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Today we're going to be talking about foods
that can fight cancer specifically
five of them. Here on the Exam Room podcast brought to you
by the Physicians Committee. Hi.
I am the weight loss champion Chuck Carroll.
And helping us learn about cancer
fighting foods today is a woman who is quite remarkable
because she is not only a plant based chef
and a recipe developer, a fantastic one at that,
but she also happens to be a cancer survivor herself.
So there is no better person on planet Earth to help us learn
today, Raise our health IQ's, then chef Lauren Kretzer.
Lauren, thank you so very much for being here.
Thank you so much for having me.
That was quite the introduction and I'm flattered.
Well, it's true. It's so good to see you again.
I feel like
it has been an eternity since you've been on the Exam Room.
It has been a few years, so a lot has happened since then.
Globally. Personally, so.
I know let's let's dive into what you have been up
to, before we unveil those five foods.
I know that since you have last been on the show,
you, as you just said, have been through a lot.
And that includes a cancer scare of your own.
So kind of bring the audience up to date with
what's been going on with you.
Yes. So I have talked a little bit about this
on my channels, but basically a few years ago,
I had what I thought was a cold, a bad cold.
And at the time, my daughter was an infant.
So I was up all night with her
just basically whenever she would wake up needing to eat.
And so I was pretty run down and just kind of feeling like
my exhaustion was due to having a young baby
and a toddler and that's why
I wasn't kind of getting over this cold that I had.
But the cold persisted for weeks, and sometimes
the symptoms were fairly severe.
So at the urging of my family,
I finally got myself over to Urgent Care on a Saturday,
just kind of expecting them to send me home
with a prescription for something
and then I'd be on my way to feeling better.
But after the physician there saw me,
she said she suspected pneumonia and she wanted to take a chest
X-ray and, just kind of trying to avoid X-rays
unless absolutely necessary, I kind of asked if I could just
bypass it, and she said that, no,
we really need the X-ray because the type of meds
we will give you will depend on that.
So I submitted to the X-ray, and when they came back
in the room, she kind of sat me down
and she said,
I don't want you to be frightened,
but we found a very large mass in your chest
and we need you to get to a hospital today
to have a CAT scan done and get that checked out.
So from then on, it was a whirlwind few months of testing.
Basically, all I heard from November of 2019
until basically pathology came back from my surgery
was that this thing was huge.
It was 12 centimeters.
So about the size of a grapefruit,
it was abutting my heart.
So in my chest cavity and no one really knew what it was.
So they said
that it had some characteristics that could be benign,
but it also had some suspicious
characteristics that were showing up in PET
scans and MRI's and things like that.
So they recommended surgical resection.
So in March of 2020 just a few days before
COVID kind of went wild and shut down the world, I had
surgery to remove it.
I was not a candidate for a minimally invasive surgery,
so they had to do a full, open thoracotomy and remove the cyst.
So it did turn out to be a benign thymic cyst.
But my surgeon in his wisdom took out my thymus gland,
which is something
that you don't really need once you're an adult.
So he took it out just in case something was up
and when I first met with him in my post-surgical appointment,
he told me that they couldn't figure out
what was wrong with it, but something was up.
So it had been sent over
to Memorial Sloan-Kettering for further evaluation.
At that point,
I kind of knew that there was a possibility of cancer,
but since I didn't feel sick I never felt sick
other than the pneumonia.
You know, I tried to stay optimistic.
And then in early April of 2020, I got a call saying that
I had a very rare aggressive form of non-Hodgkin's lymphoma.
So it kind of hit me like a ton of bricks.
And, you know, ever since then I've been kind of
dealing with it on and off.
And so, yeah, that's, that's the long, winding story.
That's the Reader's Digest version.
That's the Reader's Digest version.
I mean, I'm not sure that I could
handle the full blown text.
So, I mean, when you get that that phone call in April
and they're telling you like, oh, we have ourselves a problem
here, what runs through your head?
Because
as long as I've known you
and as much as I know about you, you have always been
an exceptionally healthy human being.
And yet you're getting this news.
How did that sit with you?
Yeah, it was really hard.
I mean, there was a lot of disbelief.
I'm going to be honest.
And the beginning and anger,
you know, kind of feeling like I had done so many things right.
And so, you know, why was this happening?
And a certain amount of shame, if I'm being honest,
because, again, you know, you eat a certain way
and you kind of preach the benefits of a certain lifestyle.
