An Investigation via Live Blood Analysis
Traditional preparation of pork involved salt-curing followed by smoking to preserve it, or marinating fresh pork in an acidic medium, usually vinegar, prior to cooking. Yet today some people simply cook fresh pork without giving any particular attention to traditional methods of preparation. How does consumption of these various preparations of pork affect the blood?
In this report, we examine three adults who normally eat a traditional Weston A. Price Foundation (WAPF) diet who participated in a pilot study to ascertain the effects of eating pork on the blood. These volunteers came to the laboratory once a week to consume pork prepared in various ways and to have their blood examined before and after eating it. Microphotographs of their blood show unexpected results.
ANCIENT SOURCE OF FOOD
Pork is one of the oldest sources of meat, with domestication of pigs documented as early as 5,000 BCE. Today it is estimated that 38 percent of the world’s meat production is pork, although its consumption varies widely throughout the globe. Fresh pork is less common than its many processed forms, including “cured” and “uncured” variations such as bacon, prosciutto, and many other types of hams. Pork processing is an old traditional method that goes back to the times before refrigeration and was originally employed to preserve the meat. However, the curing and smoking of pork imparts interesting flavors to the meat as well, and so processed pork meats have remained popular over the years. Marinating fresh pork meat before cooking it is another traditional method used in preparing fresh pork, which both tenderizes it, and imbues it with more flavor.
In this pilot study, we investigate the effects on live blood of consuming these various forms of pork—to observe the effects, if any, on the biological terrain of the body. The research questions pursued here are as follows:
1. Is there an effect from consuming pork on the blood as observed in dark-field live blood analysis?
2. Does unprocessed pork have a different effect than processed pork? We thus determine whether traditional preparation methods of pork affect the blood differently than the modern method of simply cooking fresh pork.
THE STATUS OF PORK AND HEALTH
It is interesting to note that swine have much in common anatomically and physiologically with humans—more than meets the eye. The fact is that porcine tissues are the most similar to human tissues compared to other animal tissues. For example, in medicine, pig heart valves are used to replace damaged human heart valves without any tissue rejection from the human recipient.
There are even common diseases that we share with pigs, such as the most recent outbreak of influenza, which was caused by H1N1, a virus and disease associated with swine, known as the “swine flu.”
There are two helminth (worm) parasites that we have in common, which cause the same diseases in pigs and in us: the nematode, Trichinella spiralis, which causes trichinosis, and the tapeworm, Taenia solium.
Taenia solium or tapeworm eggs hatch in a pig’s intestines and the microscopic embryo penetrates the intestinal wall, travels through the bloodstream, and ends up in another body part, such as swine muscle (pork meat), where it develops into a cyst-like form. When a human ingests undercooked pork containing a cyst, the parasite pops out and attaches itself to the human’s intestinal wall, and the tapeworm begins to grow—up to twenty feet in length. Moreover, if a human ingests eggs of the pork tapeworm, he can develop a disease known as cysticercosis, which creates cysts and lesions throughout the body, obviously causing health problems.
Trichinella spiralis is a roundworm parasite distributed worldwide. Trichinosis, the common name for this disease, was once quite common and even fatal. The larval form of the worm becomes encysted in bodily tissues and can cause a variety of symptoms. Both tapeworms and trichinosis can cause a large inflammatory response in the body.
These diseases were known to ancient cultures including the Egyptian and Greek cultures, and later among the Jews and Muslims. Both Judaism and Islam proscribe the eating of pork. In Leviticus 11:2-4, 7-8, and Deuteronomy 14:8, animals that do not possess split hooves and that do not bring up their cud, which include both pigs and camels, are not kosher. Moreover, in Islam, the flesh of swine is considered fit only for sacrifices for God and is forbidden to be eaten. Additionally, certain Christian and other religious sects consider it taboo to eat pork. The common diseases that swine and humans share are perhaps a reason that pork was forbidden by the ancient religious dietary laws, although it must be said that there is no scholarly agreement on whether there was an underlying rational explanation for these laws.
These diseases still plague humanity today and are more common in developing countries such as China and Mexico than in the United States. Besides the parasite eggs and larvae, undercooked pork and poor sanitation are contributing causal factors. Fully cooked pork should effectively kill these parasites, if present. Trichinosis has become relatively rare in the United States because cooking pork thoroughly has become a widespread practice.
CURED, UNCURED AND MARINATED PORK
Pork meat is highly perishable, even when refrigerated. In the distant past, curing pork was very important to prevent the meat of the large butchered animal from rotting, so that most of the meat was treated in that way in order to preserve it. It is “cured” with the use of curing salts, which typically include table salt, sodium nitrite, and sometimes sodium or potassium nitrate (saltpeter) to make bacon and ham.
Use of salts to pickle pork has also been shown to kill cysts of Taenia solium after twelve hours.1 Such salts also inhibit growth of harmful microbes to prevent rancidity of the meat and food poisoning. Ordinary table salt, sodium chloride, is the essential salt used in curing, but nitrates and nitrites are commonly used to add color, flavor and texture. It is not completely understood how all of these salts contribute to flavor, but numerous chemical changes in the composition of the meat occur. In addition to salts, sugar is typically added in curing pork to improve flavor, to counteract the harshness of the salts, and to provide food for desirable microorganisms to ferment and produce compounds that are flavorful, such as organic acids.
