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Thread: The gut of most disease... NOT what you think!

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    United States Avalon Member onawah's Avatar
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    Default Re: The gut of most disease... NOT what you think!

    When I am making fermented vegies, I put the mason jar lids on tight, but not airtight, during the fermentation process, according to the recommendations that I have read.
    Because the vegies expand during fermentation, the lids have to be removed periodically in order to press the vegies back down and release the air bubbles.
    Once they stop bubbling, I seal the jars as tight as I can.
    I don't think it's safe to keep the containers airtight during fermentation--the jars could explode and/or the crocks could crack due to pressure from within.
    But it's also important to avoid contamination as much as possible, so it's good to keep the containers tightly sealed during fermentation, though not airtight.
    Last edited by onawah; 15th December 2013 at 01:42.
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    Default Re: The gut of most disease... NOT what you think!

    This is a very good thread…here is a simple sauerkraut video recipe…



    I encourage you to experiment with different recipes for kraut and kimchi…they can vary a good bit and if you have been turned off in the past you might find something that you enjoy
    There are no genres…just music and really beautiful music.

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    Default Re: The gut of most disease... NOT what you think!

    Quote Posted by MorningFox (here)
    I started my first batch of sauerkraut 4 days ago, using a crock with a saucer and weight to keep the cabbage packed down and the non airtight lid on top. It's completely covered in brine and has started to go slightly milky and bubbly on top, which I thought was a good thing.

    I thought all was well but I've now just read this article which has confused me. It says amongst other contradictory information, that fermenting should be done in an airtight environment.

    Fermenting has been done traditionally without air locks for hundreds if not thousands of years, no? Should I carry on doing it the way I am?

    I think I've probably answered my own question but I guess I'm looking for a bit of reassurance as that article has made me question what I'm doing.
    Hi Morning Fox,
    These are my experiences and instructional videos and links to the equipment I sprung for:

    After researching all the benefits from Lacto-Fermentation and making a batch of 4 1/2 gallons of veggies, I sprung for a german-5-liter-fermenting-crock. Free shipping over $89. Total cost was in March, 2013 = $96, it now $110. It’s a 5 star rating, with super quick free shipping. See below for my first attempt with jars, which I still use.

    My last several batches, I kept it simple: red and green organic cabbage, red onion, and garlic. I use a little sea salt to kick off the process.

    Here’s the same pot and instructions.
    Fermenting Sauerkraut with Daniel Vitalis, Part 1


    Fermenting Sauerkraut with Daniel Vitalis, Part 2

    For those that are short of money, here’s a six minute video using jars:

    How to Make Lacto-Fermented Vegetables

    This is link has a great 6 minute vid, a reference and ideas section. It takes about a week to ferment and then you refrigerate. They keep for months.

    Here’s my first batch:
    • beet, carrot, red pepper, red onion, garlic & herbs and spices.
    • broccoli, cauliflower, green beans, red pepper, red onion, garlic & herbs and spices


    What are Lacto-Fermented Vegetables?

    “...Lacto-fermentation is a natural process to preserve foods and stops the growth of bacteria that causes foods to go bad. Unlike modern preservation methods which kills all the good stuff in food, lacto-fermentation make nutrients more absorbable and provides the intestines with friendly bacteria. The heating process of commercial fermented foods destroys the enzymes and friendly bacteria. The process of lacto-fermentation turns sugars and starches into helpful acids, mainly lactic acid. Lactic acid breaks down the proteins and helps the body absorb them. It also aids in the absorption of iron. Lactic acid does not cause the body to become over acidic. Lacto-fermented foods help to normalize the acidity of our stomach.

    Foods that have been lacto-fermented contain many vitamins, friendly bacteria and enzymes that our bodies need. They contain B vitamins, omega 3 fatty acids, digestive enzymes, lactase, lactic acid and probiotics. Traditionally foods that have been lacto-fermented include sauerkraut, sour dough bread, tamari, chutney, yogurt, kefir, and kimchi. It supports our immune systems, reduces cholesterol, acts as and anti-biotic and anti-carcinogen.

    Lacto-fermented foods promote the growth of friendly intestinal bacteria and aids in digestion. It strengthens the digestive system and increases the vitamin levels in our bodies because we are able to absorb them more readily. Lacto-fermentation neutralizes phytic acid, an unhealthy chemicals in grains and beans. Phytic acid blocks the absorption of calcium, iron, phosphorus and zinc, which leads to mineral deficiencies and bone loss. It also acts as an enzyme inhibitor. Lacto-fermentation neutralizes the phytic acid and helps break down gluten and sugar. Lacto-fermentation of dairy makes it more digestible and adds lactase to the dairy products. Soybeans are extremely high in phytic acid and must always be eaten fermented, preferably naturally by lacto-fermentation….”

    Paula
    Last edited by RunningDeer; 15th December 2013 at 02:15.

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    Default Re: The gut of most disease... NOT what you think!

    Paula, thanks to you I now have a wonderful 5 liter fermenting crock. So much easier to use than "whatever is around". Thanks for the references. (edit: sorry, forgot I had already posted about my new crock)

    I'm also into my 2nd gallon or so of yummy kefir. My grains are exploding in growth and can't find enough people to share with. Next will be experimenting with various flavors, both sweet and savory, and perhaps turning some into cheese. I like to leave it for about 3 days, so it gets pretty sour. So, so much better than the dead commercial variety.
    Last edited by conk; 18th December 2013 at 19:04.
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    Default Re: The gut of most disease... NOT what you think!

    Excellent article from Dr. Sircus on the relationship between fungi (particularly Candida) and cancer here:
    https://mail.google.com/mail/#inbox/14302fcb1431f033
    He also discusses grains, which fungi love to feed on.

    Quote New Cancer/Fungus Theory

    Source: https://youtube.com/watch?v=HmhHyq_Fv3s

    What Causes Cancer? - Doug Kaufmann On Know The Cause

    This video and chapter offers crucial information about the relationships between cancer and infectious threats that every cancer patient and their family must be aware of. The truth that we must stare down is that cancer and infections cannot be separated from each other.

    Cancer—always believed to be caused by genetic cell mutations—can in reality be caused by infections from viruses, bacteria, and fungi. “I believe that, conservatively, 15 to 20% of all cancer is caused by infections; however, the number could be larger—maybe double,” said Dr. Andrew Dannenberg, director of the Cancer Center at New York-Presbyterian Hospital/Weill Cornell Medical Center. Dr. Dannenberg made the remarks in a speech in December 2007 at the annual international conference of the American Association for Cancer Research.

    Whether caused by infections or not, once cancerous conditions are well underway the weakening of the immune system and the battle that ensues between the good guys and the bad is cheered on by hordes of infectious agents that increase in density, power and form as a patient’s cancers get worse.

    Cancer also involves inflammation, acid pH, low oxygen conditions accompanied by low CO2 levels, lower core body temperatures as well as nutritional deficiencies and high levels of tissue and cellular toxicity with heavy metals, chemicals and radiological exposure.

    When the body’s (immune system) weakens we get sick from one of a host of viruses, bacteria and fungi that already live within us but are dormant. Change pH, oxygen, cell voltage and hydration levels and these pathogens are ready to jump all over our blood streams and tissues.

    Cancer cells love the conditions that healthy cells abhor. Same goes for all infectious agents. It is impossible to be dying of cancer and not be dying of infections and nutritional deficiencies at the same time!

    Given enough time, cancer will develop whenever there is a proliferation of damaged cells. When cells are damaged, when their cell wall permeability changes, when toxins and free radicals build up, when the mitochondria lose functionality in terms of energy ATP production, when pH shifts strongly to the acidic, and when essential nutrients are absent, cells eventually, or sometimes quickly, decline into a cancerous condition.
    We can see that when a person has cancer they are literally rotting inside and dying from the loss of function, gathering infectious forces, and losing strength from malnutrition as the cancer cells eat us out of house and home.

    Science Daily reports, “With infectious diseases, it is often not the pathogen itself, but rather an excessive inflammatory immune response (sepsis) that contributes to the patient’s death, for instance as a result of organ damage. On intensive care units, sepsis is the second-most common cause of death worldwide. In patients with a severely compromised immune system specially, life-threatening candida fungal infections represent a high risk of sepsis.”