And then, whoops, I have cancer.
But, you know,
obviously since then, I've done
a lot of reflection and also a lot of research and,
you know, many things can cause cancer,
some of which are not in our control.
There's strong environmental links to the kind of cancer
that I was diagnosed with you know, use of Roundup
and things like that.
So for all I know, I was breathing that for years.
And who knows, maybe that's what caused it.
Things like stress, you know, it kind of
forced me to reexamine my life from every angle,
which was one of the huge benefits.
You know, they say every cloud has a silver lining.
And that was certainly
the one for me that I kind of just got to examine everything
that went on in my life and determine
what could have caused this and work on that.
I love the way that you put that.
I think that it's so important to you
know, stress that in particular, when it comes to diet,
you always hear our experts on the show use the term
lower your risk by whatever the percentage may be.
There is unfortunately and sadly really no magic
cure for things or no silver bullet
that would prevent something 100%.
All we can do is severely or severely
like really fantastically lower our risk for so many of
these chronic diseases.
But there are external factors, like you were just
mentioning that have literally nothing to do with nutrition.
That can still play a huge part in that.
And I am sorry that you felt that shame.
And I imagine that you felt it
especially hard because of the circles that you run in.
You know what you do for a living.
You are in the whole food plant- based community.
You are a prominent, prominent figure in it.
And so I completely understand why you would feel that shame.
But here we are now two years later as we record this.
And, you know,
I hope that you're at a point now where you realize that
there is no shame to be had here. Right?
This was not your fault.
This was just you got dealt a raw hand.
Right? Right.
Yeah.
And I mean, that's basically
what I've come to realize, that things happen to people.
And the statistics that you mentioned about lowering risk,
you know, they're certainly true,
but they're not a promise.
As I've said before, you know, in my channels
when I've talked about this, they're not a guarantee.
And so we just have to do our best,
you know, with our diet, with our lifestyle,
with everything that we can control to lower that risk.
And I think that's really empowering.
You know, like you can do things and you have a lot more power
than you think.
And that just became clearer and clearer to me
and empowered me even more in my recovery from everything.
It just kind of made me believe even more and the whole food
plant-based way of living rather than deter me from it,
because when I started reading stories of other people
who were diagnosed and recovered and, you know, using certain
tools and dietary changes, it really got me excited.
I'm like, oh, my God, this isn't a done deal.
I can still make changes because, you know,
my diet was not perfect. No one's diets perfect.
But my diet did have things going on that
I could have improved.
And that's what I've been working on the last few years.
I love your optimistic outlook on this.
That's fantastic.
So we do have those cancer fighting foods
we're going
to talk about here in just a moment,
but I feel like I want a little bit more to that readers
digest story here.
So when last we left off, it was April of 2020.
You had just gotten that news.
So what happens after that report comes back?
So my surgeon
and I had a conversation and he was very optimistic.
Thankfully, even though the cancer that
I was diagnosed with
is rare, and aggressive, it thankfully has a high cure rate.
So he told me that in all likelihood I would be okay,
but that, you know, I needed to see an oncologist right away.
So I met with an oncologist at the hospital
where I had received my surgery.
It's a, you know, the number one hospital in my state.
So I felt comfortable and spoke with him.
But my surgeon had told me, you know, seek outside opinions
just to be safe.
You know, you just want to cover all your bases.
So since I trust my surgeon so much, I decided to do just that.
So I followed up with more oncologists
at a renowned, like a, globally renowned cancer hospital. And
they immediately told me that, you know,
I had to start a pretty intensive chemotherapy regimen.
And I was kind of
shocked to hear that just because there there was
they had to removed the organ or the glands
that had the cancer on it.
And based on other testing, there was no visible cancer
in my body.
And so I was kind of, you know, thinking
why am I going to go through treatment?
There was no there was no cancer in my body right now.
And they explained, you know, microscopic cancer can exist.
And since it's aggressive, it can form a tumor fairly quickly.
And we want to kind of nip it in the bud.
And so they did more testing on me.
And I went through another PET scan and like still no sign
of cancer.
And so I was like
basically pleading with them
to give me permission to not go through the chemo.
And they told me that they were going to present my case
to something called the Tumor Board,
where every week a group of doctors
meets to discuss cases and decide on best treatment.
