What Makes Us Human? Cooking, Study Says
Homo erectus, considered the first modern human species, learned to cook and doubled its brain size over the course of 600,000 years. Similar size primates—gorillas, chimpanzees, and other great apes, all of which subsisted on a diet of raw foods—did … See all stories on this topic » |
National Geographic |
The Raw Food Diet, Overcooked | The Nutrition Post
Raw food diets have emerged as a pop culture preoccupation.
www.thenutritionpost.com/…/the-raw-food-diet-overcooked-2…
Raw food diets take the heat out of the kitchen
Swiss physician Dr. Maximilian Birchner-Benner developed the basis of raw food diets in the late 1800s, after he cured his jaundice by eating raw apples. Two centuries later, the diet has several interpretations: offshoots include veganism and …
See all stories on this topic »
What Makes Us Human? Cooking, Study Says
Similar size primates—gorillas, chimpanzees, and other great apes, all of which subsisted on a diet of raw foods—did not. "Much more than harnessing fire, what truly allowed us to become human was using fire for cooking," said study co-author Suzana … See all stories on this topic » |
National Geographic |
Digestive Fire On A Raw Food Diet – YouTube
www.realrawresults.com/digestive-fire-raw-foods Q&A of the day: does eating a simple raw … www.youtube.com/watch?v=GBEiSCyykZk |