Monday 8 May 2017

Why are Japan and Korea rice (rather than wheat) growing cultures when they on the same latitude as northern China?

Jay Liu
Jay Liu, I've been told I'm Chinese...
Answered Sep 16, 2015

They're not.

In pre-modern Korea and Japan, rice production, while highly treasured, was not the main source of nourishment for the masses. Millet, barley, and other rough grains were what most people actually ate most of the time. Rice was considered a luxury, especially in Korea and the northwestern half of Japan where the climate is quite unsuitable for rice cultivation. The fact that Southern Chinese farmers could enjoy an all rice grain diet was considered no small miracle in those days by the Japanese and Koreans.

The key to efficient rice cultivation is how many crops a year can be squeezed out. In places like Thailand were there's basically no such thing as winter, they could easily manage 3 crops a year. In Southern China, the traditional practice is 2 crops, in Northern China it's 1 crop.

In Japan, on the Kanto, Kansai, Kyushu areas, they can do 2 crops a year. But the arable land is so small in size, and the population so dense, it was never enough to support a large surplus.

Northern Chinese are tall - perhaps, due to wheat?

In China, as in many countries, the north-south divide runs deep. People from the north are seen as hale and hearty, while southerners are often portrayed as cunning, cultured traders. Northerners are taller than southerners. The north eats noodles, while the south eats rice—and according to new research, when it comes to personality, that difference has meant everything.

A study published Friday by a group of psychologists in the journal Science finds that China’s noodle-slurping northerners are more individualistic, show more “analytic thought” and divorce more frequently. By contrast, the authors write, rice-eating southerners show more hallmarks traditionally associated with East Asian culture, including more “holistic thought” and lower divorce rates.

https://blogs.wsj.com/chinarealtime/2014/05/09/wheat-vs-rice-how-chinas-north-south-culinary-divide-shapes-personality/

THE PEANUT PUZZLE

MEDICAL DISPATCH  FEBRUARY 7, 2011 ISSUE


Could the conventional wisdom on children and allergies be wrong?
By Jerome Groopman

Food allergy is likely a problem that we’ve created through our diet and environment.
Food allergy is likely a problem that we’ve created through our diet and environment.
Illustration by RICHARD MCGUIRE

Jill Mindlin prides herself on being a good parent. An attorney who lives on the North Shore of Long Island, she read books about how to raise healthy and happy children and dutifully followed their advice. She bought the car seat with the highest safety rating and covered her son and daughter with sunblock whenever they went outside. With her pediatrician’s approval, she breast-fed her children until they were at least a year old and gave them “no formula whatsoever” and no milk products or peanuts. As the American Academy of Pediatrics recommended in 2000, she introduced solid foods slowly and in small amounts.

In 2002, when her daughter, Maya Konoff, was nine months old, Mindlin took Maya for a checkup, and she got several immunizations. After they came home, Mindlin gave her a little yogurt. Soon, Mindlin told me, “Maya blew up like a tomato, bright red, swelling from head to toe.” She called the office, assuming that her daughter was reacting to the immunizations. The pediatrician told her that it was more likely an allergy of some kind. “Fortunately, there was liquid Benadryl in the house, and I was able to get Maya to take some,” Mindlin said. The reaction slowly subsided.

Several days later, Mindlin took Maya to see a pediatric allergist at a hospital on Long Island, and he told her it was unlikely that her daughter had a dairy allergy, since she had been breast-fed and was on a restricted diet. But Mindlin asked that Maya be examined, and the allergist placed a small amount of milk protein under the baby’s skin. Within minutes, she broke out in hives. As it turned out, Maya was also allergic to eggs, peanuts, tree nuts, and sesame seeds.

Despite her mother’s vigilance, Maya has had other frightening reactions. On a family outing to the Long Island Children’s Museum a few months later, after eating something labelled “vegetarian cheese,” Maya struggled to breathe and then lost consciousness. On vacation in South Carolina in 2003, Maya wanted a hot dog. “We asked the waiter to be sure that there were no dairy products in the food,” Mindlin recalled. “He came back to the table and said that the package said a hundred per cent beef.” But a few minutes after eating the hot dog Maya began vomiting and swelling. Mindlin later learned that the hot dog contained a milk protein. This time, the doctor in the E.R. gave Maya an epinephrine injection. Epinephrine, another term for adrenaline, can rapidly shut off a severe allergic reaction, and Mindlin now makes sure there are syringes of it in each of her handbags and in Maya’s knapsack.

Dr. Hugh Sampson, the director of the Jaffe Food Allergy Institute at Mount Sinai Medical Center in New York and an international expert on food allergy, is Maya’s doctor. He is a tall sixty-year-old with an athletic build and a full head of graying hair. Sampson and Dr. Scott Sicherer, a pediatric allergist who is also at Mount Sinai, have conducted extensive studies throughout the United States that show that the rate of allergy is rising sharply. Sampson estimates that three to five per cent of the population is allergic to milk, eggs, peanuts, tree nuts, or seafood. In the past decade, allergies to peanuts have doubled. Other researchers have found the same phenomenon in Great Britain. “This increase in the incidence of food allergy is real,” Sampson said when we spoke recently. He cannot say what is causing the increase, but he now thinks the conventional approach to preventing food allergies is misconceived. For most of his career, he believed, like most allergists, that children are far less likely to become allergic to problematic foods if they are not exposed to them as infants. But now Sampson and other specialists believe that early exposure may actually help prevent food allergies.

Sampson recalls that, in 1980, when he started researching the subject, as a fellow in immunology at Duke University, “food allergy was not a field that anybody wanted to get into.” Many doctors said that patients who claimed that food allergies were causing stomach aches and rashes were often just manifesting psychosomatic symptoms. “I approached the subject with the assumption that I would prove it didn’t exist,” Sampson said.

In one early test, he gave a girl in the first grade a bit of egg camouflaged in applesauce. To Sampson’s astonishment, she started wheezing and projectile vomiting. Five years later, he found that his one-year-old daughter was allergic to eggs. As Sampson got deeper into his work, he was struck by how little was known about the condition. No one knew why some children react to a food protein when it is placed on their skin but not when they eat it, or why others have antibodies in their blood that predict allergic reactions they don’t end up having.

