Hi all,
For conventional coffee, the beans are roasted, then ground and then
steeped/percolated. So, it is a food that is really cooked, and cooked
twice, once with roasting, once with steeping. Even with cold water
steeping, the food is far from raw. While I will infrequently have
coffee in some dish I cook, I dislike coffee for health reasons because
it is such a strong substance.
To my clients, I always suggest to people to cut it out by cutting back
as quickly as is comfortable, and if they still really want a hot
caffeinated drink, try green tea. While not the greatest health-wise, I
believe it is far less injurious than coffee, has some caffeine, and
most report a boost from it. It also has anti-cancer properties and
won't upset a sensitive stomach.
IMO the temporary energy increase that is sought by coffee drinkers
simply shows that they aren't really very well. I believe high energy
is natural on a raw diet or mostly raw foods diet, and is dampened
considerably by eating cooked foods excessively.
regards
r
Jon Stubbs wrote:
> I debated with myself whether or not this is relavent to raw fooders. But
>I rationalized: if anyone is trying to cut back on coffee or wants a milder
> coffee beverage that is less cooked, this might be helpful. If you have
> managed to quit coffee, this is no reason to start again!! It may be a bit
> like a caffeine patch.
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