The Gut Makeover: 4 Weeks to Nourish Your Gut, Revolutionize Your Health, and Lose Weight
4.5/5
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Gut Health
Mediterranean Diet
Lifestyle Changes
Microbiome
Western Diet
Self-Discovery
Transformation
Power of Community
New Beginnings
Overcoming Obstacles
Self-Improvement
Journey
Search for Truth
Healing
Journey to Self-Discovery
Nutrition
Recipes & Meal Plans
Gut Makeover
Four-Week Gut Makeover
Health & Wellness
About this ebook
· Lose weight with a tried and tested four week plan
· Transform the look of your skin and hair
· Address any long-standing digestive problems including bloating and IBS
· Strengthen your immune system
· Experience fewer mood swings and less anxiety
· Sleep better
· Eat for a healthy mind and body with over 50 delicious recipes
The Gut Makeover is based on revolutionary new science that reveals that the state of our gut is central to our weight and health. Learn how to rebuild your microbiome – the bacteria living in the human gut – which is the key to every single aspect of our health.
The great news is there is a lot you can do to cultivate a healthy gut. The Gut Makeover is the only book you'll need for a whole health overhaul – to control your weight, improve your skin, lift your spirits and strengthen your immune system for good.
This is more than another fad diet. This is a lifestyle you'll want to adopt for life.
Jeannette Hyde
Jeannette Hyde is a leading nutritional therapist and regular commentator who works with national and international companies and brands to share her message that a healthy guy is essential to a healthy life. She also runs a private practice in central London, UK working with clients on gut-related issues to improve weight, skin and mood and to boost wellbeing. Backed up by the latest in scientific research, Jeannette is at the forefront of her field in developing an accessible way to rebuild the microbiome, the bacteria living in the human gut – which is the key to every single aspect of our health.
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Reviews for The Gut Makeover
4 ratings1 review
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5I only got about halfway through the book due to the usual reason – that I had to return it to the library.I didn’t change my diet in any way after reading the book, but this was because I’m already eating an optimal, vegetarian, 95% vegan diet.I enjoyed reading what I managed to read of the book, since I agreed with the author’s precepts and her stressing of the importance of the microbiome. She tells us that the microbiome is now considered a whole organ in its own right. (I didn’t know that.) The gut microbiome is “the bacteria and their associated genes together”.She informs us about dysbiosis, leaky gut, food intolerances and inflammation.We are illuminated about the problems with our terrible Western diet, where we consume lots of refined carbohydrates, sugar, trans fats, artificial sweeteners and alcohol.Like one of my favourite doctors, Dr Rangan Chatterjee, the author stresses the importance of eating as many different vegetables as possible and remembering to eat “a rainbow of colours”.We need to cut down on sugar, caffeine and antibiotics.She discusses the dangers of gluten but points out that many gluten-free products are often highly processed and loaded with sugar; they are probably better described not as food but as “food-like substances”.Her four-week plan is separated into two separate phases: on weeks one and two we will focus on REPAIR and in weeks three and four we will REINOCULATE.In the REPAIR phase we should aim for 20-30 different varieties of fruit and vegetables, mostly the latter, per week. We should buy the best-quality protein we can afford – meat, fish, eggs, nuts and seeds.Like Dr Mercola, she advises a 12-hour fast between dinner and breakfast, which has been shown to improve the microbiome.We should avoid snacking between meals and focus on three structured meals a day.In the first two weeks we should avoid all dairy foods and in the second two weeks add butter, kefir and Roquefort cheese. This is the first time I’ve heard of the benefits of Roquefort, which are as follows: it’s made from ewe’s milk and fermented for a long time to create lots of bacteria; but a matchbox-size portion should be the maximum at one meal.The second half of the plan is the reinoculation stage, though I don’t really know what