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Archive for January, 2010

teflon-toxicIn Chapter 4 of Listen To Your Gut, I write about the dangers of Teflon-coated (and other non-stick coated) pots and pans and give you all the data on why we shouldn’t use them.

Well, following is an interesting article from the New York Times, written by someone else who heard about the dangers of Teflon and set out to test a number of different pans to see which one worked best and was the easiest to cook with and clean up afterwards.

I was amused by the fact that she rated the enamel-coated Le Creuset pan as the best out of them all. I have one Le Creuset frying pan (bought while my hubby had a contract in Singapore and was making loads of moola – they’re very expensive) and I have to say I like it the best as well! A full set is definitely on my wish list of things to buy when I have enough money.

Dr. Joseph Mercola recently launched a new line of nano-glaze ceramic pots and pans. However, when I looked up the patent for this new nano-glaze technology, there seemed to me to be a lot of glue involved in getting the nano-sized ceramic particles to adhere to the surface of the pans. 

I emailed Mercola asking about the glue and if they had done testing to see if any chemicals from the glue were leaching during the cooking process, but received no response.

nanoglaze-cookwareMy other hesitation with this new nano-glaze cookware is that having spent several months now researching nanotechnology – specifically nanoparticle minerals – I am also concerned about whether the nanoparticle-sized ceramic glaze components leach into food or the air.

You know how we now have washing machines with nanosilver sterilization cycles and socks with nanosilver antibacterial protection? Well, now we’ve also found that the nanoparticle silver in the wash water is entering our ground water and in turn altering the algae and bacterial balance in waterways and ponds, etc.

Joe Mercola states that they tested for any leaching of common metals (like you can get from other pans), but you would have to test specifically for leaching of nanoparticle-sized compounds – which is a very different process.

So whilst those pots (and their light weight) are very appealing, I wish someone would carry out the testing necessary to answer these questions – until we have more data I won’t be trying them.

Anyway, onto the article….

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In Search of a Pan That Lets Cooks Forget About Teflon

By: Marian Burros, New York Times
 – June 7, 2006

LIKE many home cooks, I have sent my nonstick skillets to the moldy recesses of my basement, where they have joined the 1950′s aluminum pots and the Dru casseroles (Dutch enamel coated cast iron, now eBay collectibles).

What led to this step were unsettling reports that an overheated Teflon-coated pan may release toxic gases. DuPont, the manufacturer of Teflon, says that its pans are safe and that their surfaces won’t decompose, possibly releasing the gas, until the pan’s temperature reaches 680 degrees. Some scientists say that an empty pan left on a burner set on high reaches 700 degrees in as little as three minutes. All pans with nonstick coatings are subject to the same problems, according to the Environmental Working Group, a nonprofit environmental research and advocacy organization. I banished the skillets last year and spent months dithering over what to buy while making do with the pans I had left: a large Revere Ware skillet with a concave bottom; a small, warped hand-me-down from my mother; and a medium All-Clad in fine shape.

A few passes at online pot sellers made matters worse: there are too many choices. Finally, after consulting the ratings from Consumer Reports and Cook’s Illustrated and calling several experts, I decided to do a test of my own, using the most highly recommended pans, along with a few of my own choices.

While Teflon lets manufacturers make inexpensive pans usable, uncoated cheap pans have hot spots, so cheaper pans – other than cast iron – were never considered. The most important characteristic was how close the pans came to having the nonstick qualities people love about Teflon. Can they sauté and brown, even without oil? Almost as important, how easy are they to clean?

There were eight pans in the test, most of them 12 inches in diameter: All-Clad with an aluminum core, All-Clad with a copper core, Bourgeat copper; De Buyer carbon steel; Calphalon anodized aluminum; seasoned and unseasoned Lodge cast iron and Le Creuset enameled cast iron.

All-Clad was one of the top choices of most experts, but did not do well in my tests because sometimes food stuck to the pans and cleaning them was difficult. Top chefs with whom I spoke agreed. “All of my All-Clad sauté pans have brown spots on the sides and outside, too,” said Scott Conant of L’Impero and Alto. “And eggs always stick.”

That’s the nature of stainless steel, said Harold McGee, author of “On Food and Cooking” (Scribner, 2004) and the scientist who can explain everything that happens in the kitchen. “Things stick to stainless,” he said, “and polymerized oil is one of them.”

For the two sets of tests, I cooked 6 dozen eggs; 24 pounds of chicken breasts with and without skin; 10 pounds of onions; and 10 pounds of potatoes. In one set of tests, pans were coated with one tablespoon of oil; in the other just a thin film of oil was applied with waxed paper. All the pans were preheated, the oil added and allowed to get hot enough to ripple; the food had lost its refrigerator chill.

