Bone Broth — Potent Potion of Healing

Bone Broth is Earth Mother’s Milk when lovingly tended to bones of grass-fed free range veal slowly simmer for at least half a day.  Those of us choosing to eat clean meat as an essential foundation of our self care and nourishment can also honor the great Food Chain Effort meat holds by using as much of the animal’s gift as we can.  Bones are highly concentrated energy and nutrition.  Sinfully foolish to waste!  Unthinkable to throw away! Delicious to consume.

Bone Broth is a vastly rich mineral potion prepared in this fashion.  It helps when you make it to honor each step as accepting another aspect of the animal’s gift.  It goes down to the marrow, a complexly dense food highly sought after and prized in the Wisdom of Millenia.

 

Does TV make me fat?

Several recent studies show a link between TV habits and weight gain — basically the more you watch, the heavier you tend to be.

Seems obvious in some ways…sitting doesn’t burn many calories and we often eat in front of the tube (can we still call a flat screen that?).  Not only is what we’re often eating (and drinking!) more snacky kind of stuff, we’re doing it in a distracted way that leads to more, not less.

Here’s a fascinating study that goes deeper than just sitting=not burning calories.  Turns out that sitting in front of the TV turns on genes that make us heavy!

And some of us have the cards already stacked against us genetically.  Turns out there are 32 gene variants that predispose us to higher Body Mass Index (BMI).  Inactivity like TV watching (and let me add Internet surfing!) turns on these genes, while exercise turns them off.  And these genes don’t seem to be affected by the quality of what we’re watching!

What does this mean for you?  If you are struggling with your weight, you more than likely have some of these 32 genetic variations that lead to a heavier, thicker body.  So you need to pay attention to both sides of the equation:

Where you are physically inactive  -> <- Where you can get more physical

I find this of great possible value for some of us trying to be less of us!  If we just focus on calorie consumption (Don’t eat that!) we’re still going to get pinned down by the genes trying to weigh us down.

The more we understand the bigger picture, the less likely we are to be the bigger picture!

Motivation is the key to Self-Nourishment and Self-Care, and any new motivation goes a long way.  So rather than getting more active simply to burn calories and lose weight, get moving to turn off those genes that want to pack on some pounds.

http://www.medpagetoday.com/Cardiology/Prevention/31666?utm_content=&utm_medium=email&utm_campaign=DailyHeadlines&utm_source=WC&eun=g435608d0r&userid=435608&email=btnstokes@gmail.com&mu_id=

 

Is Red Meat bad for you as this study suggests?

Wait a minute!

Once again the headline grabs the attention and the fine print gets buried.

http://www.latimes.com/health/la-he-red-meat-20120313,0,565423.story

This story in the LA Times shouting a 13% increase in death rate for those eating red meat daily.

OK.  Several things though:

1.  You simply can’t lump all red meat together.  There’s a *world* of difference between grass-fed beef and factory-farm meat.  That’s my beef, this isn’t addressed in this study.   Yes, you’ll pay more for grass-fed beef.  And it will cost you less.

2.  How you cook beef makes a difference in how good it is for you — or how bad.  The less you cook it, and the slower, the healthier it is.  High temperature cooking sure is tasty, yet brings out some nasty stuff. No mention of that either.

3.  This study focuses that 13% mortality increase on folks who eat red meat every day.  I’ve got a beef with that too.  A couple of times a week is a world of difference from every day.

4.  Oh yeah.  Processed meat is a treat.  Just like cake.  Enjoy it here and there. Mostly there.  And yet enjoy.

I eat red meat perhaps a couple of times every two weeks.  Grass fed for sure from farmers nearby I trust to raise healthy cows.  And I cook it lightly.

My body says these choices are just right.  I invite you to to tune into your own.

And meanwhile, don’t get jerked around by these news cycles around food.  They’ll ruin your appetite.  And you’ll be eating less and less of so many things good for you in moderation and balance.

This article, like so many news stories, delights in the either/or.  Wisdom looks for the both/and.  Yes, meat is resource intensive.  That means we need to be aware of what it takes to raise and be respectful in our consumption.  Not necessarily eliminate it completely if that’s not your choice.