Sampson watched as the incidence of food allergies rose alarmingly in the West while cases remained rare in Africa and Asia. He and other researchers began to investigate whether the problem could be prevented if Western mothers continued breast-feeding as long as possible. This would keep their babies away from potentially allergenic foods until their immune systems had developed sufficiently. Laboratory studies reinforced the theory. Sampson’s research group and others found that mice that had never been exposed to a particular food protein couldn’t mount an allergic reaction to it. This suggested that isolating young children from even minor exposure to potentially allergic foods would be beneficial.

In 1989, Dr. Robert Zeiger, a pediatric allergist and immunologist at Kaiser Permanente Medical Center in San Diego, published related results from one of the only controlled research studies on the subject. In the Zeiger study, which appeared in The Journal of Allergy and Clinical Immunology, mothers prone to allergy were randomly assigned a restricted diet. They avoided cow’s milk, eggs, and peanuts during the last trimester of pregnancy and during breast-feeding; their infants were given the supplement Nutramigen, derived from casein, and kept off all solid foods for six months; cow’s milk, corn, soy, citrus, and wheat were prohibited for twelve months, and egg, peanut, and fish for twenty-four months. After one year, the infants on the restricted diet had significantly fewer allergies than those in the control group. “Reduced exposure of infants to allergenic foods appeared to reduce food sensitization and allergy primarily during the first year of life,” Zeiger wrote.

A few experts believed that Zeiger’s research had not yielded results from which one could draw major conclusions. But Sampson was influenced by the article, and most of the other leading thinkers in the field agreed with the findings. “We know that the human immune system is immature for the first year or so. So I was thinking initially that, as long as we don’t expose babies to a food, they can’t make an immune response,” Sampson said, “and if we can wait until their immune system matures after a few years they could do better when later exposed to the food.”

In 1998, the Department of Health in the United Kingdom issued guidelines for doctors and families codifying these recommendations. In 2000, the American Academy of Pediatrics did the same.

The proteins within eggs, milk, peanuts, tree nuts, fish, shellfish, wheat, and soy that trigger allergic reactions don’t readily decompose when exposed to heat in certain types of cooking or to the acid in our stomachs. Within the gastrointestinal tract, the immune system battles pathogens while it ignores harmless food proteins and allows nonthreatening bacteria to reproduce. Proteins that are easily broken down by heat or digestion, such as many of those found in fruits, generally pass by. Proteins that resist breakdown are more likely to stimulate an allergic reaction.

People with the worst food allergies usually have very high levels of an antibody called immunoglobulin E (IgE). When someone like Maya drinks milk, the IgE grabs hold of specific proteins that trigger the body’s release of potent molecules like histamine and cytokines. The immune system overreacts to fight the protein that most people’s bodies ignore. When Maya “blew up like a tomato” and stopped breathing, it was because these molecules created so much swelling and inflammation that her throat closed up. For reasons that are still not completely understood, some people manifest their allergic reactions with nothing more than an outbreak of eczema. While there is a genetic predisposition to food allergies, no one has identified the specific genes, and there is no biological explanation for their existence.

“From an evolutionary-biology point of view, food allergy makes no sense at all,” Dr. Scott Sicherer, Sampson’s colleague at Mount Sinai, said. Hunters and gatherers who had potentially fatal reactions to tree nuts, peanuts, seeds, and fish would be at a distinct evolutionary disadvantage and were less likely to pass on their DNA to progeny. “It seems pretty clear that food allergy is a condition that resulted from the environment we created,” Sicherer said.

One explanation for the rise in food allergies is called the “hygiene hypothesis.” The natural environment exposes us to microbes that help teach our immune system to differentiate between dangerous pathogens and nonthreatening nutrients. When we shield children from dirt in the playground and from sick kids in preschool, we may limit their infections while also reducing their exposure to healthy microbes. This could make them susceptible to food allergies. Studies of mice raised in a germ-free environment show that they have abnormal immune systems and are more prone to allergic reactions. It is possible that we are doing the same thing to ourselves.

Researchers have also proposed several theories based on observations of geography and diet. Vitamin D is believed to reduce the development of allergies, and sunshine promotes vitamin-D production. Doctors in cold parts of the United States write three or four times as many prescriptions for epinephrine to treat food allergies as do doctors in warm locales. Dietary changes might also play a role. Eating more animal fat can increase the presence of a chemical, prostaglandin, that contributes to the body’s inflammatory responses. And as people also eat fewer fresh fruits and vegetables they fail to take in substances, such as beta-carotene, that limit inflammation in tissues.

One of the few pediatric allergists who questioned the guidelines written in 1998 and 2000 was Dr. Gideon Lack, at St. Mary’s Hospital in London. Lack studied philosophy and psychology before medicine, and his background is evident in his approach to science. “If eating eggs or eating peanuts in an allergic sufferer causes a reaction, then clearly the way to prevent a reaction from occurring is by not eating egg or peanut,” he said. “That makes sense. But that’s different from saying that clearly the way to not become allergic in the first place is not to eat egg or peanut.”

Lack published letters in The Lancet and the British Medical Journal that pointed out the absence of compelling evidence used to support the expert guidelines. His skepticism was not well received. “It was very hard to get any grant support to study my ideas,” he said.

In 2003, Lack gave a lecture in Israel about the apparent rise of peanut allergies in the United Kingdom. “It was a large lecture hall in Tel Aviv, filled with pediatricians and allergists. And I asked them, ‘How many of you have seen a case of peanut allergy in the past year?’ Something like three hands shot up.” Lack told me that if he had asked that question in the United Kingdom, ninety to ninety-five per cent would have raised their hands.

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Working with researchers in Israel, Lack surveyed more than five thousand children in Jewish schools in North London and more than five thousand schoolchildren in an ethnically and economically similar region of Tel Aviv. The team obtained detailed information about the families’ consumption of foods like peanuts, sesame, and tree nuts. They also catalogued other allergic diseases, such as asthma, eczema, and hay fever. The risk for peanut allergy among Jewish children in the London area was nearly eleven times higher than among those in Tel Aviv. Tree-nut allergy was fourteen times higher, and sesame five times higher in the United Kingdom. The relative risk for milk and egg allergy was about two to three times higher.

