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I received a press release today from the Weston A. Price Foundation, of which I am a member. I’ll post the entire press release below, but first “my story.”

As you probably know from reading various posts and my About Local Nourishment page, my family has struggled with health problems including osteo and rheumatoid arthritis, Chronic Fatigue Syndrome, irritable bowel syndrome, food allergies and food and chemical intolerances, dental problems, obesity, eye problems, blood sugar regulation problems, high blood pressure for one of us and low blood pressure for two others, and many more. I followed a vegetarian diet for a time, even went vegan for a while, and every one of my physical problems worsened. Most pronounced was a deep, dark depression that was chemically treated for several years.

After coming off the vegan diet and returning to the Standard American Diet, most of my health issues did not improve. After one year eating truly nutrient dense foods like butter, cream, raw milk, cod liver oil, fresh-caught fish, coconut oil, kefir, lacto-fermented vegetables and fruits, soaked and sprouted grains and legumes and fresh, organic fruits and vegetables, all but a couple of our physical challenges has eased, many have disappeared completely. If I had known it was this easy (and tasty!) there is no way I would have struggled so long with a tasteless fat-free, soy-heavy diet.

Whole Food Market has it wrong. I applauded John Mackey’s statement last August in which he vowed to purge the junk food from his health food stores. I didn’t entirely disagree with his “alternative to Obamacare” editorial (although his “plant-based, nutrient dense and low-fat” agenda was mentioned there—an early warning sign.) I believe the decision to grant a greater employee discount for team members meeting BMI criteria is a poor policy; discriminatory in nature, and destructive to an emotionally healthy corporate culture. But creating a new food-rating scale based on arbitrary data which has little bearing on true health is just…wrong.

Whole Foods CEO John Mackey by JOE M500, on Flickr

And now, the press release I received this morning:

WHOLE FOODS PROMOTES MILITANT VEGETARIAN AGENDA
Has the Upscale Market Outlived Its Usefulness?

WASHINGTON, DC. February 3, 2010:  Whole Foods Markets has launched a nationwide “Health Starts Here” marketing scheme that endorses a low-fat, vegetarian diet, with promises that the diet will “improve health easily and naturally.” The plan promotes the books and private business ventures of Joel Fuhrman, MD, and Rip Esselstyn, both of whom worked with Whole Foods to formulate the new guidelines. Customers now receive a pamphlet urging them to adopt a low-fat, plant-based diet and to cut back or completely eliminate animal foods.  Many Whole Foods stores no longer sell books advocating consumption of meat, eggs and dairy products.

The plan will feature new Aggregate Nutrient Density Index (ANDI) labels for foods in the store; the index is designed to make plant foods to appear “nutrient dense” by favoring various phytonutrients in plants and ignoring many vitamins and minerals essential to health. “Whole Foods has stacked the deck against animal foods by choosing ANDI parameters that do not include a host of key nutrients, such as vitamins A, D and K, DHA, EPA arachidonic acid, taurine, iodine, biotin, pantothenic acid, and vital minerals like sodium, chloride, potassium, sulfur, phosphorus, copper, manganese, boron, molybdenum and chromium,” says Sally Fallon Morell, president of the Weston A. Price Foundation. “Many of the phytochemicals that Fuhrman includes in the index he developed for Whole Foods play no essential role in the body and may even be harmful.”

“Animal foods like meat, liver, butter, whole milk and eggs contain ten to one hundred times more vitamins and minerals than plant foods,” says Fallon Morell. “Plant foods add variety and interest to the human diet but in most circumstances do not qualify as ‘nutrient-dense’ foods.”

“For years before becoming deathly ill, I followed the dietary suggestions in the Whole Foods plan,” said Kathryne Pirtle, author of Performance without Pain. “I ate large amounts of organic salads, vegetables and fruits, lots of whole grains, only a little meat and no animal fat. I had chronic pain for twenty-five years on this diet, then acid reflux, then a serious inflammation in my spine followed by chronic diarrhea. Without switching to nutrient-dense animal foods, including eggs, butter and whole dairy products, not only would I have lost my national career as a performing artist, I would have died at forty-five years old! I am not alone in this story of ill health from a low-fat, plant-based diet, which does not supply a person with enough nutrients to be healthy and can be very damaging to the intestinal tract.”

“Consumers can send a message about Whole Foods’ misinformed scheme by voting with their feet,” says Fallon Morell.  “Most major grocery store chains now carry basic organic staples and a larger array of organic fruits and vegetables than Whole Foods markets. And citizens should purchase seasonal produce  and their meat, eggs and dairy products directly from farmers engaged in non-toxic and grass-based farming. It’s not appropriate for Whole Foods to promote a scheme that has no scientific basis and that bulldozes their customers towards the higher profit items in their stores.” The local chapters of the Weston A. Price Foundation help consumers connect with farmers raising animal foods in humane, healthy and ecologically friendly fashion.