With a tablespoon of oil, all of the pans cooked well and evenly. The chicken was nicely browned, the potatoes were crisp, the onions were meltingly sweet and the eggs were nicely done. The difference between cooking in All-Clad with copper and with aluminum is not significant enough for most cooks to make the more expensive copper pan worth the higher price. The Bourgeat copper pan, of course, cooked quickly and evenly, too, but the differences are too subtle in most situations to be worth the extra money.

But with just a film of oil, neither the All-Clad nor the Bourgeat pans cooked chicken or onions without sticking badly. But then, they don’t claim to be nonstick. The remaining pans cooked well with just a film of oil.

le-creuset-tealThe Le Creuset pan and the two cast-iron pans produced amazing results. Nothing stuck, including the eggs, and it was quite easy to roll up omelets. There were almost no eggs to scrape up. I don’t recommend browning potatoes or onions with a film of oil because they won’t have much flavor, but these pans could do it.

 The chicken, on the other hand, was moist and browned beautifully, a result you wouldn’t get with Teflon-coated pans.

Calphalon did not do as well with just a film of oil: the chicken was nicely browned, but an awful lot of scrambled eggs stayed in the pan.

The carbon steel, an old workhorse that wins the prize for ugly duckling, cooked all the foods, with the exception of the eggs, quite well. Like the Calphalon, this pan had a lot of scrambled egg left in it, and one of the sunny-side-up eggs broke when it was being lifted out of the pan.

The only other difference was that the cast-iron pans, with or without enamel, took longer to heat up and cool down.
But bigger differences became clear when it was time for cleaning, the kitchen job I like least. The All-Clad, even more so than Bourgeat, required serious scrubbing to remove those pesky little brown spots that form when oil leaps up the sides of the pan and sticks. And food does stick to All-Clad sometimes, requiring removal by cleanser and elbow grease.

Cleaning the cast iron, Le Creuset and carbon steel was very easy. Food that clings to them can be easily scrubbed away with a stiff brush or, in the case of Le Creuset, soaked off. (Soap is not recommended for cast iron and carbon steel, but it can be used on the Le Creuset and the Calphalon.) Unlike the Calphalon and carbon steel, the cast-iron and enameled pans are heavy. The handles get hot, so pot holders must be used.

The carbon steel and the untreated cast iron must be seasoned, though the process is simple. They must be dried thoroughly and lightly oiled or they will rust.

 Cooking certain acidic foods like tomatoes in cast iron changes the taste and color, but it does add iron to the diet.

After all the tests, there was one pan I fell for: Le Creuset. It is easy to clean, and because of its enamel finish, acidic foods can be cooked without changes to color or taste. The cast iron pans were a very close second.

I recommend Le Creuset pans with a matte black enamel interior, not treated with any Teflon-like substance. (The company makes its black and white interior enamel from the same material, and says the black is fired at a higher temperature and withstands higher cooking temperatures.) David Bouley of Bouley and Danube said he uses Le Creuset in his country house because “it is the most reliable.”

For cooking fish, one of the most delicate of foods, Eric Ripert of Le Bernardin uses cast iron, as does Michel Richard of Citronelle in Washington. “We stopped using Teflon a long time ago,” he said. “The skin started coming off, and I didn’t want to give you a steak with a skin coating.

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Happy Cooking!

Jini

Natural Birth Control

JINI on January-27-10

ovuliteferningThose of you who have read Listen To Your Gut know that I recommend women avoid the birth control pill – since not only does it mess with your hormone balance (which is key to foundational health), it creates a gut environment that makes it difficult to establish a healthy bacterial flora.

Increased estrogen during pregnancy leads to higher sugar levels, the preferred food of ‘bad’ bacteria and Candida albicans yeast. Likewise, the surge in estrogen from the birth control pill causes this same candida overgrowth and proliferation of unhealthy bacteria in the gut.

If that’s not nasty enough, continual, high levels of estrogen will also increase your risk of breast cancer, blood clots and thin your bones. Just like menopausal women have come to realize that one of the reasons medical Hormone Replacement Therapy (HRT) is damaging is due to the estrogen – well, guess what? If its not healthy for you at 40, why would it be healthy for you at 30, or 20?

Okay, so if you don’t want to use the birth control pill (BCP), then what can you use that is safe and reliable?