And so I was kind of holding my breath for this tumor board
and they came back and they all agreed I needed chemo.
You know, I'm relatively young.
I have to really small children.
At the time,
my youngest was literally a baby and my oldest was only,
she was a toddler.
And the thought of going through treatment,
you know, in the physical and emotional toll
it would have and, you know,
chemo well, it's lifesaving for a lot of people.
It comes with its own pretty significant set of risks.
So I only wanted to go
through treatment if it was 300% necessary.
And so I went back to the original doctor
that I saw at my hospital
and kind of explained everything to him.
And he basically said to me
that it depended on how risk averse I was.
He said that there was an excellent chance
that the surgery was curative, but that he could not make
a guarantee to me.
And so he said, if you want, I would give you my blessing
to basically do constant surveillance on you.
So I went in to him every few months
and we did
full bloodwork and CAT scans, and it was a lot more scanning
than I really would have ever wanted.
But to me it was like the lesser evil.
And basically I agreed that at the first sign of cancer
I would go right into treatment you know, no ifs, ands or buts.
And thankfully, I'm two years out and so far so good.
I continue to be monitored.
I went as recently as like a month ago, and I'm going back
in a couple of months.
So I've just been under his care and careful surveillance
since then.
Outstanding.
And I love the way that you approach this.
Right?
So you are working with your physician
and you said, look, you know, if the cancer does
begin to pop up, then we'll go into treatment.
So it's not like you just
kind of went rogue and decided like, I'm not going to get scans
I'm not going to do this, I'm not going to do that.
It's like you really did take they
what I would say was a really solid approach.
Like it was really well, thought out.
And I can't imagine that you would approach anything
willy nilly,
especially given the fact
that you have two so young children in your household.
Right? Yeah.
I mean,
they were obviously first
and foremost in my decision making process.
And this was not about me.
It was about making sure that they have their mom.
And so, you know,
it wasn't something that I just kind of
jerk decided I'm not getting treatment and I wasn't being,
you know, at all cavalier about it.
You know, I've seen chemo save lives and, you know,
I'm not one to think that I'm any exception from needing it.
It's just I think of my cancer had been a different stage.
You know, I was lucky that it was stage one.
And I think if it had been a more deadly cancer,
I probably would have considered getting the chemo.
But since this cancer has a high cure rate
and since there was no visible cancer in my body, afterward,
I just kind of took that risk.
And I recognize it was a risk.
But so far, so good.
That's outstanding.
And as you said a little bit earlier,
you go through all of this
and you're an even bigger believer
in taking care of yourself, going the preventative route,
doing everything that you can to reduce the risk of cancer.
So again, I mean, if your all of your chips
weren't already in the middle of the table,
if you hadn't already gone all in with the whole food
plant based diet, certainly you are there now.
And that's why I'm super stoked, Lauren, for today,
because not only did we get an opportunity
to hear your amazing story,
which I think is going to
resonate with a large number of the exam rooms,
but you're also going to help us
learn about those five foods that you have identified
that are really good quality cancer fighters.
So you're ready to to dove into that with us?
Yeah, definitely.
All right.
Let's start with number one on the list,
cruciferous vegetables.
So when we're talking about cruciferous vegetables, number
one, what vegetables are they?
And number two, how are they helping.
So cruciferous vegetables are my number one.
Just because they're so readily available
in every supermarket in America, it doesn't really matter
if you live in a city
like New York or Los Angeles
or somewhere in the middle of the United States or elsewhere.
Chances are
you have cruciferous vegetables at your local supermarket
and there's a lot of them.
So the most common are broccoli, cauliflower, kale,
but also arugula, Brussels sprouts, cabbage, bok choy,
collard greens, watercress, radishes, turnip greens.
That's just
the most common ones that you'll find.
And they have incredible cancer fighting properties
and so I included them on this list
because you can get so much bang for your buck nutritionally.
They're not all that expensive.
Even though organic vegetables are pricier,
you don't need it to be organic
to get the benefits of cruciferous veggies.
So, yeah, that's why I was excited about this one,
just because of the availability to most people.
So. Go ahead.
No, it's cool.
Like I'm a huge fan of Brussels sprouts in particular.
So the fact that you mention them specifically, like
makes me really happy because not a day goes by that
I don't eat roasted Brussels sprouts.
Like those are my jam you know?
Are you a Brussels sprouts?