    “The working group led by Karl Kuchler in the Christian Doppler Laboratory for Infection Biology (Max. F. Perutz Laboratories at the Vienna Biocenter Campus) has now deciphered the molecular causes of life-threatening inflammatory reactions that are triggered by fungal infections: two highly aggressive types of phagocytes in the immune system (neutrophils and inflammatory monocytes), which however also have a high potential for collateral destruction, mediate the inflammatory reaction during an infection with candida. Certain interferons, the messenger substances used by the immune system, which are excreted during fungal infections, stimulate the influx of immune cell types to infected organs and lead to sepsis.”

    “We have been able to demonstrate for the first time that the targeted blockade of this immune response with inflammation-inhibiting drugs can significantly reduce candida sepsis and therefore mortality,” says Karl Kuchler, who used an anti-inflammatory substance in the study.[1]

    Science Daily said, “Infectious diseases are the world’s number-one cause of death, with pathogenic fungi being responsible for extremely dangerous infections. Worldwide, more than €6 billion are spent each year on anti-fungal medications, and the total costs of the medical treatment of infectious diseases caused by pathogenic fungi are estimated in the order of hundreds of billions of Euros.”

    Cancer cells and pre-cancerous cells are so common that nearly everyone by middle age or old age is riddled with them, said Dr. Thea Tlsty, a professor of pathology at the University of California, San Francisco. That was discovered in autopsy studies of people who died of other causes, with no idea that they had cancer cells or precancerous cells. They did not have large tumors or symptoms of cancer. “The really interesting question,” Dr. Tlsty said, “is not so much why do we get cancer as why don’t we get cancer?”

    The earlier a cell is in its path toward an aggressive cancer, researchers say, the more likely it is to reverse course and go back to being healthy again. So, for example, cells that are early precursors of cervical cancer are likely to revert. One study found that 60% of precancerous cervical cells, found with Pap tests, revert to normal within a year; 90% revert within three years.

    There are certain physical properties of cells that change that make us call them cancerous. Tumor cells display a characteristic set of features that distinguish them from normal cells. All cancer cells acquire the ability to grow and divide in the absence of appropriate signals and/or in the presence of inhibitory signals.

    The spread or metastases of cancer is inversely proportional to the amount of oxygen and the acidity around the cancer cells. The more oxygen, the slower the cancer spreads. The less oxygen and the higher the acidity the faster the cancer spreads. If cancer cells get enough oxygen, they will die (cancer cells are anaerobic). If you deprive a group of cells of vital oxygen (their primary source of energy), some will die, but others will manage to alter their genetic software program and mutate and be able to live without oxygen.

    When the oxygen level drops below 60%, the respiration process of making energy changes into fermentation in a cancer cell. Normal cells turn cancerous. Normal body cells need oxygen and are aerobic whereas cancer cells do not need oxygen and are anaerobic. Healthy cells metabolize, burn oxygen and glucose to produce ATP.

    Dr. Ma Lan and Dr. Joel Wallach point out that one type of white blood cell kills cancer cells by injecting them with oxygen, creating hydrogen peroxide in the cells.

    Dr. Luke Curtis is reporting on research that deals with 27 lung “cancer” patients who were later diagnosed with lung “fungus” instead of lung cancer. “Fungal infection can present with clinical and radiological features that are indistinguishable from thoracic malignancy, such as lung nodules or masses.” Doctors who diagnose lung cancer are unaware of the fact that cancer mimics fungal infections.[2]

    Over one million people worldwide are misdiagnosed with tuberculosis when in reality they have an incurable disease with a similar outlook to many cancers, says a recent report published in 2011 in the Bulletin of the WHO.[3] The disease called “chronic pulmonary aspergillosis” (CPA) is a fungal infection not a bacterial infection. Is this incurable, totally drug-resistant TB infection fungal or bacterial? It looks very much like, or is identical to, TB when doctors look at it on a chest X-ray and it has very similar symptoms initially. Doctors mistake it for TB and prescribe antibiotics as standard practice.

    Because the X-ray features and symptoms are so similar to bacterial tuberculosis, doctors fail to recognize it, resulting in many unnecessary fatalities.
    World Health Organization

    50% of all patients who develop pulmonary aspergillosis are unlikely to survive for more than five years, a similar outlook to many cancers. Deaths from fungal infections are a little like death from vaccines, invisible and off the radar from most of the medical establishment. Yet as high as 40% of cancers are provoked by infections, and even though in most late-stage cancers, the infection is fungal the medical profession considers it heresy to say cancer and fungus in the same breath.

    According to Dr. Milton White, cancer is “neither the result of a virus nor the consequence of an inherited gene defect. Cancer is a hybrid. It is due to a plant bacterium (conidia) derived from an Ascomycete strain of fungus…”

    We Better Get the Story Right with Cancer

    In Nature we read, “Although viruses and bacteria grab more attention, fungi are the planet’s biggest killers. Of all the pathogens being tracked, fungi have caused more than 70% of the recorded global and regional extinctions, and now threaten amphibians, bats and bees. The Irish potato famine in the 1840s showed just how devastating such pathogens can be. Phytophthora infestans (an organism similar to and often grouped with fungi) wiped out as much as three-quarters of the potato crop in Ireland and led to the death of one million people.”

    Researchers estimate that there are 1.5-5 million species of fungi in the world, but only 100,000 have been identified. Reports of new types of fungal infection in plants and animals have risen nearly tenfold since 1995.

    Fungi are dreadful enemies. During their life cycle fungi depend on other living beings, which must be exploited to different degrees for their feeding. Fungi can develop from the hyphae, the more or less beak-shaped specialized structures that allow the penetration of the host. The shape of a fungus is never defined; it is imposed by the environment in which the fungus develops. Fungi are capable of implementing an infinite number of modifications to their own metabolism in order to overcome the defense mechanism of the host. These modifications are implemented through plasmatic and biochemical actions as well as by a volumetric increase (hypertrophy) and numerical hyperplasia[4] of the cells that have been attacked.

    In 1999, Meinolf Karthaus, MD watched three different children
    with leukemia suddenly go into remission upon receiving a
    triple antifungal drug cocktail for their “secondary” fungal infections.[5]

    Doctors and Dentists at Fault

    Dr. Elmer Cranton, says that, “Yeast overgrowth is partly iatrogenic (caused by the medical profession) and can be caused by antibiotics.”

    Fungi (e.g.Aspergillus fumigatus) are not affected by antibiotics and neither are viruses. If not given correct treatment (antifungal medication) the prognosis is that 50% of those infected will die inside five years. In fact the overuse of antibiotics leads to fungal infections. Allopathic doctors practicing pharmaceutical medicine are a lost cause now that the world of pathogens is rebelling against what they have been doing with antibiotics these past decades.

    When fungi become systemic from gut inflammation and the overuse of antibiotics,
    you can see how the whole body—again, the eyes, liver, gallbladder, muscles
    and joints, kidneys, and skin—becomes involved in inflammatory bowel disease.
    Dr. Dave Holland

    Heavy metals create contaminated environments both inside and outside the cells. These environments attract all kinds of pathogens—viruses, bacteria and fungi. Many cancers are caused by infections, which are themselves caused by heavy metal contamination. According to the observations made by the internationally recognized medical researcher, Dr. Yoshiaki Omura,all cancer cells have mercury in them. The single greatest source of mercury contamination is mercury containing dental amalgum and doctors around the world still inject children with mercury containing vaccines.

    Each year in the U.S. an estimated 40 tons of mercury are used to prepare mercury-amalgam dental restorations. Scientific studies have concluded that the amalgam is the source for more than two thirds of the mercury in our human population. On a daily basis each amalgam releases on the order of 10 micrograms of mercury into the body. This mercury either accumulates in the body or is excreted via urine and feces into our wastewater systems.

    Extremely Dangerous

    “Fungal infections cannot only be extremely contagious, but they also go hand in hand with leukemia—every oncologist knows this. And these infections are devastating: once a child who has become a bone marrow transplant recipient gets a “secondary” fungal infection, his chances of living, despite all the anti-fungals in the world, are only 20%, at best,” writes Dr. David Holland.

    Doug A. Kaufman wrote:

    The day I wrote this, a young lady phoned into my syndicated radio talk show. Her three-year-old daughter was diagnosed last year with leukemia. She believes antifungal drugs and natural immune system therapy has been responsible for saving her daughter’s life. She is now telling others with cancer about her daughter’s case. After hearing her story, a friend of hers with bone cancer asked her doctor for a prescriptive antifungal drug. To her delight, this medication, meant to eradicate fungus, was also eradicating her cancer. She dared not share this with her physician, telling him only that the antifungal medication was for a “yeast” infection. When she could no longer get the antifungal medication, the cancer immediately grew back. Her physician contended that a few antifungal pills surely should have cured her yeast infection. It is my contention, however, that the reason this medication worked was because she did have a yeast infection not a vaginal infection for which this medication was prescribed; a fungal infection of the bone that may have been mimicking bone cancer.

