Fitness - Your Body Can Sprout With Energy
For years you have been eating pulses such as moong,
chowli, channa, masur, etc.
You probably soak them overnight in water
before cooking them the next day. It is a good practice because soaking
them in water makes them less gaseous. Interestingly, we Indians have
always followed such healthy practices without really knowing why
except that we learnt them from our parents. The west has discovered
these means only recently! Soaking is only the beginning. You can
take it one step farther once you realise what the mighty pulse
contains. It is literally pulsing with energy! It is Nature's energy
treasure chest packed with proteins, fats, carbohydrates, vitamins and
minerals. And the best way to free this healthy treasury is to sprout
the pulse. You are already aware that your body needs glucose to make
it energetic. When you sprout a pulse, you help it to break down all
the treasures it contains into easier-to-digest components. Thus,
starch turns into glucose, proteins into amino acids, And since you
have already done half the work of breaking it down for your body, it
sings with instant energy when fed with this digestible fuel. It's like
the process of refining crude oil into petrol to be used as fuelenergy
for your car. Sprouting enhances the pulsing-with-life-quality of
the moong, for example. It destroys or neutralises potentially
hazardous acids-e.g. phytic acid - that may otherwise retard the
release of vital minerals for your body; it breaks down saturated fats
into free-flowing fatty acids; it converts proteins into amino acids
that generate hormones and build up your muscle tissues; and facilitate
easy bowel movements. Sprouting is a predigestive process. By giving
your body pre-digested, food, you help it to use its energy in
absorbing all the nutrients, including vitamins instead of using that
same energy in breaking down the 'crude' pulse and refining it. When you eat sprouts, you are easing your body's functions, just as a busy cook may find it quicker to use pre-cooked food. What can you sprount? Almost any pulse, grain or seed. Pulses: moong, channa, peas, soyabeans, chowli, masur, matki, etc. Grains: wheat, maize, ragi, bajra, barley, etc. Seeds: methi, coriander, pumpkin, mustard, til, etc. Easy
sprouting: If you need a measure of how much you should sprout,
calculate approximately one-fourth cup of pulses per person. Wash
thoroughly to remove any chemicals, and then soak them overnight in
water in a large vessel so that they have ample scope to expand. The
next morning, drain the water and rinse them in a large strainer - the
kind you use for your tea. Keep them moist in the vessel. Rinse them
this way every day. They will begin sprouting on the third day. Now,
you can even store them in the refrigerator, but continue rinsing them
daily in the strainer. Some pulses like channa may take longer to
sprout than say, moong. So as to ensure that you always have them
handy, you can turn a comer of your kitchen into a mini-sprout farm.
The best way to eat them is in their raw sprouted form. You can have
them in salads, as garnish over soups and sabzis, with parathas. Or you
can make your own special bhel by adding to them, boiled potatoes, raw
onions, tomatoes, coriander leaves and herbal chutney. By now,
you must be enchantingly bewildered! Here you were thinking that we
would finally lead you to a diet. When, going by what we've written
before, we seem to be encouraging you to eat more often! You are dam
right, we are! It is healthier to eat more meals of the right kind than
to leave long gaps. This way you are encouraging your body to become
more energetic and ensuring that it has plenty of the right fuel to
help you exercise and bum excess fat. You are also ensuring that fat
never creeps back - because where all along you had helped fat to reach
victorious heights, now you are stopping it from invading your
muscle-tissue country! Now, you are an ally of your body's smart cells
and, believe us , they are great friends!
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