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The
latest diet fad- but is raw meat healthy?
STEPHEN MCGINTY
EVER since neolithic man sparked a flame, cooked meat has been
on the menu. Yet the latest celebrity diet to arrive in the country
has turned back time, advocating raw meat as the secret to health
and weight loss.
The
"raw food revolution" believes ingredients such as beef,
venison and fish should not be baked or boiled.
Celebrity advocates of the new diet are said to include Hollywood
actresses Uma Thurman, Demi Moore and Natalie Portman. In the
United States, a new style of raw food restaurants - dubbed "eateries
without ovens" - are cropping up, and while many of them
focus on vegetarian meals, meat dishes such as carpaccio of beef
are also found on the menu.
In
Britain, the first raw food restaurant has recently opened in
London, and chefs such as Gordon Ramsay have advocated raw meat.
Ramsay has supported raw dishes which many people would only expect
to be served up in his television programme Kitchen Nightmares.
"A
lot of people are a little bit intimidated about eating raw meat
and fish, which is a great shame because I think they are really
missing out," he said. "It is a very healthy and natural
way of doing things."
Supporters
of the raw food diet believe it is naturally more healthy than
consuming cooked food. They argue that uncooked food contains
live enzymes which give people more energy and, as a result, they
require less sleep. The enzymes, however, are killed off when
boiled or cooked at a temperature above 118F.
In
America, there are advocates who believe eating raw meat even
has the potential to reverse heart disease and can cure diabetes.
However,
while dishes such as sushi and steak tartare - raw mince - have
been served as delicacies in British restaurants for decades,
health and safety professionals believe the consumption of raw
meat on a wider scale could be potentially fatal.
Professor
Hugh Pennington, the president of the Society for General Microbiology,
who investigated the Scottish E coli outbreak that killed 17 people
in 1996, believes the new diet to be dangerous. "As someone
who has spent a good deal of time in the last ten years trying
to get across the message that by the application of common sense
infections with bacteria like E coli 157 can be prevented, I cannot
endorse raw meat," he said.
Fiona
Hinton, the managing director of the Edinburgh Dietetic Centre,
was unaware of any extra benefit to be derived from consuming
raw meat.
"The
principal benefits we get from meat are protein and the minerals
zinc and iron, all of which you will get from cooked meat without
any of the risk that could come from consuming raw meat,"
she said. "I know there are people who believe eating raw
meat will take us back to the diet of our ancestors, but we have
been cooking for a very long time; why chuck out the cooker now?"
It
is an attitude that Karl Loren, who runs the US website Vibrant
Life and advocates a raw meat diet, expects from the establishment.
An advocate of alternative medicine and natural living, Mr Loren
explains on his site that the idea of "humans eating a raw
meat diet is one that takes a great deal of understanding, because
it is so contrary to politically and medically correct thinking".
Mr
Loren has been conducting research into diabetes, which has increased
by 70 per cent in Americans aged between 30 and 39 over the past
ten years, and he believes that it is a problem that can be solved
by diet. "The raw meat diet for humans can handle these problems,"
he says on his site.
According
to Mr Loren, the human body has not changed for a long period
of time, but the human diet has changed radically. He has argued
that "it could be that the first 'drug' on our planet was
cooked food - it appeared to taste better, but it was harmful
to survival".
Andrew
Fairlie, the chef at Gleneagles Restaurant who will next month
cook for the US president, George Bush, Tony Blair and the other
G8 leaders, says he occasionally uses raw duck, lamb and beef
in his Michelin-starred dishes.
"We'll
sometimes use raw meats in our carpaccio dishes depending on the
season. We wouldn't do it during the winter, but in the summer
we'll use air-dried lamb and air-dried duck," he said. "The
meat is raw and obviously the most important thing is to use only
the best meats and know your supplier very well. Let's be honest,
it's not recommended to eat any old scabby duck.
"I
know that in the past many people were wary of eating any white
meat, but today if you want to you can eat raw pork. Remember
when you have a rare steak the centre of it is practically raw.
"My
own taste varies: sometimes I might take a fancy to a raw scallop
and other times I'd prefer to have it seared. The bottom line
is, I know about food and my customers will trust me and my suppliers."
Source: http://news.scotsman.com/health.cfm?id=652632005
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