The Joint Sugar House...the Chiropractic place

Tuesday, August 12, 2014

Stay healthier by limiting these 6 white foods


While everyone will not agree on the following 6 foods, it has been my experience as a chiropractor in Salt Lake City, Utah that eliminating or at least avoiding the following foods can improve your health – sometimes dramatically. Here’s my list:

Flour
White Flour is one of the biggest non-food culprits in our diets here in Utah.  I call it a non-food because it is a great imitator of real food and has lead to many health problems and disease. Flour starts as a whole grain which is first stripped of its outer bran layer which contains the nutritious fiber. The remaining portion is ground and chemically bleached, refined, and processed. At this point it is little more than simple carbohydrates that the body digests quickly and easily.  Commercial white flour eliminates all vitamins and most minerals. This is why it needs to be enriched.  This enriching process is the addition of chemical vitamin substitutes, anti-caking agents, and sometimes leaving agents.  The remaining white flour bears little resemblance to the original wheat.

Sugar
White sugars (and the many variations of simple carbohydrates such as high fructose corn syrup) are found in many commercial foods.  Refined carbs are high in calories and less satisfying than good carbs. The body absorbs processed sugars relatively quickly causing spikes in insulin. In an hour or two, you’re hungry again. Sugar is as addictive as heroin and leads to cravings.





Salt
White salt is not good for you in excess. Your body needs some salt to maintain electrolyte (fluid) balance. Nevertheless, a standard Utah diet is too high in salt. The American Heart Association states that excess salt can contribute to high blood pressure. If you read the ingredients of most commercial food, you’ll find salt or at least a salt component listed.






Milk
White milk is not good for you. Now this comes as a surprise to most of my patients in Salt Lake City. After all, doesn’t milk promote strong bones and bodies? Well, no; not really. Many scientific studies have shown the detrimental health effects directly linked to milk consumption.  Milk assays high in calcium, however we barely absorb the calcium especially if the milk has been pasteurized. To make matters worse, commercial milk consumption actually increases calcium loss from your bones by altering the blood PH balance. But it doesn’t end there. The homogenization process breaks up the fats in milk so the cream doesn’t float to the top. This is good, right? Well, once again, no!  By breaking up the fats so small that they don’t separate in the milk, when we consume the milk, the fats bypass the normal digestion process and enter the bloodstream as foreign particles causing an inflammatory immune response.


Rice
White rice like white flour has also been refined by the removal of the outer bran layer. “Quick” rice has been pre-cooked and is nothing more than dehydrated carbohydrates. Very little nutritional value is left.







Potatoes
White potatoes are a high glycemic food, and eating too many may increase your risk of developing type 2 diabetes.  Potatoes may be particularly hard to avoid for Utah residents, but the health risks of overconsumption are real. Many fast foods are potato based, such as potato chips, french fries, hash browns, mashed potatoes.



Do I eat the above foods? Yes - occasionally. But I do try to avoid them as much as possible. A good rule of thumb is, “If God didn’t make it – limit your consumption” and “if it won’t spoil – don’t eat it.” Bon Appétit!

-Michael Lindstrom, D.C.
  Chiropractic Physician