Do You Eat And Drink Too Much Over The Holidays?

Let Cultured Foods Help You

One of the most important things I’ve learned about health and wellness is this: overeating can stress your liver just as much as drinking too much—and most people have no idea. When we overeat or load our plates with heavy, fatty foods, our liver has to work overtime. That extra strain can slow detoxification, create a buildup of toxins, and leave us feeling sluggish and weighed down.

But here’s the good news …
There are simple, everyday things you can add to your meals that lighten the load on your liver and your whole body.

Kombucha is Powerful

You can still enjoy your favorite foods—just do yourself a favor and have a glass of kombucha or a cultured food alongside them. Kombucha contains antioxidants and powerful organic acids that support liver detoxification.

Researchers at India’s Jadavpur University discovered that kombucha protects liver cells from toxin damage.[1] They exposed liver cells to a potent toxin that normally breaks down cell membranes and leads to cell death. In the group treated with kombucha, the cell membranes stayed far more intact. The kombucha significantly reduced free-radical damage and preserved the cells’ ability to function.

I’ve seen kombucha work its magic in real life, too. Years ago, when we spent weekends at the Lake of the Ozarks, friends on our dock would often drink all weekend. I wasn’t a drinker, but after sharing kombucha with them, many began brewing their own. One friend told me that when he drank kombucha after a heavy weekend, his body would suddenly start detoxing. He would drop all the water weight that alcohol had caused him to retain, and he felt dramatically better. Without kombucha, he stayed inflamed, puffy, and sluggish.

Now, this isn’t a license to overdrink—but if you do find yourself feeling off after eating or drinking too much, kombucha can give your liver the helping hand it needs.

Kefir and Cultured Veggies - A Natural Detox

Kefir—with its 50+ probiotic strains—and cultured vegetables are powerful detoxifiers too. Your body loves the way these microbes help lighten its load.

For years I believed my liver was doing most of the detoxification work, clearing out toxic chemicals and excess hormones like estrogen. But that’s only half the story. Your gut bacteria are responsible for about 50% of your detoxification.
If you don’t have the right microbes—or enough of them—they simply can’t do their job.

So how do bacteria detoxify you? The answer is amazing.

gingerbreadkombucha

Chemical BPA

Bisphenol A (BPA) is everywhere—plastic containers, store receipts, even paper money. It’s an endocrine disruptor linked to dozens of diseases.

But animal studies show that the right gut bacteria can actually decrease the absorption of BPA and help escort it out of the body. [2]
Many of those helpful microbes come directly from cultured foods. Eat them, and they become part of your internal detox team!

Christmas Kraut

Pesticides

When you make cultured vegetables, specific strains of bacteria go to work that have been shown to degrade many different pesticides in your vegetables such as chlorpyrifos, coumaphos, diazinon, methyl parathion, and parathion. They do this while fermenting on your counter, and the pesticides will be degraded by 83.3 percent in as little as three days. Give it a few more days and they remove them completely. 3 The really cool part is that these microbes actually use these hard-to-break-down chemicals as sources of carbon and phosphorous food!

Kefir clause2

Sodium nitrate and heavy metals

Sodium nitrate—found in preserved meats, fertilizers, explosives, and even some organic foods—has been linked to chronic health issues, including cancer.

But our beloved Lactobacillus strains can break down sodium nitrate, degrade heavy metals,[4,5] and even neutralize heterocyclic amines[6] (those harmful compounds formed when meat is cooked at high temperatures).

These probiotic microbes—found in kefir, cultured vegetables, cultured dairy, and even sourdough bread—reduce toxicity and help us digest foods we might otherwise struggle with.

Just like special microbial teams are called in to clean up ocean oil spills, your microbes do the same inside your body.
All they need is for you to feed them and help them grow.

Let Your Microbes Work For You

I hope you’ll make kefir daily. As you drink it, you’ll feel the loving work it's doing inside you. Keep cultured vegetables on hand—they are tiny detoxifiers that support you with every spoonful. And if you eat bread, choose sourdough so those Lactobacillus strains can transform it for you.

