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Bill's Fruit
Smoothie
In which Thomas Edison stands in for your molars.
1 small can (6 oz) frozen orange juice 1/2 bag (8 oz) frozen
unsweetened strawberries 2 tsp raw hulled sunflower seeds 2
tbsp raw unhulled sesame seeds* 1 tsp flaxseed oil or
3 tbsp flax seed** 1 tsp Red Star T6635+ Nutritional
Yeast*** 1/2 raw carrot
Optional and not included in analysis:
2 tbsp Naturade Soy Free Protein Booster 1 Nature's Life Mega-Vita-Min
tablet 1 Country Life
Maxi-Cal Calcium tablet 1 Country Life 500 mg Rutin**** tablet 1 Kal 50
mg zinc tablet 
Place the O.J. concentrate in your industrial strength blender (a
Vita-Mix or a concrete mixer will also do), add 2 cups water and
begin to blend. Add remaining ingredients and continue 5-10 minutes
until mixture is creamy and as smooth as a milkshake. It's a handy
lunch in a thermos for those on the go and I must admit it's my
standard breakfast in spite of its high fat content. The analysis
table below shows it to be more nutritious than a milkshake,
although it is high in fat due to the sunflower and sesame seeds
which contain natural poly- and mono-unsaturated plant fat. Those
concerned with weight loss should approach this one cautiously.
NUTRIENT
ANALYSIS
| % of Calories from: |
Recommended Daily Allowance |
Smoothie |
Milkshake (for comparison only) |
| Carbohydrate |
60%-80% |
45% |
70% |
| Fat |
10%-20% |
45% |
20% |
| Protein |
10%-20% |
10% |
10% |
| Satiety Index (Wt/Cal |
>1 |
.63 |
.84 |
|
%RDA/Calorie |
| -linolenic acid** (gm) |
~2.4 |
163% |
320% |
| Calcium (Mg) |
800 |
214% |
306% |
| Cholesterol (mg) |
<300 |
0 |
|198| |
| Fiber (gm) |
22 |
184% |
21% |
| Folate (ug) |
400 |
720% |
51% |
| Iron (mg) |
18 |
202% |
38% |
| Magnesium (mg) |
350 |
310% |
106% |
| Potassium (mg) |
2000 |
276% |
207% |
| Phosphorus (mg) |
1200 |
205% |
292% |
| Riboflavin (mg) |
1.6 |
743% |
317% |
| Thiamin (mg) |
1.4 |
1090% |
79% |
| Vitamin A (RE) |
1000 |
121% |
59% |
| Vitamin B12 (ug) |
3 |
360% |
292% |
| Vitamin B6 (mg) |
2.2 |
687% |
29% |
| Vitamin E (mg) |
10 |
265% |
39% |
| Vitamin C (mg) |
60 |
1700% |
0% |
| Zinc (mg) |
15 |
144% |
74% |
*Unhulled (brown) sesame seeds contain 1100 mg of calcium per 100
grams. The calcium RDA is ~ 800 mg.
Some thoughts on fatty acids and flaxseed
oil:
**-linolenic acid (ALA) is one of two essential fatty acids (EFA)
in the human diet, the other being linoleic acid (LA).20 ALA is the
first of the omega-3 fatty acids from which is made eicosapentaenoic
acid (EPA), the famous ingredient in fish oil believed to reduce
coronary risk, and docosahexaenoic acid (DHA) which is an important
component in brain and nervous system cell membranes. Linoleic acid
(LA) is the other essential fatty acid and it is plentiful in most
grains. Both EPA and DHA can be formed in the human body from ALA,
but since ALA is synthesized only in green plant cells, most humans,
including traditional vegetarians, get marginal amounts of ALA since
they eat more grains than greens. Flaxseed oil is 100% fat, which is
bad, but the ALA content of 1 tsp probably justifies its use. Better
yet, use raw whole flaxseed since it's all going in the blender
anyway.
No Recommended Dietary Allowance (RDA) has been officially been
set for these fatty acids, however, "On the basis of the available
evidence, 0.5 to 1 en% of n-3 PUFA in a diet with 5 to 10 en%
linoleic acid seems to be an adequate level of EFA intake for
humans, which also covers increased EFA requirements during
pregnancy, lactation, and infancy." This means that in a 2200
Calorie day's food supply about .5%-1% of Calories should come from
ALA which means 22 Calories or 22/93D2.4 gms of ALA/day. This is the
RDA I have used in the above Nutrient Analysis.
***Red Star T6635+ Nutritional Yeast is available in the bulk
section of most health food stores. Yeast does not synthesize
vitamin B12 (cobalamin) but B12 from bacterial culture has been
added to this brand of yeast, so it is one of the few dependable
non-animal sources of vitamin B12, aside from B12 injections,
tablets, and multivitamin pills.
****Rutin is a plant flavonoid which strengthens skin
capillaries. I recommend it to older patients whose skin is easily
bruised and torn.
A Few Words About
Blenders
While raw fooders may argue that blenderized raw foods are not
really raw, the flip side is that a vegan diet is full of
indigestible fiber (made of cellulose) and that all plant cell
membranes are protected by a cell wall made of this tough stuff.
Perhaps the best dietary pattern is day long grazing but for those
who don't have the time to chew every morsel until it has become
microscopic in size, a blender is a useful tool.
Digestion depends on enzymes and the efficiency with which
enzymes digest food strongly depends on the surface area of the
swallowed food. Surface area is greatly increased by chewing or
grinding the food and the increase is roughly proportional to the
cube root of the number [(n)^1/3] of fragments made from the
original food item. Thus if a roughly spherical Macadamia nut is
broken by the blender blades into one thousand idealized spherical
particles the total exposed surface area is 10 times that of the
original nut. If n goes to a million particles the surface area
becomes 100 times greater, for n 3D one billion 1,000 times greater,
etc. By increasing surface area in this way digestion is greatly
aided by increasing the chances for an enzyme to reach it's
appropriate food substrate.
There may now be better blenders than the Vita-Mix on the market,
but I've had one for ~ 30 years now and have found that on the rare
occasions when it goes on the blink, there is really no substitute
to be found among the usual department store blenders. The most
digestible smoothie has no discernible particles left in it, they've
all been reduced to the consistency of milk. To achieve this effect
one needs not only a very strong blender but the ability to balance
added water so that the resulting smoothie is like milk. Too much
water and there's a loss of flavor and left over particles that
escaped the spinning blade; not enough and your tongue will report
that there are still particles present, and that means reduced
surface area for digestive enzymes to interact with.
A Few Words About
Fat
This recipe is high in fat, 45% of Calories by analysis. I do not
hold with the high carbohydrate, low fat school of vegetarian
nutrition and feel that while animal fat, hydrogenated fat, and most
vegetable oils are unhealthy, the natural plant fats in raw nuts,
seeds, and avocados have been shown to lower cholesterol levels,
provide the two essential fatty acids, and to help satisfy fat
cravings. In short, I think that by demonizing all fat we have
missed the real target which is animal source and processed foods in
general, rather than obsessive ratios of protein, fat, and
carbohydrate.
Refs:
1. The USDA Nutrient Database for Standard Reference, Release
13.
2. Modern nutrition in health and disease. Edited by Maurice E.
Shils, James A. Olson, Moshe Shike-8th ed.
ISBN 0-8121-1485-X (set). Library of Congress 92-49855. Lea &
Febiger. P.O. Box 3024200 Chester Field Parkway
Malvern, PA 19355-9725. U.S.A. Eighth Edition,
1994 |