The Real Problem with Grains

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The real problem with grains
Fit Bottomed Zone » Blog » Health » The Real Problem with Grains

Grains are a controversial food in modern society, but the real problem with grains may not be what you think! On the one hand, you have experts who claim that we aren’t meant to eat them based on the stance that grains are a modern addition to the food supply and people have consumed them for only the last 10,000 years or so. Others claim that grains are the foundation of our food supply and have been for thousands of years.

So, Who Is Right?

Turns out that both sides might be, but with some important caveats. This means it isn’t a simple answer, mostly because we may not actually be talking about the same food!

What’s In a Grain?

Grains are simply the hard, edible seeds of grass-like plants. There are many varieties and the most common are wheat, corn, oats, and rice. They are one of the most-consumed foods worldwide and the primary source of nutrition and energy for many populations around the world.

Grains are made up of three main parts:

  1. Bran – the hard outer layer or shell
  2. Germ –  the core of the seed that provides nutrients when it sprouts and grows
  3. Endosperm – the starchy food source for the growth of the seed

Anatomy of a cereal grain

By definition, a “whole grain” contains all parts of the seed, while refined grains often have the bran or germ removed, leaving just the highly starchy endosperm. Whole grains can be a source of nutrients like B-vitamins, magnesium, and others, but in refined grains most of these beneficial parts are removed.

Many manufacturers enrich processed grains with synthetic forms of nutrients like folic acid (instead of the natural form of folate), iron, and B-vitamins to try to make up for the nutrients removed during processing.

Why Avoid Grains? (Answer: They Aren’t What They Used to Be)

It’s a fact: modern grains aren’t the same as they used to be a few hundred years ago, or even a few decades ago! And the grains we consume in the U.S. aren’t the same as the grains eaten in other countries … especially when it comes to wheat.

A few major developments started the problem with grains:

1. New ways of processing led to wider availability (and decreased nutrients).

With the dawn of the modern mill in the mid 19th century, grain evolved. Before this time, grains and wheat were ground in whole form, often with stones, and the flour still contained all the components of the whole grain. It was now possible to separate the parts of the whole grain and use just the starchy endosperm to create an inexpensive and very finely ground white flour (similar to most flour used today).

Without the bran and germ, these new refined flours lasted longer on the shelf but contained much lower levels of nutrients. So much lower, in fact, that in the 1940s manufacturers started to “enrich” wheat and other flours with synthetic nutrients.

Along with the reduced cost of flour from the newer and more efficient method of refining, availability of flour soared and almost everyone could now afford it as a regular staple. This, of course, led to more people consuming flour.

This wouldn’t have been as big of a problem on its own, until …

2. Agronomists developed new types of wheat to increase yield.

In the 1960s agronomists developed new cultivars of wheat in order to increase the amount of wheat possible to grow per acre. This modern wheat is a type of dwarf wheat that, unfortunately, is much less nutritious and comes with a list of potential problems.

A centuries-long study has tracked the results of this change. Since 1843, researchers in England have been conducting research called the “Broadbalk Winter Wheat Experiment.” They tracked many variables related to wheat cultivation, including fertilizer use, crop rotation, and nutrient content.

Unfortunately, nutrient content took a dive. Mark Sisson explains in his fascinating article “The Problem with Modern Wheat“:

Between 1843 and the mid 1960s, the mineral content, including zinc, magnesium, iron, and copper, of harvested wheat grain in the experiment stayed constant. But after that point, zinc, magnesium, iron, and copper concentrations began to decrease – a shift that “coincided with the introduction of semi-dwarf, high-yielding cultivars” into the Broadbalk experiment. Another study found that the “ancient” wheats – emmer, spelt, and einkorn – had higher concentrations of selenium, an extremely important mineral, than modern wheats. Further compounding the mineral issue is the fact that phytic acid content remains unaffected in dwarf wheat. Thus, the phytate:mineral ratio is higher, which will make the already reduced levels of minerals in dwarf wheat even more unavailable to its consumers.

In other words, while these modern varieties are easier and faster to grow, they don’t contain the same levels of nutrients but have the same levels of phytic acid, creating an imbalance that can lead to nutrient deficiencies.

