|
|
  |
INTERVIEW - STEVE MEYEROWITZ SPROUTMAN®
SPROUTMAN ON FOOD AND DIET
Interviewed by James Gormley, Editorial Director, Organic
Products Retailer and Vitamin Retailer magazines.
Sproutman, You began teaching indoor gardening high above the streets
of New York City. You called your teachings a no-cooking school since so
much of your cuisine included vegetables from your own kitchen gardening.
What years was this and were people really into it?
My
first workshop was in 1977. I held regular classes right through 1986.
The living foods and sprouting movement was indeed alive and well in the
1970s and beyond. At least in the cultural capitals of our nation
---Boston, L.A. New York, S.F.---sprouting, vegetarianism, soy foods,
meditation, yoga, even yogurt, were part of the new wave of lifestyle and
self-improvement.
Sproutman, You became interested in natural foods after spending
20 years trying to correct chronic allergies and asthma with conventional
medicine. You say that within two months of eating a strict "living
foods," vegetarian diet, your lifelong symptoms vanished. Do you
still follow a 100% raw foods diet---nothing cooked, packaged, canned,
frozen, or processed?
I
firmly believe that no one diet lasts forever. After all, with each
passing decade, our bodies change, our lifestyles change, and different
needs call for different diets. Diet is a very personal matter. None of
us have the same face, and similarly, none of us have the same stomach.
There are a multiplicity of factors that go into customizing our diet and
the overreaching principle should be devotion to our body's needs rather
than devotion to some dogmatic regimen.
Yes, my
personal diet is still very conscientious and very strict. But it is not
the same diet I ate forty years ago. I am still 100% vegetarian,
mostly Vegan, with an emphasis on raw and organic. But more importantly,
I strive to make the best choices wherever I go. Sometimes that means I
do not to eat at all, because it's too late or there's a bad selection. I
believe that knowing when not to eat is an important part of everyone's
diet. And while we are on the subject, water---both quality and
quantity---is arguably more crucial than food. So a good diet is a kind
of balancing act of many factors. We all do the best we can. The time we
spend reading articles like this, attending lectures, and educating
ourselves, helps us improve our art in the juggling act that is diet and
health.
Sproutman, You have authored some of the most popular books on
sprouts, including Sprouts, the Miracle Food, Sproutman's Kitchen
Garden Cookbook, and Wheatgrass, Nature's Finest Medicine.
When you were one QVC in the 1990s, 953 people ordered your cookbook and
Kitchen Garden Salad Grower in just three minutes! Are people now
sprouting again after the bacteria scares of the late 1990s?
The
salmonella scares of the late 1990s put sprouts on the FDA radar screen
for the first time. FDA didn't even consider sprouts before this because
the industry was so small. Commercial sprout growers (sprout farmers)
took a double hit because the news angle of a "health food turning
unhealthy" made an irresistible headline. Subsequently, we've found
that no food is immune to salmonella and e-coli contamination. On the
contrary, the tiny Sprout Industry has managed to clean up its act and in
recent years has held a better track record than spinach and fresh-cut
lettuce.
I'm
promoting this kind of kitchen gardening as an alternative to
conventional agriculture. As both the general population increases, and
the cost of delivering fresh food increases, and the acreage of farmable
land decreases, the price, quality, and availability of fresh food is
increasingly at risk. But if we can all learn some simple kitchen
gardening skills, we can sustain ourselves with our own high quality,
affordable self-sufficient food supply. The kind of soil-free gardening
I'm describing is not bean sprouts, but ten inch tall micro-greens such
as baby sunflowers, buckwheat lettuce, pea shoots, Daikon radish,
broccoli, garlic chives, to name a few. And you can make your own
flourless bread from sprouted grains. So whether you live in Atlanta or
Alaska, in January or July, you can maintain a level of food
independence, and if you like, dine like a gourmet. And you don't need a
green thumb to succeed.
Sproutman, What about food supplements---do you take them? If so,
which ones, and are they not processed?
In general, I prefer whole food nutrition. That is, I choose to
eat concentrated whole foods than take concentrations of extracts from
foods (vitamins). An example of a concentrated whole food is wheatgrass,
spirulina, blue green algae, brewers yeast, bee pollen, etc. That's where
I go to get vitamins. On the other hand, if I have an ailment that I need
to treat, I will choose specific herbs and nutrients in concentrated form
(pills) as an alternative to pharmaceutical medicines. So echinacea if a
cold is coming on, licorice for respiratory congestion, bromelain to
reduce inflammation, glutamine to help heal and prevent ulcers, CoQ10 to
protect the heart, etc.
|

Sproutman Steve Meyerowitz, circa 1995
with his vegan
pizza recipe made from
sprouted wheat. No flour, no dairy, but plenty of flavor. |

Sproutman and sunflower sprouts (c.) with
raw foodist authors Jeremy Safron(l.) and Paul Nisson (r.)
in 2002. |

Sproutman showing his buckwheat lettuce
sprouts to Dr. Ann Wigmore, circa 1980. Dr. Ann was
responsible for popularizing buckwheat sprouts in the 1970s. |

Sproutman Steve Meyerowitz (c.) with Raw
Foods Guru David Wolfe author of Naked Chocolate holding a
cacao shell showing the white cacao beans that produce
chocolate after they are fermented. Also with Peter Caizer
"The Wheatgrass Messiah."(r.) in 2005. |
Back to
Biography Page 1
Home
|
|
|