Are Sprouted, Soaked, & Fermented Grains Healthy?

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Are sprouted, soaked and fermented grains healthy
Wellness Mama » Blog » Health » Are Sprouted, Soaked, & Fermented Grains Healthy?

Grains are a controversial food in modern times, and perhaps with good reason. They aren’t the food they were thousands of years ago, or hundreds of years ago, or even 50 years ago.

Are All Grains Bad?

Maybe you’ve wondered why grains have become so controversial when people from other countries (usually Asia and Italy are mentioned here) are able to eat them regularly while staying thin and living long lives. There are actually several factors that seem to contribute here, including genetics, other dietary differences, and a vast difference in the actual grains themselves.

Also- while grain consumption is an inherently irrelevant statistic when it comes to both weight and longevity,  if you want a statistically valid comparison, squatting while using the restroom actually seems to be one of the best predictors…

Even in the health community, there is a split between WAPF (Weston A. Price Foundation) followers and the Paleo/Primal/Low Carb group on the health and necessity of grains and if they should be eaten at all. Within these groups, there is disagreement among which grains are healthy and how they should be prepared.

While there is certainly a case to be made for avoiding modern grains for a variety of reasons, there are also traditional preparation methods that cultures have used for thousands of years to help reduce the not-so-great properties of grains and make them more bioavailable. Among these traditional methods are soaking, sprouting or fermenting (or a combination of all three).

What are Soaked, Sprouted or Fermented Grains?

All grains have various properties that protect them in the plant world and allow them to survive to produce seed. In animals, these protective features are often claws, teeth, sharp spines, venomous fangs, etc, or the ability to run away and escape enemies, but plants protective features tend to be a lot more subtle.

Since plants aren’t able to fight or evade, their protective mechanisms are less noticeable. Plants like poison ivy or poison oak have obvious protective mechanisms like the itch-inducing oils on their leaves.

The protective mechanisms of those amber waves of grain are harder to identify externally. These crops are often eaten by animals, so their protection lies in the ability of their seeds (the “grain” itself) to pass through the animal and emerge on the other side as a pre-fertilized seed, ready to grow.

Plants accomplish this through the presence of gluten, other lectins, enzyme inhibitors and phytic acid which allow the grains to pass through the digestive system without harm to the plant. (note: Phytic acid is especially damaging to bone and tooth health and has been linked to tooth decay) These indigestible compounds are great for ensuring the plants continued fertility, but they can be harmful to humans, especially in large amounts.

These natural protective compounds in plants can be harmful to humans, especially in large amounts, and especially for those with an underlying genetic or health issue. Thankfully, there are methods that help break down these protective compounds and make the nutrients in grains more available during digestion.

Soaking, Sprouting and Fermenting

Traditional cultures where grains were consumed regularly or in large amounts found ways to reduce the harmful components through methods like soaking, sprouting and fermenting.

These methods are designed to do what our body can’t and break down the anti-nutrients (gluten, lectin, phytic acid, etc) in grains so that they are more digestible to humans. Evidence shows that these methods do indeed make the nutrients in grains much more bioavailable and reduce the anti-nutrient properties.

These methods rely on using an acidic medium in liquid to soak the grains, a constructive environment to soak them and let them sprout, or a process like sourdough fermentation to alter the chemical make-up of the grain.

Sadly, most grains consumed these days are not prepared in any of traditional ways, and many cultures have largely given up these methods in the name of modern convenience. Yet, science is starting to understand the wisdom of these older methods and to realize that newer, more convenient forms of processing may not only be making grains harder to digest, but may be contributing to micronutrient deficiencies.

Are Soaked, Sprouted and Fermented Grains Healthy?

From a nutrient perspective, grains prepared in these ways have much higher nutrient levels and lower anti-nutrient levels than grains that are just ground into flour and baked, but should they be eaten?

The question remains, do these methods reduce the harmful properties enough to make these modern grains safe to consume. Unfortunately, with hybridized, highly sprayed and highly processed modern grains, there isn’t an easy answer and even these traditional methods may not be enough to reduce all of the harmful properties in these foods.

Mark Sisson sums up the effects of soaking and sprouting in his article about traditionally prepared grains:

Effect on phytate: If the grain contains phytase, some of the mineral-binding phytic acid will be deactivated, but not much. And if the grain has been heat-treated, which destroys phytase, or it contains very little phytase to begin with, the phytic acid will remain completely intact. Overall, neither soaking nor sprouting deactivates a significant amount of phytate.