Food is a primary way we practice acceptance of individuality.  Some of us do better with some meat in our diet and others don’t.  There’s plenty of room for both.

 

Is that Apple Juice good for kids?

There are two answers to this question:

1.  Answer #1:  No, it’s not good for your kids, or for you.

2.  Answer #2: Yes, it’s bad for your kids, and for you.

These are fascinating and challenging times we live in.  Simply knowing what to eat and not is no small thing.  So many conflicting opinions flying around in our 24-hour news cycle.  One day something is good for you, the next day not! Who to believe?

The current news tempest is about arsenic in Apple Juice.  Dr Oz started a ruckus some weeks back with his claim that various apple juices he had tested showed troublesome amounts of arsenic. http://www.doctoroz.com/videos/arsenic-apple-juice

The FDA was quick to try to calm things down by saying yes, there is arsenic in apple juice but it isn’t bad for you at these levels.  The FDA also said the kind of arsenic Oz found in apple juice was organic (naturally occuring) and not inorganic (contaminated heavy metal).

Low and behold Consumer Reports now is saying their own independent tests show that inorganic (bad for you!) arsenic is in many samples of apple juice. http://news.consumerreports.org/safety/2011/11/consumer-reports-tests-juices-for-arsenic-and-lead.html

The main reason to limit apple juice in your diet is not just because of arsenic, though that should get your attention!  Apples are #1 on the Dirty Dozen list of most contaminated foods http://www.ewg.org/foodnews/summary/ and worth buying organic.

However, fruit juices of all kinds are full of sugar and upset the body’s natural balance.  There is little nutrtion in processed fruit juice.  That’s why many of them have vitamins added, to appear like a healthy food.  Fruit juice is a sugar bomb and to be avoided.

Kids of all ages up to 99 become used to what they eat and drink, and consuming fruit juice is not a healthy habit. Keep an herb tea in the refrigerator and after a couple of days this sugar free drink will become a habit.

Organic apples themselves are a solid nutritional plus, and contain all kinds of nutrients that offset the sugar in the apple.  That is not true at all for apple juice (organic or not) or any other fruit juice, as many of the nutrients are lost in processing and what is left is a sugar cocktail.

This apple juice story is a good example of what to watch out for as a consumer.

1.  Not every story is worth acting on, though every story is worth checking out.

2.  Any story that puts food safety in question is going to bring a polished pseudo-respone from agribusiness.

3.  Government agencies are slow to react, and also in the crosshairs of the food lobby’s public relations smoothies.

My own perspective?  “If in doubt, leave it out.”

Wildbar — Primordial Nourishment

SelfNourish is testing the Wildbar in our ongoing evaluation of superfoods.  

We’ve had them two days and are paying attention to lots of things worth noting.  You can feel the jungle tingling your palm when you hold it.

Wildbar is framing this as a mood-enhancer as well as a superfood…the ingredients list reads like a Shaman’s Elixir (see below this post).

I am a serious choclificianado.  Chocolate has been so abused as mass-produced comfort food it’s easy to overlook that it is actually amazing Plant Medicine.

I like chocolate that has a taste all its own and wins you over on its shining.  Raw cacao fans rejoice.  This is the real deal.

That’s all for now…it’s hard to type and eat something this dynamic at the same time. I am devoted to my research. But, I didn’t tell you about the…..

Write me…I love mail.

SelfNourishingly,

Brian

 

Here’s Wildbar’s self description.  We’ll follow up with some test results soon.

http://www.wildbar.info/

WILDBAR® Ingredients

There have recently been big changes to WILDBAR ingredients. Every single ingredient in every WILDBAR (both Mountain Mint and Mayan Spice flavors) is raw, certified organic, vegan, Kosher, low glycemic and, of course, delicious. The result rivals the finest supplements. We think of it as Superfood Nutrition in a Great-Tasting Bar™.

Two ingredients form the synergistic foundation of the WILDBAR:

Raw Cacao
Loaded with antioxidants and phenylethylamine (20+mg PEA per bar), the “feel good” secret of dark chocolate (PEA is also known as the “Love Molecule”), our raw cacao is energizing, adaptogenic, mood enhancing and simply great tasting.