she means by “reinoculation”. But here we should gradually begin to eat prebiotic foods such as bananas, apples, asparagus, bok choy, fennel, garlic, cold potatoes, etc. (The point about cold potatoes is that they form resistant starch. This starch acts as a food for our bacteria and can help with weight loss.) Also we should add probiotic fermented foods such as kefir, Roquefort, fermented miso and fermented tempeh. I thought miso and tempeh were always fermented, but I may be mistaken.Throughout the book we’re presented with case studies of real people who have followed the plan and tell of their good results, including how much weight they have lost. Each person tells the full story of her experience with the plan, including telling us of her various ailments that were cured.We need to gradually stop our caffeine intake to avoid withdrawal headaches. Here I have to say that I tried this years ago but the withdrawal headaches simply did not disappear so I accepted that I would just have to continue drinking a little (Guayusa) tea each day.One of the things that bothered me in the book was that there was a lot about meat, meat, meat. She does have some suggestions for vegetarians but seems to have forgotten vegans.Lately, I’ve been having problems with a lack of stomach acid, so I was glad to read the author’s advice about how chewing each mouthful 20 times will stimulate the production of stomach acid and enzymes to aid digestion. Undigested food can damage the intestinal lining and trigger leaky gut, inflammation and dysbiosis.A large part of the book contains appealing recipes.I must admit that since I eat mostly just vegetables/fruit on a daily basis together with nuts and seeds for protein, I couldn’t really see how I could much improve my diet..But what I personally got out of the book was 1) cold potatoes give resistant starch 2) Roquefort contains lots of good bacteria (though I try to avoid eating dairy products) and 3) I could again try to eat some fermented soy products such as miso and tempeh (ordinary soy is harmful – my comment).But, if you need inspiration for healthy eating, then this book will be valuable.
Book preview
The Gut Makeover - Jeannette Hyde
Contents
Endorsements
Part 1: The Science of Gut Health and the Western Diet
Introduction
The Life-Changing Benefits
My Gut Story
A Road Map of the Gut
Gut Problems
The Western Diet
Diet Fads and Myths
Summary
Part 2: The Four-Week Gut Makeover
Introduction
The Four-Week Plan Basics
Before You Start!
Kitchen Essentials
Preparation Week
Phase 1: REPAIR
Phase 2: REINOCULATE
What Are You Going to Eat?
The Cost of Eating Well
Strategies for Success
Frequently Asked Questions (FAQs)
Summary
Part 3: Recipes and Meal Plans
Introduction
Liquid Breakfasts
Non-Liquid Breakfasts
Lunches and Dinners
Sample Meal Plans
Part 4: Eating for Life
Introduction
Twelve Ways to Maintain a Healthy Gut
Finally … Embrace the Core Elements of the Mediterranean Diet
A Delicate Gut – Reintroduction of Foods
Complex Cases
The Process of Change
Resources and References
About the Author
Acknowledgements
Index
Endorsements
I lost 14 pounds, saw huge improvement to stomach problems that I have had for months, and my skin is looking so good strangers have commented on it!
Jenn, age 34
"My bloating stopped, I lost 8 pounds, and 2 inches off my waist, my hay fever disappeared, my skin is less dry and flaky. The Gut Makeover is the second best thing I have ever done apart from marrying my wife!"
Theo, age 49
I’ve always had a bit of IBS all my life and for the first time in probably 40 years I’ve not had symptoms. I’ve lost over 14 pounds in weight, my skin’s better, I’m sleeping better, I feel less stressed, and off the usual yo-yo between caffeine and alcohol.
Kevin, age 45
My IBS improved the most it ever has as a result of following the principles. I’m no longer scared to eat vegetables (I used to think they made my IBS worse) and my anxiety has improved too as a result of this. My skin completely cleared up and I no longer need to use half a container of concealer every day!
Rachael, age 32
Throughout the whole month, my blood sugar was generally within the normal range and I was barely needing to use any of my insulin that I would have with meals. My insulin pen has never lasted so long!
Kate, age 32
We lost 16 pounds between us, got rid of acne, slept better, gained masses of energy, and feel more measured. This has a higher purpose than losing weight.