Effect on enzyme inhibitors: Well, since the seed has been placed in a wet medium and allowed to sprout, the enzyme inhibitors are obviously mostly deactivated. Digestion is much improved (cooking will improve it further).

Effect on lectins: The evidence is mixed, and it seems to depend on the grain. Sprouted wheat, for example, is extremely high in WGA, the infamous wheat lectin. As the wheat grain germinates, the WGA is retained in the sprout and is dispersed throughout the finished plant. In other grains, sprouting seems more beneficial, but there’s always some residual lectins that may need further processing to deactivate.

Effect on gluten: Sprouting reduces gluten to some extent, but not by very much. Don’t count on it. A little bit goes a long way.

Adding fermentation to the mix reduces the harmful properties even more, but does not completely render them harmless.

The presence of these anti-nutrients in all grains also explains why people who avoid wheat for health reasons but still consume “gluten-free” foods may still have health problems. Wheat is definitely at the more dangerous end of the grain spectrum for those with certain health issues, but other modern grains aren’t harmless by a long shot, and many of them are higher in simple starches than wheat.

So, Should We Eat Them?

Certainly, these methods of preparation do improve the nutrient profile of grains, but this still doesn’t mean that sprouted, soaked, or fermented grains are as healthy as they once were or that they should be consumed in large amounts. Many modern grains have been hybridized to be higher yield, but less nutritious. Additionally, many grains are highly sprayed right before harvest, and these chemicals remain in the processed grain or flour and traditional methods of preparation will not remove them.

Certainly, if you consume grains, it would be best to use these traditional methods (preferably all three) and to mill flour yourself using ancient grains that have been grown organically and not hybridized to reduce nutrition.

It is also important to note that there are no nutrients in grains, even traditionally prepared ones, that are not found in other foods, and many other foods are higher sources of nutrients than even traditionally prepared grains. As statistics show that we are not consuming enough vegetables, I’d personally focus on adding more vegetables to our diets for nutrients, rather than spending the extra time and money to make quality traditionally prepared grains.

It should be noted that all plant substances have properties that can make them harmful to humans in some way, but that it is much easier to reduce these harmful properties in other plants (cooking cruciferous vegetables like Broccoli and cauliflower, peeling and cooking sweet potatoes, etc).

Long story short- grains are far from a super food, especially modern grains that have been highly processed. Traditionally prepared grains are definitely a step in the right direction but they don’t compare to vegetables when it comes to nutrients. For those with a gut or autoimmune issue, even traditionally prepared grains can be problematic.

Anyone who doesn’t have any food related problems and that have excellent gut health may do great with soaked, sprouted or fermented grains, but I’d still recommend only adding these in after optimizing other aspects of the diet, increasing vegetable intake and making sure to get enough high quality proteins and fats.

There is also a definite difference between grains high in anti-nutrients like wheat, barley, etc and ones like white rice (not brown rice) which are naturally free of the more potent anti-nutrients like gluten) and which seem to be somewhat less harmful.

The other point worth mentioning is that even sprouted, soaked and fermented grains cause a spike in insulin and can inhibit weight loss and lead to other health problems if eaten in large amounts.

Summary

  • Yes, these methods do reduce the harmful properties but do not eliminate them. As grains still aren’t a stellar source of nutrition, even with all these elaborate preparation methods, and they can be/are harmful to many people.
  • For the little bit of nutrition they might provide, the benefit is still overshadowed by the harmful properties that still exist in small amounts (gluten, lectin, phytic acid, etc) and they take an extreme amount of preparation time and energy for this small amount of nutrition.
  • If you have a strong, healthy gut, eat an otherwise nutrient rich diet and go to these great lengths to properly prepare grains, you might be able to tolerate them occasionally, but why go through all the trouble when we live in a time where there is access to healthier foods (vegetables, meat, good fats, etc.).
  • In an age where we are bombarded by toxins in our air, water and food supply, removing grains (even traditionally prepared ones) is an easy step we can take to improve our health and to make room for other, more nutritious foods in our diets.
  • If a substance (in this case, grains) might be harmful for you to consume, and there are no negative effects of removing it, logically, it would be wise to avoid it.

What do you think? Do you consume sprouted, soaked, or fermented grains? Totally disagree with me? Share below!