Wild Blue-Green Algae 
Previously available only in our premium supplements, Ancient Sun’s Wild Blue-Green Algae (AFA or Aphanizomenon flos-aquae) is harvested directly from the natural paradise of Klamath Lake. Each WILDBAR includes over 1,500mg of algae. Crystal Manna™, our whole blue-green algae is nutrient-rich: high in chlorophyll, polysaccharides (healing sugars) and PEA (20+mg PEA per bar). It is one of the only animal-free sources of long-chain omega fatty acids like EPA and DHA, essential for optimum brain power. When it is synergized with raw cacao, energy, clarity, concentration and peace of mind all increase.

Building on these foundational superfoods, we add:

Organic Macadamia Nuts. Of all the nuts, this is the easiest to digest. It is also very high in essential fatty acids (EFAs). The fresh macadamia flavor melts in your mouth, making the perfect high-energy complement to our raw cacao.

Organic CLEAR Blue Agave Nectar. A high mineral, extremely low glycemic sweetener from agave cactus. Not only does it have hydrating properties, but its cool, rich flavor subtly sweetens the other WILDBAR ingredients.

Organic Hemp Seed. A creamy, delicious food that has the perfect ratio of
omega-3 to omega-6 fatty acids. This unique chlorophyll-containing seed is remarkably high in minerals and amino acids. It is an excellent, healthy replacement for fish, many of which contain environmental toxins.

Organic Poppy Seed. Another delicious food with calming properties that perfectly synergize with raw cacao. Many believe this seed to be the best concentrated source of zinc on the planet, making it excellent for the promotion of brain, glandular, and sexual health.

Organic Maca. A Peruvian radish with a flavor like vanilla crème. Maca is said to modulate the endocrine system, nourish the sex organs, and balance hormonal health. Peruvians believe that even a small amount of maca can sustain performance and energy for hours.

Organic Mesquite. The desert-growing pod of an evergreen tree, it is an excellent source of carbohydrates and minerals. Compare it to a low glycemic carob, but with an even purer chocolate flavor.
Organic Pink Himalayan Crystal Salt. An outstanding source of trace minerals as well as a truly natural, healthful salt uncorrupted by civilization. Natives believe it harnesses and encapsulates a magical energy from high in the Himalayas. Unlike other salts, it has a soothing sweetness, making it perfect for munching on the raw-cacao-powered WILDBAR.

Organic Whole Vanilla Bean Powder. Not just rare and great tasting, but also believed to have strong aphrodisiac and immune-enhancing properties, the latter due to its polysaccharide content.

Cayenne, Cinnamon and Orange Rind powder (Mayan Spice WILDBAR only). Cayenne is rich in sulfur and dilates capillaries, enhancing the cellular assimilation of nutrients. Cinnamon, also a capillary dilator, is nature’s best and tastiest source of chromium, a blood sugar modulator. Orange rind powder soothes the digestive system, while its flavor complements all the other ingredients in the Mayan Spice WILDBAR.

Essential Oil of Peppermint (Mountain Mint WILDBAR only). A cooling, menthol-containing food with the delicious taste of natural, pure mint. The menthol dilates blood capillaries, and many people also use it to relieve stuffed noses and make breathing easier.

The result of the synergy of all these ingredients is the WILDBAR. It’s the ultimate superfood, all in a bar so good, so healthy and so delicious that you’ll think it’s manna from heaven. WILDBAR – Get Your Manna Raw.

Listeria Hysteria — Wash Your Hands and Wash your melons, but don’t wash your hands of melons!

Yes, the current outbreak of Listeria is the worst in a decade and people are dying.

Make no mistake, Listeria is a serious bug.  It can incubate in the body for some months, making it hard to remember how you got it.  It also grows in refrigerator temperatures, unlike many other bacteria.

However, Listeria, like other seriously potentially harmful bacteria such as Staph and MRSA, are commonly found anywhere.  Remember, we ourselves are a walking colony of trillions of bacteria, fungi and viruses.  We actually have more of these cells than human cells in our bodies.

