Cooked Foods and
Enzymes
Does moving to a raw foods diet mean never eating hot food
again? No, it doesn’t. Sometimes you want something hot. Hot
food has always signified comfort for many of us. And on a
cold, rainy day, carrot sticks or wheatgrass juice probably
won’t cut it for most of us.
Most raw food, like our bodies, is very perishable. When raw
foods are exposed to temperatures above 118 degrees, they start
to rapidly break down, just as our bodies would if we had a
fever that high. One of the constituents of foods which can
break down are enzymes. Enzymes help us digest our food.
Enzymes are proteins though, and they have a very specific
3-dimensional structure in space. Once they are heated much
above 118 degrees, this structure can change.
Once enzymes are exposed to heat, they are no longer able to
provide the function for which they were designed. Cooked foods
contribute to chronic illness, because their enzyme content is
damaged and thus requires us to make our own enzymes to process
the food. The digestion of cooked food uses valuable metabolic
enzymes in order to help digest your food. Digestion of cooked
food demands much more energy than the digestion of raw food.
In general, raw food is so much more easily digested that it
passes through the digestive tract in 1/2 to 1/3 of the time it
takes for cooked food.
Eating enzyme-dead foods places a burden on your pancreas
and other organs and overworks them, which eventually exhausts
these organs. Many people gradually impair their pancreas and
progressively lose the ability to digest their food after a
lifetime of ingesting processed foods.
But you certainly can steam and blanch foods if you want
your food at least warm. Use a food thermometer and cook them
no higher than 118 degrees Fahrenheit. Up to this temperature,
you won’t be doing too much damage to the enzymes in food.
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