Lack’s study does not offer any proof about the cause of the variance in allergies between Jewish children in London and in Tel Aviv, but he believes the striking discrepancy may be due to a difference in diet between Israel and England. “The joke in Israel is that the first three words a child says are abba, meaning ‘father,’ ima, meaning ‘mother,’ and Bamba,” Lack said. Bamba is a peanut concoction that looks like a Cheez Doodle, and it is a staple of infants’ diets in Israel.

Lack did part of his training in pediatric allergy at the National Jewish Medical and Research Center in Denver, where he discovered that mice could develop allergies to a particular egg protein that was first rubbed on their skin or inhaled before they had ever eaten it. He wondered whether children in the United States and the United Kingdom might become allergic to peanuts through a similar mechanism. In a study published in The New England Journal of Medicine in 2003, he reported that children with eczema had often been previously exposed to an ointment containing peanut oil and were later found to be allergic to peanuts. He also determined that there was no correlation between women who had eaten peanuts while pregnant and the development of peanut allergies in their children. His study challenged the idea that restricting a mother’s diet would prevent peanut allergy, and highlighted how children can inadvertently be exposed to food proteins.

In 2006, Lack received support from the National Institutes of Health as well as from two charitable organizations, the Food Allergy Initiative and the Food Allergy and Anaphylaxis Network. He is now more than halfway through the leap study—Learning Early About Peanut Allergy. Six hundred and forty babies have been enrolled in the trial. The children are randomly selected either to eat peanut products or to avoid them entirely. The study will compare the rates of peanut allergy between the two groups. Lack is also conducting a study funded by the Food Standards Agency and the Medical Research Council, in the United Kingdom, about when to wean children from breast-feeding and how a baby’s consumption of allergenic foods affects her later development of allergies. As part of that work, he is examining thirteen hundred babies in the United Kingdom.

Lack believes that a child becomes tolerant to a variety of food proteins through exposure in the first six months of life. In developing countries, he notes, children often consume solids, initially chewed by their parents, at two or three months. “Years ago, nobody had blenders or food mixers, and today in developing countries people still don’t. The easiest way to get solid foods into a baby’s mouth is to chew it up, so it’s moist and coated with saliva, and then spit it into the baby’s mouth.”

A paper published in Maternal and Child Nutrition in January, 2010, reported that some two-thirds of students at a university in China were given premasticated food as infants. Only about fourteen per cent of American infants receive solid foods in this way. Saliva is a rich source of enzymes that can help break down solid foods and of antibodies that might coat food proteins in a way that makes them less allergenic to infants.

Lack’s research has gradually gained influence with leading allergists, including Hugh Sampson. By 2006, Sampson realized that his recommendations about food avoidance did not conform to what he termed “the real world.” Doing nothing more than inhaling or touching an allergen could prompt a reaction in some children. “You can’t avoid food proteins,” Sampson said. “So when we put out these recommendations we allowed the infants to get intermittent and low-dose exposure, especially on the skin, which actually may have made them even more sensitive.”

Sampson believes that some eighty per cent of infants who are allergic to eggs or milk will outgrow the allergy by their teen-age years, and that preventing them from being fed products with these foods may prolong the time that takes. “I spent most of my career telling mothers to avoid these types of foods for their babies,” he told me. “Now we’re testing to see if we should advise mothers to give the foods to them.”

In January, 2008, the American Academy of Pediatrics released a clinical report by Mount Sinai’s Dr. Sicherer and other researchers that overturned the expert advice of the past decade: “Current evidence does not support a major role for maternal dietary restrictions during pregnancy or lactation. . . . There is also little evidence that delaying the timing of the introduction of complementary foods beyond four to six months of age prevents the occurrence of [allergies].” Dr. Frank Greer, a specialist in newborn nutrition at the University of Wisconsin School of Medicine and Public Health and an author of the clinical report, told me, “There is so much out there about how to feed infants, when to begin rice cereal, how to phase in yellow vegetables and then green vegetables, that has no basis in scientific evidence. It’s not surprising that recommendations were made which were based on so little data.”

Dr. Susan Baker, a professor of pediatrics at the State University of New York at Buffalo and an expert on nutrition for children, chaired the committee overseen by the A.A.P. that released the recommendations in 2000. She told me that safety concerns drove the experts to recommend restricting exposure of infants to potentially allergenic foods, particularly cow’s milk. “At the time, there was a proliferation of infant formulas on the market. Babies not only have cow’s milk allergy with eczema, but some who are intolerant of milk also develop bloody diarrhea. The real concern was that the formulas might do harm. That sort of propelled us.” The committee, she said, moved from milk products to restricting other allergenic foods, like peanuts and fish. “We in medicine are making a lot of decisions and recommendations based on not a lot of solid evidence. So you toe a fine line. You want to try to get pediatricians something that is as good as it can be to help guide their practice and their thinking. Did we overreach with peanuts and other foods? Probably. Could it have been better? Absolutely.”

The 2000 recommendations have now been overturned, but Gideon Lack is disturbed by what families now face. “Basically, we are all in limbo,” he said. Sicherer told me, “This is a tricky area. The A.A.P. has backed away from making recommendations, since the evidence is weak. I try to emphasize with my patients not to feel guilty that they did or did not do something that would have resulted in their child having a food allergy. Even the experts are not certain what to advise.”

People with food allergies live under a constant threat, in a society that is still poorly informed about the condition. For people with peanut and tree-nut allergies, incidents in restaurants account for nearly a quarter of unintentional exposures and about half of all fatal reactions.

In 2007, Sicherer published the results of a survey of a hundred managers, servers, and chefs in establishments ranging from continental restaurants to bakeries and delis. Focussing on New York City and Long Island, Sicherer found that about a quarter of managers and workers believed that consuming a small amount of the allergen would be safe; thirty-five per cent believed that frying would destroy it; and a quarter thought it was safe to remove an allergen from a finished meal, like taking walnuts out of a salad. Nearly three-quarters of food workers believed that they knew how to “guarantee” a safe meal. Most states do not require that food providers attend educational programs, and there are no national requirements.