Katie Wells Avatar

About Katie Wells

Katie Wells, CTNC, MCHC, Founder of Wellness Mama and Co-founder of Wellnesse, has a background in research, journalism, and nutrition. As a mom of six, she turned to research and took health into her own hands to find answers to her health problems. WellnessMama.com is the culmination of her thousands of hours of research and all posts are medically reviewed and verified by the Wellness Mama research team. Katie is also the author of the bestselling books The Wellness Mama Cookbook and The Wellness Mama 5-Step Lifestyle Detox.

Comments

202 responses to “Are Sprouted, Soaked, & Fermented Grains Healthy?”

  1. Cori Bernall Avatar
    Cori Bernall

    So I am wondering… Why are nuts better than grains if it is recommended that they are soaked? I have seen several articles lately that encourage soaking nuts. Thanks!

  2. Martin Avatar

    My understanding is that there is a big differencee between the benefits of consuming germinated seeds compared with “whole” grains. The minerals in particular are locked into the endosperm by phytic acid and as such are relatively poorly digested. When a seed germinates, the action of water to first of all expand the seed coat, allow more moisture and air in, stimulates on a very small scale fascinating activity where the phytic acid becomes phytase…an enzyme. This eventually allows the minerals to be changed from salts to chelated versions of the same minerals which themselves are easily absorbed. In the case of wheat, vitamin C levels can increase by 1000%! Finally I hope I’m right on this subject as I produced literally tons of germinated seeds over ten years, selling them here in the UK through a national chain of health food shops …who now sell minerals in plastic containers !

  3. Dale Anderson Avatar
    Dale Anderson

    This may be a stupid question but would soaking grains in Alkaline water neutralize phytic acid? There must be a way to fix this… there must be a way. Please say it isn’t so!!!!!!

    1. Travis Avatar

      Im not certain about soaking in Alkaline water. It’s not hard to make it acidic though, just add some lemon juice of vinegar. My water is slightly alkaline, but I add a bit of lemon juice and/or yogurt runoff(whey) and hope thats ok. Also if you soak grains/beans/whatever, save a bit of the soak water and add it to the next batch. H20 isn’t breaking down the phytates for the most part, its what lives in it. Sometimes we just have to make due with our location, abilities, and whats available. Side note, I also try to remove fluoride from my water by dissolving calcium(dolomite powder)in it. I cant afford(and it isnt always feasable )to bring a filter most of the time(most filter chlorine, but do nothing for fluoride). The calcium binds with the fluoride and settles out, and even if you ingest it, it wont bind to your bone/teeth calcium, it has already done that, and is is more inert.

  4. Rachel Avatar

    I’m curious… did any particular health issue spark your interest in nutrition? I find that people who come to it out of cardiovascular emergency tend toward the vegetarian side, where as those who come to it out of a candida/leaky gut or food allergy emergency are more likely to end up paleo or otherwise anti-grain. There are plenty of testimonies of relief from both sides, and I’m beginning to wonder if it really isn’t just dependent on your body type and/or moderation. I notice a big difference between when I’m eating or not eating refined carbs but if anything I feel better when I’m eating some “Ezekiel” bread and steal-cut oats (in addition to my modest servings of organic free-range/grass fed meat and eggs and piles of fruits and veggies). I have debated this issue with my mom (a near-vegan) and still don’t feel that my anti-grain and pro-meat arguments are iron-clad. Other factors aside, grains have more nutrients per calorie than meat or white potatoes (at least according to Dr. Fuhrman), so how do you know at what point the anti-nutrients cancel out those extra nutrients? I feel like I’m comparing apples and oranges when I try to compare grains with meats in any concrete, analytical fashion… can it really be done?

  5. Wanda Avatar

    I believe this information whole heartedly. Before becoming a vegetarian I ate meat and did not relay on meat substitute products that contain wheat gluten. Once I started eating veggie sausages or fake burgers I noticed I developed Hashimotos Thyroiditis. I really want to stay off grains and need help. What else must I delete from my diet?

  6. Ben Faust Avatar
    Ben Faust

    Meat is better for you than sprouted, cooked grains? I find that very hard to believe. Even lean meat makes the blood “fatty” for around four hours after consumption, during which time that fat floating around in the blood can cause issues. Your body also produces a large amount of acid while digesting it (which can take 24 hours), throwing off your PH balance and leaching calcium out of your bones. Excessive grain consumption obviously isn’t good, just like a lot of otherwise healthful things. I eat sprouted rice and natto (fermented beans) for breakfast mixed with raw vegetables (about a 30:70 ratio), and have seen an increase in energy and overall health, including weight loss, since doing so. Just cutting out all animal products has broken me out of the “can’t lose any more weight” rut. Of course, Los makes a very good point about different diets for different people.

