An essential step to healing the body is
for an individual to eliminate the mucus-forming foods from
the diet, so as not to put mucus into the body faster than it
can be taken out or eliminated. Using this procedure, not only
are the sinuses, the bronchi, and the lungs cleared but also
the constipating mucus (catarrh) in the tissues of the body
from the top of the head to the bottom of the feet.
If this diet is followed as outlined, we guarantee that after
a short time you will have much more satisfaction from the foods
we recommend, for better health, than you ever had from the
food of your former diet.
Now, what can you eat?
The Don'ts: Salt,
eggs, all refined sugars, meat, all milk products, flours
and flour products.
The following food (secondary, denaturized,
or inorganic) substances are to be eliminated from
the individual's diet:
Salt:
For those who are accustomed to large amounts of salt, this
may sound difficult, but if you will substitute coarsely ground
pepper and savory herbs, adding powdered kelp, you will find
that the craving for salt will immediately begin to disappear.
Black pepper is a good nutritional herb and helps rebuild
the body when used in its natural state. But when pepper is
cooked in food, the molecular structure changes, so that it
becomes an inorganic irritant (as high heat changes cayenne,
black pepper, and spices from organic to inorganic), and this
is the only time when damage results. The use of salts that
are of a vegetable or potassium base (such as Dr. Jensen's,
Dr. Browner's, and other various ones, which in some cases
contain some sea salt) is all right, providing it is not overdone.
Eggs:
No eggs should be eaten in any form. (mucus forming) Sugar
and all sugar products: You may use honey, sorghum molasses
or blackstrap molasses, but no sugar of any type.
Meat:
Eliminate all meats from the diet. A little white fish once
a week, or a bit of young chicken that has not been fed commercial
food or inoculated with formaldehyde and other antispoilage
serums, would be all right (as these are the higher forms
of edible flesh), but do not use them too often. (mucus forming)
Milk:
Eliminate all dairy products: butter, cheese, cottage cheese,
milk, yogurt, etc. These are all mucus-forming substances
and in most cases, are extremely high in cholesterol (especially
butter). As a substitute for butter or margarine (hardened
vegetable oils, etc.), you can train your taste buds to enjoy
a good, fresh, bland olive oil on vegetables, salads, and
basic meals.
Flour and Flour Products:
Flour is eliminated because, when heated and baked at high
temperatures, it changes to a mucus-forming substance. It
has no more life. All wholesome food is organic, where unwholesome
food is dead and inorganic.
The Do's: any
whole, live, raw foods. Fruits, vegetables, whole grains,
nuts, seeds, and a small amount of fresh fish or chemical
free chicken.
When you start the mucusless diet, Dr. Christopher
suggested some supplements which can speed your healing. Take
a teaspoonful of cayenne in cold water three times a day.
This is quite a bit to start with, so you should begin with
1/4 teaspoonful and work up to the full amount. [Or use the
liquid cayenne extract (working up to a full dropper ) in
cold water three times a day.]
To assist digestion, put one tablespoonful of
honey and one of apple cider vinegar in warm water, stirring
until mixed. Sip this three times a day. This helps produce
hydrochloric acid for digestion.
Use kelp instead of, or in addition to, sea
salt. This provides many trace minerals and helps the thyroid
gland rebuild. You can also take the kelp in tablets. If you
cannot stand the taste, try dulse, which is milder, but still
wonderfully full of minerals.
Take a tablespoon of molasses three times a
day in warm water. You can also take it plain, but the molasses
"coffee" is often preferred as a vitamin-B complex
pick-me-up.
Take a tablespoonful of a good, fresh wheat
germ oil three times a day. This provides vitamin E, which
helps the system use oxygen.
See Dr. Christopher's Regenerative Diet for
charts on how sample diets fulfill amply the RDA recommended
for adults and children.
Basically, the mucusless diet consists of fruits
and vegetables, grains, nuts and seeds. This diet, along with
the supplements mentioned above, supply all the nutrients
that the body requires. In addition, the high quality of the
foods gives new life and health to the system. As we mentioned
in the text, some people have been completely healed by the
use of the diet alone, although the herbs surely speed recovery.