    A medical textbook used to educate Johns Hopkins medical
    students in 1957, Clinical and Immunologic Aspects of Fungous
    Diseases, declared that many fungal conditions look exactly like cancer!
    Doug A. Kaufmann
    The Germ That Causes Cancer


    Cancer is a biologically-induced
    spore (fungus) transformation disease.
    Dr. Milton W. White

    “Tumor-inducing cells have many of the properties of stem cells,” said Dr. Michael F. Clarke, a professor at the University of Michigan Cancer Center. “They make copies of themselves—a process called self-renewal—and produce all the other kinds of cells in the original tumor.”[6]

    According to the Mayo Clinic, cancer refers to any one of a large number of diseases characterized by the development of abnormal cells that divide uncontrollably and have the ability to infiltrate and destroy normal body tissue.

    Our DNA is like a set of instructions for our cells, telling them how to grow and divide. Normal cells often develop mutations in their DNA, but they have the ability to repair most of these mutations. Or, if they can’t make the repairs, the cells frequently die. However, certain mutations aren’t repaired, causing the cells to grow and become cancerous…or so the story goes. Yeasts and fungi are, in human terms, abnormal cells that divide uncontrollably and have the ability to infiltrate and destroy normal body tissue. We know so little about these terrible invaders but oncologist’s think they understand a lot about cancer even though they have not cured it.

    The shape of the fungus is never defined; it is imposed
    by the environment in which the fungus develops.

    “In some cases, the aggressive power of fungi is so great as to allow it, with only a cellular ring made up of three units, to tighten in its grip, capture and kill its prey in a short time notwithstanding the prey’s desperate struggling. Fungus, which is the most powerful and the most organized micro-organism known, seems to be an extremely logical candidate as a cause of neoplastic proliferation, Dr.Tullio Simoncini says, “Candida albicans clearly emerges as the sole candidate for tumoral proliferation.”

    Face the Fungi

    Fungi’s relationship to disease remains a difficult and controversial topic and is not really popular with doctors who hold tightly to their antibiotics and obsession with bacteria and viruses. Mainstream orthodox medicine misses the boat entirely on the treatment of fungi, yeast and molds with both the cancer and diabetes establishments “standards of care” lacking antifungal medications.

    A new area of research being driven by Dundee life scientists is revealing remarkable abilities of fungi to interact with minerals and metals. Led by Professor Geoffrey Gadd in the College of Life Sciences, the research explores the unique taste that fungi seems to have for rock and heavy metal.[7] This environmental science has demonstrated the incredible power of fungi, to eat through concrete and to absorb heavy metals such as mercury and uranium in the environment.


    What no one has thought of until now, is the possibility that fungi may have a stealth mode or several stealth modes with one of them being subversion through DNA convergence.

    New Theory Unveiled

    Cryptococcus neoformans is a fungus that “escapes phagocytosis because the spores are surrounded by a thick viscous capsule.” In the case of histoplasma capsulatum, which itself is a sac fungus, when confronted by the macrophages, they ingest the fungus, but instead of killing it and digesting it, something else can take place.

    The white cells can end up protecting the fungus and its DNA as “friend” because it has been incorporated inside the macrophages effectively hiding the invader from our other immune defenses. Unfortunately for us fungal cells always become the dominant cells.

    An entirely new way of looking at the relationship between cancer and fungus is seeing that cancer begins when the DNA from Fungus and the DNA from our white blood cells merge to form a new hybrid “tumor, or sac.” This hybrid attains a life of it’s own now, bypassing our immune defenses because it is 50% human, and therefore just enough to be recognized as “self.”

    A large and significant number of independent cancer researchers, scientists, microbiologists and prominent medical practitioners over the past 100 years have found overwhelming evidence supporting this cancer-fungus link or link between cancer and microbes in general. Microbes have always been found to be present in cancer/tumor cells. There is nothing unusual or new about this but don’t try to talk to your oncologist about any of this for I can assure you the odds are high that he or she will not want to know.

    The Vitally Important p53 Gene

    Along with phagocytosis, our p53 gene plays one of the most important roles in protecting us against cancer. It not only stops cancer invasion, but it also kills tumor cells, thereby preventing cancer from even starting. But in over 50% of all cancers, scientists have discovered that the patient’s p53 gene was mutated and unable to stop cancer from initiating. According to the American Cancer Society, the p53 gene is the most studied of all genes because damage to this gene allows cells with damaged DNA, like cancer cells, to proliferate.

    “Aflatoxin genotoxicity is associated with a defective DNA damage response bypassing p53 activation.” This means that the mycotoxin, aflatoxin, found in our food supply, is capable of inactivating the p53 gene. The Proceedings of the National Academy of Science stated in 1993, that the mycotoxin, aflatoxin b1, made by Aspergillus fungus, is known to cause p53 mutations. Mycotoxins, made by fungi, are among the most carcinogenic substances known to science.

    The Aspergillus mold toxin, aflatoxin B1, inhibits the breakdown of both glucose, or simple sugar, and glycogen.[8] Fungi and the mycotoxins they produce impacts our genetic code, causing alterations that are found in a majority of cancers, reports Doug Kaufman. “Altering a cell’s DNA amounts to changing the environmental code of that cell. Once changed the cell may respond differently – or not at all to outside hormones and enzymes that normally stimulate it to perform necessary functions. As one example of genetic alteration, aflatoxin B1 causes a break in DNA that alters the p53 tumor expression gene. Changes in this particular gene allow the cell to proliferate out of control. So it’s no accident that this same mycotoxin can also go on to cause liver cancer”

    Fungi and their mycotoxins manipulate their
    hosts on the cellular level, and prevent us from
    defending ourselves by subverting the immune system[9].

    Fungi are found in foods that we eat every day.[10] Our primary concern is the long-term effects of ingesting food contaminated with low levels of mycotoxins," and that carcinogenic toxins, such as aflatoxin, a by-product of the Aspergillus molds, is a "common contaminant of peanuts, soybeans, grains and cassava. It's a "frequent contaminant of wheat and corn." Without a properly-functioning immune system, we're at risk of succumbing to various infectious and chronic diseases. Fungi invade our grain food supply because grains-a source of carbohydrates-are their favorite food.

    Fungi are parasites whose mission is to invade a larger host.
    Given a chance they will alter our body chemistries to suit their needs.

    In their refutation of the theory of autoimmunity Kaufman and Holland[11] explain that in Type 1 diabetes it is entirely plausible that invading fungi have altered beta cells, remained undetected, yet set off the body’s immune defense system, which is unable to destroy the offending fungi allowing them to continue to invade other beta cells and progressively lead to total destruction and a complete lack of insulin. The extremely manipulative ways that fungi work to ensure their own food supply is highly characteristic of their nature.

    A recent Japanese study suggests that fungal
    mold toxins have the ability to signal the beta cells
    in the pancreas to shut them off by killing them.12

    A.V. Constantini, MD, former head of the WHO Collaborating Center for Mycotoxins in Food has spent 20 years studying and collecting data on the role fungi and mycotoxins play in devastating diseases. In his research he found a number of fungi that demonstrate specific toxicity to the pancreas.


    Candida A

    When fungal colonization and mycotoxin
    contamination is maximal one finds cancer
    growing and mestastizing at a maximal rate.

    Beating Back Late Stage Infections (Cancer & Fungus) with Sodium Bicarbonate

    Sodium bicarbonate acts as a powerful, natural and safe antifungal agent,[13] which when combined with iodine, would probably cover the entire spectrum of microbial organisms. The efficacy of sodium bicarbonate against certain bacteria and fungi[14] has been documented. Its role as a disinfectant against viruses, however, is not generally known. Sodium bicarbonate at concentrations of 5% and above was found to be effective with 99.99% reduction viral titers on food contact surfaces within a contact time of 1 min.[15]

    It was not until oncologist Dr. Tullio Simoncini came along that the concept arose that cancer can be treated with sodium bicarbonate. My book Sodium Bicarbonate, Rich Man’s Poor Man’s Cancer Treatment continues to be the only medical bible on this subject.

    Over 90, 000 people a year die from
    secondary infections in hospitals.