  7. Los Avatar

    Listen, you cannot just begin categorizing all these foods as good or bad.
    First of all if you really want satisfy your body, schedule a blood test with your doctor and find out your blood type before going structuring your diets.

    You can’t just fill a plane with regular non leaded from exxon lol.
    Every person has a different blood type or a combination of them. For example I am blood type A and most red meats do not go with my blood type and do me more hard then good. I can eat fish and turkey but after that I basically reap maximum benefits from any nuts, grains and vegetable.

    In the stone age not all humans had the same diet. They ate what they had access to and this depended on their location. A good example is Italy current day, if you go to the cost you will barely see people eating any red meats. The majority of what they ate came from the sea and surrounding vegetation. Italians in the mainland would live primarily off of meats and grain and some veg. My point is in ancient times most groups of people living on the planet had VERY different diets.

    We are their ancestors and the proof is in our blood what they ate and those everyday food they consumed are what benefits you depending on your blood type.

    1. Wren Avatar

      Good point. I guess in the end, the factor of ‘what works best for ME’ (based on careful observation of self) must ALWAYS line every nutrition and health issue…

  8. Los Avatar

    Hi Wellness Mama,

    I think the content you are sharing to the public is great and the fact that you are exposing some grains and beans that have some negative impacts on the body.

    I come from a family of doctors and was raised by one. The doctors I am associated with are not your typical medical doctors. They utilize whole food supplements and organic ailments to treat most patients depending on their status. They resort to drug prescription and pain killers when the patient is in shock or suffering from high levels of pain.

    I want to share this companies website with you and the others of this board so that you can see what real medicine is. Comb through the website and read the ingredients for each product. This is the drug companies true fear.

    What is funny is you never hear about these kind of supplements only in Whole Food or in health shops that sell you the striped down versions. Now you can’t buy these products directly you have to get them from a doctor because you know if this was available to the masses that would destroy the drug companies but at the same time protects doctors such my family that practice

    1. MARIA Avatar

      HI…Thank you but you didn’t include the website. Could you include it..

    1. Wellness Mama Avatar
      Wellness Mama

      Yes, but they are also better soaked and dehydrated

      1. Fowler Avatar

        How on earth are they ok to eat, when they *also* have phytic acid in them – in fact, if you google, often MORE than the average grain?? This is inconsistent….I’m very baffled…..if one should avoid the enzyme inhibitors and anti-nutrients in grains and just eat higher and richer sources of nutrients and iron and whatever else you need week to week (which thanks to your very helpful articles here. I’m starting to accept I’ll have to do – sprouting/fermenting freak here!) – one should also. in the same breath. avoid nuts entirely (soaked or not) – as well – right?? :S (Or to be more precise, just have the riiiight little amount that you should and not have it above that ‘healthy’ amount…)

        Result from a quick googling of ‘nuts phytic acid’: https://chriskresser.com/another-reason-you-shouldnt-go-nuts-on-nuts/

        1. Shannon Avatar

          Exactly. Sorry, but I can find a ton of research to say that grains are NOT bad for you. Really you can pick what you want to believe and then find research to back it up, because there is so much research out there that contradicts itself.

  9. Elaine Avatar
    Elaine

    I have been taking Barley Gold…tell me what do you think of this product?

      1. Elaine Avatar
        Elaine

        So you have head of Barley Gold..they say that there is no phytic acid ..they have neutralized it all.???

      2. Kris Kramer Avatar
        Kris Kramer

        I realize this is a really old post, but I’m reading it now and was about to order a Barley powder mix to aid with chronic constipation. I already ferment my own vegies, made and drink beet kvass, ingest coconut oil, etc. Still having trouble. Any reason you wouldn’t take a Barley product?

  10. Kristen Avatar

    Very interesting, I’ve been gluten-free for awhile and mostly grain-free to help bring down my inflammation/leaky gut from chronic stress. Would brown rice syrup have these anti-nutrients as well? Or just unfavorably spike insulin? Thanks

      1. Tanja Odzak-Goppold Avatar
        Tanja Odzak-Goppold

        and the arsenic.

        depending on how much brown rice anything you intake on a daily basis.

    1. karuna Avatar

      ” Would brown rice syrup have these anti-nutrients as well?”

      Can’t find the answer to this question ANYWHERE. Its really irritating.

