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Dr. Drew Ramsey is a psychiatrist, author, and farmer. He is one of psychiatry’s leading proponents of using dietary change to help balance moods, sharpen brain function and improve mental[…]
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If you have an appointment with psychiatrist Drew Ramsey, there’s no guarantee that you’re going to walk out of there with a bottle full of pills. Sometimes you’ll emerge with a recipe for a blueberry-avocado-kefir-nut smoothie. Or a shopping list for how to make kale pesto. Ramsey is leading the charge in a relatively new branch known as nutritional psychiatry. Physically, we can see the difference between someone with a good diet versus a poor diet, the external symptoms of nutritional deficiency are obvious, and so you don’t have to stretch the imagination too far to imagine the difference it might make internally, particularly to your cognitive abilities and your mental health.


Vitamin supplements are necessary for those of us with specific deficiencies, but according to Dr. Ramsey for comprehensive health in all spheres, a thoughtful and nutrient dense diet is much more effective than a multi-vitamin, for many reasons, not least of which is that supplements don’t deliver all forms of nutrients – as he points out, in the supplement bottle there is one form of vitamin E, whereas in the natural world there are eight varieties. These nutrient molecules are vital because they signal instructions to our system. “They literally travel from the end of our fork into our DNA and change how our genes get expressed and they turn on genes that keep us healthy.”

Ramsey brings to attention the versatility of food, and breaks down the myth that providing good food for yourself or your family has to cost the world. In a move that salutes the character of Bubba from Forrest Gump, and his multi-scene soliloquy on the various ways one can cook shrimp, Ramsey does the same in this video for kale, and all the ways you can turn it into nutrient-dense brain food for just a few dollars – everything from kale soup to a kalejito.

From tips on how to improve your smoothie game, and waving farewell to outdated schools of thought that demonize fat, to ideas about food as a communal ritual, and accessing quality produce on a small budget, in this video Ramsey explains the molecular power within foods that can keep our brains and bodies running optimally. Research shows that eating a diet with plenty of plant-based whole foods, good fats, and some seafood (and reducing processed foods), can decrease your risk of an illness like depression by as much as 50 per cent.

Drew Ramsey’s book is Eat Complete.

Drew Ramsey: A lot of people like to talk about multivitamins and how they're an insurance policy. And it's always confused me as a doctor. Do you really think there's an insurance policy for not eating well or not exercising or moving your body or not living in a compassionate and peaceful way? There's no insurance policy for that. When you don't eat well you get sick. And that's one of the reasons that I really promote a food first philosophy that certainly if people have a deficiency, for example, if you have an illness like pernicious anemia where your body doesn't allow you to absorb B12, of course you have to take a B12 supplement. Or if you're severely iron deficient, take an iron supplement. But over the long term what we really want to see is that people are getting their nutrients from food.

So some of the reasons for this aren't about nutrition, they're about community, that when you're engaged when your food and your food supply, when, for example, you go to a farmers market or if you have kids if you take them to a farm and teach them about where our food comes from that really creates a different philosophy or a different mindset about nutrition and about how we nourish ourselves. Certainly you can live on a multivitamin and sipping on some coconut oil, but that to me doesn't create a great meal. And that's really where I think about my favorite healthy delivery system, it's the dinner table where as people sit around there's a lot more going on than just the food. My family we're talking and we're processing the day and we're trying something new. Even just engaging with your food the creative process of cooking, you take some of these wonderful food I just sort of picked up at the deli and I thought well we can just whip up a little quick salad, add in lots of fats and proteins with these nuts and seeds, s little leafy green with the watercress. I've never made a salad that has those ingredients but it's a creative and fun process in a way to engage.

I think that's a big difference the idea of starting your day taking a set of pills that someone has prescribed for you or that we have thought about as that's what makes you healthy as opposed to really seeking out the top food sources. And food is really the foundation of your health. There's also some differences in terms of absorption. There's some molecules, for example, that just aren't in multivitamins or aren't in as good of a form I would say.

Things like a vitamin E. In the natural world there are eight forms of vitamin E, in supplements there's one form. In all these foods that I love to talk about the leafy greens and lemons and red peppers there are a host of what's called phyto nutrients or plant-based nutrients. And these are really the miracle molecules of why plant-based diet are just so incredibly good for our health because they're signaling molecules. They literally travel from the end of our fork into our DNA and change how our genes get expressed and they turn on genes that keep us healthy. So that's another way that supplements and real food differ as you get these phyto nutrients. I like the idea that food becomes a way of nourishing the self in a way that a supplement really can't. There are a lot of beliefs in supplements but really you can get all of the nutrients that you find in supplements in whole good nourishing organic foods.