But what does this diet mean in practical terms?
For most of us, it means the elimination of some of our basic
foods: milk and milk products, meats, flours--including whole
wheat flour but most especially refined flour, sugars, chemicals
of all kinds--prepared foods of all kinds.
Instead, we use foods in their wholesome state,
fresh, raw or home prepared. Dr. Christopher used an eclectic
approach in diet. He didn't recommend all-raw food, because
the cooked foods can act as a broom to sweep toxic matter
out of the intestines. Cooked food is also familiar and comforting,
while a raw diet can be hard to take for many people. He did,
however, emphasize using plenty of both raw and cooked foods,
not just cooked or just raw.
What do we do with the various categories of
foods?
For grains, Dr. Christopher recommended that
you soak whole grains in water for sixteen to twenty hours
(some say that you should do this in the refrigerator so that
the grains will not ferment). Drain off the soak water, and
cover with water that has been brought to a boil, along with
some sea salt to taste. Low-heat at 135 degrees F. or under
(using a food warmer-cooker from a restaurant supply house,
a modified crockpot, a stainless steel double boiler, a low
temperature in the oven, or a thermos bottle). For the last
method, put the soaked grain into the bottle, about 1/3 full.
Add the boiling water, turning the thermos a few times so
that all the grain is treated. Let this sit all night, and
in the morning the grain should be soft and palatable. This
only works if you have a small family, however.
You can use wheat, barley, millet, buckwheat,
rye, oat groats, and so on. Sprouted grains can also be used.
Some people like to briefly blend the cooked
grains in the blender. I especially like this method for children,
who do not often chew their food properly.
Serve these grains with a little oil or butter,
some honey, some cinnamon, etc. If you are still craving milk
on your porridge, soak some almonds overnight. Blend them
in the blender with water to cover and one apple, cored but
not peeled, and a touch of maple syrup and possibly a bit
of pure vanilla. This is so delicious on porridge that you
won't miss your milk topping.
You can also slice some fresh fruit, any kind
including berries, on your morning cereal.
During the morning and afternoon, don't hesitate
to take a glass of juice (some people like to dilute it, but
be sure to swish it around in your mouth), a piece or two
of fresh fruit, a few pre-soaked nuts or seeds--whatever you
like to snack on. Paavo Airola's research has shown that primitive
people in their natural cultures eat a little something every
couple of hours or so to keep their energy up. If you are
working under real stress, make a "smoothie" by
blending soaked almonds, water, honey, pineapple juice, a
banana and brewer's yeast together until smooth. This will
satisfy your body's needs when demands are high.
We usually prepare a vegetable meal by including
something cooked and something raw, something for starch and
something for protein. For example, we might steam some zucchini,
eat a raw salad, have a baked potato, and have a handful of
nuts or a serving of beans. Dr. Christopher recommended using
only one cooked vegetable per meal, although you can sometimes
prepare more than one. You can vary your vegetables with sauces,
herbs, tamari soy sauce, olive oil, a little fresh butter,
Vegit, etc. For salad, you can combine almost any vegetables;
just be sure not to combine vegetables and fruits, although
on occasion you might have a carrot and
raisin salad. Dress with olive oil and vinegar, or with homemade
mayonnaise.
Mayonnaise
Place in blender:
1 organically-grown egg
2 tablespoons apple cider vinegar, or one T. each vinegar
and lemon juice
1 teaspoon salt
1/2 teaspoon ground mustard seed (optional)
1/4 cup unrefined oil (olive and safflower are both good)
Blend on high. Take small cap off blender top and add more
oil in a stream until the blender seems to speed up or oil
pools on top of mayonnaise. Turn off immediately. If it curdles,
take mixture out of blender, clean blender, dry it, start
with one egg, and add the mixture to it slowly. It should
come out okay. You can also mix this by beating slowly with
an egg beater, adding the oil a drop or two at a time, but
that method is much more tedious.
You can season the oil-and-vinegar dressing
and the mayonnaise almost any way you like. Garlic and basil
are good standby seasonings, making an Italian-tasting dressing.
But you can add cayenne, almost any herb, more lemon, even
natural peanut butter, for different-tasting dressings.