    In my Natural Allopathic protocol we approach the problem of cancer and fungal infections from a number of different angles. When it comes to dealing with pathogenic microbes we want to take them head on. If we eliminate these microbes we lighten the load on the immune system so it can do its job of eliminating cancer.

    Immune systems are normally, in late stage cancer patients, choking on these harmful microbes. When we rid patients of these microbes the immune system immediately begins to be supercharged. Many have experimented through past decades of passing small electric currents and high frequencies through people and have seen anti-pathogenic effects with viruses, bacteria and fungi.

    What we are talking about here fits the military tactics that Natural Allopathic Medicine employs when facing off against cancer. A platoon of white cells are sent to rescue hostages (organs overrun by cancer), but en route get pinned down by heavy fire from ground forces (parasites, viruses, fungi and bacteria tying up the immune system). Then air support (magnesium, Bioresonance treatments, iodine, CBD and sodium bicarbonate) come and obliterate the ground forces leaving the platoon (immune system agents) free to go and recover hostages (us). We also directly increase immune system strength using far infrared treatments that raise core body temperature.

    Dr. Mark Sircus Photo
    Dr. Mark Sircus, Ac., OMD, DM (P)
    Director International Medical Veritas Association
    Doctor of Oriental and Pastoral Medicine
    http://drsircus.com/
    Each breath a gift...
    _____________

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    United States Avalon Member onawah's Avatar
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    Default Re: The gut of most disease... NOT what you think!

    3 'Dirty' Ways to Recharge Your Gut Health

    http://articles.mercola.com/sites/ar..._rid=376659019
    Quote By Dr. Mercola

    Could healthy soils hold the key to your good health? According to many experts in soil biology and biological farming, the answer is a resounding Yes.

    Daphne Miller, M.D., author of Farmacology: What Innovative Family Farming Can Teach Us About Health and Healing, recently penned an insightful article for YES Magazine1 on the importance of soil quality.

    “I spend my days in a sterile 8x10 room practicing family medicine and yet my mind is in the soil. This is because I’m discovering just how much this rich, dark substance influences the day-to-day health of my patients.

    I’m even beginning to wonder whether Hippocrates was wrong, or at least somewhat misguided, when he proclaimed, ‘Let food be thy medicine.’ Don’t get me wrong—food is important to our health. But it might be the soil where our food is grown, rather than the food itself, that offers us the real medicine,” she writes.

    Key to Improved Nutrition

    Dr. Miller cites research in her article that all point in the same direction—healthy “living” soils make for food with better nutrient content. And by “living,” I mean soils that are teeming with microorganisms such as bacteria, fungi, protozoa, and microscopic roundworms called nematodes.

    Far from being scourges to be avoided at all cost, microorganisms are an essential component of life. We now understand that it is the cooperation between these microorganisms, the soil’s biome, and the plants’ roots, called rhizosphere that is ultimately responsible for allowing the plant to absorb nutrients from the soil in which it’s grown.

    Insects and weeds also have their place in this circle of life. According to soil scientist Dr. Arden Andersen, insects are nature’s garbage collectors. Thanks to their specialized digestive systems, which differ from ours, they remove that which is not fit for us to eat—things we cannot digest.

    And weeds are nature’s way of evolving the soil—it’s an intermediate plant that mobilizes nutrients in order to alter the soil, making it more suitable for the next evolutionary level of plants to grow in it.

    Once you understand this natural cycle, it allows you to address food quality, weeds, insects, and plant disease at its point of origination, without ever resorting to chemical herbicides, pesticides, fungicides, synthetic fertilizers, or genetic engineering.

    As explained by Agri-Dynamics founder Jerry Brunetti in a recent interview, the root ball (rhizosphere) of the plant is the “gut” or intestinal tract of the plant. It houses microbes just like the human gut does, provided the soil system is healthy.

    Soil health then connects to everything up the food chain, from plant and insect health, all the way up to animal and human health. Health, therefore, truly begins in the soils in which our food is grown.

    Plant ‘Gut’ Health Is as Critical as Human Gut Health

    Old-timers like Weston Price, William Albrecht, Louis Bromfield, and Friend Sykes all found that there’s a strong correlation between having good mineralized soils with robust biological activity. According to the featured article:

    “Given this nutrient flow from soil microbes to us, how can we boost and diversify life in the soil? Studies consistently show that ecological farming consistently produces a greater microbial biomass and diversity than conventional farming.

    Ecological farming... includes many systems (biodynamic, regenerative, permaculture, full-cycle, etc.) that share core holistic tenets: protecting topsoil with cover crops and minimal plowing, rotating crops, conserving water, limiting the use of chemicals (synthetic or natural), and recycling all animal and vegetable waste back into the land.

    Much of this research supports what traditional farmers around the world have long known to be true: the more ecologically we farm, the more nutrients we harvest.”

    Researchers are increasingly starting to recognize gut microbiota as one of your most unappreciated “organs.”2 It may even be more appropriate to view your body as a “super organism” composed of symbiotic microorganisms. Probiotics are even becoming widely accepted and adopted in the conventional medical community to support health.

    In soil, we have a very similar process. The health of the plants, and those who eat those plants, all stand to benefit from the optimization of soil microbiology.

    Optimizing soil biology also strengthens plants against pest infestations without having to resort to chemical warfare. Research shows that there’s constant communication going on between plants via the rhizosphere (root ball). Plants “talk” to one another through aerial emissions—the volatile gasses they emit—and also through the mycelial networks in the soil.

    This is a major insight that deepens our understanding of the importance of nurturing and maintaining healthy soil microbiome. It also explains why you don’t really need synthetic chemicals to grow large amounts of food. On the contrary, the chemicals used in modern agriculture are killing the very foundation of health—the microbiome in the soil. In short, if we support and nurture the microbiome in soil, it in turn will provide us with good nutrition and optimal health through the food grown in it.

    The ‘Farm Effect’

    The featured article highlights another fascinating theory, which suggests that your immune cells might actually be part of a “backup” system to another long forgotten first line of defense, namely your gut microbiome, which is strengthened by—and in large part dependent on—the continuous exposure to soil microorganisms.

    Modern DNA sequencing techniques have led scientists to make the surprising discovery that gene swapping takes place between your gut microbiome and the soil biome, as well as with microorganisms from other places in your daily surroundings.

    As reported in the featured article, European researchers have discovered that children raised on organic farms have far lower incidence of allergy and asthma, compared to those raised on conventional, industrialized farms or in the suburbs. They refer to this as “the farm effect.”

    “In one study, researchers cultured farm children’s mattresses and found a potpourri of bacteria—most of which are typically found in soil,” Dr. Miller writes.3 “How soil microbes and other farm microbes protect against allergic diseases is still a matter of debate, but research is increasingly pointing to a new idea which, for lack of a better term, I will call the “microbiome exchange hypothesis.”

    This is a fascinating hypothesis, originating with French research that found an identical sequence of DNA in two different species of Bacteroidetes. One of these species of bacteria lives on seaweed. The other is part of the gut microbiome of Japanese people. The researchers concluded that the bacteria had “hitchhiked their way into the human gut via sushi and other seaweed dishes and passed their seaweed-digesting DNA on to resident microbes of the human host,” Dr. Miller writes.

    What difference does it make, you may ask? Well, it appears that people raised in areas where seaweed is a dietary staple are given—via this DNA exchange from one bacteria to another—a greater ability to extract nutrients from this particular food, compared to someone who has never eaten it before. Understanding this deep connection with local food staples gives a whole new meaning to the value of eating foods that are native, local, and in season...

    Why GMOs Can Worsen Your Health

    One of the reasons why so many of us are concerned about genetically engineered crops is because a main characteristic of such plants is resistance to the potent herbicide glyphosate, which devastates the soil microbiome. Killing microorganisms is in fact one of glyphosate’s primary mechanisms of action, as it is patented as an antibiotic. Besides that, glyphosate is a potent chelator that sequesters valuable minerals, rendering them inaccessible and unusable for the plant.

    It ties up minerals like manganese, zinc, and iron, which are essential for the plant’s immune system and growth. These minerals are also important for human health. Another problem, which applies to both genetically engineered (GE) and conventional hybridized plants, is that when a plant is altered it may lose its ability to emit the correct signals to warn its neighbors about impending attacks. Hence, they become more vulnerable to infestations.

