Science Decolonizing Your Diet Has a Whole Host of Amazing Benefits

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Decolonizing Your Diet Has a Whole Host of Amazing Benefits​

DECOLONIZING YOUR DIET has become somewhat of a social movement.

On Instagram, there are more 15,000 posts carrying the hashtag #decolonizeyourdiet.

But removing colonial influence from your diet is not just about putting down pizza and pasta. It’s important to acknowledge the history of Indigenous people in North America, including colonization.

“Colonization has taken so much from many of the cultures, and part of that being knowledge around food systems,” says Michael Wesley, of Indigenous Health and Nutrition Consulting.

“Western society has devalued Indigenous knowledge and viewed it as primitive since colonization started," Wesley says. "Evidence shows traditional food systems have addressed health disparities before they became the issues we see today. Traditional food systems and nutrition are the opposite of being primitive. They are sustainable, and promote healthy living.”

Food on reservations has been heavily influenced by the federal government. Indigenous people were forced to depend on the government for a lot of things, including heavily processed foods. Now, many Indigenous communities rely on canned foods because they last a long time. Popular foods on reservations have a long shelf life, likely because 49 percent of Indigenous tribes do not have access to running water or basic sanitation.

If you're curious about decolonizing your own diet—or even just what that entails—here's what the experts say.

What is a decolonized diet?

For many Indigenous people, decolonizing their diets means removing western European influence entirely.

Indigenous food often includes fruits, vegetables, and herbs from one region. From supporting local farms to shopping for traditional ingredients, there are plenty of ways to decolonize your diet.

Decolonizing your diet involves learning how to connect with the land, find native ingredients, and prepare ancestral dishes. It involves a deep appreciation for the land you live on, and the food that comes from it.

Decolonizing your diet is not a trend or fad, it’s a way of life, which requires looking into your ancestral history. It means supporting small minority-owned businesses rather than fast food or restaurant chains. Removing typical western European ingredients from your diet may be empowering for some.

How do you decolonize your diet?

To start, “If you're an Indigenous person to this continent, it means you will consider adding a lot more of your local regional foods,” says food activist and chef Neftalí Durán.

Indigenous Labs and The Sioux Chef founder Sean Sherman also has some solid advice on decolonizing your diet. Sherman is a James Beard Award winning chef with a mission to educate the public about Native American foodways and traditions.

Sherman recommends decolonizing your diet by eliminating ingredients that were introduced by western Europeans. That means wheat flour, dairy products, cane sugar, beef, pork and chicken in order to focus on Indigenous food systems. Many people who remove western European foods from their diet will not consume meat. If you’re planning to decolonize your diet, stock up on some Indigenous staples like corn, beans, and pumpkin seeds.

Make sure to become familiar with the plants and animals in your area. “It's just understanding Indigenous histories and cultures where you might be living. Then, it's understanding how we build modern Indigenous foods, and how we create a philosophy doing that,” says Sherman. “It was invisibility of Indigenous perspective. There were hardly Native restaurants. There were barely any books on the subject. We're attempting to create a support system to bring this into the mainstream. People are starting to normalize Indigenous foods on a larger scale.”

What are the benefits of a decolonized diet?

“Most Native foods were chosen because they contributed to health," says Catriona Rueda Esquibel, who co-authored Decolonize Your Diet: Plant-Based Mexican-American Recipes for Health and Healing. "A lot of them had protective benefits against things like high blood sugar. Eating beans, eating cactus, those kinds of things, keep your blood sugar from peaking. It’s something we need right now, and it's not met with standard American diet."

A 2021 study from the Assembly of First Nations, the University of Ottawa, and the Université de Montréal found that traditional food contributes to the overall health and well-being of Indigenous people.

And at the University of McGill’s Centre for Indigenous Peoples’ Nutrition and Environment, a study in 43 arctic communities revealed there are many benefits to consuming traditional foods, including consuming less calories, eating more lean meat and fish, and feeling a deeper connection with their heritage.
 
You don’t get oellagra from lolcorn, you get it from not processing it the right way. Aztecs, Eastern Indians, and later Americans knew how to treat the corn right that they wouldn’t get sick. You didn’t get a pellagra epidemic until they started feeding people shitty Midwestern meal. Hunter savages wasting away makes sense because their hunter savages, one step above animals.

The Three Sisters are a very strong agricultural package and as I understand the Iroquois and Aztecs had crazy huge yields on their land/chinampas.

