
Let this be me! I don’t know whom to credit for the artwork but both the title and art come from Mary Medlicott’s story on storyworks.org.uk
It’s all about guts. “Speaking up was such a gutsy thing to do, but it was a gut-wrenching experience to watch.” “Geez I hate his guts.” “Personally, my gut instinct was that it wouldn’t turn out well.” Seems like we’ve heard lots of gut-based expressions like that the past month or so. But I’m not thinking about earthy sayings at the moment – such as I did in a recent blog. I’m thinking about our guts’ health and foods that can contribute to it. Andy, in Andy’s Corner, is focused on gutsy cowboys.

Should you wish to order it, the American Museum of Natural History has a card game entitled “Gutsy: the Gut Microbiome Card Game.”

And the Cleveland Clinic has a podcast, “Butts & Guts.” Like the title?
Since my knowledge of anything inside of me is minimal, to say the least, I turned to a Colorado College GPB Sister (see my earlier blog about these sisters) for help. Here’s what Willow has to say about her background and her advice on gut health:
Owning a health food store for 33 years, I certainly was in an environment conducive to learning about health and nutrition. I did a lot of reading, went to seminars as often as possible, and I learned a great deal from my customers, things they read and their personal experiences. I’ve always been skeptical of food and health fads that are not supported by good evidence or studies.
The gut is so important, your second brain. What goes on in the gut determines what goes one in the brain. I’m including an article (editor’s note: we’ve put that article under Food for Thought) that pretty well summarizes what is so important in the gut and what can go wrong. For a healthy gut, cultured foods provide food for the good bacteria. That includes any fermented food (not sure about wine) (editor’s note: DAMN!), such as cultured yogurt unsweetened, sauerkraut, raw fermented drinks, tempeh, miso or any raw fermented food. The key word is raw. If you heat the sauerkraut it kills the good bacteria. The foods that disrupt the healthy bacteria are SUGAR, flour, artificial sweeteners, GMO foods (the glyphosphate is part of the plant that you eat) It and other pesticides work on bugs to disrupt their gut flora and kill them. So guess what it does to the human that eats it.
The secret is lots of organic vegetables, moderate amounts of fruit (which are basically sugar), pasture raised meats (not fed GMO corn and soy), (editor’s note: all the underlining is mine)
Nobody has a perfect diet, but if you eat the not so healthy foods, do so in great moderation.

Gut-healthy ingredients
After reading Willow’s suggestions and doing a little internet research, I put together a list of some additional gut-healthy foods to consider when you’re cooking; foods with lots of fiber are especially important :
- chickpeas
- lentils
- navy beans
- split peas
- barley
- oats (steel cut are best)
- raw leafy greens – dandelion greens are especially good
- fresh parsley and cilantro
- raw garlic and onion
- artichokes
- sweet potatoes and squash
- raw celery
- leeks
- raw jicama
- asparagus
- hemp, pumpkin, sunflower, chia, and flax seed
- raspberries and blackberries
- bananas (in moderation)
- uncooked pears (in moderation)
- unpeeled, uncooked apples (in moderation)
- nuts (except peanuts and cashews)
- pasture raised meats (not fed GMO corn and soy)
- and the obvious: raw sauerkraut, unsweetened cultured yogurt, raw fermented drinks, tempeh, miso, kimchi
Another piece of advice that sounds reasonable from what I gleaned from the internet: antibiotics kill ‘good’ bacteria as well as ‘bad’. If you have to take antibiotics, make sure you eat lots of foods that boost your guts’ health afterwards.
I’m pleased that we’ve already blogged about a couple of salad recipes and our green drink recipe that all have lots going for the gut:
- Crunchy Pepitas, Sweet Potato, and Black Bean Salad – raw onion, sweet potatoes, black beans, and pumpkin seeds!
- Carrot Apple Yogurt Salad – apples (for gut healthiness – don’t peel them), yogurt, almonds (raw, not blanched)!
- Jugo Verde – raw spinach, parsley, raw celery!
Plus, we’ve got two new ones to share: “Arugula, Squash, Chickpea, and Walnut Salad and Dandelion Greens, Sweet Potato, and Pumpkin Seed Salad with Miso Dressing (see photos and recipes below). And I’ve created a printable list of these gut-healthy foods, so you can easily reference it when shopping. If you want to do more reading on the subject of gut health, you can find a couple more very informative articles we posted under Food for Thought.