Your Plant Paradox No List: Stay Away From Lectins (2024)

Your Plant Paradox No List: Stay Away From Lectins (1)

Your Plant Paradox No List: Stay Away From Lectins (2)

This article is an excerpt from the Shortform summary of "The Plant Paradox" by Steven R. Gundry. Shortform has the world's best summaries of books you should be reading.

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What should you avoid on the Plant Paradox Program? Which foods are on the Plant Paradox No List?

The Plant Paradox No List identifies the things that humans just haven’t adapted to eating yet. See what’s on Plant Paradox No List.

Plant Paradox No List

The off-limits items—the Just Say “No” List—were foreign to the human diet until the Agricultural Revolution about 10,000 years ago; that’s not enough time for humans to develop resistance to the lectins contained in these foods.

Let’s take a closer look at the rationale for including some of the items on thePlant Paradox No List.

Whole grains: Contrary to popular health-food knowledge, white bread, white rice, and other white starches are actually better for you than their brown, whole-grain counterparts because the bran in the whole grains contains lectins. But for this phase, both brown rice and white rice—as well as oats, popcorn, rye, bulgur, and corn—are off-limits and are on the Plant Paradox No List.

Quinoa: This pseudo-grain—although widely considered a health food and popular gluten-free alternative—contains lectins, so they’re off-limits unless you pressure cook them, which removes the lectins, so that is an option.

Beans: Beans, peas, soybeans, lentils, and other legumes have some of the highest levels—and most dangerous forms—of lectins. For example, the lectin in castor beans is ricin, the most potent lectin and a deadly poison. Avoid these as well as green beans, chickpeas, edamame, and tofu.

Peanuts and Cashews: Despite their names, peanuts and cashews aren’t nuts; they’re legumes. As such, they contain harmful lectins.

Seeds: Lectins are contained in the seeds and skins of fruits and vegetables, so avoid pumpkin, sunflower, and chia seeds.

Cow’s Milk: As a reminder from chapter 2, almost all products from cow’s milk contain a lectin-like protein called casein A-1, so avoid ice cream, yogurt (even Greek yogurt), and cheese. Not all milks are on the Plant Paradox No List. Goat’s and sheep’s milks are approved on the PPP because they don’t have this protein; however, they do contain the Neu5Gc sugar molecule that’s linked to heart disease and cancer.

Meats: Avoid all meat that’s not pasture-raised, farmed seafood, and fish that’s high on the food chain (e.g. swordfish, tilefish, grouper, and tuna) because they tend to have more mercury. Additionally, cut down on beef, pork and lamb (even grass-fed) because they carry Neu5Gc.

Fruit: Fruits contain sugar that signal to your body that it’s summer time (aka fat-storing season), so you can only have them in limited servings. In addition to familiar fruits, this includes several that are commonly called vegetables, such as nightshades (e.g. eggplants, tomatoes, peppers, and goji berries) and squash (e.g. cucumbers, pumpkins, and zucchini).

Oils: The off-limits oils are made from lectin-containing seeds and beans; these include vegetable, corn, and peanut oil. Additionally, canola oil is off-limits because it almost universally comes from GMO seeds.

Initially, you should also limit certain fats and oils that help LPSs get through your gut wall. These include

  • Coconut oil and animal fats (long-chain saturated fats)
  • Olive oil, avocado oil, and MCT oil (mono- and polyunsaturated long-chain fats)
  • Cheese, cream cheese, heavy cream, and sour cream (saturated fats)

Sweeteners: Avoid this deadly disruptor because it harms your microbiome; eliminate Splenda, NutraSweet, Sweet’n Low, and diet drinks.

With this Plant Paradox No List, you can make sure you always eat the right food while following this program.

Your Plant Paradox No List: Stay Away From Lectins

Your Plant Paradox No List: Stay Away From Lectins (3)

———End of Preview———

Like what you just read? Read the rest of the world's best summary of Steven R. Gundry's "The Plant Paradox" at Shortform .

Here's what you'll find in our full The Plant Paradox summary :

  • Why eating more vegetables isn't enough, and why some vegetables are toxic to your body
  • The science behind lectins and how they tear apart your body, making you fat and sick
  • The 6-week program to get your body back on healthy grack
Your Plant Paradox No List: Stay Away From Lectins (2024)

FAQs

What does Dr. Gundry eat every day? ›

Gundry recommends a diet that relies on pasture-raised meats and eggs; fermented foods like sauerkraut; limited fruit; foods high in resistant starches, such as green beans; vegetables that are not in the nightshade family; and healthy fats such as olive oil.

What are the worst lectin foods? ›

These six foods are some of the worst sources of lectins in the American diet when consumed raw.
  1. Raw Kidney Beans. Red kidney beans are a great source of plant-based protein and they are a low-glycemic-index food. ...
  2. Peanuts. ...
  3. Whole Grains. ...
  4. Raw Soybeans. ...
  5. Raw Potatoes.

What is the one food we should all stop eating? ›

1. Processed meat. Processed meats contain added nitrates and other chemical substances that are bad for your health. Certain processed meats like sausages are made from leftover unwanted parts of animals and often contain high amounts of salt and fat.

What cancels out lectins? ›

Active lectins are what's found in raw plants. But boiling, baking, pressure-cooking and soaking can deactivate those lectins, so they're not going to have the same effect as they would if you ate them raw. Fermentation, sprouting and removing peels and seeds can also reduce the amount of active lectin in plant foods.

Are bananas high in lectin? ›

Some fruits, such as bananas and apples, contain lectins, but they are generally found in lower amounts compared to lectin-rich foods like grains and legumes.

Are blueberries high in lectins? ›

Lectin-free fruits include pomegranates, lemons, beets, blackberries, blueberries, apples, plums, sweet oranges, tangerines, and dates.

What does Dr. Gundry say to stop eating? ›

Foods to Avoid for Optimal Health

Grains and Pseudograins: Such as wheat, oats, quinoa, and rice; opt for millet and sorghum as lectin-free alternatives. High-Lectin Fruits and Vegetables: Limit intake of white potatoes, tomatoes, and eggplants; prefer sweet potatoes and pressure-cooked potatoes.

How do you flush lectins out of your body? ›

The trick is to limit or remove these foods, not all lectins. If you absolutely must consume these foods then reduce the overall lectin load by soaking and sprouting your nuts/seeds, grains, and legumes, and be sure to slow-cook them for longer durations on low heat. Both sprouting and heating reduce the lectin load.

What are the symptoms of too much lectin? ›

Raw kidney beans contain phytohaemagglutinin, a toxic lectin. The main symptoms of kidney bean poisoning are severe abdominal pain, vomiting, and diarrhea ( 7 , 8 , 9 , 10 ). Reported cases of this poisoning are associated with improperly cooked red kidney beans.

What destroys lectins? ›

Cooking with wet, high-heat methods like boiling, stewing, or soaking can deactivate most lectins. When it comes to the lectins in nuts and seeds, these are water-soluble and found on the outer surface so exposure to water removes them.

What three foods did Dr. Gundry eliminate from his diet? ›

In fact, lots of the “healthy” foods we've been trained to eat for centuries contain dangerous lectins, including:
  • Vegetables (especially nightshades)
  • Seeds.
  • Beans and legumes.
  • Traditional dairy products.
  • Grain-fed and farm-raised animal proteins.
Jan 29, 2019

What type of bread does Dr. Gundry recommend? ›

There's a bread out there that you can have as much as you want. It's called the Barely Bread and comes with a nod of approval from well-known American heart surgeon Steven Gundry, who has created its recipe. He believes it's the best bread one can have. It contains no grains and is lectin- and gluten-free.

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