Nitrate-reducing bacteria are facilitated in the curing process. They ferment the nitrate and nitrite to nitrous acid, which reacts with the muscle protein, myoglobin, to produce a stable, bright pink color characteristic of many hams and bacon. However, it is well known that nitrates and nitrites are weak mutagens and carcinogens. Moreover, consumption of such a nitrite- or nitrate-containing food may lead to the production of nitrosoamines, also carcinogenic, in our stomachs.
Another way of curing pork is to use condensed celery juice instead of the nitrate or nitrate salts. Celery juice is high in natural nitrates and contains other nutrients of celery that may counteract the carcinogenicity of the nitrates. Thus, it seems a safer alternative, although some individuals report adverse reactions to meat cured with celery juice. Bacon treated with celery juice is typically labeled “no nitrates.”
The safest preservation of pork without any use of nitrates and nitrite salts is simply the use of sodium chloride and a natural sweetener, such as maple sugar, to treat the meat, sometimes with a few spices for flavor. This is the old traditional method of preserving meat over the ages. It results in a preserved pork product, a bacon or ham that is known today as “uncured.” It does not have the pink color, nor does it have the long shelf life of the cured products, but it has more flavor and shelf life than raw unprocessed pork.
All of these pork products—cured and uncured—are typically smoked after the salt treatment. After that, they may undergo further aging in which natural fermentation in the meat develops more flavor.
In addition to these methods using salts and sugar, another method of treating fresh pork is to marinate it in an acidic medium. This is an important traditional food preparation technique that can kill or at least inhibit the growth of most bacteria, keeping fresh pork from spoiling and safe for consumption. Acidic treatment of pork may also kill parasites, too. Marinating pork may also be used to infuse it with herbs and spices to enhance its flavor, as well as to break down and tenderize the meat while improving its texture. For example, a marinade of alcohol, salt, vinegar, and garlic has protein-penetrating properties so that the flavors are increased throughout the meat. This penetration allows flavors and spices to be delivered more completely into the meat. An example of a traditional marinade that uses acidic elements to treat the pork is a Tandoori pork recipe. The pork is coated with a marinade of yogurt, a paste of pungent spices, and mango chutney for at least eight hours or overnight before cooking.
In this study, we compared the consumption of cooked fresh pastured pork; apple cider vinegar-marinated fresh pastured pork; uncured pastured bacon; and uncured pastured prosciutto. We also investigated the consumption of cooked fresh pastured lamb, as another unprocessed meat for comparison with fresh pastured pork.
LIVE BLOOD ANALYSIS
The blood is the tissue most easily monitored to show rapid changes in response to nutrients. Live blood analysis involves visual examination of a small droplet of capillary blood from the fingertip. The blood is put on a glass slide and observed under a high-powered light microscope, typically dark-field. This method offers a qualitative visual perspective of the blood cells and plasma, known as the “biological terrain” in integrative healthcare, which supports and sustains the cells and their vitality.
Analysis of the blood can reveal numerous conditions, including the stickiness of red blood cells (RBCs) and their tendency to aggregate and clot, as well as the formation of fibrin—the chief clotting protein—and aggregation of platelets. The presence or absence of these clotting factors can be readily seen using dark-field live blood analysis. Early blood clotting has been linked to chronic systemic biochemical inflammation, which is at the root of chronic disease.
Live blood analysis is described in detail in a previous article by the author.2 Moreover, the blood testing of adults consuming the traditional diet recommended by the Weston A. Price Foundation showed a much healthier biological terrain than those consuming the modern organic diet. There was considerably less RBC aggregation, platelet aggregation and fibrin in the blood.
SUBJECTS AND STUDY PROCEDURES
Inclusion criteria for subjects were normal healthy adults eating the traditional diet recommended by the Weston A. Price Foundation (WAPF) for over two years, and having a clean healthy biological terrain as observed in live blood analysis.
Three adults, including two females aged thirty-seven and sixty, and one male aged fiftytwo, participated in the study. The average length of time they had consumed the WAPF diet was forty-five months. Subjects each came to the laboratory once weekly for five weeks at the same time of day by individual appointment. On the days in which they participated, subjects were required to fast for at least five hours. A baseline blood test was first done. Each subject was then given a measured amount of meat to consume, at least three ounces.
All of the meats used were of the highest quality from sustainable small farms raising pastured livestock. Five preparations of meat were used:
1. Unmarinated pastured center-cut pork chop;
2. Apple cider vinegar-marinated (twenty-four hours while refrigerated) pastured center-cut pork chop;
3. Uncured pastured prosciutto;
4. Uncured pastured bacon;
5. Unmarinated pastured lamb chop.
The meats (1), (2) and (5) were cooked over low heat in a cast iron skillet for up to one hour, with a little water but no added fat, and salted to taste. The cooked meats were prepared well done. The bacon was cooked until slightly stiff, but not crisp or dry. The prosciutto was consumed from the package without any preparation.