We are discovering that many illnesses can be avoided by giving the Body what it needs so we can keep doing what we do!  SelfNourish is about that.

The risk here is not getting listeria, but in making  longterm changes to your diet to avoid whatever food is currently responsbile for the outbreak of the moment — this time cantalopes from Colorado, the time before celery.  Permanently avoiding the food carrier of the current news cycle only will increasingly limit your diet and not help you avoid getting sick.

News epidemics about illness outbreaks have an aura of stirring fears rather than standing by the truth — Many Americans are suffering from chronic disease as if it was something that can’t be avoided.  Simply not true.  Completely untrue. We’ve simply surrendered ownership of our health and natural food chain to industry — Food Inc and Big Pharma.

I’m not here to demonize these two.  Remember, they actually believe they have a worthy product and you should buy it!  And it’s our job to say, “No thank you…”

“Stephen F. Patricio, a melon shipper who is the chairman of the California Cantaloupe Advisory Board, a trade group, said that sales were plummeting, even though only melons from the farm in Colorado were implicated. He said that California growers had repeatedly been hurt by outbreaks that were a result of lax practices elsewhere. A salmonella outbreak involving Texas cantaloupes in 1991 and a series of outbreaks from Mexican cantaloupes from 2000 to 2002 devastated sales of all cantaloupes. Now, he said, it is happening again.” http://www.nytimes.com/2011/09/29/business/costco-urges-stricter-safety-measures-on-cantaloupes.html?ref=business

Certainly I’m not going to eat the Rocky Ford Cantalope’s from Colorado right now, but once the crisis blows over and the source of infection addressed, I will do so happily.

The CDC says healthy people usually don’t get sick from eating Listeria contaminated food. It most often affects those with compromised immune systems — the elderly, pregnant women, babies, who need an extra layer of attention and care.

http://www.cdc.gov/listeria/

What can we do?

1.  Stay healthy.  Avoiding illness of most kinds means paying day-to-day attention to sleep, diet, stress reduction.

2.  The great news is it is proven effective to just wash all produce in cold running water.  Use your washed hands to rub the food under the running cold water.  For years I’ve washed Cantaloupe with Dr Bonner’s Soap before cutting it open.

“Trevor V. Suslow, an extension specialist at the University of California, Davis, who has done industry-financed research into food safety and cantaloupes, said that the fruit’s rough skin made it more susceptible to harboring unwanted bacteria.

“You have these tremendous hiding places, if you will, nooks and crannies, lots of areas for microbes to get in and attach and hide,” Dr. Suslow said. It is best to keep cantaloupes dry to reduce the possibility that bacteria will grow on them, he said. In California, growers typically do not immerse melons in water to wash them and use chilled air to cool them.

In other regions, he said, cantaloupes are often washed in a large tank or with a water spray and are cooled with sprays of cold water as well. Those techniques may be more likely to spread bacteria.”  http://www.nytimes.com/2011/09/29/business/costco-urges-stricter-safety-measures-on-cantaloupes.html?ref=business

3.  Emerging research is making it more clear how much of our health resides in our gut.  Take a good probiotic.  Store shelves are now flooded with these products, and many of them are marginal.  We have found great success with Dr Mercola’s Complete ProBiotics. Take a look at his before buying another so you know what to look for.

http://probiotics.mercola.com/probiotics.html

And remember, relax.  Life is a safe and kind journey no matter what happens!

 

Carbs Are the Metabolic Bullies

I have a love affair with bread.

And one with pasta.

Another with cookies of only the best kind

And then of course are the signs of my nutritional maturity — brown rice, rolled oats, quinoa, amaranth.  Aren’t I the healthy one?

My diet, however, has now shifted in a dramatic way:

40% protein — Salmon, chicken, turkey, eggs, raw dairy (milk, cheese, yogurt)

40% fat — Raw whole dairy, cheese, butter, free use of coconut oil. Avocado.

Olive oil only dribbled on salad or greens.

20% carbs and these mostly from vegetables.  Rarely do I cook grains anymore. And very fewer more cookies, sniff.  Even few whole grains these days while I reset my metabolic clock.

