Episode 188, Paleo-Friendly Bread




The Paleo View show

Summary: Intro (0:00)News and Views (1:18)A whole lot of people told Sarah at the Nutritional Therapy Association conference to say hi to StacyThe conference was three times bigger this year than lastSarah got to meet many new people and reconnect with old colleagues and friendsGreat to be in an environment where Sarah felt surrounded by her peepsThere were also some amazing vendors in attendanceStacy made Paleo peeps with honey and vital proteins, and dusted them in freeze dried fruitThere is some transition happening on the Paleo Parents team with their long-time team member Monica, who is stepping back as she prepares for the arrival of her third babySarah is starting to work on her next book and owes her publisher two chapters by the end of the month, so she is working on the narrative nowHow Stacy and Sarah fill eggs for Easter egg huntsThis week's show topic will be on Paleo breadScience with Sarah (15:21)A question that Sarah gets asked a lot is if soaking, sprouting and/or fermenting makes a difference with the nutrient compounds of nuts and grainsSoaking and sprouting are the same thing - the variable is how long you go forWith soaking you take the grain and put them in water for twelve to twenty-four hoursIf you rinse them and put them on a damp paper towel to allow them to sprout and grow, it becomes a sprouted grain - but the things happening in a sprouted grain start to happen when you begin to soak the grainThe anti-nutrients in grains and if they are or are not impacted by the soaking and sproutingFermentation we are using yeast and bacteria to partially digest the grainDigesting the product using bacteria and yeastIt is the same process as making sauerkrautThe anti-nutrients in grains and if they are or are not impacted by the soaking and sproutingThese processes do not make grains a nutrient-dense food, but they do change the food and makes it more digestible for people that do not have overt food sensitivitiesWhether you consume these sprouted or fermented grains is all individual choice, and based on where you fall on an ancestral template spectrumPlaying around with soaked and fermented grains wouldn't qualify as PaleoAll the considerations that go into the choices you make, what your goals may be, and understanding the types of options you haveQuestions & Answers (27:01)Andrea - what are your thoughts on fermented sourdough bread?Stacy recommends avoiding breads, focusing on incorporating nutrient dense items insteadLooking at what you gain by eating these foodsQuality of life food versus a nourishing foodWhen we cook/bake a food we kill the nutrients that are beneficial when consuming fermented foodsChris - is there such a thing as Paleo bread?Yes making any recipe with less refined ingredients is a healthier option, but it is deceptive to say that any sort of treat is healthyStacy refers to these foods as grain-free or gluten-free, she doesn't refer to them as PaleoSelecting what you eat daily by what adds nutrients, but adding the occasional gluten-free foods is what makes this a sustainable lifestyleIts not about deprivation or telling yourself you can't have something - you can choose to eat these things, you just have to decide if they are inline with the goals that you have for yourself and if that is truly a decision that you want to makeWe all have to find our balanceThere is absolutely a place for Paleo bread, or bagels, or whatever it is you want - and you will find many of these Paleo recipes in Paleo cookbooksLooking at it as a treat versus this is how I can have toast with breakfastThere can be a problem with relying on Paleo versions of old favoritesFiguring out what works for you and implementing strategies around those findings - and this process takes time and baby stepsSarah's nine year old won a blue ribbon at their county science fairThanks for listening, we will be back next week!Outro (54:11)