Brussels Sprouts fan?
Oh, yeah.
I love all the cruciferous'
And that's why they were my number one.
They're a personal favorite of mine
and they're so hearty, like you really have to chew.
So if you're not including meat in your diet
and you're new to a plant based diet,
they're very satisfying because they're not
the kind of things that you just kind of inhale
or you kind of have to.
They really give you that satisfaction
when you're eating them.
And there's so many different ways to enjoy them.
Like you said, you enjoy roasted Brussels sprouts,
but there's so many ways to have them raw cooked, roasted,
sauteed or fried.
But the
biggest benefits come from eating them raw, actually.
So they they contain this compound called
Sulforaphane, which is a mega anti-cancer compound.
But Sulforaphane can't be activated
unless this enzyme called myrosinase is activated.
And basically myrosinase
doesn't become activated when it's cooked,
but there's a few hacks to get around that.
So just first and foremost, try to include some raw
cruciferous' in your diet. And it's fairly easy.
If you like salads, you can just finally chop up
kale or cabbage or even Brussels sprouts, shred them,
throw them in your salad.
They don't even have to be
the sole base of your salad, just part of it.
And things like radishes, finely chopped raw cauliflower,
like throw that all in your salad
or in your wrap or in your grain bowl,
some raw component which I advocate for anyway.
I think some of the nutrients in vegetables are diminished
when they're cooked.
So it's always nice to have a raw component to your meal.
But if you are cooking your veggies, there's two ways
to kind of circumvent the deactivation of morose, and
one is to chop your vegetables
and just let them sit on the cutting board
for about 30 to 40 minutes before you cook them
and just chopping them
and letting them set
does activate that enzyme so the sulforaphane can be formed.
So that's number one.
And number two is to use ground mustard powder.
So you can buy this on any spice rack in the grocery store,
just mustard seed powder ground mustard seed,
a taste just like mustard.
And you just want to sprinkle a very small amount of it
on your cooked vegetables and that will that contains more.
So that will activate the sulforaphane as well.
So those two ways are ways to kind of circumvent that
frozen vegetables you can also use.
But they've been, you know, usually blanched.
So like flesh cooked before they're frozen.
So if you're going to be using frozen veggies,
the chop and weight method won't work,
but you can add
the mustard powder on it
and that will allow
you to absorb all those valuable anti-cancer nutrients.
Kitchen science like that's that is so cool to me
that you chop up a vegetable,
let it breathe, and that activates it like that.
I would have never thought about that.
Like literally never in a million kajillion years would
I have thought that by chopping a vegetable
and letting it breathe,
this cancer fighting compound would just spring to life.
Like that is the
coolest, like the wickedest, most cool thing ever.
Like, thank you.
I have no idea.
And it's nice because if you're short on time,
you can kind of use that as like a meal prep thing too.
So just chop your broccoli or whatever in the morning
and then when you're ready to cook your dinner,
you've not only save time by doing your chopping,
but you've activated all those valuable compounds.
That is super cool.
You know, what we're a fan of here in my house is garlic.
And so when this popped up
on the list, as well, I was like, Hot
diggity, here we go.
And like, I'm like, I like I'm one of those people,
Lauren, that does not treat hummus like a dip.
Like, to me, hummus should be its own food group.
With the spoon. Exactly right.
You definitely want to go the soup route with your hummus.
So and my hummus always has a lot of garlic.
And I love, love, love me some garlic.
And so you're saying here today that garlic
this is another cancer fighter that you want in your diet.
Yeah.
I mean, I was so excited to read
about the anti-cancer properties of garlic
because I am half-Italian.
So garlic is going through my blood as we speak
and it's just such an incredible food.
The first of all, I mean, cancer aside, it's
amazing for immunity.
So right now everyone's interested
in boosting their immunity
with COVID and everything else going on in the world
so that some garlic into your diet and immunity,
of course, is related to fighting cancer cells as well,
which is something that I personally didn't
make the connection with.
Know stupidly, I guess, like you think of immunity,
you think of the common cold, COVID, the flu.
You don't really think
your immune system
is working to fight off cancer cells, but it is.
And so a lot of us have you know, baby cancer cells
in our body that never grow into tumors
because our immune systems are working
so hard to get rid of them.
And so that's why
garlic is such a huge thing to add to your diet
and it's so easy to add to your diet.
