I stated at the start of this book: do not treat food like a pill. Concoctions from herbalists or ‘natural’ food supplements are not panaceas or cure-alls, in exactly the same way that anti-diabetic medications will not manage a patient’s condition if they don’t make changes in their lifestyle to complement treatment. Nonetheless, this does not stop me getting excited about the incredible effects of spices.

Spices make food visibly enticing by adding colour and enhancing the flavour and aroma of the most uninspiring ingredients. Using precise techniques, we can quantify their high antioxidant capacity and activity, which explains why we’ve used spice as a preservative for centuries. There is enough evidence to support the daily inclusion of nature’s wonderful spices and here are some staples I believe everyone should have in the store cupboard and the clinical evidence as to why.

Turmeric

Turmeric is probably one of the most extensively researched spices we have in nutritional science and it’s now commonly accepted that daily dietary inclusion can prevent bowel cancer. There’s also evidence that it could be beneficial for helping dementia, chronic pain syndromes and inflammatory conditions.

It’s astonishing what effects a single ingredient can potentially have on the body.

As is usually the case in nutritional therapy, supplementation using high doses of one of turmeric’s active compounds, ‘curcumin’, has had mixed results.

Turmeric is not just curcumin. The spice is made up of hundreds of different plant chemicals of which curcumin is just one. These studies teach us a lesson: use whole plants as much as possible rather than isolated chemicals. A single component is not likely to be responsible for their health benefits; it’s the complex arrangement of molecules in whole ingredients that we find in nature.

Herbs and spices

These are some of my favourite herbs and spices to use when I’m cooking. I always have these in my kitchen and I highly recommend that you get as many of them as you can into your diet.

I use ground turmeric in everything from Malaysian curry pastes to soups and stews; and if you can get hold of the fresh stuff that looks like ginger with bright orange flesh, even better. Using fresh turmeric in cooking with other ingredients like chilli and black pepper (that contain capsaicin and piperine) heightens its effect and availability in the body.

If nothing else gets you interested in ‘food as medicine’, this herbaceous plant from the ginger family should.

Garlic

I’ve been raised to expect garlic to be used in most dishes cooked at home. But even now, whether I’m cooking Italian, Chinese or Moroccan food, garlic forms the flavour base for most of my meals. Enough research has been published for me to believe that it can lower your risk of cancer, and laboratory studies demonstrate its anti-bacterial and anti-viral properties.

It may have a positive impact on human gut microbe populations

too, and it’s so easy to incorporate into meals. It’s definitely an ingredient I get into my food on a daily basis (you’ll notice how often it’s used in my recipes).

Garlic is also so versatile. You can simply cut the top off a whole bulb, drizzle it with olive oil and roast it for 20 minutes, squeezing the cooked pulp out of its papery skins and storing it in the fridge. I use it as a spread or flavour enhancer when making quick meals. Look out for fresh, smoked garlic and my current favourite, black garlic: it has a sweet balsamic vinegary taste and is a wonder ingredient in pesto and sauces.

Ginger

Here’s another spice often used in Indian cooking, with a host of studies examining its effect on everything from cancer prevention to nausea.

Gingerols, shagoals and zingerones are all antioxidants thought to be responsible for its health effects.

I use fresh ginger as much as possible for its pungent taste and powerful volatile compounds. It’s a staple base for lots of my recipes and sometimes I’ll boil some up with honey to treat a sore throat. There are many innovative ways to use ginger in drinks, tonics, sauces and curries. My recipes will show you how easy it is to get this marvellous spice into your system.

There are well recognised polyphenol compounds in ginger and it’s been suggested in the research that we class it as a functional food because of its effects on the body. I use it in my Medicinal Broth (see here (#litres_trial_promo)), I pop ginger skin into tea, I grate it into Asian-style dressings (see here (#litres_trial_promo)) and it’s cheap and available to everyone. Get it into your kitchen.

Sumac

This vibrant burgundy-coloured spice has the most wonderful, warm citrus flavour. It’s used in Iranian and Turkish cuisines in tagines and stews or simply to garnish plates with a sour note. It also happens to be one of the most antioxidant-rich ingredients on the planet.

It’s been used in traditional medicine to treat everything from diabetes

to cardiac disease, but unfortunately the extent of research we currently have to support these claims is mainly performed in a petri dish or on animals.

The research is one to watch.

Made from drying a species of the plant genus Rhus, sumac is generally underutilised in cooking, but I use it all the time for its incredible flavour profile and vibrancy. A sprinkle will transform everything from poached eggs to natural yoghurt. Try it out in some of my Middle Eastern-inspired dishes (see Persian Chicken Thighs here (#litres_trial_promo), and Spicy Baked Eggs here (#litres_trial_promo)).

Cumin
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