    On numerous occasions, I’ve stated that the differences between industrial farming and organic farming, using time-tested all-natural methods, are so vast that the foods produced by the former cannot be equated to the foods produced by the latter. Use of genetically engineered plants only deepens the many problems associated with conventional, chemical-heavy farming.

    The environmental effects are also 180 degrees opposed, as industrial farming contributes to every form of environmental devastation, while organic farming methods restore the environment and invigorate and support the ecosystem—of which humans are an integral part, I might add. Many equate modern techniques with “progress,” when in fact most of our technological advancements are now threatening to destroy us right along with the planet as a whole.

    Three Basic Principles of Biological Gardening

    “Life” in essence boils down to microbiology—their presence in us and around us, and the benevolent symbiotic relationships that exist between us. If you support the microbiology in your gut, they will support your good health. The same principle applies to the soil in which your food is grown. Take care of it, and it will take care of you.

    This is important information, as many nay-sayers will tell you that buying organic produce is a waste of money. From my perspective, understanding the impact soil quality has on the final product, and how chemical fertilizers and pesticides used in conventional farming decimate the microorganisms in the soil, makes for a very strong argument that organic or biologically farmed foods are indeed a healthier choice.

    Below, I’ll list some helpful sources for finding such foods, but you may also want to consider growing your own. Homemade ferments are another excellent way to boost your nutrition and promote healthy gut flora—and if made with homegrown veggies, all the better! As Dr. Miller writes:4

    “Eating fresh-grown food from healthy soil is not an all-or-nothing proposition, and even a daily handful of herbs from a container garden can have a positive impact on our health. Whether it is homegrown or from a local farm, I do mention to my patients that they should think twice before peeling or scrubbing their farm bounty. After all, who knows what beneficial bacteria might be coming along for the ride? By the way, eating fermented farm-fresh vegetables is a great way to get a mega-dose of soil bacteria.” [Emphasis mine]

    Three basic principles of biological gardening that will make your soil hospitable for beneficial microorganisms, which in turn will allow plants to flourish, are the following. I’ve previously written about how to employ these principles in your own garden, so for more information, please review the related articles listed in the side bar.

    Correct nutrient balance in the soil
    Soil inoculation. This can be done by adding soil probiotics or basic fermentation products such as compost tea. This will generate and support the proliferation of beneficial bacteria much in the same way you can boost the probiotics in your fermented vegetables by using a starter culture
    Proper food (fertilizer) for the microorganisms to consume and thrive. Note that it’s the microbiome that you need to feed, not the plant directly. The microbes in turn will then feed the proper nutrients to the plants grown in that soil.
    Without these bioorganisms, your plants cannot get the nutrients they need. So what you need is not more chemical soil additives; what you need is the proper balance of beneficial soil organisms. Hence, the better you’re able to fertilize the microbes, the healthier your plants will be, and the fewer plant diseases, pest infestations, and weed problems you’ll have as well

    Whet Your Appetite for Gardening by Growing Sprouts

    While you can grow all manner of food, even in small spaces, one of the easiest and least expensive is sprouts. Best of all, sprouts can be grown year-round, regardless of weather, and contain up to 30 times the nutrition of organic vegetables grown in your own garden. They also allow your body to extract more vitamins, minerals, amino acids, and essential fats from the foods you eat, so in terms of growing nutrient-dense food for your family at minimal expense, they’re really hard to beat.

    During sprouting, minerals, such as calcium and magnesium, bind to protein, making them more bioavailable. Furthermore, both the quality of the protein and the fiber content of beans, nuts, seeds, and grains improve when sprouted. The content of vitamins and essential fatty acids also increases dramatically during the sprouting process. Sunflower seed and pea sprouts tend to top the list of all the seeds that you can sprout and are typically each about 30 times more nutritious than organic vegetables.

    Helpful Resources

    “Thinking of a healthy body as an extension of a healthy farm, and vice versa, is a paradigm shift for many of us. But when we consider that all of our cells get their building blocks from plants and soil then, suddenly, it all makes sense. In fact, it is not too much of a stretch to say: We are soil,” Dr. Miller states.5

    Indeed, the finding that your physical and mental health is rooted in microscopic organisms in the soil and in the foods you eat is thought-provoking, to say the least. On the upside, it tells us how to fix countless problems—from poor health to environmental issues that plague mankind across the globe. For all of these reasons, I cannot encourage you to support the small family farms in your local area strongly enough. They, and by extension you, are part of the solution. Here are some great resources to obtain wholesome food that supports not only you but also the environment:

    Alternative Farming Systems Information Center, Community Supported Agriculture (CSA)
    Farmers' Markets -- A national listing of farmers' markets.
    Local Harvest -- This Web site will help you find farmers' markets, family farms, and other sources of sustainably grown food in your area where you can buy produce, grass-fed meats, and many other goodies.
    Eat Well Guide: Wholesome Food from Healthy Animals -- The Eat Well Guide is a free online directory of sustainably raised meat, poultry, dairy, and eggs from farms, stores, restaurants, inns, and hotels, and online outlets in the United States and Canada.
    Community Involved in Sustaining Agriculture(CISA) -- CISA is dedicated to sustaining agriculture and promoting the products of small farms.
    FoodRoutes -- The FoodRoutes “Find Good Food” map can help you connect with local farmers to find the freshest, tastiest food possible. On their interactive map, you can find a listing for local farmers, CSA's, and markets near you.
    Each breath a gift...
    _____________

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    Default Re: The gut of most disease... NOT what you think!

    One wonders where that "Don't touch that! It's caca!" comes from? Starving MDs?

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    Default Re: The gut of most disease... NOT what you think!

    Quote Onawah Default Re: The gut of most disease... NOT what you think!
    Excellent article from Dr. Sircus on the relationship between fungi (particularly Candida) and cancer here:
    https://mail.google.com/mail/#inbox/14302fcb1431f033
    He also discusses grains, which fungi love to feed on.

    Quote New Cancer/Fungus Theory

    Source: https://youtube.com/watch?v=HmhHyq_Fv3s

    What Causes Cancer? - Doug Kaufmann On Know The Cause
    Onawah, I am glad you posted this. I have gone beyond this thread since starting it. I do not think it goes deep enough into the causes of digestive illness and what is going on in our modern society. I have found more help from a website detailing out one man's health journey out of fungus based illness. This man, Dave Asprey, spent over $300,000 of his own money finding the cure for his illness. His wife is a doctor and his relationship to her probably helped to spur him onto victory over his life long illness. The in-depth information I've found by following the links on his blog has been the next level for me. I think I'm going to open a whole new thread on it.

    In a nutshell... Dave realized that we all eat mold, fungus, and micotoxins with every meal! This did not used to be the case in the past. And... it is not hard to turn back the clock and eat in a way that does not follow these practices.

    Here is his website link: www.thebulletproofexec.com

    I have changed my diet to follow his information. It was easy and I have a great deal more energy and health. I enjoy following his recommendations... they are a lot of fun, and the meals are very tasty and satisfying.
    Last edited by Dawn; 30th December 2013 at 01:24.

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    Default Re: The gut of most disease... NOT what you think!

    Dawn, I believe that website link should be: http://www.bulletproofexec.com/

    Thanks!

    I'm checking it out... :~)

    Dennis


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    Default Re: The gut of most disease... NOT what you think!


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    Default Re: The gut of most disease... NOT what you think!

    Quote Dave Asprey on The Bulletproof Diet at Smart Life Forum April 19, 2012

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    Default Re: The gut of most disease... NOT what you think!

    Ok the above post, I tried to make my own version of Bulletproof coffee and the stars aligned while shopping, for me usually a sign I am on to something, I broke my blender a few weeks ago, so I found a stick blender on discount for 16 euro's, next to it stood a French coffee press, same discount and same price, so 16 euro's for the hardware is pretty cheap, the good coffeeguy Simon Levelt was located on the other corner of the street and I bought some ( 250 grams) of central American ( Mexican), light roasted fresh sweet coffee< they gave it a course grind for me, 5.20 euro's ( for me that's expensive coffee), on the other corner is my local health food supermarket located Gooodyfoods and I bought 3 sticks of organic grass fed butter ( 3x2.65 =7.95), raw unprocessed coconutoil was in the cupboard already so that didn't cost me anything for this experiment, total cost for the experiment 29.15 euro's, thank god for Christmas bonuses. The required MCT oil wasn't available since the Sports nutrition dude was closed today and yesterday, so I used coconutoil.