I could be wrong about the yields, though.
That was my point, they got pellagra from not processing what they stole. It wasn't a huge widespread problem or anything, just an issue with stealing shit they didn't know how to use properly. As for the three sisters, it requires large amounts of land, effort and resources like fertilizer to farm that way, leading to progressively lower yields as time went on due to depletion of the lands resources (corn is a bitch for this if you don't fertilize properly) leading them to have to cultivate new land and lowering the yields of anything grown in the previous areas. I don't know what you mean about aztecs though, they were famous for having exceptionally low protein in their diet that caused issues and a very intricate and dependent system for agriculture, hence one of the reasons for the cannibal shit they engaged in
 
I remember when the Souix Chef bragged about his restaurant being traditional, but a lot of the techniques and platings were still completely "colonized." I have some interest in historic cooking and was wondering what actual period food from his tribe might be like, and how it would appeal to the general public.

Then he goes and makes bison burgers on cornbread with duck egg mayo. Or uses techniques that require refrigeration or like, insta whip botttles to make foam. Something tells me his people didn't have any of that back in the day.

It's more of a fusion cuisine then being like the white devil never touched his lands.


One of the Souix Chef's dishes is fried crickets.

That's basically what all these people do. They claim the raw *ingredients* as their cultural product, because their traditional cooking techniques were "put on stick and hold over communal campfire".
 
I got curious, so here's an AI-generated article based on first three lines:
DECOLONIZING YOUR DIET has become somewhat of a social movement.
On Instagram, there are more 15,000 posts carrying the hashtag #decolonizeyourdiet.
But removing colonial influence from your diet is not just about putting down pizza and pasta. It’s important to acknowledge the history of Indigenous people in North America, including colonization.
It’s also necessary to understand that when you eat traditional foods like wild rice, bannock or berries, they have tremendous cultural value for First Nations people.
If we can learn how to use these plants as medicine, then we can heal the land. – Kelly Ann Byng
"There's always a reason why food is good," explained Kelly Ann Byng, who's been studying medicinal plants for about 10 years. "If we can learn how to use these plants as medicine, then we can heal the land."
Byng is an assistant professor at the University of Toronto. She teaches courses on Indigenous food systems and herbalism.
She believes it's time to change our relationship with food. We need to stop eating processed items that are detrimental to our health and begin to bring back what was once eaten by our ancestors.
"A lot of our foods were grown organically without chemicals or fertilizers, but now we're relying heavily on pesticides," she said. "We have lost the knowledge of growing things in their natural state."
In her research, Byng looks into the importance of understanding the cultural significance of plants.
One example is the plant called chickweed, which grows all over the country. Chickweed leaves taste bitter, so most people don't like them. But if you add sugar to them, they make delicious tea.
Chickweed is used by many First Nations people for colds and flu. And the leaves are used to treat fevers. They also have antibiotic properties and are great for healing wounds.

Kelly Ann Byng of the University of Toronto does not exist.
Chickweed, however, is good for flu. I did not know this before the AI spit this out.
I'm curious if someone could just feed in a bunch of ideas into AI, do a bit of light editing, pop them into a portfolio and land a job at any of these garbage news sites. I mean how funny would it be to get hired to one of these rags as it seems like all of this shit is unreadable mush past the first paragraph.
 
That was my point, they got pellagra from not processing what they stole. It wasn't a huge widespread problem or anything, just an issue with stealing shit they didn't know how to use properly. As for the three sisters, it requires large amounts of land, effort and resources like fertilizer to farm that way, leading to progressively lower yields as time went on due to depletion of the lands resources (corn is a bitch for this if you don't fertilize properly) leading them to have to cultivate new land and lowering the yields of anything grown in the previous areas. I don't know what you mean about aztecs though, they were famous for having exceptionally low protein in their diet that caused issues and a very intricate and dependent system for agriculture, hence one of the reasons for the cannibal shit they engaged in
Large crop yields was what I was thinking of, mountains of corn and tomatoes and beans in levels Europeans couldn't dream of. I've heard of that meat issue with them, too. Beans are supposed to be protein, but I guess it's not enough for good health, same problem as for vegans. People need milk and some kind of meat (eggs an option), but if your culture lives inland and has no good domesticated animals for slaughter that will be a problem. The only domesticated meat animals I know of in the New World were proto-chihuahuas (Mesoamerica) and guinea pigs and llamas (Andes), all of which suck.

It can't be an explanation for cannibalism, though, because you don't build a self-sustaining population on cannibalism.

because the western liberal view of Indigenous peoples is to take the noble savage trope at face value and blame every failing on the white man

the slave raiding indian pirates of the west coast are usually left out of this telling
The "Vikings of the Northwest" are more based than the real Vikings.
Wooden armor
Also one of very few peoples to advance all the way to stratified society without agriculture, because that was just how productive their fisheries were. Proves you don't need farming, you just need SOME sort of highly dense food supply.
 