  11. Stefa folle Avatar
    Stefa folle

    I have been trying to eliminate grains and realised quickly that I cannot afford this diet!
    Anyone has good recommendations on books for soaking,sprouting and fermenting grains?

    1. Poppin Avatar

      A great book with lots of traditional food recipes(including soaking and sprouting), as well as interesting tidbits, is “Nourishing Traditions” by Sally Fallon. I personally have found it helpful in clarifying these most disputed questions(fermented dairy, properly prepared grains) as well as making yummy food.

  12. Nellie Ann Avatar
    Nellie Ann

    I work on a mill, and I found this really interesting. We feature and greatly encourage gluten-free products. As a girl of the great American Heartland, it is hard to stop eating wheat. I want to make the switch to gluten free, but I have a taste for wheat products and I know how to use them better. Do you have the sources (studies/stats/journals) that you got this info, so I can learn more?

  13. Mary Avatar

    yes, i do. Jesus ate grain, so did almost all of our ancestors. i always use sprouted nuts/flours/seeds/beans – but i think that eliminating all of these if you are having no health problems and enjoy them constitutes an excessive pre-occupation with the health of the body. i have great gut health, eat grains or beans with every meal and have zero belly fat after having 3 kids (and one is only 5 months). i’m northern european. and i second the GAPS link that is rarely talked about. few understand digestion like dr. cambell and she approves of both grain and pork in a healthy gut, and nuts for even an unhealthy one.

    1. Felicia Alvarez Avatar
      Felicia Alvarez

      The grains of Bible time are very different genetically from the grains of today. Now they have been selectively bred to not only be shorter for ease of harvest but to contain even higher levels of phytates and other anti-nutrient because these protect against crop damage by pests and increase storage time, even at the cost of the health of the consumer. And by the way, while Jesus’ diet probably included the ancient forms of these grains, it didn’t include pork. Just sayin’.

  14. Christina Avatar
    Christina

    One thing I find rather frustrating about everyone who bashes grains is that very few of you acknowledge situations like the one mother a few comments back who can’t afford a Paleo diet. I’m on GAPS right now and have been grain free for 6 months, and boy has it taken a toll on our bank account! And that’s just with one person grain free, my husband still eats (soaked or sprouted) grains. It’s really not practical at all (financially speaking) to raise a family on the Paleo diet. I definitely understand being grain free if you have gut issues and need healing, but I do wish Paleo bloggers would give a little grace to those who are just struggling to put whole foods of any kind on their tables. The other issue is guilt – I’ve been in traditional foods and Paleo circles long enough to know how much controversy there is about pretty much everything – if we tried to follow the “right” thing to the “t” we’d die of the stress and guilt before we die of the grains and legumes!

    1. Alisha Gallmeier Avatar
      Alisha Gallmeier

      Why do we have to acknowledge other people’s situations? Do you think acknowledgement will make unhealthy choices more acceptable? Face it: our economy has reached “stagflation.” Higher prices, no growth. Think about reasons why food prices have skyrocketed and complain to your lawmakers instead of lecturing us. Mandatory ethanol production has increased corn prices, which in turn increases pork prices. Subsidies also keep prices artificially high. Cumbersome regulation, Big Food lobbying, and public health hysteria has made whole foods more expensive and not even available in some areas (raw milk, etc). Go complain to the lawmakers who have put us in this position. Or vote them all out.

      1. Rose Avatar

        A brilliant and well written post. You have dialed in the most pressing problem we have today with our food production–our government, in collusion with Big Pharma and the likes of Monsanto, is killing us.

    2. Felicia Alvarez Avatar
      Felicia Alvarez

      I’m sorry, but I disagree. It really is only more expensive to eat Primal/Paleo if you are trying to recreate a SAD menu with “legal” components. Just drop the grains and replace with more non-starchy veg. Three ounces of meat or other protein (eggs, for example or dairy if you use it), with an ample salad or a cooked leafy green and a brightly colored veggie are a complete meal. Or make a soup with bone broth and lots of veggies and a little meat. It doesn’t have to be complicated. We are just so used to the stuffed feeling we get from a starchy diet and the over-eating that grain cravings lead to, that we can’t imagine we could be satisfied without them. Give it about five to ten days and you would be amazed at how much money you can save.

    3. Los Avatar

      If you want to make the cost worth it your going to have sacrifice time.
      Grab a bucket and google organic vegetable gardening. You can grow vegetable anywhere the only factor is the climate your in that limits what you can garden.

