Chinese food therapy
Alternative medicine | |
Claims | Health claims relating to Chinese diet |
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Related fields | Traditional Chinese medicine |
Chinese food therapy (simplified Chinese: 食疗; traditional Chinese: 食療; pinyin: shíliáo; literally: "food therapy", also called nutrition therapy and dietary therapy) is a mode of dieting rooted in Chinese understandings of the effects of food on the human organism,[1] and centred on concepts such as eating in moderation.[2][3] Its basic precepts are a mix of folk views and concepts drawn from traditional Chinese medicine. It was the prescientific analog of modern medical nutrition therapy; that is, it was a state-of-the-art version of dietary therapy before the sciences of biology and chemistry allowed the discovery of present physiological knowledge. It now qualifies as alternative medicine.
Food therapy has long been a common approach to health among Chinese people both in China and overseas, and was popularized for western readers in the 1990s with the publication of books like The Tao of Healthy Eating (Flaws 1995a) and The Wisdom of the Chinese Kitchen (Young 1999),[4] which also cites Flaws 1995b, Zhao & Ellis 1998, and Simonds 1999.
Origins
A number of ancient Chinese cookbooks and treatises on food (now lost) display an early Chinese interest in food, but no known focus on its medical value.[5] The literature on "nourishing life" (yangsheng 養生) integrated advice on food within broader advice on how to attain immortality. Such books, however, are only precursors of "dietary therapy", because they did not systematically describe the effect of individual food items.[6]
The earliest extant Chinese dietary text is a chapter of Sun Simiao's Prescriptions Worth a Thousand Gold (Qianjin Fang 千金方), which was completed in the 650s during the Tang dynasty.[7] Sun's work contains the earliest known use of the term "food (or dietary) therapy" (shiliao).[1] Sun stated that he wanted to present current knowledge about food so that people would first turn to food rather than drugs when suffering from an ailment.[8] His chapter contains 154 entries divided into four sections – on fruits, vegetables, cereals, and meat – in which Sun explains the properties of individual foodstuffs with concepts borrowed from the Yellow Emperor's Inner Canon: qi, the viscera, vital essence (jing 精), and correspondences between the Five Phases, the "five flavors" (sour, bitter, sweet, pungent, and salty), and the five grains.[9] He also set a large number of "dietary interdictions" (shijin 食禁), some based on calendrical notions (no water chestnuts in the 7th month), others on purported interactions between foods (no clear wine with horse meat) or between different flavors.[10]
Sun Simiao's disciple Meng Shen (孟詵; 621–713) compiled the first work entirely devoted to the therapeutic value of food: the Materia Dietetica (Shiliao bencao 食療本草; lit., "food therapy materia medica"). This work has not survived, but it is quoted in later texts – like the 10th-century Japanese text Ishinpō – and a fragment of it has been found among the Dunhuang manuscripts. Surviving excerpts show that Meng gave less importance to dietary prohibitions than Sun, and that he provided information on how to prepare foodstuffs rather than just describe their properties.[11] The works of Sun Simiao and Meng Shen established the genre of materia dietetica and shaped its development in the following centuries.[12]
Precepts
Although the precepts of Chinese food therapy are neither systematic nor identical in all times and places, some basic concepts can be isolated.[13] Food items are classified as "heating" (re 熱; "hot") or "cooling" (liang 涼; "cool"). Heating food is typically "high-calorie, subjected to high heat in cooking, spicy or bitter, or 'hot' in color (red, orange)", and includes red meat, innards, baked and deep-fried goods, and alcohol.[13] They are to be avoided in the summer and can be used to treat "cold" illnesses like excessive pallor, watery feces, fatigue, chills, and low body temperature caused by a number of possible causes, including anemia. Green vegetables are the most typical cooling food, which is "low-calorie, watery, soothing or sour in taste, or 'cool' in color (whitish, green)". They are recommended for "hot" conditions: rashes, dryness or redness of skin, heartburns, and other "symptoms similar to those of a burn", but also sore throat, swollen gums, and constipation.[13]
See also
- Hu Sihui, a dietitian from the Yuan Dynasty, and author of Yinshan Zhengyao ("Important Principles of Food and Drink")
- Shennong Ben Cao Jing, a text from the Han Dynasty that discusses several medicinal herbs, including several food plants and animals.