3. Grains are hard to digest without soaking, sprouting, and other traditional preparations.

Aside from the fact that the grains and flours we consume are fundamentally different from the ones our grandparents and great-grandparents consumed, we also prepare them much differently and this may also help explain the increasing rates of allergies and intolerance problems with grains.

I explain in depth in this article how in almost all cultures people traditionally prepared grains by different methods like soaking, sprouting and fermenting (think sourdough bread). These methods make the nutrients in grains more available to the human body and reduce the phytates that can bind to minerals in the body. Many studies support the nutritional benefits of this traditional preparation.

In the name of convenience, we’ve largely stopped using these traditional preparation methods, further reducing the amount of nutrients we can obtain from grains and flours and potentially increasing the amount of mineral-binding phytic acid we consume.

But Why So Many Allergies to Grains and Wheat Especially?

If we just look at the changes in grains from the invention of the modern steel mill and the high-yield dwarf varieties cultivated in the 1960s, it still doesn’t completely match up with or explain the drastic rise of grain-related allergies and intolerances in the last two decades … but there is a missing link that might!

Are Grains and Wheat Toxic?

Other countries don’t seem to have the same problem with grains. Many people report that they are able to eat wheat and other grains without a problem when travelling abroad, even if they react to it in the U.S. In fact, I know several families who while traveling out of the country who consumed more processed grains than they would at home and noticed that certain digestive and skin issues actually improved.

I have family members who can consume certain varieties of grains (like imported organic Einkorn wheat or the ancient grain spelt) without a problem but react horribly to regular wheat or grain products. Why is this? Both contain gluten, so perhaps gluten intolerance isn’t the problem we think it is!

In fact, the answer may be something much simpler and more obvious that isn’t being widely talked about: the cultivation and spraying methods that have changed in the last few decades.

The Real Problem with Wheat

So what’s a mom to do? So many experts in the health world today (many that I’ve interviewed myself on the Fit Bottomed Zone podcast) say a resounding “no” to grains and especially gluten-containing grains. JJ Virgin recommends against giving wheat or gluten to kids and Dr. David Perlmutter blames grain in large part of the rising epidemic of MS and other brain conditions.

I agree with the Healthy Home Economist that new pesticides (Roundup or glyphosate, specifically) are largely to blame. The timeline matches up much more closely with the rise in wheat and gluten intolerance in the U.S.

From her article “The Real Reason Wheat Is Toxic Is Not Gluten“:

Pre-harvest application of the herbicide Roundup or other herbicides containing the deadly active ingredient glyphosate to wheat and barley as a desiccant was suggested as early as 1980. It has since become routine over the past 15 years and is used as a drying agent 7-10 days before harvest within the conventional farming community. According to Dr. Stephanie Seneff of MIT who has studied the issue in depth and who I recently saw present on the subject at a nutritional Conference in Indianapolis, desiccating non-organic wheat crops with glyphosate just before harvest came into vogue late in the 1990’s with the result that most of the non-organic wheat in the United States is now contaminated with it.

The fact that glyphosate is banned in many parts of the world may explain why other countries fare better.

In fact, this article and chart explain how increased glyphosate use on wheat crops may be partially to blame for the rising rates of celiac disease, comparing the increased incidence of celiac with increased glyphosate use:

celiac-incidence-as-a-factor-of-glyphosate-application-to-wheat

Of course, I’m hesitant to assume that any of these factors alone is directly responsible for the rising problems we are seeing related to grain consumption in the last few decades, but when you consider that glyphosate may impact gut bacteria in a negative way, it makes sense that this could be contributing to the problem.

Other Reasons for the Problem with Grains and Wheat

Aside from the above problems with modern grains themselves and the way they are cultivated and processed, I believe there are several other (possibly inadvertent) effects of our grain consumption.

More Grains = Less of Other Foods

We know that statistically we are consuming more grain products in general (both whole grain and refined grains) and that corn and wheat are two of the top 5 most consumed foods in the United States. We also know that we are statistically consuming less fat that we have in previous decades, and fewer vegetables.