Alana and Lisa Macfarlane (The Mac Twins), age 28
Part 1
The Science of Gut Health and the Western Diet
Introduction
The media have declared that there is a revolution – and that is not too strong a word – happening right now in the nutrition world. Recent discoveries from leading researchers have shown that the state of our gut is central to our weight and health. So if we want to look and feel good for the long term, we need a diet that creates a high-performance digestive system. We have entered the gut-health era of diet and nutrition, and it will be here for a long time indeed. The science is simply too persuasive to suggest otherwise.
So, back to basics. The digestive tract is huge and tightly packed within the body. Running from mouth to anus, if it were laid out straight it would be around 23–30 feet long. Our intestines, especially our large intestine, contain masses of bacteria – weighing on average 3½ pounds in each individual – and these are instrumental to our well-being.
The collection of bacteria living on and in our body has been dubbed the microbiome
(see here) and consists of about 100 trillion bacterial cells. This may be up to ten times more numerous than the human cells in the body, which means we may only be 10 percent human; the rest of us is all this stuff that is living in and on us.
The highest concentration of bacteria is to be found in our gut. Having a wide diversity of these bugs in our intestines is now understood to be essential to life. In 2014 a landmark review paper on the microbiome published in the Journal of Clinical Investigation from New York University said: The composition of the microbiome and its activities are involved in most, if not all, of the biological processes that constitute the human health and disease, as we proceed through our own life cycle.
You could think of the microbiome as the control center of human health.
Until recently our gut health has been totally underestimated, but we now know that it is essential to take care of it from cradle to old age. It amazes me that it has taken so long for the idea of gut health to have a revolution. When Hippocrates (circa 460–375 BC) said bad digestion is the root of all evil
he was certainly on to something all those centuries ago.
Good gut health has an important impact on many aspects of your health, some of which might not have occurred to you:
• There is a growing body of research showing that not all calories are created equal. Junk food, sugar, artificial sweeteners, alcohol, and meat reared on antibiotics may change the balance of bacteria in the gut and actually make us extract more calories from them than unprocessed foods – even if the calorie counts are the same.
• The digestive system has now been dubbed the second brain
– with signals passing from gut to brain, not just the other way round as originally thought. This may mean an unhealthy gut playing a role in a low mood, and a healthy gut doing the same for a better mood.
• A disturbed gut lining can lead to undigested particles of food, or toxins, getting into our bloodstream, leading to irritated skin, allergy-style symptoms, and a confused immune system.
• A healthy microbiome has been linked with a healthy immune system. The microbiome is in contact with a large pool of the immune system – around 70 percent of immune cells live in the gut.
The great news is there is a lot you can do to cultivate a healthy gut. The biggest influence you can have on the state of your gut lining, and a healthy microbiome, is your diet – which you control.
So what does this mean for us in practice? Simply, it means that we need to adopt a diet which stimulates the flourishing of as many different and varied species of gut bugs as possible, and which makes the beneficial bugs bloom and thrive. We also need to put foods into our diet daily that we know will help us to build a strong gut lining. Both of these concepts have recently been shown to be key to controlling weight, maintaining beautiful skin, improving mood, and developing a strong immune system. A good gut may also protect us from developing autoimmune disorders, which are currently at near-epidemic levels in developed countries.
This book will explain how to eat to achieve great gut health, even in your busy life. It will set you on the path to strengthening your gut lining and reseeding the bugs in your intestines to give you vibrant health and achieve a body weight that suits you.
How the Makeover Works
The book centers around a four-week plan that I have designed based on the latest research on the microbiome and impaired intestinal permeability (also known as leaky gut; see here). It is not a diet in the popular sense of the word; it is a restoration program. It’s a whole health overhaul.
For four weeks we are going to take out of your everyday diet the foods that could be irritating your gut lining or skewing the balance and impacting the diversity of that 3½ pounds of bacteria in your intestines, and replace them with foods that will help. Think of it as a personal makeover working from the inside out: using good food to restore your bacteria, to create a beneficial impact on your weight, skin, mood, and immune system.