After consuming the pork, subjects were allowed to leave the laboratory, instructed to drink only water as needed, and to refrain from eating anything else. Five hours later, each subject returned to the laboratory for a post-meat blood test.
Microphotographs of the blood samples were recorded and scored. The data for the three subjects were also averaged for each condition and plotted in tables and graphs.
PHOTOGRAPHIC COMPARISON OF BLOOD BEFORE AND AFTER EATING MEAT
The results show unequivocally that consuming unmarinated cooked pork shows a significant negative effect on the blood. Five hours after consumption, subjects showed extremely coagulated blood, with extensive red blood cell (RBC) rouleaux (cells in the formation of stacked coins), RBC aggregates, and the presence of clotting factors, especially fibrin, which is seen as white threads in dark-field microscopy.
FIGURE 1. Microphotograph of blood of male, 52, before consuming the unmarinated cooked pork chop. RBCs are seen as round cells, and small white patches of platelet aggregates are seen. This is the picture of normal, healthy blood.
FIGURE 2. Microphotograph of blood of male, 52, five hours after consuming the unmarinated cooked pork chop. RBCs are entirely stuck together in rouleaux (stacks of coins) formations. This blood condition disrupts the microcirculation.
FIGURE 3. Microphotograph of blood of male, 52, five hours after consuming the unmarinated cooked pork chop. RBCs are entirely stuck together in rouleaux (stacks of coins) formations, and a high level of fibrin, white threads, means that early blood clotting has transpired.
Figure 1 shows the blood of a subject, male, age fifty-two, whose blood showed the most dramatic changes after eating unprocessed cooked pork. Initially, this subject’s blood looks very healthy. The RBCs are separate and uniformly round, and there are no debris or clotting factors seen in the plasma, which appears black in darkfield. Figures 2 and 3 show his blood about five hours after consuming the unmarinated cooked pork chop. His RBCs are completely congealed in tight rouleaux. Additionally, Figure 3 shows that the blood has a high level of fibrin as well as rouleaux. Not a single free-floating RBC was observed throughout his blood sample after he consumed the unmarinated cooked pork. This subject also felt considerable fatigue about two hours after eating the pork chop, although he insisted that he was not sleep deprived that day.
The other two subjects showed similar blood results following consumption of the unmarinated cooked pork chop. Two of the three subjects felt fatigued after eating the pork chop, which suggests reduced peripheral blood circulation due to RBC stickiness and aggregation. Because the tiniest microcapillaries are smaller than the diameter of a single blood cell, each cell must pass through singly and deform its shape in order to do so; blood cell aggregates simply cannot pass through them.
By contrast, all three subjects reported no fatigue or other symptoms after eating the marinated cooked pork chop. Figure 4 shows the same subject’s fasted blood on another day prior to eating marinated pork. The same cut of pork was marinated in the refrigerator for twenty-four hours, completely submerged in unfiltered live apple cider vinegar (with the “mother”). The subject’s blood looks completely normal before consuming this pork chop. Then, five hours after consuming the same size portion of a marinated pork chop, the subject’s blood is shown in Figure 5. The RBCs in this blood sample show a very slight stickiness or tendency to aggregate, and a few platelet aggregate forms are seen, with no fibrin. The subject’s blood is largely unchanged from before. The other two subjects showed essentially no change before or after consumption of the marinated cooked pork.
FIGURE 4. Microphotograph of blood of male, 52, before consuming a marinated cooked pork chop. RBCs are freely moving. Very few platelet aggregates are seen. This blood appears normal and healthy.
FIGURE 5. Microphotograph of blood of male, 52, five hours after consuming a marinated cooked pork chop. RBCs are mostly free to move, although there are a few small aggregates. This blood appears normal and healthy with little change compared to Figure 4.
FIGURE 6. Microphotograph of blood of female, 37, before consuming uncured pastured bacon. This is the picture of completely normal, healthy blood.
Figure 6 shows the blood of the female subject, age thirty-seven, fasted, prior to consuming four strips of uncured pastured bacon. Again, this subject’s blood is normal and healthy, without any RBC aggregates or fibrin. Figure 7 shows the blood of the same subject, five hours after consuming the bacon. The subject’s RBCs are not aggregated; there is only a minuscule amount of platelet aggregates and fibrin. This blood is essentially unchanged over baseline. The other two subjects’ blood samples also appear about the same, before and after consumption of bacon, too.
Figure 8 shows the blood of a subject, male, fifty-two, prior to consumption of prosciutto. This blood looks normal and healthy, with several platelet aggregates shown, and a white blood cell is also seen. Figure 9 shows the blood of the same subject about five hours after consuming three ounces of pastured prosciutto. Again, this blood looks normal and healthy, about the same as the subject’s initial blood test that same day. Moreover, the blood of the other two subjects also did not change significantly pre-post eating prosciutto.
