Monday 5 February 2018

Variety = Diversity

Health experts agree that diversity of gut microbes is essential for good health*.

Research Microbiologist Kiran Krishnan, tells us that:

"Diversity of bacteria in your gut is controlled by diversity of food in your diet."


Kiran says that early humans consumed upwards of 600 different foods in a year but the average healthy Westerner eats maybe 15-20!  He suggests that to get more variety in our diet, we not always shop at the supermarket but sometimes go to Chinese or Asian grocery stores to source different types and varieties of vegetables.

I find different types and varieties of vegetables by shopping at my local farmer's market because they grow the varieties of vegetables that do well in my local area. These are generally tropical or Asian varieties and very different from the regular vegetables sold in the big chain supermarkets.

One particular farmer at my local market specialises in sprouts. She tells me about the different weird and wonderful sprouts she has on offer. Sometimes they are sprouts from relatively common vegetables like snow peas or red cabbage, and sometimes they are foreign varieties of vegetables. Most of the time I don't remember exactly what they are but I try a different one each week.
Red cabbage sprouts - I think!

Dr Frank Lipman also tells us that to create a diverse bacterial gut you need to eat lots of different foods, especially vegetables:

"Eat lots of different types of vegetables, eat lots of different types of foods. The more diverse your diet, the more diverse that food is going to be for the bacteria. What you feed your bacteria and how you treat your bacteria is going to create a more diverse microbiome."

"I always tell my patients to eat the stalks and the stems, because that's the fibre that your body doesn't break down properly and bacteria love that."

I find a good way to do this is to pop chopped up stems of vegetables like cauliflower, broccoli and kale into casseroles or bolognaise.

Dr Frank Lipman - Broken Brain documentary series 

Related posts:
It's All About the Gut

~ take every opportunity to put the good stuff in ~
This blog is about me, what I'm doing, what's working for me, and what's not. It includes my experiences and opinions. It is for general information only and is in no way intended to replace the advice of a health care professional.