I mean, it will be shelf stable forever in a cool, dark place.
It's again available at pretty much every single supermarket.
It's not expensive and it tastes great.
So most people love garlic
and you don't really need a lot of it.
So just added into one meal a day.
Raw is a little better, but cooked is also
valuable in terms of its nutritional properties.
And it helps with detoxifying carcinogens,
halting cancer cell growth, blocking angiogenesis.
So angiogenesis is
when it's the formation of new blood vessels for tumors.
And so we want to stop that so the tumors can't grow
and garlic helps out with that.
So it's got quite a few impressive
nutritional boosters in terms of beating cancer.
You know, I'm a I'm a fan of just taking fresh
garlic, crushing it.
You know,
you got one of those things, you just squeeze it
and it just, you know, crushes it right there for you.
I'll put that in a salad for a little bit of zest.
Just just the one clove because I think that if you
if you go above that,
it's a little bit too zesty in my opinion.
But but as you said, I mean, it's it's super easy to do
and I would think, you know, especially
if you're adding it to a salad
which has cruciferous vegetables
in it as well,
you add the garlic on top of that man,
you're living large at that point, right? Yeah.
And that's something
that I incorporated right away when I decided to try to
stave off cancer on my own is I started making these giant
cancer fighting salads.
And the raw garlic was a component.
Like you said,
I would have all my finely shredded cruciferous veggies,
and then I would just take
a microplane, which is like a mini respirator.
You can get it on Amazon, you can get it
lots of places online.
It's similar to a garlic press, and it just basically
finally grate your garlic almost into a pulp.
And so I would put that on my salad
and just massage it in
with like a quarter of an avocado
and some lemon juice in lieu of dressing.
And it's so delicious.
And the the cruciferous get like nice and tender and it
just really it's really on me.
I'm a big fan.
Have you made a pizza
and just put like a garlic clove on there, roasted garlic
cloves on top of the pizza have you tried that yet?
That is heavenly. I haven't. I have to try that.
I'm a big piece of person.
So yeah.
So if you like garlic and you like pizza
and, you know, maybe your partner isn't
exactly offended by garlic breath, like go for it if.
You can't play out. My husband and I do.
And there's one more thing about garlic.
I wanted to mention and try.
Oh, man,
it's really great to eat if you are looking
to protect your body against radiation damage.
So a lot of cancer
patients are,
of course, going through radiation treatment
and even if you're not going through radiation treatment,
you've probably been subjected to lots of scans.
So CAT scans and PET scans unfortunately
come with a lot of radiation.
So just detoxify from that.
Having a lot of garlic helps.
Garlic for the win.
All right.
Now, I also like this, especially with my breakfast
breakfast berries so good.
Especially like on top of oatmeal.
I love throwing all kinds of berries
in my oatmeal in the morning.
It made your list.
Another thing that made me majorly happy.
So what's up with berries and fighting cancer?
Yeah.
So berries
are the healthiest fruit and they're second only to herbs
and spices in terms of their antioxidant content.
And antioxidants are just superstars
in keeping us healthy.
Berries help reduce inflammation.
Inflammation is pretty much linked to everything bad
that can happen to you, including cancer.
So we always want to try to keep inflammation down and berries
help with that.
And they are just chock full of nutrients and vitamins.
So they just keep your body humming along really nicely.
But aside from reducing inflammation,
they also prevent DNA damage and they also prevent the
tumor angiogenesis,
which I mentioned before, the formation
of new blood vessels for cancer to grow and spread
so they can help prevent that.
And berries again are just widely
available and frozen berries are available year round.
They're far cheaper
than their fresh counterpart and they're just as good for you.
So berries can be incorporated into all types
of foods, mostly sweet, but of course savory.
Occasionally as well.
And then there's one type of berry
well, two types of berries.
Then I want to single out.
First of all, out
of all the berries that you commonly found in supermarkets,
they're all good for you.
But Blackberries are the highest
in antioxidants out of all of them.
So try to incorporate Blackberries into your diet
when possible.
And the other one I wanted to
mention is Berry, that you've probably never seen
before a possibly never heard of before.
And it's the Indian Gooseberry and it goes by the name Amla.
And Amla is pretty sure it's the single
highest antioxidant food in existence.
It's got this very interesting sour taste to it.