And of course, keep kombucha nearby for those days when your body needs a little pick-me-up.

Before long, you may even start talking about your microbes in the third person:
“Would Donna’s microbes enjoy this cultured food? I think they would—time to eat!”


🎄Let the Holidays Make You Healthier

This is the year the holidays are going to help your health instead of hurt it. Add one probiotic food to each holiday meal and watch how much better you feel. Better digestion, more nutrients, more energy, more joy.

These foods are simple, delicious, and deeply supportive.

Check out all the recipes we have and start giving your microbes the love they deserve!

 

Listen To My Podcast

Do you overeat on Thanksgiving and Christmas? Overeating is as stressful to the liver as drinking too much alcohol. But there are ways to help your liver and your body, and also get more nutrients from your food. I'll share what I do and the foods we eat and drink. Let this be the year that Thanksgiving makes you healthy!

Baked Sourdough French Toast
The recipe is made with leftover sourdough bread. You can make it the night before […]
Christmas Kraut
Unbelievably good kraut that tastes like Christmas!! Feel free to experiment and add different seasonings, […]
Cranberry Chai Kombucha
Cranberry juice has many health benefits, including relief from urinary tract infection, respiratory disorders, and […]
Cranberry Chai Water Kefir
Cranberry juice has many health benefits, including relief from urinary tract infections, respiratory disorders, and […]
Cranberry Kefir Delish
You can add small orange slices to this dish after it is already prepared for […]
Cranberry Rosemary Kombucha
Cranberries and rosemary - oh my!! You've gotta try this kombucha. Learn how powerful cranberries […]
Gingerbread Bars with Kefir Frosting
Molasses gives these bars their rich flavor. Molasses is a rich source of nutrients, and […]
Gingerbread Kefir Smoothie
Black Strap Molasses is loaded with minerals and gives some of that wonderful classic gingerbread […]
Gingerbread Kombucha
The unique gingerbread taste in this kombucha comes from molasse. There are many types of […]
Gingerbread Sourdough
Sourdough bread is super yummy with all the flavors of gingerbread. Have a slice for […]
Gingerbread Water Kefir
The flavor of gingerbread comes from blackstrap molasses, ginger and spices. This water kefir doesn't […]
Grinchy Kefir Smoothie
Spirulina is optional in this smoothie, but it has many benefits. It's considered a superfood […]
Kefir Claus
🎅Perfect little kefir holiday treats. Fun to make too and you'll get kefir and prebiotics […]
Kefir Lemon Yule Log
I made this for a Christmas Cultured Class I did and boy was it a […]
Pumpkin Kefir Oatmeal
Talk about yummy warm comforting oatmeal with a probiotic topping... this fits the bill! Oatmeal […]
Pumpkin Sourdough Bread
This bread rises really well due to the pumpkin that gives extra food to the […]
Thank You Kraut
We named this Thank You Kraut because it is perfect for Thanksgiving. It’s loaded […]

References:

  1. https://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S0928468011000034
  2. Kenji Oishi, Tadashi Sato, Wakae Yokoi, Yasuto Yoshida, Masahiko Ito, Haruji Sawada. Biosci Biotechnol Biochem. 2008 Jun;72(6):1409-15. Epub 2008 Jun 7. PMID:
  3. Shah Md Asraful Islam, Renukaradhya K Math, Kye Man Cho, Woo Jin Lim, Su Young Hong, Jong Min Kim, Myoung Geun Yun, Ji Joong Cho, Han Dae Yun.  J Agric Food Chem. 2010 May 12;58(9):5380-6. PMID
  4. Chang-Kyung Oh, Myung-Chul Oh, Soo-Hyun Kim. J Med Food. 2004;7(1):38-44. PMID:
  5. Marc Monachese, Jeremy P Burton, Gregor Reid.  Appl Environ Microbiol. 2012 Sep ;78(18):6397-404. Epub 2012 Jul 13. PMID:
  6. Adriana Nowak, Zdzislawa Libudzisz. Eur J Nutr. 2009 Oct ;48(7):419-27. Epub 2009 May 16. PMID:

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