“The growing emphasis on plant-based diets deficient in animal protein also serves to promote soy foods as both meat and dairy substitutes,” says Kaayla T. Daniel, PhD, CCN, author of The Whole Soy Story: The Dark Side of America’s Favorite Health Food.   “Soy is not only one of the top eight allergens but has been linked in more than sixty years of studies to malnutrition, digestive distress, thyroid dysfunction, reproductive disorders including infertility, and even cancer, especially breast cancer.”

“Low-fat patients are my most unhealthy patients,” says John P. Salerno, MD, a board certified family physician from New York City. “The reason we are spiraling into diabetes and obesity is because of the low-fat concept developed by the U.S government decades ago. Low-fat diets have a low nutrient base, and phytonutrients in vegetables cannot be properly absorbed without fat.”

Fallon Morell cites recent studies from Europe showing that low-fat diets promote weight gain in both children and adults, and also contribute to infertility. A meta-analysis published January, 2010 in the American Journal of Clinical Nutrition found no significant evidence that saturated fat consumption is associated with an increased risk of cardiovascular disease.

“Whole Foods CEO John Mackay has stated that eating animal fats amounts to an addiction. But in fact, animal fats are essential for good health,” says Fallon Morell. “The nutrients in animal fats, such as vitamins A, D and K, arachidonic acid, DHA, choline, cholesterol and saturated fat, are critical for brain function. In the misguided war against cholesterol and saturated fat, we have created an epidemic of learning disorders in the young and mental decline in the elderly.”

“Perhaps the vegetarian diet has affected the thinking powers of Whole Foods management,” says Fallon Morell. “It’s time for the stockholders to insist on leadership devoted to increasing customer base, not promoting a personal vegetarian agenda.”

Comments about the Whole Foods Health Starts Here scheme can be emailed to customer.questions@wholefoods.com.

The Weston A. Price Foundation is a 501C3 nutrition education foundation with the mission of disseminating accurate, science-based information on diet and health. Named after nutrition pioneer Weston A. Price, DDS, author of the book, Nutrition and Physical Degeneration, the Washington, DC-based Foundation publishes a quarterly journal for over 12,000 members, supports 400 local chapters worldwide and hosts a yearly conference. The Foundation headquarters phone number is (202) 363-4394, westonaprice.org, info@westonaprice.org.

CONTACT
Kimberly Hartke, Publicist, the Weston A. Price Foundation
703-860-2711, 703-675-5557 press@westonaprice.org

We’re through the first week of the 28-Day Real Food Challlenge. Here’s what we did:

Day one’s assignment: clean out pantry – check (except hubby’s cereal and sugar for culturing kefir, stored up high)

Day two: shop for healthy stuff – check. Of the suggested foods, those that weren’t already in my pantry were on my weekly shopping list anyway.

Day three: Improve your grains – easy, have mill for making my own fresh flour and well in the habit of soaking grains for pancakes and breads. I’m still looking into a no-knead sourdough recipe, I hear one of the Real Food Media bloggers was working on one…

Day four: Sourdough Starter – not quite check. We were supposed to start a sourdough starter today for use next Thursday, but I don’t have a starter. I could start the recipe from Nourishing Traditions and just be a week behind on this goal, but opted instead to send away for the sourdough started Wardeh blogged about at GNOWFGLINS. I’m sure the family is in no hurry for me to accomplish this goal because other than the barely-soured bread we buy from Twin Forks, no one but me really likes the flavor of sourdough.

Day five: Sprout your grains – check. There’s always something sprouting in the kitchen. Sometimes beans or grains, so I started some wheat. I made double what I expected to use because our guinea pigs just love wheat grass to munch on!

Day six: Milling your own sprouted grain flour – check. Drying and milling sprouted grains is something I don’t do as often as cooking the sprouted grains. Once dehydrated and milled, a quart of grains only makes about a cup of flour, so to make enough sprouted grain flour for my large family’s use, I’d have to have several large pans sprouting and drying continuously, something we just don’t have physical space for.

I do love how the sprouting and drying process brings out a sweet flavor in the grains, and I often use sprouted wheat flour when just a few tablespoons of flour is called for, like coating a piece of fish, or for a crumb muffin topping. I’m down to about 1/2 cup of sprouted wheat flour left in my supply, so I imagine I will be drying and milling this batch of sprouts.

My mill balks at sprouted grains too. The engine is quite happy to grind them, but the “tails” on the sprouts frequently jam the opening, so before I run them through the mill, I’ll rub the grains between my hands. That makes them go through much more easily. All the grains and the rubbed-off tails go through the mill easier that way and I don’t have to sit by the mill unjamming the little tails!

Come join us at Nourished Kitchen and follow along! If you haven’t started yet, you can start day one anytime and benefit from all the comments of those of us already past the days you start!

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