Monday, 12 May 2025    HomeAbout UsContact Us    








You are here:
Levels of Food Combination Digestibility
Posted by HealthyMuslim, in Nutrition
Topics: Food Combination Combining Foods Food Digestibility Digestion

  Mail To Friend    Printer Friendly Bookmark and Share

Further to a previous article on the combining foods for optimum nutrition, this article highlights the ease or difficulty of in the digestibility of certain combinations of foods.

The various nutrients in food tend to interact in very complex ways, sometimes they may inhibit and at other times enhance the digestive process. Therefore, it is important to pay careful attention to food combination. This will greatly enhance the digestibility of food, especially when it is chewed thoroughly as well.

You should use this to help you formulate your diet accordingly.

Easy to Digest

  • Sprouted beans + vegetables
  • Sprouted beans + sweet or sub-acid fruits
  • Sprouted grains + vegetables
  • Vegetables + low-starch foods
  • High-starch foods + low-starch foods

Relatively Easy to Digest

  • Protein + leafy greens
  • Protein + vegetables
  • Avocado + leafy greens or sub-acid or sweet fruits
  • Soaked or sprouted seeds, nuts or grains + sweet or sub-acid fruits
  • Vegetables + high-starch foods

Hard to Digest: Promotes Putrefaction and fermentation

  • Protein + starches
  • Oil (saturated fat) + Protein
  • Protein + sweet or sub-acid fruit
  • Fruit (rapidly fermenting) + vegetables

Explanation of the Food Groups

Some of the terms used above are explained below:

  • Protein Foods: meat, fish, dairy, beans, tofu, eggs, nuts, seeds
  • vegetables: all vegetables except low-starch ones (see below)
  • High-Starch Foods: all cereals: buckwheat, wheat, oats, rye, barley, millet, brown rice, potatoes, sweet potatoes, yams
  • Low-Starch Foods: carrot, parsnip, squash, pumpkin, artichoke, corn
  • Acid Fruit: grapefruit, lemon, lime, orange, pineapple, plum, prune, all berries, sour apples; tomatoes and cucumber should be considered acid fruits too
  • Sub-Acid Fruit: (fresh or dried): applies, apricots, sweet cherry, mango, nectarine, peace, grape, raisin
  • Sweet Fruit: (fresh or dried): papaya, banana, dates, figs

    You should use this classification and the digestibility levels above to monitor and change how your food is combined. This will lead to much better digestion and absorption, leading to a healthier life.

    Unfortunately, most people don't have the slightest clue about these very important dietary principles. Day and night they eat badly combined food that is doing untold damage to their colon and intestines.

    A few important notes to finish off:

    First, "acid fruit" refers to fruits that are acidic prior to digestion, such as lemons, oranges, limes etc. However a lot of these acid fruits actually produce a net alkaline effect in the body after they have been digested. You might find a lot of these fruits labelled as "alkaline forming" which is what they are after digestion.

    Secondly, a lot of foods have a combination of different food types. They may include protein as well as carbohydrates, or fats as well as proteins. So you might ask what about food combinations in that situation? What we are speaking of are "concentrated proteins" and "concentrated carbohydrates" i.e. the combination of foods that have a high protein content with a high carbohydrate content.

    For example you should not eat vegetables high in starch (potatoes, pasta) with concentrated proteins (meats, nuts).

    We will cover this in more detail in future articles inshaa'Allaah.


Link to this article:   Show: HTML LinkFull LinkShort Link
Share or Bookmark this page: You will need to have an account with the selected service in order to post links or bookmark this page.

                 
  
Subscribe via RSS or email:
Follow us through RSS or email. Click the RSS icon to subscribe to our feed.

     
  

Related Articles:
Add a Comment
You must be registered and logged in to comment.





Topics
Research
Technology
News
Articles

Latest Articles
Understanding the Different Types of Colloidal Silver
Antibacterial Activity of Silver Nanoparticles Against Gram-Positive and Gram-Negative Bacteria
Antitumor Activity of Colloidal Silver on MCF-7 Human Breast Cancer Cells
Studies on Interaction of Colloidal Silver Nanoparticles WIth Five Different Bacterial Species
Some Effects of Weak Direct Current and Silver Ions on Experimental Osteomyelitis
Silver Anode Treatment of Chronic Osteomyelitis
Effects of Electrically Generated Silver Ions on Human Cells and Wound Healing
Copper-Silver Ionization for Legionella Control in Hospitals
Agion Technology: Antimicrobial Products for Food and Services Industries
Electrically Generated Silver Ions: Quantitative Effects on Bacterial and Mammalian Cells

Pages
No pages found.

Most Popular
Silver Anode Treatment of Chronic Osteomyelitis
Antibacterial Activity of Silver Nanoparticles Against Gram-Positive and Gram-Negative Bacteria
Understanding the Different Types of Colloidal Silver
Copper-Silver Ionization for Legionella Control in Hospitals
Electrically Generated Silver Ions: Quantitative Effects on Bacterial and Mammalian Cells
Antitumor Activity of Colloidal Silver on MCF-7 Human Breast Cancer Cells
Agion Technology: Antimicrobial Products for Food and Services Industries
Effects of Electrically Generated Silver Ions on Human Cells and Wound Healing
Studies on Interaction of Colloidal Silver Nanoparticles WIth Five Different Bacterial Species
Some Effects of Weak Direct Current and Silver Ions on Experimental Osteomyelitis

Archives (View more)
2011 • July


Copyright © 2025 . All rights reserved. RSSTagsPrivacyLegal and Terms of UseSitemap