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The Whole-Grain Hoax By
Dr. Al
Sears
The
modern health industry and big business do a lot of advertising,
advising and
talking about how good for you whole grains are. And now everyone seems
to have
fallen for the whole-grain lie. Even the smart people at Harvard. What
they
should be warning you about are the whole grains. The
whole
idea behind eating a grain “whole” is this: Your body breaks down
dietary
starch – carbohydrates – into glucose, spiking your
blood sugar. If a
grain is left whole, you won’t break it down as fast, and it won’t
raise your
blood sugar. It
sounds
like a nice theory, but it doesn’t work in the real world. Let
me
show you what I mean. Pure
glucose has a glycemic index rating of 100. The
glycemic index measures how quickly food breaks down into glucose in
your
bloodstream. And the higher a food’s rating is on the glycemic index,
the more
it raises your blood-sugar level. Here
are
the glycemic index ratings for one serving of some common whole-grain
breads:
Here
are
the glycemic index ratings for a serving of some common snacks:
I’m
not
showing you this to advise you to replace your whole grains with junk
food. I’m
saying whole grains ARE junk food, at least when it comes to the
glycemic
index. Even
table sugar is only 61 on the glycemic index. The
bottom line here is that big business wants you to keep eating grains.
They’re
cheap to produce and companies make a fortune selling grain for all
those
rolls, boxes of cereal and loaves of bread. None
of
them are natural in that you could not have eaten these processed foods
in your
native environment. And none of them are “healthy.” Real
health foods are the ones you were designed to eat in your native
environment:
muscle and organ meat from animals and fish, and every kind of fruit,
vegetable
and nut. If
it
comes packaged in a cardboard box, plastic bag, foil wrapper or
Styrofoam
container, be careful of what’s in there. Here
are four
tips for shopping at the grocery store, so you can stay away
from fake
“health” food like whole grains:
To Your Good Health,
Note: The good folks at the FTC
require me to disclose that I am an affiliate of the companies that |
Health Supplements and You 2011