The rising tide of research is almost breaking through into the mainstream about the national epidemic of insulin resistance.  To get healthy, most of us need to eat half or less of the carbs we are eating now in grain form (this covers donuts to pasta).

For many of us, this calls for a what seems like a drastic change, because we have become so accustomed to carbs being more than half of our diet, rather than the 20% now recommended for optimal long term health.

And yes, whole grains are better than refined ones, yet ideally they aren’t a daily thing.

That’s a b-i-g stretch for most of us!

This article from the LA Times is one of the better ones I’ve found that explain this.

A reversal on carbs

Fat was once the devil. Now more nutritionists are pointing accusingly at sugar and refined grains.

 

 Marni Jameson, Special to the Los Angeles TimesDecember 20, 2010
Most people can count calories. Many have a clue about where fat lurks in their diets. However, fewer give carbohydrates much thought, or know why they should.But a growing number of top nutritional scientists blame excessive carbohydrates — not fat — for America’s ills. They say cutting carbohydrates is the key to reversing obesity, heart disease, Type 2 diabetes and hypertension.”Fat is not the problem,” says Dr. Walter Willett, chairman of the department of nutrition at the Harvard School of Public Health. “If Americans could eliminate sugary beverages, potatoes, white bread, pasta, white rice and sugary snacks, we would wipe out almost all the problems we have with weight and diabetes and other metabolicdiseases.”It’s a confusing message. For years we’ve been fed the line that eating fat would make us fat and lead to chronic illnesses. “Dietary fat used to be public enemy No. 1,” says Dr. Edward Saltzman, associate professor of nutrition and medicine at Tufts University. “Now a growing and convincing body of science is pointing the finger at carbs, especially those containing refined flour and sugar.”Americans, on average, eat 250 to 300 grams of carbs a day, accounting for about 55% of their caloric intake. The most conservative recommendations say they should eat half that amount. Consumption of carbohydrates has increased over the years with the help of a 30-year-old, government-mandated message to cut fat.And the nation’s levels of obesity, Type 2 diabetes and heart disease have risen. “The country’s big low-fat message backfired,” says Dr. Frank Hu, professor of nutrition and epidemiology at the Harvard School of Public Health. “The overemphasis on reducing fat caused the consumption of carbohydrates and sugar in our diets to soar. That shift may be linked to the biggest health problems in America today.”To understand what’s behind the upheaval takes some basic understanding of food and metabolism.

All carbohydrates (a category including sugars) convert to sugar in the blood, and the more refined the carbs are, the quicker the conversion goes. When you eat a glazed doughnut or a serving of mashed potatoes, it turns into blood sugar very quickly. To manage the blood sugar, the pancreas produces insulin, which moves sugar into cells, where it’s stored as fuel in the form of glycogen.

If you have a perfectly healthy metabolism, the system works beautifully, says Dr. Stephen Phinney, a nutritional biochemist and an emeritus professor of UC Davis who has studied carbohydrates for 30 years. “However, over time, as our bodies get tired of processing high loads of carbs, which evolution didn’t prepare us for … how the body responds to insulin can change,” he says.

When cells become more resistant to those insulin instructions, the pancreas needs to make more insulin to push the same amount of glucose into cells. As people become insulin resistant, carbs become a bigger challenge for the body. When the pancreas gets exhausted and can’t produce enough insulin to keep up with the glucose in the blood, diabetes develops.

The first sign of insulin resistance is a condition called metabolic syndrome — a red flag that diabetes, and possibly heart disease, is just around the corner. People are said to have the syndrome when they have three or more of the following: high blood triglycerides (more than 150 mg); high blood pressure (over 135/85); central obesity (a waist circumference in men of more than 40 inches and in women, more than 35 inches); low HDL cholesterol (under 40 in men, under 50 in women); or elevated fasting glucose.

About one-fourth of adults has three or more of these symptoms.

“Put these people on a low-carb diet and they’ll not only lose weight, which always helps these conditions, but their blood levels will improve,” Phinney says. In a 12-week study published in 2008, Phinney and his colleagues put 40 overweight or obese men and women with metabolic syndrome on a 1,500-calorie diet. Half went on a low-fat, high-carb diet. The others went on a low-carb, high-fat diet. The low-fat group consumed 12 grams of saturated fat a day out of a total of 40 grams of fat, while the low-carb group ate 36 grams of saturated fat a day — three times more — out of a total of 100 grams of fat.