Since refined grains can spike insulin levels and are a highly processed carbohydrate, our increased consumption may be partially to blame for the rising rates of diabetes and obesity (though of course other factors come into play here as well).

Grains like wheat are found in the vast majority of all processed foods, which makes sense because they are inexpensive, shelf stable, and easy to manufacture. Unfortunately, we are consuming these foods in higher amounts at the expense of foods like vegetables, healthy proteins, and beneficial fats.

Fewer Nutrients

More grains and less of other foods means that we are also statistically consuming fewer of the nutrients found in foods like fresh produce, ethically sourced proteins and healthy fats. As we already know that modern grains have a diminished nutrient content, it is no wonder that it is becoming so difficult to consume enough nutrients from food alone.

Many experts suggest that micronutrient deficiency may be a large contributor to many types of modern disease as we simple aren’t able to obtain enough micronutrients from our food supply. As grains are a large part of the modern food supply but a low source of nutrients, they are contributing to this problem.

So Should We Consume Modern Grains?: The Bottom Line

The problem with grains isn’t as clear-cut as it sometimes seems. It isn’t just about the gluten, or the processing, or the modern cultivation, but a complex combination of many factors. There isn’t a clear-cut answer to that question and it truly does vary on an individual level based on gut health, the type of grain, and how it was prepared.

My Take on Grains

For years, I was completely anti-grain and didn’t eat them at all, especially while healing a thyroid issue. After many years of consuming processed grains when I was younger, I felt great avoiding grains entirely and saw no reason to eat them as I was consuming more nutrients and more vegetables without grains in my diet. This was a guiding principle of my cookbook as well, which I kept entirely grain free and dairy optional.

These days, I do eat white rice on occasion (here’s why) and serve it and other organic and properly prepared grains to my family at times.

What I Do:

  • I still avoid most grains, especially those that contain gluten, the majority of the time.
  • If I do consume grains, I opt for white rice or properly prepared whole grains such as organic Einkorn (soaked, fermented, sprouted, etc.).
  • I don’t make grains a staple of my diet. I do occasionally consume them but make sure that the core of our family’s diet is a wide variety of vegetables and fruits, healthy proteins, and beneficial fats.
  • Whenever possible, I use vegetables in place of grains. Love grains or hate them, vegetables typically contain many more nutrients. I make simple substitutes like using cabbage for noodles in spaghetti or sweet potatoes instead of noodles in lasagna. Not only are these substitutes more nutritious, but they also taste better (in my opinion).
  • I often bake with grain-free flours like coconut flour or almond flour, which are higher in protein and fiber and experiment with cassava flour and plantain flour (sources of resistant starch).
  • When I travel internationally, I try grains in other countries out of curiosity to see how I react. So far, so good … the research continues!

I realize that for many people completely avoiding grains is neither desirable or practical, and it certainly may not be necessary for everyone. At the same time, I continue to feel strongly about avoiding processed modern grains that have been refined, modified, and highly sprayed as they offer no nutritional value and may have a severe health impact over time.

What do you think? Do you consume modern grains? Why or why not?

Sources

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Katie Wells Avatar

About Katie Wells

Katie Wells, CTNC, MCHC, Founder of Fit Bottomed Zone 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. fitbottomedzone.com is the culmination of her thousands of hours of research and all posts are medically reviewed and verified by the Fit Bottomed Zone research team. Katie is also the author of the bestselling books The Fit Bottomed Zone Cookbook and The Fit Bottomed Zone 5-Step Lifestyle Detox.

Comments

976 responses to “The Real Problem with Grains”

  1. Hicunni Chandler Avatar
    Hicunni Chandler

    Hi! There is some great information on nutrition, specifically regarding to eat grains or not to eat them. The videos are available for 24 hrs after its showing. Please register for FREE . Check it out futureofnutritionconference.com I stumbled upon this and it is going on right now…awesome information!
    By the way, I have enjoyed reading the information on this blog!

  2. Rhett J D. Avatar
    Rhett J D.

    Atkins diet was researched and was done over 40 years with great results all scientific backed. Want real science try it on yourself instead of making excuses.

  3. Rhett J D. Avatar
    Rhett J D.

    Its doing the atkins way of eating to be honest and i also quit grains a few years ago, its difficult at times but i dont miss the pain.