The four-week plan pays a nod to the diets of indigenous hunter-gatherers in South America and Africa, who have diverse species of bacteria in their guts supported by eating many vegetables, supplemented with quality meats and fish, eggs, nuts, and seeds, and from time to time a little dairy. The plan involves eating an array of delicious, unprocessed foods that won’t leave you hungry.
Once we have built your gut up to a state of bacterial diversity and abundance on the four-week makeover, we will transition to the maintenance part of this program, which is a gut-friendly version of the real Mediterranean diet, based on the diet from the pre-1960s in Greece. This consisted of a high intake of plants – vegetables, seasonal fruits, and wild herbs – supplemented with fish, nuts and grains, extra virgin olive oil, artisan, slow-matured cheeses teeming with friendly bacteria, and moderate amounts of quality meat. This Mediterranean diet is the best way to support a healthy gut. It’s also an enjoyable way to eat for the long term.
By following this plan you will implement a set of habits that you can incorporate into your diet every day. Once you have a strong gut lining and a flourishing, healthy pond of beneficial bacteria, you will go forward with a set of principles to keep it that way. The recommendations in these pages are simple and implementable, so you can attain and maintain a tip-top-condition gut, and enjoy good health and weight even after the four weeks are up. You may from time to time come back to the four-week plan. It isn’t a roller coaster of feast and famine, self-denial, and rebound hunger, it’s simply a hit of the reset button.
The Gut Makeover is enjoyable and easy to follow, and its recipes accessible and filling, but if you need a little convincing to carry on with the plan, all the way through I will provide you with explanations of the groundbreaking research behind it. I will share with you the latest digestive health science, coupled with my clinical experience based on it, to help you improve your weight and general health. This is a massive area of research, expanding by the day, with the biggest advances having occurred within the past three years (1,389 research papers on gut microbiome
were published on the PubMed database in the first seven months of 2015, compared with 389 in 2010 and 55 in 2005). Many of the findings are discussed behind closed doors at medical conferences and in peer-reviewed scientific literature; applying it to real life is my job and my passion. I have assessed this research and designed a style of eating for one month that will help you build a strong gut lining and reseed the bugs in your intestines for vibrant health. So, let’s grab hold of this revolutionary gut science and adopt an eating pattern to improve your health today.
Buzzword Bugbears
I’d like to mention my two language irritations around healthy eating: the phrase going on a diet
and the word clean.
Let’s start with going on a diet.
For me, this phrase spells misery, depravation, and starvation. It also spells short-termism. In my experience, and the experience of many people I have met, it often carries connotations of failure. That is why I like to talk about having a plan
or eating strategy
rather than being on a diet.
The second buzzword that grates is eating clean.
This is the new term you see a lot on websites and spoken among evangelical communities who are doing something I do agree with – shunning processed food and eating natural, unprocessed food instead. Brilliant! But if you call that clean, does that mean when you’re not eating that way you’re eating dirty? And how does that make you feel – a failure? As you’ll find out later in this book, I don’t want you to eat processed food, as you are unlikely to reach your goals with it. While I agree with the idea behind eating clean
(avoiding processed foods) I have not adopted this word as I find it judgemental and confusing. So you won’t see the word clean
in this book, but you will hear me encouraging you to choose unprocessed foods wherever possible.
The Life-Changing Benefits
To call the Gut Makeover a diet – a word most people associate with slimming – would acknowledge just one small part of the benefits you are likely to see from undergoing this makeover for a month. On this plan your gut undergoes a restoration program along with the rest of your health. You may find you experience fewer niggly ailments, too.
The people who have tried the Gut Makeover have seen a large number of benefits, including increased energy, better moods and fewer mood swings, less anxiety, less bloating and tummy fat, better sleep, fewer aches and pains, disappearance of swollen ankles, reduction or disappearance of menopausal symptoms such as hot flashes, improvement in constipation, disappearance of heartburn, improvement in asthma and hay fever, disappearance of acne and mouth ulcers, and complete subsidence of food cravings – and that’s all before even losing weight!