Sampson, acutely aware of the risks facing food-allergy sufferers, is now trying to work out a way to help desensitize people. To do this, he is relying on the idea behind the hygiene hypothesis and some of Lack’s investigations: that exposure in small doses, in controlled circumstances, can build tolerance. He is trying to identify how the IgE antibody attaches to different proteins, and he uses this knowledge to have foods cooked in a way that would make the proteins less allergenic. Researchers at Mount Sinai observed, for example, that baking caused milk proteins to change shape in a way that could be less provocative to the immune system. An allergic person might be able to eat the altered proteins and become tolerant of them in all their forms. Sampson and other researchers have also configured an experimental vaccine that contains fragments of peanut protein that might “reëducate” the immune system of allergic people. Safety studies of the experimental vaccine are under way at the Jaffe Institute.

In 2008, when Maya Konoff was seven, her mother enrolled her in a research study being conducted by Dr. Sampson at the Jaffe Food Allergy Institute, funded by the N.I.H. She was given allergens in an altered form, and if she achieved tolerance she would be given foods that contained the allergen in its more natural state.

The treatment rooms at the institute are painted in soft tones and the hallways are decorated with large photographs of fruits. The institute has a spotless stainless-steel kitchen; all the refrigerators and cabinets are kept locked. Diego Baraona, the chef, prepares the foods. When I visited, he showed me a batch of small muffins he had baked, with applesauce and milk, and cups of rice pudding tightly sealed in plastic. With a nurse and Jill Mindlin at Maya’s side, the child was given a muffin. Maya tentatively took a bite, waited, and seemed to have no reaction. In short order, she ate the rest of the muffin. “It was very exciting for our family,” Mindlin recalled, “because it meant that she was one of those kids whose bodies didn’t recognize the milk protein when it was broken down in baking, so now she had potential to eat baked foods.”

The next step was to try a taste of pizza. Maya took her first bite, waited, smiled, and then took another two bites. “I knew right then that things were not going well, even though Maya had not exhibited any physical symptoms,” Mindlin said. “She had been so giddy, riding off the high of eating the muffin, happy and chattering, and then all of a sudden there was this pall that came over her.” Maya soon broke out in hives and began vomiting. Sampson gave her an epinephrine injection. As the drug took effect, the anaphylactic reaction was arrested.

According to the protocol, Maya was supposed to come back in six months. Dr. Sampson counselled that in the meantime she should eat baked foods that included milk. When she returned, an intravenous line was inserted and an epinephrine inject pen was placed at the bedside before Maya was offered a slice of the same pizza. “It was nothing less than miraculous,” her mother told me. “She ate the entire slice of pizza.” Maya was observed for several hours and then given a bowl of rice pudding. The doctors told Mindlin to expect a reaction. “But instead she ate the whole bowl of rice pudding and was fine. She jumped two levels, just by eating muffins every day,” Mindlin said.

Maya returned to Mount Sinai the next day for a glass of milk. “That didn’t go quite as well,” Mindlin said. As Maya finished drinking, her nose began to run and she vomited. The allergic reaction was mild enough to be treated with Benadryl. When I spoke to Mindlin in December, she told me that Maya can now eat macaroni and cheese but that she is still unable to drink milk. “Even if she never progresses past this, I have no regrets about being in the study, because now she can go to a birthday party and have a slice of pizza. It’s huge.” ♦


Jerome Groopman, a staff writer since 1998, writes primarily about medicine and biology. More

http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2011/02/07/the-peanut-puzzle

is it immunization which is driving people to allergies?

My note: Is immunization the cause of allergies?

A very young girl develops allergy to dairy, eggs, peanuts, tree nuts, and sesame seeds.

This could not have happened because the young girl took lot of anti-biotics (the other cause of allergies). So, is it immunization which is driving people to allergies?

No one knew why some children react to a food protein when it is placed on their skin but not when they eat it,




http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2011/02/07/the-peanut-puzzle

FODMAPS seem more likely than gluten to cause widespread intestinal distress,

Summary 

A good article asking if Gluten is really the culprit for celiac. 

http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2014/11/03/grain



****

Gluten anxiety has been building for years, but it didn’t become acute until 2011, when a group led by Peter Gibson, a professor of gastroenterology at Monash University and the director of the G.I. unit at the Alfred Hospital, in Melbourne, seemed to provide evidence that gluten was capable of causing illness even in people who did not have celiac disease. Gibson and his colleagues recruited thirty-four people with irritable-bowel syndrome, all of whom had complained of stomach ailments that largely disappeared when they stopped eating gluten. He put them all on a strictly monitored gluten-free diet, but, unbeknownst to the subjects, about half got muffins and bread with gluten. It was a double-blind study, so neither the doctors nor the patients knew which muffins and bread contained gluten. But most of those who ate the gluten reported that the pain returned; for most of the others it did not. The study was small but meticulous, and the results were compelling. Several similar studies are now under way, but dietary research is notoriously time-consuming and difficult.

Gibson published his findings in the American Journal of Gastroenterology, but, along with other experts, he urged restraint in interpreting data from such a small study. Nevertheless, millions of people with vague symptoms of gastric distress suddenly found something concrete for which to blame their troubles. The market boomed, but the essential mystery remained unsolved: Why was gluten suddenly so hazardous? Perhaps, researchers thought, farmers had increased the protein (and gluten) content of wheat so drastically that people could no longer digest it properly.

But there is more to wheat than gluten. Wheat also contains a combination of complex carbohydrates, and the Australian team wondered if these could be responsible for the problems. Gibson and his colleagues devised a different study: they recruited a group of thirty-seven volunteers who seemed unable to digest gluten properly. This time, the researchers attempted to rule out the carbohydrates and confirm gluten as the culprit. Gibson put all the volunteers on a diet that was gluten-free and also free of a group of carbohydrates that he and his colleagues called fodmaps, an acronym for a series of words that few people will ever remember: fermentable oligosaccharides, disaccharides, monosaccharides, and polyols. Not all carbohydrates are considered fodmaps, but many types of foods contain them, including foods that are high in fructose, like honey, apples, mangoes, and watermelon; dairy products, like milk and ice cream; and fructans, such as garlic and onions.