  4. Lola W Avatar

    OMG! I feel like I’m listening to my kids fight over who has to turn off the TV 🙂

    To clear one thing up (at least for those who are not Creationists) – Humans are, indeed, designed to be omnivores. I have a degree in biological anthropology and have spent many hours doing reading, lab work and the like on this exact topic. Australopithecus is considered the “upright ape” that eventually led to modern humans. They were omnivores, as shown by their teeth and skull characteristics, which are VERY similar to ours. During the same time, another upright ape lived. This one was called Paranthropus and was vegetarian. They had a huge amount of molar surface area, much less prominent front teeth, a square shaped dental pattern and much greater musculature in the jaw area than Australopithecus did. Paranthropus died out because they could not adapt to many different environments, while Australopithecus continued on. It was all about survival.

    Now, just because you can survive on a food, doesn’t necessarily mean it is optimal. Heck, many of us are surviving on junk to reproductive age today. I think the fact that nobody can agree on a “correct” diet is a good indication that there is none! I think most people (yes, even the Paleo people would agree that everyone should eat lots of vegetables and some degree of fruit, nuts and seeds. How you fill in the rest should depend on how certain foods make you feel as well as how they fit into your family and culture – of course minimizing refined and artificial food sources. It’s actually pretty simple.

  5. Stacy Renee Avatar
    Stacy Renee

    This sounds like a good idea and I”ve actually been cutting out a lot of grains lately and feel better, as when I eat bread and stuff I feel bloated. – But I’ve looked at the meal plans and stuff and its all meat. this seems like a very paleo type diet, which I’m intrigued by, but my boyfriend and I are vegetarians, we eat a lot of beans for protein and stuff. How would this be do-able for us?

    1. alexander Avatar
      alexander

      Perhaps you should be asking why rice wouldn’t be ok.
      Japanese people have been surviving on a diet that consists mainly of rice for quite some time, and Japan has the highest life expectency.
      Any food (including grains) are okay unless you specifically have an allergic reaction to the food in question. No one is suggesting overeating carbs, but they are essential.

      This article makes carbs (especially grains) seem really bad. They’re not at all, and you are more likely to live a healthier and happier life with carbs (and grains) in your diet than without.

  6. Charles Avatar

    I really, really resent this latest layer of experts and authorities. They give us crappy advice, like “eat low fat”, meaning eat high carbohydrates which cost millions of mainly women their gall blatter and gave us the current type 2 diabetes epidemic. They gave us marriages without men, children without men, is great for kids and that led to the gangs, drugs, murders, and single mothers being rock stars.

    I wish they would mind their own business and quit thinking they know so much.

    And, then there was coffee causes cancer, knee replacements until they happened to notice a ligament they hadn’t noticed for thousands of years. Then there was the girls are as good as boys playing football and socker which led to ACL surgery for thousands and thousands of young girls.

    What about, talk to your child, reason with them, make your marriage a two headed monster, causing conflict and divorce rates at 50%? And, then there was my favorite, Women’s Lib, which ruined about twenty years and led to nothing. Young women still long for marriage, men, homes and children.

    This is all liberal garbage. You young heads full of mush, don’t listen to it. Follow the plan of God and the Bible.

    You people have no shame, or you are on Satan’s payroll. How can you do these things to fellow human beings?

    Run from experts and authorities trying to give you a better life. Decide for yourself.

  7. Aurora Fay Avatar
    Aurora Fay

    So quinoa,or burgul are going to kill me now? Oh i though they were extremely good for you mmmmmmhh

  8. michelle Avatar
    michelle

    In your article Fit Bottomed Zone you wrote about the consumption of grains increasing the risk of infertility and certain cancers, isn’t this only true for people suffering from celiac disease?