I've never personally found it fresh or frozen,
but they do sell amla powder online
pretty much everywhere, and you only need a tiny bit
to have a teaspoon in your smoothie.
You can even mix it into water and chug it if you wanted to.
But that's going to give you a mega antioxidant boost
far more than you would get with any other food.
So just one little
half a teaspoon will double the antioxidants
that you would find in like, say, a blueberry.
So that's something that I
always add in to my smoothies just because it's so powerful.
I hate to burst your bubble, but you are actually not
the first person to bring up Amla
or the Indian gooseberry on the show.
Cyrus and Robby from Mastering Diabetes are big fans of it.
I mean, big, big, big, big, big fans.
And I'm like you.
I can't find a fresh one to save my life right now.
But the powder, as you said, is readily available.
And to your point about frozen berries, absolutely. Yes.
Love going to Costco for this very reason.
Is, I mean, you get these
ginormous bags of frozen blueberries
and I've got like two or three of them right
now in my freezer downstairs
as you said, Blackberries,
strawberries are down there as well.
And so it's like whatever you want
to put in that smoothie that particular day,
you can get your hands on any time of year.
Random question.
Blackberries, like I.
I have to put them
in the smoothie because it drives me up the wall
when I eat the fresh ones
and then the seeds kind of get stuck into like
I don't know any way around that.
Have you discovered anything?
I haven't.
I'm sorry to burst your bubble.
I like blackberries, seeds and all,
but yeah, I mean, they're they're so good for you.
And like you said, frozen blueberries,
especially if you can find the wild blueberries.
There's a brand that sells Maine Wild blueberries,
and those may have even more antioxidants
than your standard high, but blueberry.
So any berries
will will do the trick I mean, they're all good for you.
So not only blueberries, strawberries, cherries,
cranberries, you know, there's so many to choose from.
And if you can get the goose
berry powder or the alma powder,
you're just bringing it up another level.
But I mean,
when you think of the cancer fighting power of a smoothie,
you know, with some of the stuff in it.
So like I said, one teaspoon of this,
I think has something like 750 antioxidant units.
And then compare that to I think it's like
a bagel I think has 20 antioxidant units.
So, you know, these two things, both are plant based.
One of them is going to help you fight disease.
The other is not going to do too much for you.
So definitely go for the berries when you can. Absolutely.
And in a smoothie, mix it with your cruciferous vegetables.
Oh, easy right.
I don't know about the garlic in a smoothie
with those things, berries and garlic together.
Maybe in a salad, though.
If you make a salad with a garlic dressing.
I can see that with like strawberries
in particular, get a little bit warmer.
You get the fresh strawberries. That sounds pretty good.
That sounds pretty. Pretty good.
I like where your head's at and I trust
I trust your suggestions, your recommendations,
because, well, you are a recipe developer and a chef after all.
All right.
Number four, I have a big old, big old bowl
of roasted mushrooms right now in the refrigerator, these two.
Good for you.
These two big cancer fighters talk to us about mushrooms.
So mushrooms are one of those foods
that I just can't get enough of.
And they bring in from the common white
button mushroom to the uber fancy morels.
Chanterelles, you know, all these
fancy mushrooms that you might not be able
to find at your supermarket.
But if you do find them, definitely buy them.
But they're all good for you.
So the white button mushrooms are the most widely available.
Again, I made this list
trying to get foods that
no one would really have trouble finding.
There was a large study done in China
relatively recently where they showed that just eating one
white button mushroom a day.
So the most generic common cheap mushroom of them all
can help lower breast cancer risk.
But I think it was like 64% or 63% or something to that effect.
So mushrooms have tons of compounds
which are cancer fighters and they're just so good.
I mean,
like if you're eating a plant based diet,
they really bring in that meatiness, that umami.
You can have them on their own as a side
you can incorporate them
into stir fries, into brambles, you can even
turn them into veggie burgers or vegan meatballs.
I mean, I've seen mushrooms used in so many ways.
One of my personal favorites is just to take
your talking mushrooms,
put a little bit of tamari on them,
a little bit of smoked paprika, and you bake them
in the oven for I forget. How long?
Like 20 minutes ish, maybe a little longer.
And they turn into
kind of like a big
any texture, and that just goes on everything for me.
So I love mushrooms.
I especially love mushrooms ever since my cancer diagnosis.
Now I feel like I have to eat a lot of them.