    Anywho, non of the products I used were the bulletproof version ( 100%) mold free, since I have to order the Bulletproof stuff from the internet, and I don't use paypal, and getting the stuff from the US to my doorstep in Holland would very likely have quadrupled the cost for me and I am no rich stinker.

    But, I started my experiment anyhow since the coffee and grass fed butter and coconut oil at least were the best I could get whiling staying within my budget, so far I feel good, I used over a whole stick of butter 1.1/2 in my coffee and actually am not hungry yet, an inflamed tooth and gumline has already mysteriously cleared up within hours of drinking my version of the bulletproof and I have plenty of energy and am not jittery from the coffee so far ( coffeejitters apparently have nothing to do with coffee or caffeine but with the mold in cheap coffee that produces a toxic chemical reaction, jitters, this makes some sense to me since we are for a good part a biochemical organism), clearly my body understands something weird is happening now it suddenly has a mass of fat to burn without effort and is directing energy to cleaning me out, or it is just moldy coffee of course but I am trying my best to make something out of this, anyway the huge chunk of butter seems to relax me and energize me at the same time, but, I am not doing it good enough, that much I know, so for you interested parties, if you can afford it, try the real stuff, so far this isn't that bad, but the real stuff will prolly give you even better results.
    Last edited by 778 neighbour of some guy; 31st December 2013 at 13:06.

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    Default Re: The gut of most disease... NOT what you think!

    Yep... nutrition... definitely turned into a weapon:

    A miracle in Wisconsin
    Dec30 by Jon Rappoport

    A Miracle in Wisconsin
    by Jon Rappoport, December 30, 2013
    www.nomorefakenews.com

    I published this article in October of 2002. At the time, it was the most widely read piece I’d written and posted on my site. Its basics still hold up.

    What I didn’t mention at the time was the corrosive role school-food distributors and their allies on boards of education play in the health of children.

    These are the people who operate a corrupt system and mandate the feeding of toxic and nutritionally empty junk to students across the country.

    One school took another path:

    Natural Ovens and the ‘Healthy Lunch Program’ Revolution
    A MIRACLE IN WISCONSIN
    by Jon Rappoport, Monday, October 14, 2002

    A revolution has occurred in Appleton, Wisconsin. It’s taken place in the Central Alternative High School. The kids now behave. The hallways aren’t frantic. Even the teachers are happy.

    The school used to be out of control. Kids packed weapons. Discipline problems swamped the principal’s office.

    But not since 1997.

    What happened? Did they line every inch of space with cops? Did they spray Valium gas in the classrooms? Did they install metal detectors in the bathrooms? Did they build holding cells in the gym?

    Afraid not. In 1997, a private group called Natural Ovens began installing a healthy lunch program.

    Fast-food burgers, fries, and burritos gave way to fresh salads, meats “prepared with old-fashioned recipes,” and whole grain bread. Fresh fruits were added to the menu. Good drinking water arrived.

    Vending machines were removed.

    As reported in a newsletter called Pure Facts, “Grades are up, truancy is no longer a problem, arguments are rare, and teachers are able to spend their time teaching.”

    Principal LuAnn Coenen, who files annual reports with the state of Wisconsin, has turned in some staggering figures since 1997. Drop-outs? Students expelled? Students discovered to be using drugs? Carrying weapons? Committing suicide? Every category has come up ZERO. Every year.

    Mary Bruyette, a teacher, states, “I don’t have to deal with daily discipline issues. I don’t have disruptions in class or the difficulties with student behavior I experienced before we started the food program.”

    One student asserted, “Now that I can concentrate I think it’s easier to get along with people.” What a concept—eating healthier food increases concentration.

    Principal Coenen sums it up: “I can’t buy the argument that it’s too costly for schools to provide good nutrition for their students. I found that one cost will reduce another. I don’t have the vandalism. I don’t have the litter. I don’t have the need for high security.”

    At a nearby middle school, the new food program is catching on. A teacher there, Dennis Abram, reports, “I’ve taught here almost 30 years. I see the kids this year as calmer, easier to talk to. They just seem more rational. I had thought about retiring this year and basically I’ve decided to teach another year—I’m having too much fun!”

    Pure Facts, the newsletter that ran this story, is published by a non-profit organization called The Feingold Association, which has existed since 1976. Part of its mission is to “generate public awareness of the potential role of foods and synthetic additives in behavior, learning and health problems. The [Feingold] program is based on a diet eliminating synthetic colors, synthetic flavors, and the preservatives BHA, BHT, and TBHQ.”

    Thirty years ago there was a Dr. Feingold. His breakthrough work proved the connection between these negative factors in food and the lives of children. Hailed as a revolutionary advance, Feingold’s findings were soon trashed by the medical cartel, since those findings threatened the drugs-for-everything, disease-model concept of modern healthcare.

    But Feingold’s followers have kept his work alive.

    If what happened in Appleton, Wisconsin, takes hold in many other communities across America, perhaps the ravenous corporations who invade school space with their vending machines and junk food will be tossed out on their behinds. It could happen.

    And perhaps ADHD will become a dinosaur. A non-disease that was once attributed to errant brain chemistry. And perhaps Ritalin will be seen as just another toxic chemical that was added to the bodies of kids in a crazed attempt to put a lid on behavior that, in part, was the result of a subversion of the food supply.

    For those readers who ask me about solutions to the problems we face—here is a real solution. Help these groups. Get involved. Step into the fray. Stand up and be counted.

    The drug companies aren’t going to do it. They’re busy estimating the size of their potential markets. They’re building their chemical pipelines into the minds and bodies of the young.

    Every great revolution starts with a foothold. Sounds like Natural Ovens and The Feingold Association have made strong cuts into the big rock of ignorance and greed.

    First published 10-14-2002.
    Jon Rappoport

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    Default Re: The gut of most disease... NOT what you think!

    Fermenting Foods—One of the Easiest and Most Creative Aspects of Making Food from Scratch
    December 29, 2013
    http://articles.mercola.com/sites/ar..._rid=382183370

    Quote By Dr. Mercola

    Ninety percent of the genetic material in your body is not yours but belongs to the bacteria that outnumber your cells 10 to 1. These bacteria have enormous influence on your digestion, detoxification and immune system.

    Sandor Katz is a self-described “fermentation revivalist,” and has published two books on this topic, along with a third on the underground food movement. He’s a native of New York and a graduate of Brown University. Sandor currently lives in Tennessee, where he pursues his interest by presenting workshops around the world on fermentation.

    Fermented food is something I too have become quite passionate about, and I firmly believe it’s an absolutely essential factor if you want to optimize your health and prevent disease. The culturing process produces beneficial microbes that are extremely important for human health as they help balance your intestinal flora, thereby boosting overall immunity.

    Moreover, your gut literally serves as your second brain, and even produces more of the neurotransmitter serotonin—known to have a beneficial influence on your mood—than your brain does, so maintaining a healthy gut will benefit your mind as well as your body.

    Fermented foods are also some of the best chelators and detox agents available, meaning they can help rid your body of a wide variety of toxins, including heavy metals.

    “It wasn’t until I was in my 20s... that I first began to learn about and observe some of the digestive benefits of eating live culture fermented foods,” Sandor says.

    “It was another decade after that when I left New York City, moved to rural Tennessee, and got involved in keeping a garden that I first had a reason to investigate the practice of fermentation. All of the cabbages were ready at the same time, and I thought I should learn how to make sauerkraut. I did a little bit of research in cookbooks and started making sauerkraut. Thus began my investigations into fermentation about 18 years ago.”

    Starter Cultures versus Wild Ferment

    When fermenting vegetables, you can either use a starter culture, or simply allow the natural enzymes in the vegetables do all the work. This is called “wild fermentation.” Personally, I prefer a starter culture as it provides a larger number of different species and the culture can be optimized with species that produce high levels of vitamin K2, which research is finding is likely every bit as important as vitamin D.

    For this past year, we’ve been making two to three gallons of fermented vegetables every week in our Chicago office for the staff, which they can enjoy with the lunch we provide as an employee benefit.

    We use a starter culture of the same probiotic strains that we sell as a supplement, which has been researched by our team to produce about 10 times the amount of vitamin K2 as any other starter culture... When we had the vegetables tested, we found that in a four- to six-ounce serving there were literally 10 trillion beneficial bacteria, or about 100 times the amount of bacteria in a bottle of high potency probiotics.

    There are about 100 trillion bacteria in your gut, so a single serving can literally “reseed” 10 percent of the bacterial population of the average person’s gut! To me that’s extraordinary, and a profoundly powerful reason to consider adding fermented vegetables as a staple to your diet.