FIGURE 7. Microphotograph of blood of female, 37, five hours after consuming uncured pastured bacon. RBCs are free to move. This blood appears normal without any clotting factors seen.
As an additional control, we also looked for an effect from consuming an unmarinated, pastured lamb chop on the blood of the same three subjects. The blood of the female subject, age thirty-seven, prior to eating the lamb chop is shown in Figure 10. Her blood is seen as normal, healthy blood with a few platelet aggregates. About five hours after consuming the lamb chop, her blood appears as shown in Figure 11, which is about the same as the pre-lamb condition. Moreover, the blood of the other two subjects did not show any significant changes after consuming lamb either.
FIGURE 8. Microphotograph of blood of male, 52, before consuming proscuitto. RBCs are free to move. This blood appears normal and healthy with several platelet aggregates and a white blood cell present.
FIGURE 9. Microphotograph of blood of male, 52, five hours after consuming proscuitto. This blood appears normal and healthy. There is no apparent change over the initial blood test, as shown in Figure 8.
FIGURE 10. Microphotograph of blood of female, 37, before consuming an unmarinated cooked lamb chop. This blood appears normal and healthy with only a few platelet aggregates.
FIGURE 11. Microphotograph of blood of female, 37, five hours after consuming an unmarinated cooked lamb chop. This blood appears normal and healthy with only a few platelet aggregates. No changes are observed over the sample shown in Figure 10.
BLOOD COAGULATION SCORES
There were two blood tests (before and after) per condition times five conditions (five types of meat) times three subjects for a total of thirty blood tests. Blood tests were scored by a researcher with long-term experience using live blood analysis. A Likert scale was used as follows: 0 (none present); 1 (very small amount); 2 (small amount); 3 (moderate amount); 4 (moderately large amount); 5 (large amount); 6 (the highest level ever observed). The following variables were scored for each blood test:
• Rouleaux of RBCs, whereby the cells are in tight stacks like rolls of coins seen on edge;
• Other looser aggregates of RBCs (non-rouleaux);
• Stickiness of RBCs, which appears as cells try to break away from each other;
• Platelet aggregates, which appear as a grey sludge in the blood plasma;
• Fibrin, which appears as white threads in the blood plasma;
• Spicules, short forms of fibrin that appear in small clusters in the blood plasma;
• Shape changes in RBCs, cell distortions involved in the clotting process.
Figure 12 shows the results of the mean values of the three subjects’ scores of the three most prevalent blood coagulation factors seen to occur after consuming cooked unmarinated pork, which were rouleaux, RBC aggregates and fibrin. Compare this with Figure 13, which shows the mean values of the three subjects’ scores after consuming cooked marinated pork. The difference between these two charts is striking as well as significant. It is clear that consuming umarinated cooked pork shows a significant coagulation effect on the blood. However, no statistics are calculated in this study as the sample was small.
Figures 14, 15 and 16 depict the mean values of these same coagulation factors for before and after consumption of bacon, prosciutto and lamb for the three subjects. The results of these are similar to those for the marinated pork, with no significant changes observed before or after consumption of these meats.
FIGURE 12. This chart and accompanying table show the average values of scores for blood coagulation variables for the three subjects before and after consuming unmarinated cooked pork chops. The pre-post differences for rouleaux, RBC aggregation, and fibrin are significant.
FIGURE 13. This chart and accompanying table show the average values of scores for blood coagulation variables for the three subjects before and after consuming marinated cooked pork chops. The pre-post differences are insignificant.
FIGURE 14. This chart and accompanying table show the average values of scores for blood coagulation variables for the three subjects before and after consuming bacon. The pre-post differences are insignificant.
FIGURE 15. This chart and accompanying table show the average values of scores for blood coagulation variables for the three subjects before and after consuming proscuitto. The prepost differences are insignificant.
FIGURE 16. This chart and accompanying table show the average values of scores for blood coagulation variables for the three subjects before and after consuming lamb chops. The pre-post differences are insignificant.
CONCLUSIONS
1. Consuming unmarinated cooked pastured pork produces blood coagulation and clotting in blood examined at five hours after eating; however, consuming marinated cooked pork does not produce any blood coagulation or clotting.
2. Consuming processed forms of pastured uncured pork, including bacon and prosciutto, does not produce any blood coagulation or other visible changes in the blood at five hours after eating.
3. Consuming unmarinated cooked pastured lamb does not produce any blood coagulation or other visible changes in the blood at five hours after eating.
4. No changes in white blood cell activity, white blood cell clumping, crystals, microbes, or spicules (indicating liver stress), were found before or after consumption of all five preparations of pork and lamb.
The results suggest that unmarinated cooked pastured pork may be unique in producing these coagulation effects on the blood, which also appeared quite rapidly, in less than ten minutes after blood draw, and did not clear up during an hour of observing the blood under the microscope.