      BUT, you can grow at least 3 vegetables OR MUCH MORE that you normally see in most supermarkets,

      Word to the wise I am a 22 year old college economic/finance student and the cost of vegetables and food in general will increase quite drastically the next 10yrs and will continue to rise and you better believe your taxes are going up. I will not explain how just keep note of prices. It will be good to incorporate a self-produced food system/source now so you get used to the practice.

      The benefit is instant cost saving and it is guaranteed not GMO or pesticide-free because you control the process.

      *MAKE SURE YOU LEARN THE ORGANIC METHOD

    4. Chris Avatar

      I agree, I don; t necessarily dispute the premises that grains may be unhealthy, but I am from latin AMERICA the poor and most middle class depends on grains as basic staple , for economic reasons, I which that area .be address About meat,a free pasture beef in my area is fifteen dollars a pound, for a decent cut, i can not afford .appreciate some comments on that

      1. Joey Szekeres Avatar
        Joey Szekeres

        Very true…. I no longer strictly go by the no grain rule… But what I do now is buy quality grains. Organic and sprouted, and the sprouting is more important to me. The government subsidizes certain crops and much is grown of these and that is why it is cheaper… pretty much all grains are going to be cheaper than meat and veggies fruits etc. So sometimes we gotta do what we gotta do.. I can afford to go grain free but I would also like to save some off my food bill, so I eat grains again now and like it 🙂 Just quality grains and even those are not bad in price. I don’t make a lot at all but I like my job so no climbing corporate ladders for me so I gotta work with my budget. I usually buy Ezekiel bread, eating grains again helps save some $. But I still buy quality stuff so eating quality will cost more just like anything else quality does. But how I save is this, I shop at thrift stores for clothes when I can, don’t always find what I want but sometimes. I have not drove in years now and this saves me the most money of all… This alone freed up the money to be able to afford to eat better. Also I don’t have a cell phone bill, I use google voice and just pay 1 bill instead of 2. But we gotta do best we can that’s all, I will live as long as I can best I can eating Ezekiel bread! and of course other things hehe but that is my cheap staple food.

    5. Sarah Avatar

      I’m with you Christina. We are a family of 8, with my oldest being almost 9 and my youngest is 8 months old. We have tried going *mostly* grain-free for 3 weeks now. I budget $850 a month for groceries, and go shopping every 2 weeks, but by the end of those 2 weeks our fridge and cupboards are just about bare! I’m finding I have to dip into some other budgeted category to buy more food for a couple of days.
      While I have benefited from being grain-free by losing 8 lbs. so far, we haven’t noticed any other differences. Since we didn’t have any noticeable issues to begin with, my husband and I have decided that we are going to do 75% grain-free meals, and the 25% of grains will be prepared traditionally.

      1. Sheila Avatar

        To those worried about costs….. Try getting some chickens if that is a possibility where you live. In my town, you can have up to 5 hens, as long as they are not along the fence line and you keep them cleaned up. We moved out to the country a few years ago, and I have a small flock of free range chickens now. I do provide them with feed, try to get good quality stuff, but they mostly feed themselves in the woods and the yard. Every so often I will hatch out some eggs, as I do lose a few from time to time to coyotes, neighbor’s dogs, hawks, etc. But I usually have more eggs than I know what to do with, and that really helps with the food bill. Plus I know they are healthy and have not been given any questionable chemicals.

    6. Mary Avatar

      Christina, I agree. The stress of “eat this, don’t eat that” may actually be worse than the diet issue itself. Especially since what’s “good” and what’s “bad” changes as often as our smart phones become smarter. Worse yet, there is never a consensus between those informing us what’s good vs. bad. There are so many answers to the same question. The “best” answer to a valid question I’ve read so far is right here: “don’t ask us, blame the politicians YOU voted into office.” Wow.

      I have read that the new craze of going “gluten free” and the new claims on labels of being “gluten free” is actually moot unless you have Celiac disease which makes one intolerant to gluten. To someone without it, gluten is not a problem, therefore going “gluten free” is completely unnecessary. Stating that here may be a problem for some, yet at many other sites it’s agreed upon by most.

