|   | Naturopathic Medicine: Grains |    | 
		 
	 
    
        
     
   
   
    
    
    
        Whole Grains 
         What is a whole grain?  Basically a grain is a seed and is made
up 
         of three parts: the GERM, which contains vitamins (especially E),
         oils and proteins and can sprout under the right conditions; the
         ENDOSPERM or starchy bulk of the grain which nourishes the 
         seedling; and the BRAN or tough outer covering that protects the
         grain, containing protein, minerals, fiber and small amounts of
         vitamins.  As long as the grain or seed remains intact it will
         live for some time in a dormant condition.  When exposed to warmth
         and moisture, it will begin to wake up and sprout.  A processed
         grain will not grow if planted, and similarly provides less food
         energy when consumed.  If the integrity of the grain is disrupted
         by grinding, cracking or rolling, it cannot remain alive.  It 
         dies, and decay will eventually begin.  For this reason, any whole
 grain which is not in its natural state, such as whole grain 
         flour, cracked wheat, corn meal, etc., will eventually spoil 
         unless it is refrigerated.  Even under cold storage, it will 
         remain fresh only for a limited amount of time.
          
 
         The history of civilization closely parallels that of agriculture
         and growing of cereal grains.  The word cereal derives from the
         Latin "cerealis," pertaining to Ceres, the Roman goddess
of 
         vegetation.  It refers to all food-grain bearing grasses, such
as 
         barley, buckwheat, maize (Indian corn), millet, oats, rice, rye
         and wheat.  The cereals originated in Central Asia and the Far
         East, with the exception of Indian corn, native to South America.
         They have been cultivated since prehistoric times, and their
         distribution became worldwide as civilization advanced.  The 
         practice of agriculture allowed the development of great states
         and empires.  The cultures of antiquity were all built around the
         agricultural centers of grain growing peoples: the Chinese, 
         Indians, Koreans and Japanese in Asia; the Sumerians, Babylonians,
         Assyrians, Hittites, Phoenicians, Israelites and Syrians in the
         Near East; the Egyptians, Lydians, Nubians and Carthaginians in
         Africa; the Cretins, Greeks, Etruscans and Romans in Europe; the
         Incas, Mayans and Aztecs in South and Central America.  
         Industrialization led to the establishment of western nations as
         great world markets, but to this day in large parts of South 
         America, Africa and the Far East the agricultural methods and 
         farming tools are still nearly the same as in Biblical times.
         The civilizing influence of agriculture was, originally, the need
         for inherently peacible farming folk to devise ways to organize
         and protect themselves and their lands from the more quarrelsome
         hunters, accustomed to stalk and kill their food.  Furthermore,
         grown food is more sophisticated by virtue of its high energy 
         efficiency:  It takes approximately 12 pounds of grain to make
one 
         pound of meat. 
 
         Because they are low on the food chain, grains remain today the
         cheapest, and thus most common, source of unrefined carbohydrates,
         which most nutritionists advise should make up at least 60% of
a 
         healthy diet.  The Physicians Committee for Responsible Medicine
         (Washington DC) have intensively campaigned for the adoption of a new
         "Four Food Groups:" Whole Grains, Vegetables, Fruits
and Legumes, 
         all of which are largely complex carbohydrates.  In selecting
         grains, beans and seeds, look for those that are organically 
         grown.  Whole grains should be well-formed, without blemishes,
         distortions or discolorations.  Green grains are only immature
         kernels and should be used along with the others.  Grains are best
         stored in a cool, dry place.  Keeping them in paper bags allows
         them to breathe. 
 
         Cereal grains are the source of many food items such as bread,
         crackers, cooked or ready to eat cereals, all the pastas, noddles,
         rice and corn.  The word for corn in medieval English meant 
         "grain," and the Chinese pictogram for rice is the same
as that 
         for "food."  Cereal grains provide an average of 75%
carbohydrate, 
         10 to 15% protein and 2% fat.  Diet and health are increasingly
         correlated.  Other than a few relatively rare metabolic diseases
         (such as Celiac sprue) whole grains are never implicated as 
         culprits.  Sadly, however, much of the grain produced in this 
         country is used only indirectly for nutrition.  Clearly it is the
         addiction to animal fat and protein that is creating environmental
         havoc, both inside and outside our bodies.  We cut down oxygen-
         producing, medicinal herb-sheltering, water-pumping rain forests
         in order to grow grain mono-species with inorganic fertilizers
and 
         pesticides to feed livestock.  The livestock contaminate our 
         dwindling groundwater supply with their feces and disrupt the  
         ozone layer with their gaseous eructations.  The various diseases
         of these, and other, domesticated animals are controlled by 
         antibiotics which become inexorably involved in the food chain.
         This in turn creates a need for more powerful antibacterial drugs
         which propels the greed of the petrochemical and pharmaceutical
         merchants.  Eat smart:  Replacine excess animal fat with grains,
         legumes, fruits and vegetables. 
 
         References 
         Ballentine, Rudolph, "Diet & Nutrition." Himalayan
International 
         Institute, Honesdale, PA, 1978. 
 
         Lehner, Ernst and JoHanna, "Food and Medicinal Plants."
Tudor
         Publishing Co., New York, NY, 1962. 
 
       
         McNeill, William H, "The Rise of the West." The University
of 
         Chicago Press, Chicago, IL 1963. 
 
      
         Levin, Cecile T, "Cooking for Regeneration." Japan Publications,
         Tokyo and New York, 1988. 
 
        
         Robbins, J, "Diet for a New America." Stillpoint Publishing,
         Walpole, NH, 1987 
 
     
	
    
        
     
   	
	       
     
    
    
    
   
        
    
    
        
		
			  | A graduate of Bastyr University in Seattle, she completed both the Naturopathic and Acupuncture/Oriental Medicine programs. Her preceptor work (similar to residencies) took place in Seattle, West Virginia and China,......more | 
		 
	 
     
   
    
    
    
   
    
                  
            
                
    
        
     
   
                
                  
            
                
    
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