Although you can make salads according to recipes,
we usually stick to a miniature salad bar. We prepare raw
vegetables as we have them, using leaf lettuce and never iceberg,
which has few nutrients but lots of chemicals. We cut or shred
what we want, placing the items in nice heaps on a large platter.
Each member of the family takes the vegetables that s/he wants.
Don't forget to include vegetables that are often served cooked,
such as raw, shredded beets--very tasty raw, cauliflower and
cabbage, raw peas, etc. Some people eat the starchy vegetables,
such as yams and sweet potatoes, raw, but we prefer these
cooked. Don't forget a nice little pile of minced garlic,
green onions, or chives. Avocados, tomatoes, jicama (a delicious
Mexican root vegetable), Jerusalem artichokes, and other unusual
vegetables make great, satisfying salads.
For a starch, baked potato is our favorite standby,
but baked squash, yams, pumpkins, etc., are also good. You
can prepare a grain casserole by mixing soaked, low-heated
grains with steamed vegetables. Although this may sound a
little plain and mundane, you can come up with some very good
combinations, varying seasonings. One of our favorites:
Lentil-Rice Casserole
Soak and low-heat:
2 cups lentils
2 cups brown rice, long or short grain
When the grain is nearly done, add:
2 cups cut carrots, cooked
2 cloves raw garlic large onion, sauteed (optional) bay leaf
1/4 cup blackstrap molasses
2 tablespoons (or more, to taste) apple cider vinegar
2 teaspoons salt
Low-heat for a couple of hours. Makes enough
for a large family, or for two hearty meals.
For other grain-casseroles, just add herbs and
seasonings with a generous hand. You can lightly toast and
grind up some sesame seeds for a lovely topping. Almost any
grain and vegetable combination is delicious. Transfiguration
Diet, by Littlegreen Inc.'s Think Tank, provides detailed
recipes and some other information on their application of
Dr. Christopher's mucusless diet.
A handful of nuts or seeds, ground up and sprinkled
on the vegetables, can provide good protein. You may want
to prepare a bean dish, however. Just soak some dried beans
for about 24 hours. Then low-heat them until tender, perhaps
another 24 hours. You can season them with tomato, garlic,
onions, chili, cayenne--almost any seasoning. We love them
plain with a little olive oil and tamari sauce; navy beans
and garbanzos are delightful this way. You can make soup out
of them, or mash them in a pan in which you have heated some
oil to make a good dish of refried beans (just be sure to
add enough liquid to keep the frijoles creamy). Salt to taste.
This simple recipe has a gourmet taste, and it is our family
favorite. Most of my children beg me for frijoles refritos!
As you can see, the mucusless diet provides
plenty of protein, which is the longstanding lament of those
who feel that they can't give up their animal products.
As for nuts and seeds, you can grind them up,
mix them with other ingredients, and make a very good confection.
For example:
Seed Candy
Sunflower Seeds
Sesame Seeds
Honey
Carob Powder
Coconut
Ground Raisins or other dried fruit (optional)
Grind the seeds in a blender or seed grinder. Add the other
ingredients, going light on the honey and adding a touch of
water if the mixture needs binding. Roll in more carob powder
or sesame seeds or coconut, if desired.
Old-fashioned halvah is nothing but ground sesame
seeds and honey, perhaps with a touch of natural vanilla.
Seeds may also be sprouted for use in salads
or for eating out of hand. For a long time we enjoyed sunflower
seeds out of hand, but when we finally sprouted them, we were
amazed at how delicious they are. Soak them overnight, drain
them, and in the morning a tiny sprout appears. Sprouted alfalfa
seeds are the foundation of many salads, and they are easy
to make. Just soak a few tablespoons of alfalfa seeds in water
in a wide-mouthed quart jar. Next morning, drain, using a
commercial top sold for this purpose, or a nylon stocking,
well-cleaned, held on with a jar ring or rubber band. Now
rinse the sprouts three times a day or so, letting drain thoroughly
each time (that's the secret for sweet sprouts). After four
days, they will have grown about three inches long and developed
nice green leaves, which you can enhance by leaving the jar
for a couple of hours in the sunshine.