So, yeah,
if you can incorporate them into your diet daily,
you don't need a lot like I said one button mushroom a day.
And that study was shown
to drastically reduce breast cancer risk.
Outstanding.
And we've been talking recently about how powerful they can be
as far as your mind, the health of your brain
and helping to stave off cognitive impairment.
I mean, some mushrooms are like
little powerhouse foods and the fact that the white
button mushroom is so can be so healthy is like
it just blows my mind because you're right.
When you said
it is literally the most generic mushroom out there,
that literally is the most generic mushroom out there.
It is in every grocery store across America.
Yeah.
And it's because they contain
something called an aromatase inhibitor
or it is an aromatase inhibitor
and that helps block the production of estrogen.
So that's why
I think it's been linked to reducing breast cancer risk
at least that's what I've read.
And so I think that's pretty exciting.
And they also boost
natural killer cell activity in our bodies.
So that's something that
we all want to work on with immunity, again,
not only in terms of cancer but COVID.
You know, these little cells are working very hard
to kill off anything dangerous,
you know,
that they deemed dangerous in our bodies and cancer
cells is one of those things that they're fighting against.
And mushrooms help bolster them, essentially.
Put those in the salad as well.
I mean, you're doing pretty good.
And then number five here, not so much of a food as it is
a spice, turmeric or turmeric, as it said.
Which are you, a tumor or a turmeric person?
I'm a. Turmeric person. Outstanding.
I like the way you speak.
Talk to us about this.
What's what's so powerful as far as fighting cancer?
Sure.
So turmeric,
even though you can't really find the root that easily,
you can find the way that health food stores occasionally,
but you can pretty much find the ground form most anywhere.
So it's in your spice aisle.
It's a beautiful, bright goldenrod, orange, yellow color.
It will stain anything you put it on.
So use it with caution,
but turmeric, it contains something called curcumin.
And curcumin is one of the most impressive anti-cancer
things that I've personally read about.
And it's just so easy to add into foods.
So turmeric
is it's got like a slightly I don't even know how
to describe it, like a slightly spicy
but not heat wise, just kind of like a slightly spicy
taste to it.
But it's relatively subtle if you use it in small amounts.
So turmeric is the main spice in curry powder.
So of course, if you like cooking with curry
powder, you're probably getting a lot of turmeric
in your diet already.
But if you're not using curry,
you can just take
the single spice turmeric and just add like
a quarter teaspoon and a half a teaspoon to your food.
It will change the color.
But you know,
if you're making a soup,
I always thought in soups, if you're
making a salad dressing, put it in that
I actually buy the whole root when I can find it and I
leave it peeled and I freeze them.
And when I'm ready to use it, I'll literally just like rinse
it to essentially clean it off and throw it in my blender
and blend it up to make a smoothie.
And it's one of those things that if you read about it,
it's amazing
that it hasn't been advertised more as an anti-cancer agent.
It's that powerful.
But unfortunately, it's not the kind of thing
that we can patent and make money off of.
So I think that's why it just hasn't
been studied as extensively as it as it should be.
But it's really incredible.
And like I said, you can use it in
so many different applications and it's relatively cheap,
especially if you're buying the the grounds kind,
but even a whole root.
I find them the most cheaply at Asian grocery stores.
They're usually available in the fresh produce
aisle right next to the ginger,
and they look like basically orange ginger,
and you just throw the whole thing in the freezer,
like I said.
And then when you're ready
to use it, either
put it in the blender or you can pull it and grate it
up on the microplane, which I mentioned before.
Add it to your stir-frys,
to your grain bowls all different ways.
Yeah.
And if it really does you cook a dish and the tumeric
has really changed its color and you're serving it,
you're nervous, like, what are people going to say?
Why is this dish so yellow?
Just call it golden. And whatever it is, right?
So if it's if it's like a golden pasta,
like it's a pasta dish or whatever,
just call it golden pasta, you know,
or golden rice, whatever the case, may be.
And then suddenly it goes
from like, what is this to, oh, that is gourmet, right?
Yeah, yeah, yeah.
So big fan of that.
And lastly, we actually have a bonus here.
And this one really we've talked about it on the show before,
but we have to keep
talking about it because the stigma still exists.
And your bonus one is soy.
Talk to us.
Yeah, I wanted to bring up soy if we had the time,
and I'm glad we did because like you said,
there are so many misperceptions about soy, especially when
it comes to breast cancer.