The early blood coagulation and clotting observed after consuming cooked unmarinated pork are adverse changes in the blood. A shorter blood coagulation time is associated with increased systemic biochemical inflammation as well as the possible formation of blood clots in the body, as in heart attack or stroke. This condition in the blood, if chronic, is associated with increased risk of chronic degenerative disease, including cardiovascular disease, cancer, autoimmune disorders and others.2
What is it about unmarinated cooked pork that may produce biochemical inflammation and early blood clotting? A literature search revealed use of pork in the Materia Medica of ancient China. In Chinese medicine, “pork has the medical properties of being bitter, somewhat cooling, and slightly poisonous, and was used for chronic madness.”3 Yet pork is the most common meat consumed in China, indeed throughout Asia. Usually it is marinated in vinegar before it is cooked; pickled pork is also a common dish throughout Asia.
It is well known that allergies cause unwanted inflammation. Is this a possible link? In modern medicine, meat allergies are rare in adults, typically outgrown during the first few years of life.4 Those who are allergic to pork are typically sensitive to pork serum albumin.
There is also an interesting link that has been found between sensitivity to pork meat and cats, as these two allergies are frequency associated, suggesting a crossed allergenicity.5 That is, those with allergy to pork frequently have respiratory allergies to cats. However, in this study, the subjects were allergic neither to pork nor cats. In searching the modern scientific and medical literature for clues, nothing was uncovered that might explain the results of this study.
What is most notable, however, is that the results demonstrate the wisdom of traditional food preparation. The processing of pork in customary ways by salts and acidic marinades makes pork safe for consumption— not only by inactivating parasites, killing off noxious bacteria that may cause food poisoning, and promoting safe fermentations in the meat that add flavor; traditional processing of pork also seems to prevent the inflammatory and blood clotting effects as observed here through live blood analysis, although we do not know why. We speculate that raw pork contains a toxin, unidentified to date, and that heat alone from cooking cannot destroy it, but that fermentation with salt, and also acid plus heat, do so. This toxin in pork, if it exists, is therefore heat-stable and requires further denaturation by salt or acid in order to detoxify it. This is exactly what traditional pork preparation provides.
ACKNOWLEDGMENT
This study was supported in part by a small grant from the Weston A. Price Foundation.
REFERENCES
1. Rodriguez-Canul, R.; Argaez-Rodrigues, F, et al. (2002) Taenia solium Metacestode Viability in Infected Pork after Preparation with Salt Pickling or cooking methods common in Yucatan, Mexico. Journal of Food Protection 65(4):666-669.
2. Rubik B (2009) Pilot Research Study: Live Blood Analysis of Adults Comparing the Weston A. Price Foundation Diet and the Conventional Modern Diet. Wise Traditions in Food, Farming, and the Healing Arts Vol 10(4): 35-43.
3. Lo, V; Barrett, P. (2005). Cooking Up Fine Remedies: On the Culinary Aesthetic in a 16th Century Chinese Materia Medica. Medical History 49:395-422.
4. Restani, P; Ballabio, C; Tripodi, S; Fiocchi A. (2009) Meat Allergy. Current Opinion in Allergy and Clinical Immunology 9(3): 265-269.
5. Drouet, M; Boutet, S; Lauret, MG; Chene, J; Bonneau, JC; Le Sellin, J; Hassoun, S; Gay, G; Sabbah, A. (1994) The Pork-Cat Syndrome or Crossed Allergy Between Pork Meat and Cat Epithelia. Allerg Immunol 26(5):166-8.
This article appeared in Wise Traditions in Food, Farming and the Healing Arts, the quarterly journal of the Weston A. Price Foundation, Fall 2011.
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Gayle says
Instructions for marinating with salt or vinegar would be helpful.Or a link to more information about preparation.
Tracey Parrish says
Do you have a marinade recipe we should use?
Tim Boyd says
A simple marinade would be lemon juice or vinegar all day in the refrigerator.
Bobby says
PURE COKE COLA OVER PORK & IT KILLS & REMOVES ALL CREEPIES!
IT TASTES BETTER TOO!
Julie says
Ingredients
a bottle of apple cider (not the vinegar – the drink!)
a couple of star anise
a couple of dried bay leaves
one onion – sliced into rings
a chunk of fresh ginger – peeled and grated
coarse sea salt and black pepper
a couple of tablespoons of preserved ginger (the kind you would eat with sushi – you’ll find it at any Asian supermarket)
a couple of tablespoons of the preserved ginger juice
a drizzle of honey
4x pork chops (for 15- 20 minutes on the braai!)
Julie says
Put all the ingredients in a pot over medium-hot coals. Bring it to the boil, reduce the heat by scraping some of the coals to one side Cover the pot and let the marinade simmer for about 10 minutes. Take it off the braai and let it cool completely. Then pour it over the pork, cover it and leave in the fridge overnight.
clifton greene says
while your recipe certainly sounds delicious, you miss the entire purpose of the article. The pork MUST be thoroughly marinated in RAW (not pasteurized) UNFILTERED apple cidar vinegar (with the mother) for 24 hours prior to cooking to prevent toxic pork’s toxic effect on blood. The purpose of cooking is to make people feel good, not to poison folks, slowly or otherwise. Braggs makes a good organic albeit expensive product and Heinze did make a less expensive although not organic raw unfiltered apple cidar vinegar (with the mother)
Christopher says
Greetings from the future! 😉
I saw SOME reference to unpasturized apple cider vinegar in the body of the article, HOWEVER, for the most part, they simply referred to the requirement of an ACIDIC medium.