    You don’t have to use a starter culture however. Wild fermentation is fermentation based on microorganisms that are naturally present in the food you’re fermenting. It’s just as simple as using a starter culture, but it will take a little longer for it to ferment.

    “It’s very predictable when you salt and submerge vegetables [in their natural juices or brine]. The bacteria that will initiate at fermentation are always Leuconostoc mesenteroides. Then it’s a successive process whereby, as the pH changes and as the environment changes, different strains of bacteria come into dominance...” Sandor explains.

    “Typically, in a mature sauerkraut, the late-stage bacterium that’s dominant is Lactobacillus plantarum. It’s a very predictable succession, what happens with raw vegetables, [but] the specific strains will always be somewhat different depending on the vegetables you’re using and the environment that you’re doing it in.”

    To Salt or Not to Salt?

    Whether or not to use salt also largely comes down to personal preference. While it’s not a necessity, Sandor does provide some compelling reasons for adding a small amount of natural, unprocessed salt—such as Himalayan salt—to your vegetables. For example, salt:

    Strengthens the ferment’s ability to eliminate any potential pathogenic bacteria present
    Adds to the flavor
    Acts as a natural preservative, which may be necessary if you’re making large batches that need to last for a larger portion of the year
    Slows the enzymatic digestion of the vegetables, leaving them crunchier
    Inhibits surface molds
    Again, natural unrefined salts are ideal as they contain a broad spectrum of minerals, and the fermentation process makes the minerals more bioavailable—a win-win situation!

    “Just now, I’m getting near the bottom of a 55-gallon barrel of sauerkraut that I made last November mostly out of radishes. That would not be possible without the addition of salt,” Sandor says. “You can make sauerkraut, and then you can ferment for several weeks in a cool environment. Maybe you could get to several months. But what would happen eventually to a salt-free kraut is that enzymes in the vegetable would basically digest the fiber of the vegetables. It would just turn into a mush, which is not at all appealing to me.”

    What Type of Container Should You Use?

    There’s no need to over-think or spend large amounts of money on containers. The material they’re made of is important however. You do NOT want to use plastic or metal. Plastics are loaded with chemicals you don’t want leaching into your food, such as bisphenol-A (BPA) and phthlalates. Metal is also inadvisable as salts can corrode the metal. Even if you don’t add salt, most vegetables have some natural salts in them. Good options include:

    Glass jars (wide-mouthed Mason jars are ideal, so that you can get your whole hand in there to press down the vegetables)
    Ceramic crocks
    Wooden barrels
    I completely agree with Sandor’s sound general advice here:

    “My main message that I would encourage your viewers and listeners to remember is you don’t need to buy anything special. You need a head of cabbage or a couple of pounds of vegetables, and beyond that everything you need is already in your kitchen. Whatever tools or devices you typically use to chop or shred vegetables, you can use that. Add some salt, mix it around, squeeze it with your hands for a couple of minutes, and stuff it into a jar.

    Beyond that, you could use any kind of shredding device you like: a mandoline, a food processor, a continuous feed food processor, or a specialized cabbage-chopping device. You could buy beautiful elegantly designed crocks. But you have everything that you need to get started in your kitchen. Don’t let the beautiful crock that you don’t have yet be the reason why you don’t start doing this.

    I think it’s really important to recognize that you don’t need anything special to start a fermentation practice. You might decide you want to play with starter cultures, but you don’t need starter cultures to get started. You might decide that you want to invest in a crock, but you don’t need a crock to get started.

    If you take two pounds of vegetables, you can stuff a quart-sized jar with those. Just chop them up. Shred them. They can be extremely fine, or they can be coarse and chunky. It doesn’t matter. Lightly salt them to taste or else weigh them and measure out 1.5 percent salt. I prefer to salt them lightly to taste.”

    Two Helpful Tips...

    As Sandor explains, an important step in the process is to squeeze the vegetables before packing them into the jar. You don’t need any fancy tools for this; just use your hands. “Bruising” the vegetables in this way allows the cell walls to break down and release their juices. Capture the juice in the jar you’re going to ferment your vegetables in. Then stuff as many veggies into the jar that will fit. You want to stuff them in as tightly as possible, forcing out any air pockets that might ruin the batch. The brine should cover the vegetables.

    Sandor then simply covers the jar with the lid and leaves it on the kitchen counter. A helpful tip I learned from Caroline Barringer is to top off the jar with a cabbage leaf, tucking it down the sides. Again, make sure the veggies are completely covered with the natural brine you squeezed out of the vegetables (or add a small amount of celery juice), and that the juice is all the way to the top of the jar to eliminate trapped air.

    To speed up the fermentation, store the jars in a warm, slightly moist place for 24 to 96 hours, depending on the food being cultured. Ideal temperature range is 68-75 degrees Fahrenheit; 85 degrees max. You don’t want it too hot, as heat will kill the beneficial microbes. Don’t tuck them away in a dark closet and forget about them, though! As Sandor explains:

    “The reason why you don’t want to just put it in the closet and forget about it is that it’s going to produce pressures, especially in the first couple of days. You want to relieve that pressure by opening the jar for a second. In that way, you don’t get a huge accumulation of pressure and risk the possibility of the jar exploding – or what’s more likely to happen, if you’re using a canning jar, where the glass is thick and the lid is thin, it will just contort the top. But it’s best to consciously release the pressure.”

    The second tip is to smell and taste your ferment regularly. There’s really no objective moment when the fermentation is ready, so go ahead and taste it at frequent intervals, starting after about 48 hours. Then keep on tasting it every few days or a couple of times a week as it matures. It typically takes about a week for the optimal amount of fermentation to occur. Resist the temptation to eat out of the jar, however, as this can introduce undesirable organisms from your mouth into the jar. Instead, always use a clean spoon to take out what you're going to eat, then, making sure the remaining veggies are covered with the brine solution, recap the jar.

    When the flavor is to your personal liking, transfer the jars into the refrigerator to dramatically slow the progression of the fermentation. Keep in mind, the vegetables will tend to get increasingly sour as time goes on, but according to Sandor, you could let the vegetables ferment for weeks and even months without worrying about them spoiling—after all, that’s what the fermentation process does: It preserves food without refrigeration.

    Some additional info on how to ferment vegetables can be found here.

    On Allowing Your Creative Juices to Flow

    There is no food that cannot be fermented. As Katz states in a recent NPR article1, bread, coffee, pickles, beer, cheese, yogurt and soy sauce are all examples of foods that have been fermented at some point during their production process. That said, not every vegetable will produce equally delicious results, and not every food is as easily fermented as vegetables, but your imagination is really the only limit when it comes to what you can concoct.

    “If you ferment summer squash, which are very watery, they will tend to get soft and mushy much faster than any other kind of vegetable would,” Sandor says. .. You can certainly ferment kale and other dark green vegetables, but the high levels of chlorophyll in these vegetables produce a really strong flavor in fermentation. I prefer to use dark green vegetables as a minor ingredient rather than as the primary ingredient. Then I feel like that strong flavor can become a nice accent.

    But if it’s pure dark green vegetables, that flavor’s a little bit too strong for me, although I have heard from other people who really, really love it. In a way you can only learn what you like by experimenting.

    My biggest batch every year has been from radishes. I have a farmer friend who uses daikon radishes as a cover crop over acres and acres of his land. He invites me to pick a truckload full of daikon radishes. And I augment that with some cabbages, some chili peppers and garlic, and make a 55-gallon barrel full every year... Then you can also ferment whole vegetables. The difference with whole vegetables is that you can’t pull the water out of them, so you need to mix up a brine – salty water – and ferment them in the salty water.

    ... I met a woman whose grandmother was from a town in Poland, where they used mashed potatoes in their sauerkraut. And I love making mashed potatoes sauerkrauts. What I do is I steam potatoes, I mash them up, cool them to body temperature, and then I layer the mash potatoes in with my salted cabbage. That makes a beautiful sauerkraut. You can really be experimental and go wild. You can add things other than vegetables.

    ... In German tradition, juniper berries are often used. I’ve been tasting wildly experimental krauts with curry seasonings and things like that. Really, the only limitation is our imagination, once we understand the underlying principles of getting the vegetables submerged.”

    A Word of Caution Regarding Meat Fermentation

    As just mentioned, while virtually any food can be fermented, and the fermentation process automatically renders the food exceptionally safe since the probiotics produced kill any pathogens present, a disclaimer regarding fermenting meats is worth taking note of.