I've seen breast cancer survivors, you know,
say I can't have that that edamame
or I can't have that tofu
and they genuinely think it's going to be giving them cancer.
And, you know, I appreciate the fear
behind those decisions
because once you get a diagnosis,
you want to do everything to stay away from it.
But they're actually doing themselves
unknowingly a big disservice
because soy has actually been linked
to lower breast cancer recurrence and it's also linked
to preventing breast cancer in the first place.
So when I say soy
I don't mean every single type of soy out there.
I mean generally whole minimally processed soy products.
So things like organic tofu, tempeh,
unsweetened soy milk, edamame, these are the kinds of
soy that you really want to be including in your diet.
Studies have shown that children who start eating soy
at a young age regularly have lower
risk of developing breast cancer as an adult.
And those who start eating soy later in life
the the statistics aren't quite as impressive.
I mean, it will still help you.
But, you know, soy from an early age is really great.
And the type of
I think it's like an estrogen
compound that's in soy is is different
than the type of estrogen that our body produces.
So that's why it does
not have the negative effects that people think that it does.
It's it's a plant estrogen.
And so it's not going to harm you.
It'll actually help you.
So if you can include some soy in your diet, like I said,
those minimally processed kinds, you want to stay away
generally speaking, from the ultra processed soy.
So if you're saying like soy isolate protein powders
or some very popular commercially produce
like veggie burgers,
that's the kind of soy
that that isn't linked to prevention of cancer,
but tofu, tempeh, edamame, unsweetened
soy milk, those are all foods that are very good for you.
And gentlemen, as Dr.
Barnard and I point out, every single time this comes up,
it will not cause you to have enhancements on your chest,
shall we say.
I promise you it will not do that whatsoever.
Wow. Lauren, thank you so much for being here today.
And thank you so much for sharing your story.
I really didn't know
about your battle until kind of recently.
And I'm just so thrilled
that you're able to be here
and you look as happy and as healthy as you are
and you're working with your doctors.
The numbers are all looking good.
And I mean, really just you're such an inspiration.
And I really do think that a lot of viewers and the Exam Room
today are feeling the same kind of way.
So, again, thank you so much for being here.
Thank you.
Oh, of course. Of course.
Now, listen, you can get a whole lot more
from Lauren at her Web site.
LaurenKretzer.com
There's a link to that in the episode notes
or in the show description. Follow her on Instagram.
A must follow Lauren_Kretzer.
And then you were telling me right before the interview
started, you have this new Substack
that you're really proud about.
So first of all,
what is the Substack? And second of all,
what are you doing on said Substack?
So, yeah, I'm excited about it just because I feel I've
kind of gathered so much knowledge
about nutrition and cancer specifically since my diagnosis.
But I've also always been interested
in plant based nutrition and obviously cooking forever.
And like you, Chuck I wanted to turn my knowledge
and my personal experience into something good
and to give knowledge to others.
So Substack is a platform that I've found
that I'm excited about because it's
kind of like the marriage of a newsletter and a blog.
So basically you subscribe, it's very barebones.
It'll come right to your inbox, or you can just go to Substack
and read it directly there if you want
And that's where I basically indulge in all of my nerdy food,
nutrition, holistic living, wellness, healing passions.
I also like to travel.
So now that we're getting back into travel,
I plan on doing travel recaps
with from a vegan perspective, of course,
and there's a free version where I give you all
sorts of goodies
including recipes, and then there's a paid version,
which is a very modest subscription price,
and then you'll get access to even more stuff.
And one of the paid posts
actually is I gave my entire Healing
Cancer Protocol, so I went through every single
supplement meal type of thing that I incorporated
post diagnosis,
and I wrote all about it for my Substack subscribers.
So you can find that post there too.
I love it.
I love it. I'm going to go sign up for your Substack.
I think it will be my very first Substack subscription and
there's a link to that
also in the episode notes or in the show description.
Lauren Kretzer, thank you so very much for being here again.
You're just the rock star of rock star
so your wisdom and your recipes and your story
and your experience, I mean, really,
please do continue doing exactly what it is that you are doing.
As far as putting this knowledge out there
because the world needs more people like you.
Thank you.
And thank you for this
amazing podcast and give me the platform to
to reach so many of your awesome listeners
and I'm honored to be here again.
If your health IQ is a couple of points
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