Title: Resveratrol has been shown to prevent blood clotting an
1EATING HEALTHILY, AND WELL
THIERRY JUGNET, CHEF-OWNER, MOSAIC CUSINE AND
CAFÉ
2LETS TALK ABOUT
The Green Movement How It Began A brief
history of eating cave people to the modern
era What caused the Green Movement?
3LETS TALK ABOUT
How do we eat healthily? Organic, or not?
Is wine fine? Nitrates and nitrites How
does food affect our carbon footprint?
4LETS TALK ABOUT
- How should we prepare our food?
- Controlling portions
- A well-balanced plate carbs, proteins, and
fats - Eating seasonally, eating locally
5An Environmentalist
6Were the Cave People Our First Environmentalists?
7What Did Cave People Eat?
8Heres What Cave People Didnt Eat
- Potatoes (less than 11,000 years old)?
- Cereal grains (rice, wheat, barley, corn)?
- Dairy products
- Refined sugar products
- Distilled alcohol
- Fruit bred for high sugar content
- Large amounts of salt
- Foods that required cooking
9The Diet of The Cave People
- Higher in protein
- Higher protein to fat ratio
- Less saturated fat
10If they lived near water
11Fruits and Berries
12Nuts and Seeds
- a good source of proteins and fats
13Root Vegetables
- Rutabagas
- Onions
- Turnips
- Carrots.
14Grains and Fibers
15Eggs
16We Discover Cooking
- 10,000 Years Ago
- Cooking had a profound effect on our diets.
- Cooking foods made them much more edible and
digestible. - The heat destroyed any toxins.
- We began mixing foods eggs and grains.
- Food could be stored for longer periods.
17Our food was also the seeds of the plants. We
began to farm. Agriculture was born.
18Dairy Enters Our Diets
19Were our genes ready for Dairy?Or Salt? Or Sugar?
20Not So Good Substances
21Not So Good Substances
22Lets Look at More Current Times
- The New Environmentalism
- International events
- Catastrophic weather/climate change
- September 11th
- Wars, gas shortages
- Scientific consensus about environmental concerns
23What Does Organic Mean?
- Grown without the use of pesticides, synthetic
fertilizers, sewage sludge, genetically modified
organisms, or ionizing radiation. - Animals do not take antibiotic or growth
hormones.
24Organic? Or Not?
Before a product can be labeled organic --
Government-approved certifier inspects the
farm. Makes sure the farmer is following all
USDA standards. Companies that handle or
process organic food before it gets to your local
super- market or restaurant must be certified.
25Understanding Organic
- 100 Organic Made with 100 organic ingredients
- Organic Made with at least 95 organic
ingredients - Made with Organic Ingredients A minimum of 70
organic ingredients with strict restrictions on
the remaining 30, including no genetically
modified organisms (GMOs)?
26Why Do Organics Cost More?
Organic farmers dont receive federal
subsidies. Organic farming is more labor
intensive. Organic farms--- --are often
smaller. --do not benefit from economies of
scale, like larger growers.
27Is Organic Food More Nutritious?
- No definitive research.
- Some organic foods have been shown to have
higher nutritional values. - Some organic tomatoes have higher levels of
phytochemicals and vitamin C.
(University of California, Davis)?
28Does Organic Food Taste Better?
29Is Wine Fine?
30Safe and Effective Drinking
- Men No more than two glasses of wine per day
- Women No more than one drink per day
- One drinka 5-ounce glass of red or white wine,
12 ounces of regular beer, or 1.5 ounces of
80-proof distilled spirits.
31Health Benefits of Wine
Moderate amounts of alcohol can raise good
cholesterol and thin the blood. Resveratrol has
been shown to prevent blood clotting and plaque
formation. Red wine provides much more
resveratrol compared to white wine.
32Nitrates and Nitrites
Nitrate (NO3) is a form of nitrogen combined
with oxygen. It can be converted in the body to
nitrite (NO2). The major adult intake of nitrate
is from food rather than water -- but sometimes
excessive amounts of nitrate get into drinking
water. Typical sources of nitrate include
sewage disposal systems, run-off from barnyards
or fertilized fields, industrial wastes, or
nitrates that are naturally occurring in the
soil. Nitrate contamination can be related to
human, animal, or industrial waste practices.
33What isA Carbon Footprint?
34Your Carbon Footprint
The direct effect your actions and
lifestyle have on the environment in terms of
carbon dioxide emissions.
35Travel is a big contributor.
36All our actions have a direct or indirect impact,
including our diet, and the clothes we wear.
Here are just a few examples
37Trash
38Cans
39Overloading
40Public Transport
41Trash and Land Fills
42How Does This Relate to Our Food?
We are what we eat. Eating less meat and
dairy products may be a more effective way for us
to lower food related climate impact.
43Eating Local Food
- Shifting to an entirely local diet would reduce
the equivalent greenhouse gas emissions by as
much as driving 1,000 miles. - Changing only one day per weeks meat and
dairy-based calories to chicken, fish or
vegetables would have a similar impact. - Moving from the American diet with predominant
meat -- to a vegetable-based diet would reduce
the emissions by 8,000 miles per year.
44The Cold Facts
- The food we consume contributes to climate
change. - The production, packaging and transportation of
food consumes energy and results in carbon
emissions which threaten to raise average global
surface temperatures. - Our current food system and food choices are
largely responsible for exacerbating the global
climate crisis.
45And more
- Ten thousand small to medium-sized organic farms
can emit as much as half the carbon dioxide as
chemical farms because they use less fossil
fuel energy. - In fact, 10,000 medium-sized organic farms can
store as much carbon in the soil as we would save
if we took one million cars off the road.
46The Mediterranean Diet
- A truly healthy way of eating.
- Breads, grains, legumes, fresh vegetables and
fruits, rice, pasta, seafood, nuts, olive oil - The everyday use of natural fresh local seasonal
plant foods that gently balance the intake of
fish, meat and poultry.
47The Mediterranean Diet
- A wide range of dishes, including meat recipes,
fish and seafood prepared with fresh and seasonal
seafoods from the Mediterranean. - The ingrained habit of sitting at a table in
company to eat three meals each day, for which at
least two are cookedbased on warm dishes, not
raw food. Eating and socializing go hand in hand.
48Joyful Eating
49Enjoyment
50A Relaxed Spirit
51Mosaic Cuisine and Cafe
52Mosaic Cuisine and Cafe
53Mosaic Cuisine and Cafe
54Thanks, and Bon Appétit!