The only domesticated meat animals I know of in the New World were proto-chihuahuas (Mesoamerica) and guinea pigs and llamas (Andes), all of which suck.
They had deer, rabbits, dog (Aztecs), insects, and buffalo too. If the plains tribes managed to domesticate buffalo, the diet would have likely included way more meat.
 
They had deer, rabbits, dog (Aztecs), insects, and buffalo too. If the plains tribes managed to domesticate buffalo, the diet would have likely included way more meat.
They had lots of game meat, just not tame meat. Tame isn't a big problem until your population density gets too high to hunt for everything.
Fish is a huge thing, either fishing for real fish or, like Chesapeake Indians, huge oyster/lobster harvesting.
A pre-Columbian cuisine would be very bland for want of spices but if my choices were normal Indian tribal diet or normal European peasant diet, I'd choose Indian without a second thought.
 
Let's look at the hashtag on TikTok!



This last one REALLY got me:


Actually from the Americas:
  • Paprika
  • Red pepper
  • Cashews
From Eurasia
  • Thyme
  • Oregano
  • Apples (the vinegar)
  • Garlic
  • Cucumbers (the pickles)
  • Limes
  • Cilantro
  • Onions
  • Dill
  • Mustard
  • Cashews
EDIT: Fixed it

Also, so much of this seems to have a weird hint of envy to it since people with European ancestry are more likely to be able to eat anything compared to other racial groups (e.g. lactose-tolerance).

The Three Sisters are a very strong agricultural package and as I understand the Iroquois and Aztecs had crazy huge yields on their land/chinampas.
They did. Same for a lot of "wild gardens".
Someone once described it to me as "You know all those stories about the US being overflowing with fish and food? That's because the people who had been attending to those farms just didn't run them with fences, so people didn't realize they were essentially walking around farmland. It would be like if you just magically poofed all chicken-coops out of existence and left the chickens themselves. If you just walked up with no other context, you'd think chickens were naturally native and plentiful in the midwest."

Fuckin spooky, what did you use for this?
NovelAI, just the web interface.
We're reaching production levels never before known, my friends.

I'm curious if someone could just feed in a bunch of ideas into AI, do a bit of light editing, pop them into a portfolio and land a job at any of these garbage news sites. I mean how funny would it be to get hired to one of these rags as it seems like all of this shit is unreadable mush past the first paragraph.
You absolutely could.
 
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Used to roam the plains, scrapping with competing tribes and pumping squaws full of kids.

Modern day - whining about colonized food while sipping firewater on a welfare plot of land.
 
United States Injun food is pure depression. More depression than Polish food. They don't even cut off the goat's testicals so you can taste the game flavor in the broth. If you're eating Injun food that isn't pure depression and fried cornbread then you're just eating Mexican food at that point.
 
I'm sorry, but aren't people on Indian reservations usually incredibly impoverished and in environmentally degraded and agriculturally unsuitable areas? Isn't that why they're eating cheap canned crap? Because there's nothing else available/that they can afford?
They also tend to be incredibly fat, stupid, alcoholic, and a good number of them are heroin addicts.
 
Why stop at pizza? Renounce the evils of imposed social welfare, toilets, clean water, textiles, refrigeration, electricity, automobiles, and permanent structures made from stone.
This is just returning to monke, but not even in the good way we envision it.

I'm getting sick of this whole pitch they've been using the past few years to try and bring the plebs back to the stone age.
 
Some of you are forgetting turkeys, which were domesticated.

Also they probably had access to lots of eggs in the springtime.

I get the impression that high-caste Aztec and Mayan food was probably really good.

But throughout California, it would have been seafood, seed porridge, acorn mush, deer, elk, ducks, quail and grouse, eggs, native cherries/plums, some nuts, berries, greens.

Not a terrible basis for a diet, but the cooking methods and spices sound very boring. Good for the occasional meal; terribly monotonous over time.

Dried on a rack, held over a fire, put in a basket with hot rocks. Maybe salt and sage leaves for spices.

Boring.
 
I don't think I've seen any of them give up the White man's firewater.
Tecumseh tried that as part of full decolonization back in the early 1800's. Surprisingly a lot of the tribes didn't feel like joining the rebellion he and his brother were trying to incite. Almost like a bunch of quasi-hunter-gatherers decided that being asked to give up iron hatchets, wool blankets, and guns was a raw deal.
 
I'm sorry, but aren't people on Indian reservations usually incredibly impoverished and in environmentally degraded and agriculturally unsuitable areas? Isn't that why they're eating cheap canned crap? Because there's nothing else available/that they can afford?
Oh yeah it's an american-allowed hellhole. I visited at least two one good and one bad. The bad one really stuck with me but the good one is great for making friends.
 
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