Weight Loss
Benefit: Most people will lose 6 to 13 pounds in the first month, but if the key principles are maintained longer this can continue gradually in the months afterward, with weight stabilization going forward.
Why? Research shows that if our microbiome has a low bacteria count and certain friendly species are not dominating we may extract more calories from our diet – whatever that may be. We may also feel hungrier. Many of us have a depleted microbiome because antibiotics have wiped out some of the beneficial bacteria and we are eating a poor diet. One course of antibiotics can leave the microbiome weaker for up to four years, leading to increased calorie extraction and appetite changes. However, rebuilding the numbers of different species of bacteria in our gut with the right food could reverse this. The microbiome can be recalibrated in days to weeks through your Gut Makeover.
Better Mental Health
Benefit: Most people experience a better mood and a reduction in mood swings, anxiety, fear, nervousness, aggressiveness, irritability, anger, and depression.
Why? The gut has been dubbed the second brain
and it has more than 100 million neurons embedded in its walls. We all know how our mood can impact our gut – for instance, experiencing butterflies when we are nervous. But it is now understood that hormonal and neural signals pass from the gut to the brain, which means that if the bacteria in our gut is out of balance, or the number of species is low, our mood and thinking may be affected. Your Gut Makeover will put foods into your diet to help friendly gut bacteria flourish and increase the breadth of bacterial species.
Improved Immune System
Benefit: People experience improvements in gut complaints and immune disorders, such as reduced bloating, heartburn, constipation, loose stools as well as less pain and symptoms connected with autoimmunity, such as rheumatoid arthritis, psoriatic arthritis, and psoriasis.
Why? Our gut bacteria send messages to our immune cells, so having a diverse range of bacterial species can support the immune system and prevent us catching every cough and cold going. Supporting our gut bacteria, and therefore our immune system, through the Gut Makeover can also reduce our risk of autoimmune disorders, currently at near epidemic levels – with more than 80 known at time of writing.
Better Skin
Benefit: Many find an improvement in acne, hives, eczema, rashes, and rosacea.
Why? To have beautiful skin we need to support our microbiome. A healthy microbiome has been linked with healthy skin.
My Gut Story
For decades we’ve all been counting calories – in, out, in, out, shake it all about. Be honest now, how many calorie-controlled diets have you been on in your lifetime? Me? More than I care to remember! The first was in the 1980s, when I was 18. I looked in a mirror and thought that if I was thinner I’d look better and people might like me more. At the time I was very influenced by all the chitter-chatter among my peers about weight loss and perfectionism. So I bought a little yellow book listing calorie counts and became such an expert that I could calculate the numbers of every meal without even looking at it any more.
Over a few months I became thinner and thinner. At 5 feet, 7 inches, I went from a healthy 132 pounds to about 112 pounds. Then one day I woke up and suddenly had the most insatiable hunger of my life. I couldn’t stop eating and started craving junk foods I had never eaten before. I remember being on the upstairs of a bus and turning my head to see a McDonald’s; I immediately had to break my journey, get off, and go in and have a big binge. I would buy a loaf of sliced white bread, a pot of jam, and some margarine, saying to myself I’d have just one slice, but then I’d sit by the toaster preparing each one till the entire loaf was gone in one sitting.
I gained 48 pounds and rocketed to 160 pounds – the heaviest I have ever been before or after that time. Instead of being thin, I was now officially overweight for my height. I felt permanently depressed, my skin was a mess, I caught several colds a year, and my figure was destroyed – along with any tiny piece of confidence I’d ever harbored. My thighs rubbed together painfully when I walked and I lived in a long black sweater dress to hide my shape.
It took me another four years of misery-bingeing and crash dieting, counting calories then giving up, and punishing exercise