There are a number of family planning methods that – when used correctly – have similar efficacy rates to the BCP. The Creighton Model Fertility Care System (CrM) is one recommended by Dr. Carolyn Dean MD ND (who has contributed many articles and teleseminars for our JPT Wellness Circle) and it is based on the well-known Billings Method.

For those of you who can’t face the multi-pronged approach of a thorough natural family planning method, I found you can also use a saliva test to track your ovulation. These tests are primarily marketed as “fertility kits” for women trying to get pregnant since they help you pinpoint your ovulation very accurately. Well hello? If you know when you’re approaching ovulation and when ovulation is occurring, then you can just avoid intercourse during this period (and for 4 days following ovulation) and prevent pregnancy too. The accuracy rate of saliva testing is 98%

Obviously, the drawback to this method is that you can’t have intercourse every day, all month long, month after month and it also won’t work if you’re taking hormonal supplements – as that can skew the readings.

For those of you considering a vasectomy, be sure and check out my protocol for natural, holistic post-vasectomy care – so you can skip the painkillers (not needed!), swelling and antibiotics after the procedure.

All About Elemental Diets

JINI on January-21-10

elemental-dietThis is a great teleseminar with me (Jini Patel Thompson) and my assistant, Nicole Paull, called All About Elemental Diets. This is from our JPT Wellness Circle, but we decided to make it available to everyone since we get these questions all the time.

We discuss the most common questions, difficulties, tips and tricks for people wanting to go on an elemental diet.

We also discuss viable alternatives to an elemental diet – for people who don’t have the money, or the time, or the willpower to do an exclusively elemental diet. We even tell you who should not go on an elemental diet!

Nicole and I have been answering questions on the forum and doing private consults with people on The IBD Remission Diet for years (in addition to having both personally been on the Diet) – so we pull from a huge pool of experience with hundreds of different people.

This is definitely information and insight you won’t find anywhere else – by the end you’ll likely know more about bowel rest diets than your GI! Just click below to download both the mp3 audio recording of the teleseminar and the written transcript.

Right-click here to DOWNLOAD THE AUDIO MP3 RECORDING

Right-click here to DOWNLOAD THE WRITTEN TRANSCRIPT

Soar higher,

Jini

herbal-tea-cancer-natural-remediesIf you or a loved one has been diagnosed with cancer, where do you start? What are the alternative therapies with the highest success rates?

In this podcast, Jim Ehmke – who has trained directly with Dr. William Donald Kelley and is fluent in Dr. Simoncini’s protocols, among many others – gives us the benefit of his 30+ years of using alternative treatment protocols with cancer clients.

Learn the multi-pronged approach necessary when treating any form of cancer and if you don’t have cancer, then begin using these tools now as a preventative.

Just click the play button below to get all the details…

Or, if you have an iPod or mp3 player, you can subscribe to my podcast show on iTunes. Then you will automatically get new episodes downloaded straight to your iPod.

Too funny – A new study from Boston University has found a correlation between people who use non-stick (T-Fal, Teflon, etc.) cookware and higher levels of “bad” HDL cholesterol. So, ironically, a major promotion tactic of non-stick cookware has been that if you use them, you can use less butter, oil, etc. and thereby reduce your calorie intake and “eat healthier”. NOT!!

Okay, so it’s a preliminary study and not conclusive, but still, it’s something to keep an eye on.

In Listen To Your Gut, I take you through your kitchen and (for other proven reasons) one of the items on your checklist is getting rid of non-stick cookware, bakeware, etc. and replacing them with healthy alternatives (like cast iron and low nickel-content stainless steel).

Other sources of this non-stick coating you may not be aware of include glossy paper plates, microwave popcorn bags (not that you should be using a microwave anyway) and any other processed food that comes in a lined package to prevent leakage.

At any rate, as long as you’re cooking and baking with good, healthy oils and fats, you can and should use plenty of them to lubricate your pans. See my video about this:

Are Mammograms Safe?

JINI on January-11-10

breasthealthA friend of mine sent me this email the other day, so I thought I’d share this info with you as well:

Tomorrow, I’m off to have a mammogram. Apparently, I have mastitis. yes, only I could get that and yet not be breast feeding! Doc G is concerned, however, because of the swelling, so I’ve been recommended to go for a mammogram.