I’d be curious to know if they made any scientific conclusions regarding that difference.
mus says
Pigs are not allowed to be sacrificed to god in Islam. Dont know where that has been sourced from but please change that. Pigs can be eaten only to prevent starvation in a desperate life or death situation.
Charles says
Yes Isalm does not sacrifice swines to Allah nor eat swines.
Joy says
I wonder what effect, if any, consuming lard–prok fat– (hydrogenated and unhydrogenated) has on the blood?
Anne says
Well hydrogenated oils will always have a bad effect, they are known to cause glycation and inflammation in the arteries . Thing is I have read where pork meat and fat contain toxins or waste material the pig does not excrete because they do not sweat and their digestion is very fast and they tend to eat unsanitary things. I haven’t eaten pork in about 4 years and one of the reasons, before I read up on it, was that whenever I reheated any leftover pork there was always a pee or sweat like smell that really turned me off, and for the day after I kind of felt queasy and sluggish. I also read where it does something to the metabolism after eating and it’s like a heat response, not really sure how to describe it and I don’t have the article to quote, but it said it was not a good thing and that duck meat has a similar reaction just not as intense.
whisperingsage says
Then there is always ractopamine, a heart med; https://www.naturalnews.com/047876_ractopamine_turkey_feed_additive.html
Charles says
Duck is kosher though
Clint says
Great article. I’m curious whether the author or others have reports of stomach distress or other symptoms shortly after eating non marinated pork?
I have just encountered severe digestive pain after eating at a friend’s who served this type of pork. Remembering that, I was sick at a previous dinner served at their home about a year earlier.
Kim Angus says
I get severe symptoms of gastrointestinal distress (diarrhea, cramps, bloating and sometimes vomiting, feels like someone worked my guts over with a baseball bat) lasting 4-5 days if I eat non marinated pork or anything contaminated with its juices. Have even been caught a couple of times by inadequately processed pork.
But I can eat ham, bacon, salami, pork crackling (as long as it’s from the top and the roast wasn’t turned) and lard without a problem.
Nice to know I’m not imagining it.
clifton greene says
@Julie: while your recipe certainly sounds delicious, you miss the entire purpose of the article. The pork MUST be thoroughly marinated in RAW (not pasteurized) UNFILTERED aplle cidar vinegar (with the mother) for 24 hours prior to cooking to prevent toxic pork’s toxic effect on blood. The purpose of cooking is to make people feel good, not to poison folks, slowly or otherwise. Braggs makes a good organic albeit expensive product and Heinze did make a less expensive although not organic raw unfiltered apple cidar vinegar (with the mother)
Laura says
I have been experimenting with brines and smoking because I started having tremendous reactions to fresh pork about 5 years ago in which I ended up in the hospital in severe pain (like a bad flu). This happened 3 times before I made the connection between eating pork and the reaction and it is one of the most painful things I have ever experienced. I found I could still eat bacon and ham without issue and after finding the above article, confirmed my thoughts that there exist something unhealthful with fresh pork but that it can be safely consumed when cured. I now wonder how many people have inflammatory/pain reactions to pork and are just not making the connection as a possible reason for either chronic pain or a sudden attack of arthritic type pain? I would like to see more studies on this.
Jack says
Clean and Marinate your meat people . I’ve witness some nasty stuff like people cooking their chicken right of the package no cleaning no marinating.. Was just nasty.. Now imagine their pork??? Deadly!!! Go to any Caribbean friend you may have ask how they Marinate meat it might save you some trips to the hospital
Chris says
So does this article suggest that pork is heart healthy, and does not effect cholesterol, if marinated as stated? I see the no clotting aspect, but if you were trying to lower your cholesterol levels, and still wanted to eat pork, is marinating, (as specifically said above) now make pork safe for those with high cholesterol? Assuming you are eating correct portions?
Rachel C says
You may need to read more of this site. Eating meat does not raise cholesterol and has never been proven to do so.
whisperingsage says
The brain is 70% cholesterol. We need it. Read more here and listen to https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ARB73jV4mro&t=540s and https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jBZUneSv1hg&t=923s and his other talks, he is a pathologist with 26,000 autopsies under his belt.
Deanna says
I agree with you regarding our need for cholesterol. I tried to watch your videos.
The first one said it was unavailable. (Censored maybe?)
The second said it was private.
Can you provide the name if the pathologist?
Sara says
Just made chili a couple of days ago and one ingredient was a pound of pork sausage. That night and the next day my body felt as if I’d been in an accident. Yesterday I had a small amount for lunch and had body pain again during the night. Glad I found this information.
whisperingsage says
Could be ractopamine; https://www.naturalnews.com/047876_ractopamine_turkey_feed_additive.html
Bobby says
WHAT IS THE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN PORK & BACON?
MOST PEOPLE DON’T KNOW!
PORK IS UNCURED!
