Paleo Magazine Express September 2015 | Page 6

Dirt Eirik G na ar s A A MISSING COMPONENT OF THE MODERN DIET s Paleo dieters know, some food groups are healthier than others. However, it could be argued that factors such as preparation methods, processing techniques, pasture fed versus grain fed, or full fat versus low fat are in some ways even more important than which food groups you eat—as long as you stick with a whole-foods dietary template, of course. This might sound a bit exaggerated, but if we look at how healthy human populations around the world have eaten, it quickly becomes clear that we are an extremely adaptable species. Non-modernized cultures have thrived on everything from diets very high in carbohydrates to almost exclusively meat-based diets.1,2 The primary differences between the foods that were consumed in nonmodernized, traditional cultures and those we eat in today’s Westernized world are that isolated, healthy populations—such as those studied by Dr. Weston A. Price— ate food of extremely high quality, and they put far more emphasis on processing and preparing their food correctly, using techniques such as lacto-fermentation to make grains, legumes, fruits and vegetables more shelf stable and easier to digest. The transition from traditional to modern food is clearly visible when you take a trip through your local grocery store. Kefir made from raw, grass-fed, full-fat milk fermented with real kefir grains has been replaced with kefir made from pasteurized, homogenized, grain-fed, fat-reduced milk fermented by the use of a starter culture; sourdough oatmeal bread is replaced with massive amounts of wheat products; and animal products from wild and pasture-fed animals are replaced with meat from livestock that have been raised on unnatural food and injected with hormones and antibiotics. I’m exaggerating to make a point, as most of 6 September 2015 eNewsletter us do have access to food that is more in line with the types of foods we’ve eaten throughout most of our evolutionary history. However, when we look at the world’s population and the modern food environment as a whole, it’s clear that we’ve largely disconnected ourselves from the past. So, to find a healthy eating pattern, we can’t simply discuss which food groups we should include in our diet; we habitat of one of the last hunter-gatherer communities on earth, the Hadza. Although most of the Hadza people have now transitioned over to a more modern lifestyle, there are still some who stick to the old ways of doing things. They gather honey when possible, do persistence hunting to chase down prey, and eat fruits, vegetables and berries that are available in the wild. Although not a perfect imitation of the African Paleolithic man, these people give us a glimpse of how our prehistoric ancestors lived. There are many things we can learn from the Hadza, one being that an ancestral African lifestyle often includes massive exposure to microbes. When the Hadza men are out hunting, women spend their time digging for underground storage organs. Although not as highly valued as meat and honey, tubers rich in prebiotic fibers are relatively easy to gather, and they constitute a large part of the Hadza diet. These women definitely get their hands dirty—a “dirtiness” that seems to be one of the characteristics of the Hadza lifestyle. As Jeff Leach of the Human Food COMPARED TO RELATIVELY RECENT INTRODUCTIONS TO THE HUMAN DIET, SUCH AS CONTROLLED LACTOFERMENTED FOODS AND SOAKED AND SPROUTED GRAINS, THE DAILY INGESTION OF DIRT IS AS ANCIENT AS CAN BE. also have to look at the hints evolution gives us about other aspects of human nutrition. This brings us to the topic of today’s article. When most people think about eating healthfully, soil and bacteria are usually not the first things that come to mind—but I’ll argue that they should be. We’ve already discussed briefly how food quality, preparation and preservation methods, and processing techniques have changed since the pre-industrial days. There’s another transition that might be just as important, but typically receives little attention—the transition from eating “dirty” food to eating “clean” food. Our Dirty Ancestors Compared to relatively recent introductions to the human diet, such as controlled lacto-fermented foods and soaked and sprouted grains, the daily ingestion of dirt is as ancient as can be. In the Paleolithic era, hunter-gatherers lived in close contact with the natural environment, and hand sanitizers, shampoo, washing machines, bar soaps and large apartment buildings were nowhere to be found. Let’s for a moment diverge far from the modern world, into the African Project has reported, the Hadza even eat the intestines of the animals they kill, and sometimes “wash” their hands with the stomach contents. This behavior really highlights the difference between microbial exposure in an ancestral environment and in the modern world. It’s simply impossible to avoid getting a daily dose of dirt through your diet when you rarely wash your hands, dig up and eat tubers with clinging soil, and generally live in close proximity to nature. One might suspect that these behaviors would lead to frequent infections and increased mortality rates, but what the data show is that although infants in hunter-gatherer populations can be vulnerable to certain parasites and other pathogenic microbes they pick up from the environment, the general theme is that dirt is good for us.3,5 At least, that is, “old dirt.” Because this is really where the problem lies. In the modern world, factors such as pollution, conventional farming methods and widespread use of biocides have changed the soil microbiome, and for people living in less-developed countries, the combination of malnutrition, dysbiosis and exposure to pathogens can sometimes be deadly.