Most people have no trouble digesting fodmaps, but these carbohydrates are osmotic, which means that they pull water into the intestinal tract. That can cause abdominal pain, bloating, and diarrhea. When the carbohydrates enter the small intestine undigested, they move on to the colon, where bacteria begin to break them down. That process causes fermentation, and one product of fermentation is gas. In Gibson’s new study, when the subjects were placed on a diet free of both gluten and fodmaps, their gastrointestinal symptoms abated. After two weeks, all of the participants reported that they felt better. Some subjects were then secretly given food that contained gluten; the symptoms did not recur. The study provided evidence that the 2011 study was wrong—or, at least, incomplete. The cause of the symptoms seemed to be fodmaps, not gluten; no biological markers were found in the blood, feces, or urine to suggest that gluten caused any unusual metabolic response.

In fact, fodmaps seem more likely than gluten to cause widespread intestinal distress, since bacteria regularly ferment carbohydrates but ferment protein less frequently. Although a fodmap-free diet is complicated, it permits people to eliminate individual foods temporarily and then reintroduce them systematically to determine which, if any, are responsible for their stomach problems. fodmaps are not as trendy as gluten and not as easy to understand. But, biologically, their role makes more sense, Murray says.

“That first paper, in 2011, blew our minds,” Murray told me. “Essentially, it said that people are intolerant of gluten, and it was based on a well-designed, double-blind study. When people were challenged with gluten, by eating the muffins, they got sick. We just couldn’t figure it out. But then came the second study. By then, it was almost too late to put the genie back in the bottle. You have millions of people out there completely convinced that they feel better when they don’t eat gluten—and they don’t want to hear anything different.”

The fodmap research, while influential and highly regarded, involved fewer than a hundred people, not enough to account definitively for the number of people who have abandoned foods that contain gluten. Several groups are trying to repeat those results. But studies like that take time. At present, there are no blood tests, biopsies, genetic markers, or antibodies that can confirm a diagnosis of non-celiac gluten sensitivity. There have been a few studies suggesting that people without celiac disease have a reason to eliminate gluten from their diet. But most of the data are unclear or preliminary. Doctors rarely diagnose non-celiac gluten sensitivity, and many don’t believe that it exists. Few people seem to have been deterred by the lack of evidence. “Everyone is trying to figure out what is going on, but nobody in medicine, at least not in my field, thinks this adds up to anything like the number of people who say they feel better when they take gluten out of their diet,” Murray said. “It’s hard to put a number on these things, but I would have to say that at least seventy per cent of it is hype and desire. There is just nothing obviously related to gluten that is wrong with most of these people.’’

http://www.newyorker.com/magazine/2014/11/03/grain

Highest amount of minerals in white rice - potassium and phosphorus

Summary: 

White rice had many mineral and vitamins, it's just not empty calories.
Similarly, wheat has many minerals and vitamins.
Generally, both wheat and rice have more minerals in them but have low vitamins.
None of the other starches (potatoes, sweet potato, cassava, soyabean, yam, plantain) come close to wheat or rice in providing the energy or carbohydrates. Maize and

Wheat has 10 times fiber that of white rice.
Wheat has 5 times selenium that of white rice.
Wheat has 5 times magnesium that of white rice.
Wheat has 4 times manganese that of white rice
Wheat has 3 times potassium and phosphorous that of white rice
Wheat has 2 times zinc that of white rice

Wheat has Vitamin A, rice doesn't. 
Wheat has 20 times vitamin K1 that of white rice. 
Wheat has 10 times vitamin E that of white rice.
Wheat has 4 times niacin (B3) that of white rice.

But in absolute terms, wheat has highest amount of fiber, potassium, phosphorous, magnesium and selenium compared to white rice.

Minerals in white rice (per 100 grams)

Potassium - 115 mg
Phosphorus - 115 mg

Calcium - 28 mg
Magnesium - 25 mg
Iron - 0.8 mg
Sodium - 5 mg
Zinc - 1.09


https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rice


***

Ayurveda on Rice

Rice is cooling in nature.

Ayurveda recommends avoiding excess consumption of rice that is parboiled, instant or pre-cooked because is has less nutrition and less prana, or life energy,

Rice is generally good for balancing Vata and Pitta. However old rice does not increase Kapha.

The Ayurvedic treatise Charaka Samhita (c. 700 B.C.) praised the medicinal value of certain varieties of rice – to balance or pacify all the mind/body constitutions (vata, pitta and kapha), to strengthen, revitalize and energize the body, regulate blood pressure, and to prevent skin diseases and premature aging.  But not all rice is the same. Indeed, Ayurvedic treatises document the properties of different varieties of rice, grown in different seasons, in different growing areas, soil types (marshy or dry soils), land preparation (plowed or unplowed land), planting method (broadcast or transplanted), post harvest processing, and aging of rice (new or one/two-year old rice).

Ayurvedic Properties of Rice

Rasa (Taste): Sweet
Virya (Potency): Cooling
Vipaka (Post digestive effective): Sweet
Guna (Qualities): Unctuous, nourishing and Strength promoting. Brown rice is light to digest and white polished rice is slightly heavy to digest
Actions on the doshas: Balances Vata and Pitta and increases Kapha. But old rice does not increase Kapha.

“Old rice” (one year maturity after harvest) versus new rice  (Freshly harvested rice)
 
Freshly harvested rice is hard to digest, whereas 1-year-old rice is “lighter” and two-year old rice is even more “excellent in quality”. Also Ayurveda texts explain that old rice is wholesome in diabetes and obesity. Ayurveda recommends storage of rice in moist free airtight containers.
Now – a – days we are eating newer and newer rice which is becoming harder and harder for us to digest. 
With respect to the preparation of rice, the Ayurvedic texts explain that dry roasting (i.e. drying over heat) certain varieties of rice can make them “light” to digest and hence beneficial when the digestive fire is low. In addition, there are references to the digestive benefits of soaking rice prior to cooking it. Soaking the rice for at least 1 hour prior to cooking them will make it lighter for digestion. 