BACON IS CURED BY SALTING & PUTTING INTO A TANK OF SALT WATER FOR A FEW WEEKS!
Bacon is much safer than Pork!
Ibro says
Frankly article made me afraid of eating pork .. it is harmful to health and very bad
Bee Winfield says
Being an organic pork producer in Australia where we are told by Public Health authority we do not have Trichinosis and eating raw pork is fine, I am really sad to hear that.
whisperingsage says
I would be interested in a similar study done with YOUR pork. Again, commercial herds are treated (depending on the management) with ractopamine,; https://www.naturalnews.com/047876_ractopamine_turkey_feed_additive.html
And we raise our own rabbits, chickens, turkeys, geese and goats for this same concern. The names of the drugs change but it’s never good. When we have live greens available, (we are trying to remineralize our soils with 60 minerals- limestone and dolomite), our goat milk is yellow, our eggs are deep orange, our chicken skin and fat is yellow, bunny fat is yellow, and I mean YELLOW. I think there would be a difference. I don’t know if you know, but raw cows’ milk is yellow, yellow. Goats is only light yellow.
Maureen Diaz says
Just a point of clarification on the color of milk. The yellow color you see, predominantly in various cattle species when properly grass-fed, are the carotenoids which the animal has not fully converted to true Vit A. Some breeds of cattle, in particular holstein, and, generally, goats, are able to make a more complete conversion to this critical nutrient and thus there is less of the yellow-orange coloring present in the milk. So whiter milk is actually not a bad thing, but can actually be helpful for those consumers who have a compromised gut, certain illnesses, or other reasons which make it difficult to make the conversion within their own digestive tract. Of course that does not mean that more yellow is a bad thing either, but the whiteness of milk from a healthy, well-managed herd should not be considered less nutritious.
Bobbie Jo DeBellefeuille says
The process of curing pork can ONLY be done after you soak it in an acidic solution? You can’t cure pork if you don’t soak it with salts or apple cider vinegar?
Ellen says
Is it possible to treat the pork with the vinegar and then make sausage with it? Is the flavor affected? I am very glad to have come across this information.
I’ve seen the RBC rouloux formation and massive aggregation–not from eating pork (that I know of) under a Darkfield microscope. It’s very sobering to see the effects on the RBCs. This is what vaccines do to the microcirculation and so cause strokes in the cranial nerve areas that are fed by capillary beds in the brainstem. Look closely at children’s faces; look for the asymmetry in the facial nerves (adults also), unevenness in iris placement or medial or lateral displacement of the iris. It’s criminal what’s being done to babies and children and the effing doctors are doing it! Look for Dr. Andrew Moulden’s work and the zeta potential–he paid for his tenacity in researching this and educating parents….killed at 45 years old.
whisperingsage says
I think you would LOVE Joel Wallach. https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ARB73jV4mro&t=540s
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=jBZUneSv1hg&t=923s
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=9vXzTjy64VE
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=ECGCE57uNN4
Katherine says
it is now 2022 and I am amazed one of these 4 videos still remains on youtube and I hope I can get to it before they remove that too
jeff jones says
30 years ago, the pork industry went on an add campaign, alternatively labeling pork as “the other white meat!” This should have told most folk just how nasty, filthy and infected pork products are! What was the first white meat for which the above comparison was made? If you guessed chicken you were wrong!!
Nina says
Has anyone soaked pork in apple cider vinegar marinade and then reused the marinade later? Would that work?
Jake says
Ummm… does no one else have a problem with extrapolating to the entire human race the results of 3 middle aged+ people of unclear background/medical history?
Roland says
“In this pilot study, we investigate the effects on live blood of consuming these various forms of pork” – No one claimed that this is an exhaustive study, but few able to do a complete study are interested. Pick the reasons for that yourself.
Sharon Reeve says
Absolutely! Yes, I have a large problem with this! This tiny statistically irrelevant study will stop many people from eating pork, and this isn’t fair or balanced. Do a study using 100% pastured pork fed no drugs and given no vaccines. We do not know the status of the pork used for the study, vaccines, and drugs that could have been used in raising the animals.
Rowena Gordon says
Does smokeing pork ribs for 8 hrs or more make them ok to eat or must u marinate first?
Alvin Schlangen says
It seems to me that the very foundation of WAP ideals is in the diet, in this case – of the hog and/or the lamb in question. The test results show poorly for the pork chop that was not marinated but good for the lamb chop. Was the merely the animal difference or perhaps the diet of said animal. I see pastured pork self-fed corn (non gmo) but (imo) all influenced by gmo corn. Might this be the difference in the test result? If the acid neutralizes the inherent element of the monoculture corn or soy, we may have the same result with different management..
We have a common response to our heritage pork grown without corn/soy/wheat along with grass fodder and sun in MN winter – as it is noticeably more digestible to sensitive folks. The devil is in the details and if you do research, the results should support attention to it:( Tx
Sharon Reeve says
Thank you for raising animals right.
anne says
Is it safe to eat lard? Is it safe to use pork broth? Is it possible to marinate the pork meat after it has been cooked to make it safe to eat? WHat about the cartilage and skin that breaks down into broth, does it produce changes in the blood?