Chia seeds make good sprouts, but they are a
little gelatinous, which not everyone enjoys (we do). Radish
sprouts are spicy and great on salad. Red clover seed sprouts
look much like alfalfa but have a slightly different flavor.
Mung bean sprouts are sweet and hearty, more starchy than
the others, but still great for eating raw. Lentil and garbanzo
beans are hefty too. Be sure to cook sprouted soybeans to
inactivate the enzyme which makes the bean indigestible.
Some people grow sunflower and buckwheat
lettuce by planting the soaked seeds into a small flat of
moist soil. This produces tender green leaves which you can
clip for salad.
Ann Wigmore suggests a seed cheese which she
claims is very digestible. In a blender, blend 1 cup sesame
seed, 1 cup sunflower seed, and 2 cups Rejuvelac. Put into
a muslin bag and allow to drain for 8-12 hours. This is good
with vegetables.
Most people can accept the changes required by this diet except
for one thing: they want bread. Bread is considered the staff
of life (although it's actually wheat that the scripture refers
to). Personally, we have had a difficult time giving up bread.
You can provide some substitutes, as follows:
Sprout the wheat until the little sprouts appear
but no longer. Place the sprouted wheat in a food processor
and grind until it forms a bread-like mass. Take this out
and place on oiled baking sheet in little loaves. Bake at
150-165° F. for 30 to 60 minutes, or until done to your
liking. Slice thin to eat.
Sprout wheat as above, and blend in blender
with only a little water until a pancake-batter consistency.
Pour onto oiled cookie trays and low-heat as above. Makes
a cracker. One family also places the trays under glass frames
in the sun; one hot afternoon should give you good crackers.
Both of the above recipes can be sweetened with
honey, lightly salted, or flavored with herbs or ground raisins.
If you are still hankering after regular bread,
you can make an improvement on your regular whole wheat loaves
by sprouting the wheat as above, perhaps a quart of sprouts,
and blending with a very little water in the blender. Use
this as the base of your whole wheat bread, adding it to activated
yeast, a little honey (though not very much, because the sprouting
process makes the wheat very sweet), some sea salt, and adding
only as much whole wheat flour as you need to knead the loaf.
One baker also adds a cup or two of gluten flour, which is
very concentrated, but does really improve the texture. Knead,
rise and bake as usual. Although this is not a live food,
the acidity of much of the grain is changed to alkaline and
the bread is better for us. However, the texture is very heavy
and somewhat sticky, not at all like the light fluffy bread
we're used to. Still, it's a trade-off, because whole wheat
bread as we normally consume it is very mucus-forming, a dead
food.
One nutritionist suggests that if you must have
bread, you should bake pita bread and then stuff it with good
salad vegetables, including avocado if you can. Add plenty
of sprouts, and this perhaps will balance the acidifying effect
of the bread.
Pita
2 cups warm water
2 tablespoons honey
1 tablespoon dried yeast
Activate yeast
Add:
1 teaspoon sea salt
1 teaspoon kelp (optional)
Mix in:
5-6 cups of freshly-ground whole wheat flour, as needed to
make a dough that you can knead
Flour a clean surface, and knead until springy.
Let rest 15 minutes.
Break off golf-ball sized pieces of dough, and roll out about
1/4 inch thick into tortilla-shaped circles. Place on ungreased
cookie sheet that has been sprinkled with cornmeal. Let rise
about 30 minutes, during which you preheat your oven to 450°
F.
Place sheets on bottom shelf of oven, and bake the pita breads
for 5-8 minutes, just until they puff and solidify a bit.
Remove and cool separately. If you don't have a lot of cookie
sheets, let the breads rise on a cornmeal-sprinkled surface,
and gently, gently place them on the cookie sheets as they
become available. Makes 2 dozen pita breads. Cut in half across
the circle to form two pockets and stuff as desired. Homemade
mayonnaise is a good dressing.
Another frustration in adapting to this diet
is the absence of milk. But to heal quickly, and especially
for serious disease, it's best to eliminate milks entirely.
However, you can make palatable nut and seed milks that behave
quite a bit like milk. Just blend (soaked) almonds in water,
in proportions of about one to four. Blend until smooth and
strain if desired, although we enjoy the pulp as well. Sesame
and coconut also make good milks. Sunflower seed milk is strongly
flavored but still pleasant.