Some benefits of rice mentioned in Ayurveda texts –
 
From Ayurvedic point of view, rice provides the basis of wide range of healing gruels. Rice was prepared as a thin stew with specific spices to treat different illnesses.
Khichadi made of old rice and mung is beneficial to a person suffering from fever or stomach disorder.
Rice gruel mixed with ghee or butter is advised throughout pregnancy. As rice, ghee and butter are cooling and anabolic, they nourish the mother – to be as well as help in proper growth of the fetus.
Old rice is beneficial in diabetes and obesity.
Indications of rice wash water (Tandulodaka) are also mentioned in many disorders like bleeding disorders, leucorrhoea, etc.

Khichari for Tridosha - A wholesome meal for one and all
  
Benefits - Khichari for Tridosha balances Vata, Pitta and Kapha by providing complete tissue nourishment. It helps in elimination of Ama (metabolic toxins) and improved Agni (metabolic fire). It serves as meal in fever, nausea, loss of appetite.
 
Ingredients –Dhanya (Oryza sativa), Mudga (Vigna radiata), Jiraka (Cuminum cyminum), Rajika (Brassica juncea), Haridra (Curcuma longa), Dhanyak (Coriandrum sativum), Twak (Cinnamomum zeylanicum), Curry leaf, Lavana (Rock salt), Ghrita (Ghee)
 
How to prepare Khichadi?–Take one cup (100 gm) and add 3 times water and cook on slow heat. If required more water can be added while cooking. This serves one person.

http://chakrapaniayurveda.com/Newsletter/2016/Ayurvedic-view-on-Rice.html

***

Summary

Old rice is preferred. 

Old rice
- absorbs more water.
- It's less sticky. Each grain is separate.
- Based on what the quora writer learnt from her parents, old rice is to be preferred.
- Usually, 1.5 years to 3 years old rice is to be preferred.

New Rice
- absorbs less water.
- It's more sticky.
- Chinese and others using chopsticks usually prefer this type of rice.

https://www.quora.com/Indian-Cuisine-and-Food-Why-is-aged-basmati-rice-highly-prized-and-more-expensive

***

Rice congee - food for the sick 

Rice may also be made into congee (also called rice porridge or rice gruel) by adding more water than usual, so that the cooked rice is saturated with water, usually to the point that it disintegrates. Rice porridge is commonly eaten as a breakfast food, and is also a traditional food for the sick.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rice

***

Arsenic concerns 

Rice contains 10-20 times more arsenic than other cereal crops.

Arsenic is a carcinogen.
Diabetes - More importantly, it could be arsenic in rice that is causes diabetes. (Source: Research in Taiwan - Regional Synthesis of medical geology book)
Immune development -
Growth development -
IQ development -
"We know that low levels of arsenic impact immune development, they impact growth development, they impact IQ development," say Prof Andy Mehrag of Queen's University Belfast who has been studying arsenic for decades.

"The only thing I can really equate it to is smoking," says Prof Andy Meharg of Queen's University Belfast, who has been studying arsenic for decades. "If you take one or two cigarettes per day, your risks are going to be a lot less than if you're smoking 30 or 40 cigarettes a day. It's dose-dependent - the more you eat, the higher your risk is."

He believes that the current legislation isn't strict enough, and that more needs to be done to protect those who eat a lot of rice.

Eating a couple of portions of rice a week isn't putting an adult like me at high risk, but Prof Meharg is concerned about children and babies.

Arsenic is a Group 1 carcinogen. The amount of arsenic in rice varies widely with the greatest concentration in brown rice and rice grown on land formerly used to grow cotton, such as in Arkansas, Louisiana, Missouri, and Texas. White rice grown in Arkansas, Louisiana, Missouri, and Texas, which account collectively for 76 percent of American-produced rice, had higher levels of arsenic than other regions of the world studied, possibly because of past use of arsenic-based pesticides to control cotton weevils. Jasmine rice from Thailand and Basmati rice from Pakistan and India contain the least arsenic among rice varieties in one study. China has set a limit of 150 ppb for arsenic in rice.

Cooking

Now, some ways of cooking rice reduce arsenic levels more than others. We carried out some tests with Prof Meharg and found the best technique is to soak the rice overnight before cooking it in a 5:1 water-to-rice ratio.

That cuts arsenic levels by 80%, compared to the common approach of using two parts water to one part rice and letting all the water soak in. Using lots of water - the 5:1 ratio - without pre-soaking also reduced arsenic levels, but not by as much as the pre-soaking levels.


So, while I would now think twice about feeding young children too much rice or rice products, I'm not going to stop eating rice myself. I will, however, be cooking it in more water and, when I remember, leave it to soak overnight.

*
Matta rice is traditionally double cooked. The rice is washed in a large pan and left to soak from 1 hour to overnight. The rice is drained and simmered with 4 to 8 parts water for 30 minutes. It is then covered and left for 15–20 minutes. The rice is then salted and boiled for another 15–20 minutes or until cooked. It is finally drained and left covered for a further 10–15 minutes before serving.[7]

http://www.bbc.com/news/health-38910848

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rice

***

Bacillus cereus

Cooked rice can contain Bacillus cereus spores, which produce an emetic toxin when left at 4–60 °C (39–140 °F). When storing cooked rice for use the next day, rapid cooling is advised to reduce the risk of toxin production.[25] One of the enterotoxins produced by Bacillus cereus is heat-resistant; reheating contaminated rice kills the bacteria, but does not destroy the toxin already present.

https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Rice

***

Red Rice is the best variety 

In Ayurveda, the traditional Indian medical system, colored rice has been called shastika rice and claims that it can restore imbalances in the human body. Pigmented rice is rich in antioxidants and polyphenols and has two or three times as much zinc and iron as white rice [17] which possess the desirable quality to boost, strengthen, regenerate and energize the body [18]. It is also used as baby food and replaces white rice on special occasion in the state. The red color, varying from light to dark red, is confined to the bran layer. Red Rice (Zag, Tel Zag, Gull Zag, Shel Kew, Kaw Quder) Keeps You Away From Obesity, Diabetes and Cancer. Rice with a red bran layer is called red rice. Susruta (400 BC), Charaka (700 BC), and Vagbhata (700 AD), the well-known vriddha trayi (Trio of Elders) of Ayurveda, considered red rice (rakta shali) the best among the other rice varieties, due to desirable property as they had the power to redress the imbalance in the tridosha or humours (the vata, the pitta, and the kapha – are collectively called the tridosha) whose imbalance in the body causes various types of diseases. In recent times, interest in red rices has been revived because of the presence of antioxidants. The antioxidant and scavenging activity of red rice is higher than that of white rice [19].