Another important perspective when we think about brain health is it allows us to look at certain food trends in certain ways that you can take something that people think of as healthy like juicing or a smoothie. If you look at a smoothie for a lot of people it's often a lot of tropical fruits and maybe some low-fat milk or yogurt and really it's a lot of simple sugars. And we want people to have a more robust meal with her smoothie. So all the smoothies in Eat Complete have seeds or nuts in them because I'm trying to increase the fat content in a smoothie and increase of the protein content. Now fat has been a bad word for way too long. I hope that everyone now is considering fat as something that's really healthy. One reason is your brain is mainly made of fat and your brain is amazing. Human brains are amazing so fats are very, very important to brain function. And also it's important in terms of staying full that when we eat fats and proteins and complex carbohydrates our bodies just stay full longer so you're eating fewer calories and that helps move you towards an optimal weight.

So really eating for brain health helps you look at something like a smoothie and say I want to get as much of the whole food as possible. It's why the smoothies in our house I don't usually juice ever in our house, we just throw the whole food in there whether it's kale, blueberries, some kaffir, a little fermented dairy product, some almonds, for example, and blend it up where I'm really, again, trying to deliver a lot of nutrition in a small dose. The other thing I like about smoothies is often times I'm working with patients who are depressed and they don't have a lot of appetite so it's a little bit of a paradox, we know they need to eat much better in terms of really to restore their full health. So they don't have a big appetite so something like a smoothie with, again, lots of nuts and seeds and some healthy fats really can help them because it goes down easy and it's in a small, small amount.

There are a number of myths that I think are also really important to dispel about eating for your health. One is the myth that it costs too much. I grew up in a food desert in Crawford County Indiana, very rural Indiana and a food desert is a place that there isn't fresh food and there aren't grocery stores. And what's very interesting about where I grew up is there are a lot of farms. So you'd wonder how is there a food desert? And we see what's happening really over the last ten years in America is a change in how we get our food. Increasingly we're having food delivered to us. Increasingly we're having farms, like right here in New York City one of my favorite farms is on a rooftop across the river, huge farm; feeds hundreds of families called Brooklyn Grange Farm.

So in terms of access we really see things shifting where there are great policies in the many states now where food stamps are two for one in a farmers market. So there's this redistribution of how we think about food and food dollars, but access can be a huge issue so how do you find access? There are lots of great resources to help you find local farms in your area. A CSA or community supported agriculture is a way that for a few hundred dollars you can get a big box of produce every single week. And so there's all kinds of little tips and hacks in terms of how you can get this food into your diet without spending a lot of money. Eat Complete is a plant-based book. Plants cost less money than things like meat and even a lot of processed foods. So when I think about how to describe what is a healthy food to people I talk about the rule of kale. That kale has been a phenomenon and even there's a little bit of kale backlash now, but really the point is that kale teaches us a lesson. There's three lessons. The rules of kale are we want to look for foods that are nutrient dense, more nutrients per calorie. The difference between a kale salad is a bevy of nutrition and good feeling and something like a soda or a marshmallow, just sugar no nutrients for your brain. We want everybody to be nutrient dense food.

The second rule kale is about culinary versatility, that you can do a lot with it. I mean you might not think so. Back in the day kale was just in the salad bar at Pizza Hut. It's like the third circle of hell for kale, but culinary versatility is that you can use kale in a lot of different things. You can drop it in your smoothie; you've just increased the nutrient density of that smoothie. You can make a kale pesto or a kale soup or a kale salad and put a nice piece of salmon or wild shrimp on top of it. You can make a kalejito even. You can use it and all kinds of ways creatively. And then the third is accessibility. Kale grows everywhere. It's $2 to $3 dollars for a big bunch of organic kale. You can make a giant batch of kale chips. You can feed a family of four for probably a week on a few dollars of kale.

And so that's really I think where the accessibility issue hits home for me is that we forget to teach people about proper nutrition and about our relationship with the food supply and we don't learn these basic culinary skills. I'm not a great chef. I have a chef's knife and my cutting board and some olive oil and that's the base of almost all of my dishes and a cast-iron skillet. Simply combining good wholesome foods together it ends up being just absolutely delicious and incredibly nutritious. And that's the goal and I think we have to really understand that for a lot of people the barrier is money and time. And one of my favorite little tips is around dried beans and lentils. So dried beans here in Manhattan $2.29 a pound for the small red bean. The small red bean has more phyto nutrients or antioxidants per gram that any other food, even more than blueberries. So an example of really, really low cost point very, very nutritious food. And then time. And part of my focus in Eat Complete was trying to find very, very simple quick recipes for people to employ in their every day life. Because as a clinician I really am on the front line of seeing the difference of sort of telling people what to eat and helping them really change their behavior.

I meet with a lot of eaters where it's very clear to me they know exactly what they should be eating, but how you actualize that, how you manifest that in your every day life is the challenge. And that's where dispelling these myths like it takes forever. I cooked breakfast for my kids and my wife this morning in five or ten minutes. It's simple, oatmeal with some almond butter scooped on top of it. If I want to get fancy maybe I'll put a little lemon zest on there, a little cinnamon, maybe drop in some fruit; simple, simple whole foods. A real easy test of your food is look at your plate and everything should have one ingredient. You're looking at brussels sprouts maybe with a little bacon in there or you're looking at wild salmon with a garlic scape pesto, all things that you recognize and know as opposed to reading ingredients on the back of a package where those foods are generally created for the shelf; they're not really created for your health.


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