Here’s what I wrote back:

YIKES!! do NOT have a mammogram – TONS of research show they CAUSE cancer – where there was no hint of it before. Here are some articles on this topic:

http://articles.mercola.com/sites/articles/archive/2009/06/27/Stop-Read-This-BEFORE-You-Get-that-Mammogram.aspx

http://articles.mercola.com/sites/articles/archive/2009/12/03/Avoid-Routine-Mammograms-if-You-are-Under-50.aspx

http://www.naturalnews.com/027641_mammograms_brst_cancer.html

Instead, I would do the wild oregano anti-viral protocol to treat the mastitis and also apply topically to the nipples and aureola. Dilute the wild oregano oil 6:1 if you need to: 6 drops olive oil to 1 drop wild oregano oil, if nipples are sensitive to full-strength wild oregano.

http://www.listen2yourgut.com/blog/gut/wild-oregano-oil-antiviral-protocol-for-swine-flu/

When you get back, get thermal imaging (thermography screening) done if you are still concerned – many naturopathic clinics offer these now.

And be sure to read this for ongoing maintenance and preventative measures:

http://www.listen2yourgut.com/blog/gut/burn-your-bra-before-it-kills-you/

*my mum used to get cysts and swelling until she stopped wearing a bra (except for evenings out).

hugs,
Jini

childhood-obesityDr. Silvio Najt is board certified in Cardiology (with a specialization in Emergency Medicine) and he shares with Jini Patel Thompson his views on “high cholesterol” and the mis-use of statin drugs. Prepare to be informed, amazed and maybe a little bit shocked…..

Find out what you can do and what you can eat to naturally bring your cholesterol into a healthy range. And as a side note, if you have high cholesterol, then make doubly sure you are not using teflon-coated pans or bakeware – due to the link between PFCs and high HDL cholesterol.

Please Note: English is not Dr. Najt’s first language (although he did live and practice medicine in the U.S. for numerous years) – so please be patient with his pronunciation.

Just click the play button below to get all the details…

Or, if you have an iPod or mp3 player, you can subscribe to my podcast show on iTunes. Then you will automatically get new episodes downloaded straight to your iPod.

One last thing, my friend Carolyn Dean MD, ND also has an excellent approach to cholesterol, here it is:

People often tell me about the pressure they feel from doctors to
take statin drug medication for their cholesterol. The minute their
blood test is above 220, their doctors scare them into taking drugs
saying they can get a heart attack if they don’t. Then every chest
pain or feeling of tiredness sends them into a panic.

There is so much wrong with this black and white approach to
cholesterol that it’s hard to know where to being so I’ll give you
some facts in point form.

1. In 1913 a Russian study found that rabbits fed cholesterol
developed yellow plaque in their arteries. However, the cholesterol
they were fed was rancid and led directly to the abnormal finding.
But by the time those facts were revealed, cholesterol’s fate was
sealed. It became the bad guy and the “cause” of heart disease.

2. We require cholesterol as the main building block to make all
our hormones. When cholesterol is down, so is your libido.

3. Cholesterol coats every cell in the body with a fatty membrane.
This is especially important for brain cells. The brain is a very
fatty tissue!

4. Cholesterol is an important antioxidant and when it’s elevated
that can be a sign of toxicity. If your cholesterol is high, that’s
when you go on a detox program. It’s NOT the time to take a toxic drug.

5. Cholesterol becomes elevated due to stress because stress
produces toxins in the body that require cholesterol to act as an antioxidant.

5. When I was in medical school the “normal” cholesterol was around
250. The new “normal” cholesterol promoted by drug companies is
under 200 with 180 being considered ideal. Hammering cholesterol
down with statin drugs is the wrong approach.

6. Statin drug side effects are painful muscles and muscle damage,
nerve damage, impotence and memory impairment. Muscle pain is
treated with anti-inflammatories–that’s until they are taken off
the market for causing heart disease. Impotence is treated with
Viagra. And memory impairment is treated with Alzheimer’s drugs.
It’s a win win for the drug companies. But what about you…

What do I recommend?

1. Pay attention to your diet. I am not an enemy of eggs – see
Point 1 above. Trans fats and rancid fats and oils (in baked goods
and fried foods) are the main culprits in raising your cholesterol.

2. Magnesium is a mineral that acts like a natural statin and helps
balance cholesterol in the body.

3. Detoxification with clay baths or footbaths. See my ‘resources
page’ at http://drcarolyndean.com/resources.html

4. Red Rice Yeast with CoQ10 is a natural plant statin and can
lower cholesterol more naturally than statins. I recommend it if
detoxification, stress reduction and magnesium aren’t enough.

For natural ways to treat 134 different disease conditions you’ll
want to have my eBook, Future Health Now Encyclopedia on your
desktop. http://drcarolyndean.com/fhne

Carolyn Dean MD ND
The Doctor of the Future