Ancient Ayurvedic treatises laud the red rice as a nutritive food and medicine. They are known to be influential in the treatment of various ailments such as diarrhea, vomiting, fever, hemorrhage, chest pain, wounds, and burns [20]. Colored rice has been preferred in the past for their special features such as medicinal value and exclusive taste. A large number of these varieties are still grown in various parts of the sate by tribal’s and small farmers who are deprived of modern technologies and health care systems, where indigenous rice with their nutritional and medicinal properties are a rich alternative for the same. This indigenous rice variety in state and India seems to contribute tremendously to the health of the women including adolescent girls, lactating mothers and pregnant women [20]. Ayurvedic properties of Raktasali (red rice) and their effect on human physiology. Red rice (Raktasali) was the most efficacious in subduing deranged humors [21,22]. It was considered good treatment for fevers and ulcers, Improves eyesight, voice improver, semen enhancer, diuretic, spermatophytic, refrigerant, cosmetic, and tonic and was antitoxic.

https://www.omicsgroup.org/journals/health-benefits-of-traditional-rice-varieties-of-temperate-regions-2167-0412-1000198.php?aid=58451

http://asianagrihistory.org/articles/Red-Rices-Uma-Ahuja.pdf









Humans feasting on grains for at least 100,000 years

By Katherine Harmon on December 17, 2009
 
 
Grains might have been an important part of human dietsmuch further back in our history than previous research has suggested. 

Although cupcakes and crumpets were still a long way off during the Middle Stone Age, new evidence suggests that at least some humans of that time period were eating starchy, cereal-based snacks as early as 105,000 years ago. The findings, gleaned from grass seed residue found on ancient African stone tools, are detailed online Thursday in Science. 

Researchers have assumed that humans were foraging for fruits, nuts and roots long before 100,000 years ago, but cereal grains are quite a new addition to the early prehistoric gastronomic picture. "This broadens the timeline for the use of grass seeds by our species," Julio Mercader, an assistant professor at University of Calgary's Department of Archeology and author of the paper, said in a prepared statement. 

Plant domestication, most scientists think, made its debut some 10,000 years ago, with grain storage cropping up about 11,000 years ago. An ancient site in Israel yielded a hearty collection of grains, which were dated to about 23,000 years ago, according to a 2004 Proceedings of the National Academy of Sciences paper. But such an early appearance of wild cereals in the human diet—as this new paper proposes—would push the assumed date of substantial grass-seed eating back more than 70,000 years. 

So just what were these gatherers purportedly gnashing? 

Mercader and a team from Mozambique's University of Eduardo Molande had uncovered hundreds of ancient artifacts in a limestone cave near Lake Nissa in Mozambique. Analyzing the surface of 70 of these tools, Mercader found some 2,370 granules of plant starch, which, he reasons, could not have accidentally come from growing plants in such dark reaches of the cave. And the fact that so many of the tools had a coating is evidence of at least some processing to make the seeds more edible. 

"The inclusion of cereals in our diet is considered an important step in human evolution because of the technical complexity and the culinary manipulation that are required to turn grains into staples," Mercader said. Indeed, a descendent of the wild sorghum found on the tools still makes up a large portion of modern diets in sub-Saharan products including breads, porridge and even beer. 
Other tidbits that these hungry humans appear to have been dining on during that period include the African false banana, pigeon peas, wild oranges, African wine palm and the African potato, the researchers concluded. These finds are "proof of an expanded and sophisticated diet much earlier than we believed," Mercader said. And grain consumption was the first step toward grains' domestication—and, eventually, cupcakes. 


Idli batter fermentation

http://www.thehindu.com/todays-paper/tp-features/tp-sci-tech-and-agri/Idli-batter-fermentation/article15951210.ece


SCI-TECH & AGRI

JANUARY 22, 2009 00:00 IST

How does idli batter ferment? Where does the yeast that ferments the batter come from?

ARUNA VENKATRAMAN

Coimbatore, Tamil Nadu

Fermentation of idli or dosa batter is carried out largely by lactic acid bacteria (not yeast as mentioned in your question), the same class of microorganisms that are found in ‘dahi.’

The predominating bacteria in the relevant early stages of fermentation have been found to be the ‘heterofermentative’ type like Leuconostoc mesenteroides, which produce carbon dioxide in addition to lactic acid, the acid found in dahi.

Homofermentative lactic acid bacteria produce only lactic acid. During the later stages of fermentation, the type of dominating bacteria change, but by then the batter is probably too sour. Good idli can be made only with batter fermented for a limited time.

The presence of yeasts has also been reported in the fermenting batter, but in the idli or dosa fermentation, the yeasts are more of a nuisance than helpful microbes. Anyhow, in the mildly acid environment created by lactic fermentation, growth of yeasts is probably suppressed to a great extent.
The bacteria responsible for the fermentation are naturally present on the ‘urad’ seeds, and no ‘starter’ is needed, unlike in making dahi.

Parboiled rice is needed, because the texture and taste of the idli or dosa made with plain rice is usually not satisfactory. Parboiling probably leads to partial breakdown of starch in the rice grains, changing the texture and taste.

Some people also add a handful of fenugreek seeds for soaking along with the urad.
As an aside, I might add my personal observation (not supported by definitive scientific evidence) that the dahi made in southern states of India usually seems to have quite a bit of carbon dioxide in it — ‘heterofermenative.’

It gives a lovely tingling sensation on the tongue. Dahi in the northern states is usually flat — does not have carbon dioxide in it.

The difference could be due to the type of bacteria prevalent, and also the type of milk used — ‘homogenised,’ buffalo milk, etc., as different from non-homogenised, and cow milk.