  9. Cindy Lewis Avatar
    Cindy Lewis

    Thank you, I’ve just switched to no grains, no sugar and after the initial 5 days, I’m feeling great. I am doing this under another nutritionalist who has diligently been studying this as well. We all used to believe the earth was flat…

  10. Lily Winter Avatar
    Lily Winter

    I want to chuck a donut at you!! I LOVE grains!! 🙁 But I’ve been toying with the idea of giving them up… Very torn *sigh* My family practically lives off pasta and potatoes, I don’t know if they would be willing to put up with me keeping grains out of the house. Of course I am the mom… I have very little willpower, but I’m working on kicking the evil smoke habit, and next up is the diet soda addiction… If I can kill those two I might feel strong enough to take on the grains.

  11. Natasha Field Avatar
    Natasha Field

    I’d like to chuck a donut at you.
    Not because you’re wrong, I think you’re highly intelligent person and I absolutely agree with you – but because I have no idea how to get my husband to go on-board with this.
    Any tips? 🙂

  12. cyril Avatar

    Also what exactly are you recommending I should eliminate from my diet? Just cereal grains or starchy foods as well?

  13. cyril Avatar

    Hi there, I found the info regarding a link between grains and dermatitus very interesting. I’ve had nummular dermatitus for nearly 3 years and no cure in sight. As a matter of fact my dermatologist has no idea what causes it. I’m 70 yrs old and have never had any allergies that I know of so why dermatitis now? Also what is the difference between nummular and herpetiformis?

  14. Cheri Avatar

    Hello,

    I would like to start off by saying that I made one of your deo recipes yesterday (coconut oil/cornstarch base), and it’s great! I melted down the coconut oil (just enough to get it nice and liquidy), then added the other ingredients, then followed with fridge time to get everything to solidify inside the packaging I poured the mixture into. I used it today, and so far it seems to work. We’ll see how it goes with time, since I’m fairly sensitive in the pit area.

    Now to my main point:
    I generally agree with your stance on the posts of yours that I have viewed so far. However, I have noticed something that rips me apart, quite literally! You don’t provide sources!! Especially sources referencing phrases like this one:

    “In the last 130 years of increased grain consumption, chronic disease rates have skyrocketed, fertility has fallen and the average weight of the population has steadily risen. The more consumption of grains rose, the more fertility rates fell. Research from the University of Missouri, the average sperm count of American males has dropped 50% since the 1930s. To add insult to impotence, testicle size tends to have an inverse relationship with grain consumption.”

    Also, I was very interested and intrigued by the discussion on phytic acid. Yet, you provided no sources for this information.

    I have two concerns that I would love to see addressed, if possible:
    1) Please provide sources to reproducable, peer-reviewed studies for your information. Also, if you get this information elsewhere (other blogs, etc.), I’d love to know the source! (Also, citing is a great way to give credit to those who did the work to find the information in the first place.)
    2) If you are not able to provide such sources, please do not state your opinion as though it were fact. I’m really glad to hear someone with a tremendous internet presence questioning the very same things that I am questioning. However, as we also learned in freshman biology, the scientific method is a framework for asking questions and searching for/finding the answers. Thus we cannot say that simply because maggots appear on food we have left out, maggots spontaneously generate. I believe that the best way of teaching is by encouraging questioning; getting the mind to be inquisitive and search for relations between the things it observes. Thus, to state opinions as fact, with only a disclaimer that you are not a doctor, is not the optimal way to teach, or to encourage questioning.

    I hope that you are able to provide some sources on the information in this article, and I sincerily hope that this website continues. I look forward to trying some of your other recipes!

    Thank you and have a Merry Christmas!

  15. Nancy Avatar

    One diet doesn’t work for everyone. I eat mostly grains and lean chicken and fish. However mostly grains. Good fats too. I run 35 miles a week, lift weights and swim regularly. I’m 48 and look 38 (some say younger). I am not overweight, have no heart issues and no disease processes. I have no reason to change my diet or my life according to my physicians. My cholesterol and all my vitals are excellent. I’m regular and have never suffered digestive or mental health issues. My diet doesn’t guarantee me a life of perfect health / and neither does yours. Different strokes for different folks. What kills people are diseases with still unknown etiologies (cancer etc) self-inflicted conditions often due too much junk food, drugs and alcohol combined with too little water, good fats, great grains and dehydration. And of course accidents (external events). I’m 5’4″ inches tall and 120 pounds. I have 18 percent body fat. One diet won’t benefit everyone in the same way.

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