- Ben Cao Gangmu, a materia medica regarded as the most comprehensive medical book ever written in the history of traditional Chinese medicine and compiled by Li Shizhen during the Ming Dynasty.
- Ch'ang Ming a series of dietary and lifestyle recommendations adapted to Western eating habits brought to the West by Chan Kam Lee a Chinese herbalist from Shandong and popularised by Chee Soo in his book "The Tao of Long Life" published in 1979 by Harpercollins and translated into French, Spanish, Italian and Indonesian. (ISBN 0850303206)
References
Citations
- 1 2 Engelhardt 2001, p. 173.
- ↑ Whang J (January 1981). "Chinese traditional food therapy". J Am Diet Assoc 78 (1): 55–7. PMID 7217561.
- ↑ Shen, CuiZhen; Samantha Mei-Che Pang; Enid Wai-Yung Kwong; ZhiQing Cheng (April 2010). "The effect of Chinese food therapy on community dwelling Chinese hypertensive patients with Yin-deficiency.". Journal of Clinical Nursing 19 (7-8): 1008–1020. doi:10.1111/j.1365-2702.2009.02937. PMID 20492045. Retrieved 27 April 2014.
- ↑ Barnes 2013, p. 339–341.
- ↑ Engelhardt 2001, p. 174–175.
- ↑ Engelhardt 2001, p. 175–176.
- ↑ Engelhardt 2001, p. 176.
- ↑ Engelhardt 2001, p. 177.
- ↑ Engelhardt 2001, pp. 178–181.
- ↑ Engelhardt 2001, pp. 181–183.
- ↑ Engelhardt 2001, pp. 184–187.
- ↑ Engelhardt 2001, p. 187.
- 1 2 3 Anderson 2013, pp. 259–260.
Works cited
- Anderson, Eugene N. (2013), "Folk Nutritional Therapy in Modern China", in TJ Hinrichs and Linda L. Barnes, Chinese Medicine and Healing: An Illustrated History, Cambridge, Mass.: The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, pp. 259–260, ISBN 978-0-674-04737-2.
- Barnes, Linda L. (2013), "A World of Chinese Medicine and Healing: Part Two", in TJ Hinrichs and Linda L. Barnes (eds.), Chinese Medicine and Healing: An Illustrated History, Cambridge, Mass.: The Belknap Press of Harvard University Press, pp. 334–378, ISBN 978-0-674-04737-2.
- Engelhardt, Ute (2001), "Dietetics in Tang China and the first extant works of material dietetica", in Elisabeth Hsü (ed.), Innovation in Chinese Medicine, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 173–191, ISBN 0-521-80068-4.
- Flaws, Bob (1995a), The Tao of Healthy Eating: Dietary Wisdom According to the Traditional Chinese Medicine, Boulder, Colorado: Blue Poppy Press.
- Flaws, Bob (1995b), The Book of Jook: Chinese Medicinal Porridges—A Healthy Alternative to the Typical Western Breakfast, Boulder, Colorado: Blue Poppy Press.
- Simonds, Nina (1999), A Spoonful of Ginger: Irresistible Health-Giving Recipes from Asian Kitchens, New York: Knopf.
- Young, Grace (1999), The Wisdom of the Chinese Kitchen: Classic Family Recipes for Celebration and Healing, New York: Simon and Schuster.
- Zhao, Zhuo; Ellis, George (1998), The Healing Cuisine of China: 300 Recipes for Vibrant Health and Longevity, Rochester, Vermont: Healing Arts Press.
Further reading
- Lu, Henry C. Chinese system of Food Cures (1989, Pelanduk Publications Malaysia Sdn Bhd, ISBN 9789679782530)
- Kastner, Joerg. Chinese Nutrition Therapy: Dietetics in Traditional Chinese Medicine (2008, Thieme Medical Publishers, ISBN 3131309628)
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