    “Fermenting vegetables is an intrinsically safe practice. In the United States, according to the USDA, there’s never been a single case of food poisoning reported from fermented vegetables. There is no danger. The food itself is a strategy for protection. Fermented vegetables are safer than raw vegetables,” Sandor says. “With meat, I can’t say this. The word “botulism,” which is the most feared food poisoning form of all, comes from the Latin word “botulist” or sausage. Until the advent of canning, which was in the 19th century, it was from fermented sausages that people knew about the rare food poisoning disease of botulism.

    There’s a little bit more of a learning curve. Another limitation with fermentation of meat for preservation process is the acids, which are what enable certain fermented foods to preserve so well. Acids are produced from carbohydrates, and meat fundamentally lacks carbohydrates. There’s a tiny bit of glycogen, but not enough to support a significant fermentation and formation of lactic acid. Typically, when salami is produced, the meat and the fat are minced or ground. And then they’re mixed with a tiny bit of sugar. The sugar is really what is fermented by the lactic acid bacteria and creates the acidic environment that is able to preserve the meat.

    It’s not through acidification alone that the meat is preserved. It’s a combination of acidification, drying (the meat is partially dried), and salting (the meat is always salted). Any one of these mediums could preserve the meat, either making it very, very dry as in something like jerky, making it very, very salty as in a food like prosciutto, or very highly acidic.”

    More Information

    To learn more, pick up one of Sandor’s books, The Art of Fermentation: An In-Depth Exploration of Essential Concepts and Processes from Around the World, or Wild Fermentation: The Flavor, Nutrition, and Craft of Live-Culture Foods.

    You can also find more information on his website at WildFermentation.com.
    Each breath a gift...
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    Default Re: The gut of most disease... NOT what you think!

    Have you ever thought you found an answer... only to realize some time later that the info was not complete?

    I find myself looking back on this thread with some sorrow.

    You see, I MUST try to correct the harm I have done here before more people are injured by following it.

    I just started a new thread here that is actually much more advanced in information than this thread... please go look at it! https://projectavalon.net/forum4/show...516#post781516

    Why is this important? Well, if you are eating kefir and making fermented vegetables then it is highly likely you are also consuming a lot of living mold. These can take up residence in your body, causing a lot of inflammation... and down the line they may also cause cancer.

    It turns out that many of the 'good' bacteria in cultured foods are actually inflammatory.

    Here is a link to information that can start you in the right direction: http://www.bulletproofexec.com/why-y...fat-and-foggy/

    Last edited by Dawn; 7th January 2014 at 23:48.

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    Default Re: The gut of most disease... NOT what you think!

    I would love to try fermenting some veggies this summer when the garden is going! Thanks for all the info & especially the links & vids

    Especially the sauerkraut one.. maaaaaaan I could eat like 10 pounds of that in one day lol. I'd love to just make it myself.

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    Default Re: The gut of most disease... NOT what you think!

    I'm not sure this post belongs here, and if not, please delete or move. I saw this floating around out there and thought it was pertinent to the discussion here. Sometimes we lose sight of the simple stuff, we all need to be eating organic at least. I found this little video, made by a little girl to be a great reminder of that fact.


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    Default Re: The gut of most disease... NOT what you think!

    Quote Molly: I would love to try fermenting some veggies this summer when the garden is going! Thanks for all the info & especially the links & vids

    Especially the sauerkraut one.. maaaaaaan I could eat like 10 pounds of that in one day lol. I'd love to just make it myself.
    I know! This thread is enticing! BUT WAIT!!!!

    MY LATEST INFORMATION IS THAT YOU MAY BE POISONING YOUR BODY IF YOU DO THIS!!!! Please, OH (!) PLEASE! Take a look at my latest thread. And... please don't do this to yourself.

    Here is the link to this important information: https://projectavalon.net/forum4/show...516#post781516

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    Default Re: The gut of most disease... NOT what you think!

    you made many people here fermenting maniacs and it really was fun but somehow I didn´t relate well to my Kefir the last few months and even threw him away 2-3 weeks ago, now with your new information I get a different view

    still in love with my kombucha!
    Last edited by wegge; 9th January 2014 at 18:44.

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    Default Re: The gut of most disease... NOT what you think!

    Quote:
    'What Is Lacto-fermentation?


    Historically, fermented foods have played an important role in the diets of most every society throughout the world. But beyond just the culinary choices and preservation advantages of fermented foods is the natural phenomenon of fermentation performed by the cells within our bodies that helps to keep us healthy. With fermentation becoming quite popular in modern culture, it is good to understand some of the basic science regarding fermentation and lacto-fermentation in particular.

    Lactic Bacteria

    Most people think about beer or wine when they hear the term fermentation. While certain yeasts are used to convert the sugars in grape juice or grains into alcohol, it is bacteria that are responsible for lacto-fermentation. The “lacto” portion of the term refers to a specific species of bacteria, namely Lactobacillus. Various strains of these bacteria are present on the surface of all plants, especially those growing close to the ground, and are also common to the gastrointestinal tracts, mouths, and vaginas of humans and other animal species. Many of us may be familiar with Lactobacillus acidophilus, the acid-loving bacterium commonly included in the process of making yogurt, but there are many others.

    Lactobacillus bacteria have the ability to convert sugars into lactic acid through a naturally occurring fermentation process. The Lactobacillus strain is so named because it can readily use lactose, the sugar in milk, and convert it quickly and easily to lactic acid. So lacto-fermentation does not necessarily need to involve dairy products.

    Lactic Acid

    Lactic acid is a natural preservative that inhibits the growth of harmful, or putrefying, bacteria. This phenomenon allowed people to preserve foods for extended periods of time before the advent of refrigeration or canning. Lactic acid also promotes the growth of healthy bacteria in the intestinal tract. That is why lacto-fermented foods are considered probiotic foods. (Probiotic means “for life”.).

    Beyond preservation advantages, lacto-fermentation also increases the vitamin and enzyme levels, as well as digestibility, of the fermented food. In addition, lactobacillus organisms produce antibiotic and anticarcinogenic substances that may contribute to good health. That is yet another reason to have an abundant amount of lactobacilli residing in our intestinal tracts.

    Fermented Foods

    The diets of every traditional society have included some kind of lacto-fermented food. In Europe they have been primarily dairy, sauerkraut, grape leaves, herbs, and root vegetables. The Alaskan Inuit ferment fish and sea mammals. The Orient is known for pickled vegetables and kimchi in particular.

    Pickles and relishes are a part of the American food tradition. But the kind of pickles and sauerkraut that can be purchased in most grocery stores today are not at all the same products our ancestors knew. Since the advent of industrialization, most pickling is done with vinegar, which offers more predictable results, but no lactic acid. However, with just a little patience, instruction, and minimal supplies, it is possible to learn the time-honored art of lacto-fermentation.

    How It Works

    Lacto-fermentation really is more art than science. The science part is simple: lactobacillus (from a prepared culture, fresh whey, or just naturally occurring) plus sugar (naturally present in vegetables and fruits), plus a little salt, minus oxygen (anaerobic process), plus time, equal lactic acid fermentation. The length of fermentation can vary from a few hours to two months or more. The temperature of the room where fermentation occurs will determine the length of time. The ideal temperature is around 72°F, but warmer or cooler temperature will still work. (Some strains of bacteria require specific temperature ranges.) The length of time is dependent more on the flavor you prefer than anything else and since the flavor level of lacto-fermented vegetables increases with time you will want to sample often until you are experienced enough to know what works for your tastes. Just keep in mind that you don’t want to introduce a lot of oxygen to the fermentation process as this increases the chance of spoilage. Lacto-fermentation is generally done in an airtight container or a crock with a water seal that prevents air from contaminating the culture. If you have a reliable recipe to follow, you can make minor adjustments as you see fit.

    The important thing is not to be intimidated by lacto-fermentation. You are not going to make your family sick by giving them home-fermented foods. Unless it smells unmistakably putrid (in which case common sense says throw it away), fermented foods are some of the safest foods you can eat. They are easy for even a beginner to prepare and it doesn’t take long to gain enough confidence to venture beyond basic yogurt or sauerkraut to an endless variety of vegetable and/or fruit combinations.
    " end of quote

    Sourse: http://www.culturesforhealth.com/wha...-fermentation/
    Last edited by chocolate; 9th January 2014 at 17:29.

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