You can make soy milk, which many people use as a plentiful
milk substitute. The best-tasting recipe we have seen is as
follows:
Soy milk
Sort through 1 quart dry soybeans and discard
bad ones. Soak overnight in three cups of water. Drain well.
Put on a large pot of water to boil. In a blender which you
have preheated by blending 2 cups of boiling water for 1 minute,
put in 1 cup of beans to the 2 cups of boiling water. Grind
for 2 or 3 minutes. Strain in a muslin bag to remove the pulp,
and squeeze well to get out as much of the milk as you can.
Heat the milk at least 30 minutes in a double
boiler. Stir occasionally.
Add 2 tablespoons oil, and a little honey, if
desired. Refrigerate and use as dairy milk.
The flavor of this milk is mild and pleasant.
You should be careful not to crack a plastic or glass blender
container with the boiling water.
Some people enjoy sprouted-wheat milk, which
is made by blending sprouted wheat with water until creamy.
It's a little strong-tasting but very satisfying. Sometimes
a little apple or grape juice over grains or other fruits
can be delicious and satisfying.
The only safe sweeteners are honey, blackstrap
molasses, sorghum, maple syrup, or fruit sugars (that is,
ground-up dried fruits, such as date). Any processed sugars
should be avoided. They are often the main cause of many health
problems.
In the evening or between meals, fruits can
be very satisfying. A large bowl of chopped fruits of various
kinds, sprinkled with wheat germ, ground nuts or seeds, or
a bit of honey, is a delectable treat. You can use avocado
with fruits or vegetables, making a rich and satisfying meal.
Dr. Christopher recommended using a potassium
broth with vegetable meals. This is most easily made by purchasing
Dr. Jensen's or Dr. Bonner's broth. However, we like to make
our own. Just simmer potatoes, celery, carrots, onions, garlic,
herbs and whatever other vegetables you like in water until
tender. When it's done, add tamari soy sauce to taste. You
can blend this in the blender if you like. This simple recipe
is very delicious and satisfying.
You can make delicious soups by blending fresh,
raw vegetables (only good-quality, good-tasting ones that
you'd normally eat raw) with hot water or nut or soymilk.
Just clean and cut up the vegetables (corn, peas, tomatoes,
celery, carrot, etc.) and place them in the blender with seasonings
and hot water. Blend until smooth and serve immediately. You
might need to warm it up a little on the stove. A little well-sauteed
onion makes the soup taste cooked. Our favorite variation
of the raw soup is eaten cold:
Summer Soup or Gazpacho
In the blender container place:
Several cut-up, ripe tomatoes
1 clove garlic, peeled
1 stick celery, cut-up
1 green pepper, cleaned and cup up
2 teaspoons basil or 2 tablespoons fresh basil
1 teaspoon sea salt
1/2 teaspoon paprika
Blend until smooth, strain through a colander,
and serve cold.
Some people like to purchase or make a nutmeat
preparation to stand-in for meats.
Nut Loaf
1 part cashews, coarsely ground
1 part almonds, coarsely ground
1 part celery, finely chopped
1 part carrots, finely chopped
1/4 part minced parsley
1 part tomato, blended in blender or finely chopped
1 avocado, mashed
salt, pepper, herbs, Vegesal, etc., to taste
Mix all together and press into loaf pan. Refrigerate until
firm.
You can buy vegetarian meat substitutes, but
check the labels for additives. Once we bought some meatless
hot dogs, and they contained nitrates and nitrites the same
as the meat variety!
You can also make bean loaves by combining beans, crumbs,
vegetables, and seasonings, baking for a half hour if desired.
We tend to go more simple than this, however,
simply using the foods as they are without making too many
combinations.
As for sauces, you can make a lovely off-white
sauce by using olive oil or butter, whole-wheat flour, and
almond milk. Flavor this as desired. Just alter your regular
sauce recipes using the foods recommended in this diet.
Desserts are hard to give up, but you can alter
some of your favorite recipes so they are mucusless and delicious.