      I don’t have any food allergies for which I’m thankful. I have changed my diet in the past based on what was popular at the time. In the ’90s, the enemy was fat. I was younger and more easily swayed so I went with it. I’d never actually had a weight problem but at that time, skinny was in. I did lose a few pounds (that I really didn’t need to lose) and I also thought I was eating healthy with my extremely low fat diet. A year or two in, I became clinically depressed. I thought it could have been because I was going through so hard times although I can look back and say the hard time was simply “life.” Nothing so traumatic that one would expect to need going on Prozac. Of course Prozac was the newest “go-to” drug at that time also. Funny how that worked out. Anyway, wasn’t until years later I heard that no having enough fat, be it healthy or even unhealthy fat was linked to depression. Mind you, back then any fat was unhealthy, but considered not AS unhealthy as others. But I do believe it’s very likely my diet caused or at least contributed to my bout of depression. The prozac turned me into a zombie but that’s another topic for another site.

      Therefore, my lifestyle is everything is moderation. I do, however, avoid sugar, foods w/sugar. However, I’m not completely sugar free. I do allow myself a treat now and then. Happiness is also needed to be healthy. Ice cream makes me happy. I refuse to sit and research all day what I should eat or not eat and why. Everyone who writes an article such as this believes their way is the only way. Therefore, in every case we’re going to be eating right AND eating wrong at the same time. We can’t win. If we were to take it all so serious, we’d need Xanax for sure.

      Ain’t no politician going to fix each one of our problems. Who can possibly expect them to make it so everyone can afford anything one may need or want. Even if it were possible to “vote them all out” who the heck is going to replace them? I mean seriously. I guess when you don’t have an answer, blame it on the politicians. HA!

      Life’s short no matter what you eat or don’t eat. It’s mighty ironic that I can eat fats again but now grains are evil. Fifteen years from now it may turn out that cutting out grains was actually a bad thing to do. No one knows! Period! No one can promise I’m not going to get run over by a car either… lol

      I know I’ve gotten a bit carried away here but it was therapeutic. I now absolutely won’t feel guilty for eating a couple scoops of ice cream which I’m about to do. I made myself hungry.

      1. Mary Avatar

        I do want to add that I respect this site, Wellness Mama, and your dedication to it. I’m not suggesting for a moment that you don’t know what you’re talking about. You obviously did a lot research, possibly schooling, and found something that works for you, are happy with it and apparently feel good eating the no-grain way. I also give you props for passing your knowledge and what you believe in on to others. Others may find the answers they’re looking for here and what’s better than that?

        However, EVERYTHING in life needs balance. It’s great that this site provides a place for others to voice their opinions, many don’t. However, I didn’t realize mine was so long until I posted it. I guess my husbands right. I do talk too much.

      2. Joey Avatar

        I hear ya, msdc. I feel the same way, it’s frustrating a bit but since I love studying and reading about health so much it doesn’t matter I just keep coming back for more info. But at a certain point I keep reading but I don’t change much, I eat what I enjoy and don’t worry about the rest. I even eat some things that I don’t think are ideal but I still eat them because I just can’t keep changing sometimes or eliminating everything. The one thing I do is just eat quality stuff regardless of what it is and avoid junk food almost entirely. I keep it pretty simple and then focus on other joys in life. Have a great night!!

      3. Maren Avatar

        I totally agree Mary!! The stress over what to eat and not to eat plus the guilt is a huge problem! And it makes your head spin how fast the ideas on what is good and not changes.

    7. Sydnee Avatar

      VERY well said!! Thank you for putting this out there, Christina!!

      1. Katie - Wellness Mama Avatar

        I absolutely agree Christina (and Sydnee). It is more expensive and it isn’t doable for everyone all the time (there have been times it was very tough or even impossible for us as well). I feel that I have an obligation to write about what I’ve found works best for our family and what I believe are the best options, but I hope that I’ve never made another mom feel guilty for not choosing the same things or being able to afford them. As moms, we are all trying to do the best we can, and this doesn’t mean that we will (or should) choose the same things all the time. Thank you both for reading and for commenting on this.

  15. Ona Avatar

    I do love alll the info on why the grains are bad for you. I new to this and I need to know what or where you find out what I can serve my family instead of grains?

    1. Wellness Mama Avatar
      Wellness Mama

      Vegetables are always a great option and starchy foods like sweet potatoes, squash and root veggies have a lot more vitamins than grains 🙂 A lot of my recipes sub vegetables (zucchini lasagna, spaghetti with squash or cabbage, etc.

  16. Lisa Avatar

    I use organic sprouted whole wheat flour.  Should I be soaking this before using it?  I am currently experiencing pregnancy induced gluten intolerance.  I still need wheat flour for my 3 young kids, it makes a meal stretch.  I want to prepare this flour as healthily as possible.   Thanks for any help!