Maureen Diaz says
Anne, lard and broth seem to be fine, the problem apparently is within the flesh meat and possibly organs (liver and kidney should always be soaked in an acidic medium prior to consuming anyway). But this has not been specifically tested to the best of my knowledge. Marinating is effective prior to cooking, but doubtful after.
Mark says
I was wondering the same about lard. Do you have any links that could confirm that lard is safe? Also, aren´t the toxins always stored in the fat?
Lee says
in the GAPS cooking classes they say to marinate the bones and meaty parts of pork first if you are using them to make GAPS meat stock. That includes skin and cartilage as well.
whisperingsage says
I was reading this article while eating pork earlier this week and could feel the paranoid blood coagulating in my veins. Today, I threw about half a cup of Apple cider vinegar onto the raw chops for a few hours and they sucked it right in. And they are tender and delicious. They don’t even taste like vinegar.
Katherine says
Thanks! Was going to do this experiment so now I dont have to. I hate to mess up experimenting with expensive pastured meat.
I try to dry salt everything instead of marinating with salty water, so I’ll throw my regular amount of salt together with the vinegar as it defrosts. Thats the plan now.
Razvan Popescu says
one of the best documented and relevnat articles out there. where can i follow you author?
PS. this is very relevant for zero carbers / carnivors considering that is the default healing diet
Ava says
This is a truly amazing, credible study. I have always noticed on a ketogenic diet that when I eat pork I don’t lose and sometimes gain, and my blood sugar tests higher UNLESS it is cured. Amazing.
maritza castello says
I used raw apple cider vinegar. Is this Ok?
Mark says
Would be interesting to know how the common pig compares to wild boar? Does wild boar/hog have the same negative effects on the blood if uncured?
Jonathan says
Would cooking in a pressure cooker or Instant Pot, have any benefit versus marinating? Since cooking foods under pressure has been shown to make the protien more digestable:
https://deeprootsathome.com/pressure-cooking-healthy-nutrients/
Me personally always marinate my meat for 24 hours for better flavor and tenderness, but am curious about pressure cookers effect.
Great Article!
Diana Paul says
I don’t understand the difference between uncured bacon and a pork chop. They are both pork. Am I understand this correctly that you can eat uncured bacon but not a pork chop.
MOHAMED says
“Moreover, in Islam, the flesh of swine is considered fit only for sacrifices for God and is forbidden to be eaten”
Wrong please do a better research. This kind of mistake take the whole article integrity down.
Thank you
Diana says
Does pork belly have the same effect? Do you have to cure it like raw pork? A little confusing. Appreciate information since I eat a lot of pork belly. I get it from a farmer and just fry it like bacon. Thanks for any clarification.
Maureen Diaz says
Yes, pork belly does have the same effect. Thus, we recommend also consuming some sauerkraut or other fermented food with it, or at least the juice.
Cynthia Berg says
I realize this is an older article, but hoping someone can respond to my question about pork.
Does soaking raw pork in a salt brine have the same benefits as soaking in ACV? Or a combination of brine & ACV? We raise our own pork, outdoors, in woods & pasture but have always also fed an organic pig food ration as a supplement. I almost always brine our pork before cooking it. We make our own bacon from the belly (dry brine w/salt, sugar, and seasonings and have also wet brined w/ACV, spices, sugar, and salt) and then smoke after the brining phase. It has been many, many years since I’ve had commercially raised pork and I don’t recall if I had the negative stomach reactions some speak of in the comments above. BUT, my husband has had a couple of serious medical situations with blood clotting. I want to make sure I am cooking our pork in a way that is healthy for him. I thought we did have a pretty healthy diet as most of our food comes either from local farms or our own farm. But reading this has given me another layer of knowledge that I will be incorporating into our lives and I will be sharing it with our market customers 🙂 Thank you for sharing your knowledge.
Peace and Blessings…
Cynthia (Green Heart Farm – Vermont)
Camilla says
Maybe the bacterium Helicobacter pylori is the cause of the symptoms? This bacterium is often found on pig carcasses.
Diana Louise Paul says
Hello,
Do you think it’s possible to have Restless Leg S. after eating uncured bacon?
Seems every time I eat it I get RLS. And, are you talking about fresh ground pastured pork from the farmer that is bad? I love pork but not at the risk of other health issues. I’m thawing some in the refrigerator i order from my farmer. Guess I’ll be throwing it out. Thanks for sharing such a great article.
Diana
TeeDee says
I´m wondering if it must be marinated in the vinegar for the full 24 hours. I tried it and found it to be too vinegary tasting after only a few bites. Would 4-8 hrs be acceptable if I also added salt? Would that combo give me safer pork?
Chelsea says
How do I properly prepare ground pork? I make homemade breakfast patties. I just added herbs and then fry in lard in cast iron til the sides are browned. Do I need to soak ground pork in vinegar? I ate this recently and didn’t soak it. They are local pasture pigs. I don’t think they are corn and soy free though.