T. S. RAMAN
Retired Biochemist,
Indian Agricultural Research Institute, New Delhi

Friday 5 May 2017

Nanammal: The 97-year-old woman from Tamil Nadu who teaches yoga to 100 students

https://yourstory.com/2017/04/nanammal-yoga/?curator=alphaideas&utm_source=alphaideas

V. Nanammal is a 97-year-old woman from Coimbatore in Tamil Nadu. Even at her advanced age, Nanammal practices the art of yoga, and what’s more, also teaches it to other enthusiasts.

25 APRIL 2017



Possibly the oldest yoga instructor in India, Nanammal teaches yoga to more than 100 students on a daily basis, and her students include people from all age groups. Nanammal started to learn the basics of yoga from her father, who was a martial artist, from the early age of eight. Being a natural early riser, she drinks 500 ml of water as soon as she wakes up, and uses neem sticks to brush her teeth, and even carries a few when she goes out of town. She eats healthy food at all times of the day, like fruits, milk with honey, and turmeric powder.
Speaking with Deccan Chronicle, she said,
My husband was a Siddha practitioner and was into agriculture and cultivation. This is how my liking for naturopathy had its inception, even after my marriage. I never stopped practising yoga at any point in my life. That’s the secret of my health. The food I consumer every day is highly rich in fibre and calcium. I have kanji with a different vegetarian dish every day. All the vegetables we use are from our own farm.
According to a Deccan Herald report, Nanammal attempted to get on to the Guinness Book of World Records by teaching yoga to over 20,000 students and enthusiasts in Coimbatore. Right now, her objective is to create awareness among women, mainly girl students, about yoga techniques by going to various educational institutions to solve several health-related problems, especially after marriage. Her son, V. Ellusami, said,
She had rejected offers from several yoga federations across the world as she does not know English.
Around 600 students who learnt yoga from Nanammal are are now into yoga instruction all around the world. Right now, 36 members from her family are serious practitioners. Nanammal strongly conveys that there's never any excuse or limit if there is the right intent.

Why disrupted body clocks trigger liver cancer

Oncology and circadian rhythms
Shift work and jet lag can induce hepatic tumours. Here’s how



Dec 3rd 2016

DRINKING too much and eating too much are both good ways of getting liver cancer. But there is a third. The disrupted circadian rhythms caused by working shifts or crossing time zones also seem to induce the disease. Precisely how and why meddling with day and night cycles has such a dire effect on the liver remains an enigma, but a study just published in Cancer Cell by Loning Fu and David Moore at the Baylor College of Medicine, in Texas, sheds some light on the matter.

Among the liver’s many jobs is making bile, a substance secreted into the intestine to break down the fats and oils in food. One of bile’s main components is bile acid, a derivative of cholesterol. Dr Fu and Dr Moore knew from their previous research that disrupting the circadian rhythms of mice causes the rodents’ livers to overproduce this substance. They also knew that liver cancer commonly appears in mice engineered to lack certain genes required for the management of day-night cycles. This led them to suspect a link between liver cancer and too much bile acid. To take a closer look, they set up an experiment.

Working with a team of colleagues, the two researchers studied mice that had had their day-night cycles disrupted. A group of 80 of the animals which had previously lived on a cycle of 12 hours in light and 12 hours in darkness had the lights kept on, on one occasion, for 20 hours, instead. Three days later they were again subjected to four hours of darkness rather than 12. This alternation, at three-day intervals, was then kept up for 30 weeks. A group of 110 mice, meanwhile, were maintained on a constant 12-hour cycle as a control.

After 12 weeks, and again after 30 weeks, the team killed some of the rodents in order to look at their livers. They found that the livers of animals on the disrupted schedule had accumulated fat and showed evidence of damage. In particular, they overproduced bile acid. Eventually, after 90 weeks, they killed and examined the remaining animals. Just under 9% of the cycle-disrupted mice, they discovered, had developed liver cancer. None of the control mice had done so.

In need of regeneration

The probable cause of these differences emerged when the researchers ran two similar follow-up experiments using genetically engineered mice. Some of the mice lacked the gene needed to make the constitutive androstane receptor (CAR), a molecule involved in clearing away bile acid. This gene is activated when levels of bile acid get too high. CAR molecules help liver tissue to regenerate, since excess acid damages tissue, inhibiting regeneration. However, the cellular proliferation associated with regeneration is the sort of thing that can sometimes get out of hand and lead to cancer.

Other mice Dr Fu and Dr Moore looked at lacked a different gene, for a receptor molecule called FXR. This keeps bile-acid production under control in the first place.

In their experiment the researchers found that in mice lacking the gene for CAR, neither those with disrupted day-night cycles nor those used as controls developed liver cancer. In contrast, even if their day-night cycles were uninterrupted almost 30% of mice lacking FXR developed liver cancer. Among those with interrupted cycles the figure was above 60%. On the basis of these results Dr Fu and Dr Moore suggest that developing either a drug that blocks the activity of CAR, to stop cell proliferation, or one that activates FXR, to decrease bile-acid production, could save shift workers and frequent flyers from the threat of liver cancer.

This article appeared in the Science and technology section of the print edition under the headline "Zoned out"

Wednesday 3 May 2017

Salt - too less is a problem; too much is a problem; ideal is between 3 grams to 5 grams


Scientific establishment got it all wrong about Salt, just like it got it all wrong about Fat. 

Salt - too less is a problem.
       - too less salt leads to high blood pressure & cardiovascular disease
       - sodium primarily helps by preventing infection
       - most of the sodium is stored in the skin, just under the skin
       - in an experiment, a dog's left leg was injured, after few hours most of the sodium got                    concentrated near the site of injury. Why? To prevent infection.
   
Just like most other nutritional things, too less is bad and too much is bad. e.g. Salt, Thyroid harmones

Did you know that driving your Sodium too low by limiting salt and drinking a lot of fluids is potentially fatal while it would be almost impossible to consume enough salt to kill yourself.  Every year numerous people, mainly babies given too much water, athletes who overhydrate and college students who drink too much beer kill themselves by driving their salt too low.  It’s called “Water Intoxication”.

http://borntoeatmeat.com/?p=441