Despite all the extra saturated fat the low-carb group was getting, at the end of the 12 weeks, levels of triglycerides (which are risk factors for heart disease) had dropped by 50% in this group. Levels of good HDL cholesterol increased by 15%.

In the low-fat, high-carb group, triglycerides dropped only 20% and there was no change in HDL.

The take-home message from this study and others like it is that — contrary to what many expect — dietary fat intake is not directly related to blood fat. Rather, the amount of carbohydrates in the diet appears to be a potent contributor.

“The good news,” adds Willett, “is that based on what we know, almost everyone can avoid Type 2 diabetes. Avoiding unhealthy carbohydrates is an important part of that solution.” For those who are newly diagnosed, he adds, a low-carb diet can take the load off the pancreas before it gets too damaged and improve the condition — reducing or averting the need for insulin or other diabetes meds.

Americans can also blame high-carb diets for why the population has gotten fatter over the last 30 years, says Phinney, who is co-author of “The New Atkins for a New You” (Simon & Schuster, 2010).

“Carbohydrates are a metabolic bully,” Phinney says. “They cut in front of fat as a fuel source and insist on being burned first. What isn’t burned gets stored as fat, and doesn’t come out of storage as long as carbs are available. And in the average American diet, they always are.”

Here’s how Phinney explains it: When you cut carbs, your body first uses available glycogen as fuel. When that’s gone, the body turns to fat and the pancreas gets a break. Blood sugar stabilizes, insulin levels drop, fat burns. That’s why the diet works for diabetics and for weight loss.

When the body switches to burning fat instead of glycogen, it goes into a process called nutritional ketosis. If a person eats 50 or fewer grams of carbs, his body will go there, Phinney says. (Nutritional ketosis isn’t to be confused with ketoacidosis, a dangerous condition that can occur in diabetics.)

Beyond the fat-burning effects of ketosis, people lose weight on low-carb diets because fat and protein increase satisfaction and reduce appetite. On the flip side, simple carbs cause an insulin surge, which triggers a blood sugar drop, which makes you hungry again.

“At my obesity clinic, my default diet for treating obesity, Type 2 diabetes and metabolic syndrome is a low-carb diet,” says Dr. Eric Westman, director of the Lifestyle Medicine Clinic at Duke University Medical Center, and co-author of the new Atkins book. “If you take carbohydrates away, all these things get better.”

Though the movement to cap carbs is growing, not all nutritional scientists have fully embraced it. Dr. Ronald Krauss, senior scientist at Children’s Hospital Oakland Research Institute and founder and past chair of the American Heart Assn.‘s Council on Nutrition, Physical Activity and Metabolism, says that while he fundamentally agrees with those advocating fewer dietary carbs, he doesn’t like to demonize one food group.

That said, he adds, those who eat too many calories tend to overconsume carbohydrates, particularly refined carbohydrates and sugars. “It can be extremely valuable to limit carbohydrate intake and substitute protein and fat. I am glad to see so many people in the medical community getting on board. But in general I don’t recommend extreme dietary measures for promoting health.”

Joanne Slavin, professor of nutrition at the University of Minnesota and a member of the advisory committee for the 2010 Dietary Guidelines for Americans, is less inclined to support the movement. The committee, she says, “looked at carbohydrates and health outcomes and did not find a relationship between carbohydrate intake and increased disease risk.”

Most Americans need to reduce calories and increase activity, Slavin adds. Cutting down on carbs as a calorie source is a good strategy, “but making a hit list of carbohydrate-containing foods is shortsighted and doomed to fail, similar to the low-fat rules that started in the 1980s.”

As nutrition scientists try to find the ideal for the future, others look to history and evolution for answers. One way to put our diet in perspective is to imagine the face of a clock with 24 hours on it. Each hour represents 100,000 years that humans have been on the Earth.