In Dr. Christopher's Regenerative Diet, a pudding is suggested:
Strawberry Barley Pudding
Strawberry Barley Pudding is an elegant spoon-up
finish for any luncheon or dinner. And leftovers are quite
a temptation to any refrigerator raider. Try this appealing
and delicious delight.
2 cups strawberries
2 cups low-heated barley
1/2 cup honey
1/2 teaspoon almond extract
Combine above ingredients in blender, puree
and set aside.
2 cups strawberries
1/2 cup honey
2 tablespoons arrowroot
1/2 teaspoon almond extract
Combine these ingredients in the top of a double
boiler. Heat to 130° F. and maintain heat for 30 minutes.
Remove from heat and add barley mixture from blender.
Place in refrigerator and chill thoroughly.
Just before serving top with coconut chips and garnish with
fresh strawberry halves.
This method of making pudding can be adapted
to other fruits and grains, varying flavors as desired.
You can make a nice fruit cobbler by lightly steaming fresh
fruit, sweetening as desired, and topping with ground, low-heated
grains, lightly-toasted and ground seeds or nuts, lightly-toasted
wheat germ, etc. Top with nut cream, which is just nut milk
made with a little less water, sweetened with honey or maple
syrup.
You can question the cost of such a diet. Actually,
if you eliminate the high-prices processed foods from your
grocery list, you free up quite a bit of money that can be
used to bring home much delicious, fresh produce. Even if
it does cost more than you are used to paying, you will be
eliminating visits to the doctor's office, supplements at
the health food store, and time lost from work. I consider
our grocery budget money invested in health. Once we bought
several bags of fruit when we lived in Toronto, Canada. The
check-out attendant asked us if we worked for a restaurant!
During the winter, you can usually obtain good
vegetables and fruits in most parts of the country, although
in some places, such as Alaska, the price can get pretty high.
I always wonder what we would do if shipping were somehow
stopped, as in an economic disaster. I would hope that we
could contrive some sort of storage facility, such as an underground
pit. I have seen people store carrots, celery, squash, apples,
pears, etc., in root cellars all the way through until the
next harvest, and in good condition, too. Dr. Christopher
always recommended that people grow their own food, experimenting
with varieties that are not necessarily "supposed"
to grow in their locales. He recalled that his father had
the first bearing almond tree in Salt Lake City, Utah. Everyone
else thought they couldn't grow there.
A mainstay of the winter mucusless diet must
be sprouts. If you can accustom your family to eating sprouts,
they can form an important part of your salads, and soups
too. Ann Wigmore suggests a soup made of your favorite sprouts,
plus buckwheat lettuce and sunflower greens. Blend this with
seasonings and water in your blender, and it makes a high-powered,
nutritious soup.
As you begin the mucusless diet, you will feel
yourself getting more and more energy and needing less and
less food. Sometimes you may be tempted to go off the diet,
but you might try this trick offered by a nutritionist. When
you feel reasonable tempted by ice cream, chocolate, or some
other forbidden food, take just one bite and chew it slowly.
Then ask yourself, do you really want more of this? If you
feel strongly that you do, take just one more bite and repeat.
Often the body's mechanism will deny the need for the food
once it gets the vibrations of what's going in. In any case,
don't allow yourself to shovel in bad food. Go for a walk
if you have to! Take a couple of glasses of cold water. You
can eventually overcome bad food cravings.
During the process of cleansing and rebuilding
your body, you can expect what is called a cleansing crisis.
Your symptoms may all flare up; you may feel bad all over;
you may feel like you have the flu. Just keep going, the cleansing
crisis will pass, and you'll feel better than ever. Dr. Christopher
used to have recurrent flareups of his rheumatism and arthritis;
for a week or two every seven years he would have to go back
to his wheelchair. He accepted these crises, as hard as they
were to live with, and continued on with the business of cleansing
and building.
Look upon your new adventure in diet as
fun, interesting, and freedom-giving. You will gain your health
from it, and also learn to control the sources and preparation
of your food. Take it for granted that the food tastes good,
that it's good for you, and that it's making you better. Soon
you'll be delighted at how good it tastes and how much you
enjoy it; it will become a way of life.
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