Friday, June 13, 2008

The Need for Seaweed

Hijiki, wakame, kombu, nori...usually if I can't pronounce it, I don't eat it. But in the case of sea vegetables, I have to eat my words.

Like most normal people, when I think of vegetables I think of tractors and dirt and farms and all things earthly. Being macro has challenged that paradigm for me by opening my mind (and mouth) to the fruits of the sea.

Since we have cut out or dramatically reduced meat and dairy products and heaped up on whole grains and vegetables we have been enjoying more varied, complex proteins and carbohydrates. The thing that vegans and macros need to watch out for is deficiency in essential minerals and proteins. Whole grains cover many of these, but tacking on sea vegetables to your diet can give true balance to a no-meat and dairy diet.

Seafood is ancient, one of the first forms of life on earth, according to some, and is full of many of the bountiful minerals the ocean stores.
According to Sundance Natural Foods, 1/4 cup of cooked hijiki contains over half the calcium found in a cup of milk and more iron than in an egg, important concerns for vegans, those who refrain from eating any animal-based products. They also contain vitamins A, B1, C and E, as well as protein and carbohydrates. The Eden Foods wakame sea vegetables we buy give us 100% of our iodine, 8% of our calcium and 30% of our magnesium in just one serving—plus it's a natural source of unprocessed sodium.

One of seaweed's most astounding and valuable health benefits is its ability to remove radioactive strontium and other heavy metals from our bodies. Sundance Natural Foods reports that whole brown seaweeds (not granulated) including kelp contain alginic acid which binds with the toxins in the intestines rendering them indigestible and carries them out of the system.

While it definitely pushes my comfort zone at the moment, eating more seafood is something that I am committed to. The first step toward change is knowledge, and with this valuable information, it will be hard to NOT eat more seaweed.

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