On this clock, the advent of agriculture and refined grains would have appeared at about 11:54 p.m. (23 hours and 54 minutes into the day). Before that, humans were hunters and gatherers, eating animals and plants off the land. Agriculture allowed for the mass production of crops such as wheat and corn, and refineries transformed whole grains into refined flour and created processed sugar.

Some, like Phinney, would argue that we haven’t evolved to adapt to a diet of refined foods and mass agriculture — and that maybe we shouldn’t try.

health@latimes.com

White Fruits and Vegetables can help deter stroke!

Often someone asks me, “What’s the best fruit/vegetable to eat?”

The one you have right now, is my usual reply.

I have noticed a general drift favoring green vegetables, usually with the word “leafy” after the word “green”.  No taking away from the multiple healthy nutrients in them, yet what about the less glamorous kind?

Turns out, according to a study just published in Lancet that white vegetables and fruits have their own power and medicine and can help us avoid stroke, the often devastating and debilitating clot or hemorrhage that can suddenly change our life.

Here’s an excerpt from the New York Times:

“The old adage promoting an apple a day for better health just got a boost from science. A large Dutch study has found that eating apples and pears is associated with a lower risk of stroke.

The findings counter the widespread belief that the most healthful fruits and vegetables are those that come in deep, rich colors inside and out. The dark green of spinach and deep red of raspberries are produced by phytochemicals that are associated with better heart health and lower rates of cancer, prompting the common advice to “eat your colors.” Apples and pears, although red, light green or yellow on the outside, are typically considered “white” fruits because the inside of the fruit, which represents the largest edible portion, is white.

Researchers in the Netherlands decided to track fruit and vegetable intake based on the color of the largest edible portion of the food. The categories were green (broccoli, kale, spinach and lettuce), orange/yellow (oranges, carrots and peaches), red/purple (cherries, grapes, beets and tomatoes) and white (apples, pears, bananas and cauliflower).

The investigators analyzed data collected from 20,069 men and women who took part in the Dutch Morgen study, which stands for Monitoring Project on Risk Factors and Chronic Diseases. All the participants, ages 20 to 65, were healthy and free of cardiovascular disease at the start. The study subjects filled out food questionnaires detailing their eating habits.

During the next 10 years, the investigators documented 233 strokes among the study participants. There was no relationship between stroke risk and consumption of any of the brightly colored fruits and vegetables. However, people who consumed at least 171 grams of white produce daily — equal to about one medium to large apple — had a 52 percent lower risk of stroke than those who ate less than 78 grams of white fruit a day. On average, every 25 grams of white fruit eaten daily was associated with a 9 percent lower risk for stroke.

The findings were published on Thursday in Stroke: Journal of the American Heart Association.

Although the white category contained a number of foods, the investigators found that apples, pears and applesauce were the most common foods eaten in that category. When analyzed separately, apples and pears accounted for a 7 percent decline in stroke risk for every 25 grams eaten each day.

The strength of the research is that it analyzed a large, population-based study group. The downside is that eating habits were based on people’s own recollections of fruit and vegetable consumption, so the data may not be reliable. For instance, vegetables like onions or peppers that are often chopped and mixed in with foods are not as easy to remember when a person is filling out a dietary questionnaire, so it may be that those foods are underrepresented compared with apples, which are relatively easy to remember eating.

Why apples and pears might reduce stroke risk isn’t known, though both fruits are rich sources of dietary fiber, which is associated with lowering blood pressure. Both fruits also contain a number of nutrients and phytochemicals, including the flavonol quercetin, which may have anti-inflammatory properties.

The investigators noted that the findings should be replicated in other large studies before specific recommendations are made about consumption of white fruits.

“Previous prospective cohort studies found that high fruit and vegetable consumption lowers the risk of stroke,” Linda Oude Griep of the division of human nutrition at Wageningen University said in an e-mail. “This is the first study on color groups of fruits and vegetables and stroke, so yes, these results were surprising. However, these findings need to be confirmed in more prospective cohort studies before definite conclusions can be made.”

The study was financed by several Dutch and European public health agencies, although a portion of the cost was paid by an unrestricted grant from the Dutch Product Board for Horticulture, which promotes agricultural interests in the region.