  17. Jenny Avatar

    I’m gonna have to checkout chai, that’s a grain isn’t it? Didn’t I see it recommended here?

  18. kristy Avatar
    kristy

    I struggle with this issue a lot and would love to hear your thoughts. My family of 6 spends quite a bit on groceries, but we really cannot afford to spend more. I have lowered our grain intake but we simply can’t afford a no-grain diet. I would have to big time sacrifice my convictions on the quality of meat we eat to have the money to even reduce our intake a little more. It is frustrating but I just don’t see any way around it…something has to give in regard to my convictions in order to keep to our budget…

    1. Lisa Avatar

      I know how you feel, because I have the same problem as you. Food prices are getting higher I just have to keep in mind that we have to have “moderation in all things”. Even with the food we eat. Eating the grains that are less harmful are better to buy, even if it lowers food cost. If I wasn’t pregnant then I would be making mine own bread and other things and not buying so much. I also live in the big city and there is no space to grow my own garden, which helps lower food budget. Hang in there, you are not alone.

    2. Nellie Ann Avatar
      Nellie Ann

      I, too, have your problem. We have cut red meat for the most part in my family, merely because it is too expensive. You can make more dishes with “kinder” grains like rice, quinoa, or millet and use herbs like cinnamon/cardamom or cilantro/lime to vary flavors. Another art to master is tofu. Tofu is very cheap and high in protein. Just be sure buy the organic stuff, to avoid the downside of processing.

    3. Richard Patterson Avatar
      Richard Patterson

      I am not a parent so perhaps this is a pipe-dream: Might the kids be satisfied by using fatty foods like butter, coconut oil and roasted coconut chips (with cinnamon and erythritol)? Costco now sells Kerry Gold grass-fed butter in 3-packs for perhaps $6.00.

      1. Tanja Odzak-Goppold Avatar
        Tanja Odzak-Goppold

        Mine are!

        no one says you have to eat a TON of meat. just some.
        make it high quality.

        add butter and fats to everything. they love it!
        they get baked sweet potatoes for breakfast with a ton of butter.
        sometimes, a little rice with mashed banana, with a ton of butter.
        occasionally, we make properly prepared grains… like waffles! with a ton of butter.

        if you give them low-fat, then yes, they’ll eat a ton of grains.
        But add butter, and they will eat less grains.
        OR…
        make paleo green plantain pancakes. with butter.

        anyway.
        butter!
        BUTTER BUTTER BUTTER!!!
        I feed my kids TONS of butter.
        broccoli. with a mini dipping bowl of butter.
        they’ll eat a head of broccoli if it has butter and salt, without even blinking.

    4. Donna Pawlak Avatar
      Donna Pawlak

      Hi, we also have this problem. However, I did find that when we changed our diet, the costs did not really alter that much. As I was no longer buying bread, as I make my own sourdough and we eat very little of it. I do not buy the crisps and snacks and frozen foods, tins etc that I used to buy. I merely buy my organic box and go to the shops to buy my meat and fish. We switched to primarily more veggie meals and making things like a sourdough veggie pizza, veggie curries and chillies. You can either use cauliflour rice or I soak my brown rice. We havent had a problem with rice again, we try to do this no more than once or twice a week. Fermented/soaked overnight tortillas for mexican meals. We still eat potatoes and sweet potatoes. I make all my own sauces and try to ferment what I can because its better for your gut health apparently. There are ways around things, I think the biggest problem is getting your head around planning your meals and feedings your ferments but once you get into a routine with one, try the next, dont expect too much too soon, you will be overwhelmed. Start in one area and look to make the changes. Generally, I now buy organic meat but because we only eat a little meat now, the cost again is actually less than before and is equalising out.

      1. Kimberly Avatar
        Kimberly

        I was wondering what “organic box” you buy? Is it a home delivery service or a CSA? Thanks!

        1. Donna Avatar

          Hi, we are in the UK and have a delivery of organic veg from a local farm, we can buy organic meat from our local Supermarket now so I buy it sparingly. Although I expect things might change as we hear that Monsanto are wanting and making plans to move into the UK.

  19. Evie Andrews Avatar
    Evie Andrews

    I’m new to all this grain free thing. I have recently come across that I need to eliminate them to help my acne. I really don’t want to give them up as they are a staple that I have grown up with. Everything has grains in it. All the food I’ve learnt to prepare has grains in it. It has been quite frustrating really, but having read this blog with the simple yet easy to follow facts it has made me more detrmined to keep trying new things. Thanks heaps.

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