IX.
HEALTHFUL FOOD.
THE person who decides what shall be the food and drink of a family,
and the modes of its preparation, is the one who decides, to a greater
or less extent, what shall be the health of that family. It is the
opinion of most medical men, that intemperance in eating is one of the
most fruitful of all causes of disease and death. If this be so, the
woman who wisely adapts the food and cooking of her family to the laws
of health removes one of the greatest risks which threatens the lives of
those under her care. But, unfortunately, there is no other duty that
has been involved in more doubt and perplexity. Were one to believe all
that is said and written on this subject, the conclusion probably would
be, that there is not one solitary article of food on God's earth which
it is healthful to eat. Happily, however, there are general principles
on this subject which, if understood and applied, will prove a safe
guide to any woman of common sense; and it is the object of the
following chapter to set forth these principles.
All material things on earth, whether solid, liquid, or gaseous, can
be resolved into sixty-two simple substances, only fourteen of which are
in the human body; and these, in certain proportions, in all mankind.
Thus, in a man weighing 154 lbs. are found, 111 lbs. oxygen gas, and
14 lbs. hydrogen gas, which, united, form water; 21 lbs. carbon; 8 lbs.
8 oz. nitrogen gas; 1 lb. 12 oz. 190 grs. phosphorus; 2 lbs. calcium,
the chief ingredient of bones; 2 oz. fluorine; 2 oz. 219 grs. sulphur; 2
oz.
47 grs. chlorine; 2 oz. 116 grs. sodium; 100 grs. iron; 290 grs.
potassium; 12 grs. magnesium; and 2 grs. silicon.
These simple substances are constantly passing out of the body
through the lungs, skin, and other excreting organs.
It is found that certain of these simple elements are used for one
part of the body, and others for other parts, and this in certain
regular proportions. Thus, carbon is the chief element of fat, and also
supplies the fuel that combines with oxygen in the capillaries to
produce animal heat. The nitrogen which we gain from our food and the
air is the chief element of muscle; phosphorus is the chief element of
brain and nerves; and calcium or lime is the hard portion of the bones.
Iron is an important element of blood, and silicon supplies the hardest
parts of the teeth, nails, and hair.
Water, which is composed of the two gases, oxygen and hydrogen, is
the largest portion of the body, forming its fluids; there is four times
as much of carbon as there is of nitrogen in the body; while there is
only two per cent as much phosphorus as carbon. A man weighing one
hundred and fifty-four pounds, who leads an active life, takes into his
stomach daily from two to three pounds of solid food, and from five to
six pounds of liquid. At the same time he takes into his lungs, daily,
four or five thousand gallons of air. This amounts to three thousand
pounds of nutriment received through stomach and lungs, and then
expelled from the body, in one year; or about twenty times the man's own
weight.
The change goes on in every minute point of the body, though in some
parts much faster than in others; as set forth in the piquant and
sprightly language of Dr. O.W. Holmes,
who, giving a vivid picture of the constant decay and renewal of the
body, says:
"Every organized being always lives immersed in a strong solution of
its own elements."
"Sometimes, as in the case of the air-plant, the solution contains
all its elements; but in higher plants, and in animals generally, some
of the principal ones only. Take our own bodies, and we find the
atmosphere contains oxygen and the nitrogen, of which we are so largely
made up, as its chief constituents; the hydrogen, also, in its watery
vapor; the carbon, in its carbonic acid. What our air-bath does not
furnish us, we must take in the form of nourishment, supplied through
the digestive organs. But the first food we take, after we have set up
for ourselves, is air, and the last food we take is air also. We are all
chameleons in our diet, as we are all salamanders in our
habitats, inasmuch as we live
always in the fire of our own smouldering combustion; a gentle but
constant flame, fanned every day by the same forty hogsheads of air
which furnish us not with our daily bread, which we can live more than a
day without touching, but with our momentary, and oftener than
momentary, aliment, without which we can not live five minutes."
"We are perishing and being born again at every instant. We do
literally enter over and over again into the womb of that great mother,
from whom we get our bones, and flesh, and blood, and marrow. 'I die
daily' is true of all that live. If we cease to die, particle by
particle, and to be born anew in the same proportion, the whole movement
of life comes to an end, and swift, universal, irreparable decay
resolves our frames into the parent elements."
"The products of the internal fire which consumes us over and over
again every year, pass off mainly in smoke and steam from the lungs and
the skin. The smoke is only invisible, because the combustion is so
perfect. The steam is plain enough in our breaths on a frosty morning;
and an over-driven horse will show us, on a larger scale, the cloud that
is always arising from own bodies."
"Man walks, then, not only in a vain show, but wrapped
in an uncelestial aureole of his own material exhalations. A great mist
of gases and of vapor rises day and night from the whole realm of living
nature. The water and the carbonic acid which animals exhale become the
food of plants, whose leaves are at once lungs and mouths. The vegetable
world reverses the breathing process of the animal creation, restoring
the elements which that has combined and rendered effete for its own
purposes, to their original condition. The salt-water ocean is a great
aquarium. The air ocean in which we live is a 'Wardian case,' of larger
dimensions."
It is found that the simple elements will not nourish the body in
their natural state, but only when organized, either as vegetable or
animal food; and, to the dismay of the Grahamite or vegetarian school,
it is now established by chemists that animal and vegetable food contain
the same elements, and in nearly the same proportions.
Thus, in animal food, carbon predominates in fats, while in
vegetable food it shows itself in sugar, starch, and vegetable oils.
Nitrogen is found in animal food in the albumen, fibrin, and caseine;
while in vegetables it is in gluten, albumen, and caseine.
[Illustration: An enlarged cross-section of a kernel of wheat.]
It is also a curious fact that, in all articles of food, the
elements that nourish diverse parts of the body are divided into
separable portions, and also that the proportions correspond in a great
degree to the wants of the body. For example, a kernel of wheat contains
all the articles demanded for every part of the body. Fig. 55
represents, upon an enlarged scale, the position and proportions of the
chief elements required. The white central part is the largest in
quantity, and is chiefly carbon in the form of starch, which supplies
fat and fuel for the capillaries. The shaded outer portion is chiefly
nitrogen, which nourishes the muscles, and the dark spot at the bottom
is principally phosphorus, which nourishes the brain and
nerves. And these elements are in due proportion to the demands of the
body. A portion of the outer covering of a wheat-kernel holds lime,
silica, and iron, which are needed by the body, and which are found in
no other part of the grain. The woody fibre is not digested, but serves
by its bulk and stimulating action to facilitate digestion. It is
therefore evident that bread made of unbolted flour is more healthful
than that made of superfine flour. The process of bolting removes all
the woody fibre; the lime needed for the bones; the silica for hair,
nails, and teeth; the iron for the blood; and most of the nitrogen and
phosphorus needed for muscles, brain, and nerves.
Experiments on animals prove that fine flour alone, which is chiefly
carbon, will not sustain life more than a month, while unbolted flour
furnishes all that is needed for every part of the body. There are cases
where persons can not use such coarse bread, on account of its
irritating action on inflamed coats of the stomach. For such, a kind of
wheaten grit is provided, containing all the kernel of the wheat, except
the outside woody fibre.
When the body requires a given kind of diet, specially demanded by
brain, lungs, or muscles, the appetite will crave food for it until the
necessary amount of this article is secured. If, then, the food in which
the needed aliment abounds is not supplied, other food will be taken in
larger quantities than needed until that amount is gained. For all kinds
of food have supplies for every want of the body, though in different
proportions. Thus, for example, if the muscles are worked a great deal,
food in which nitrogen abounds is required, and the appetite will
continue until the requisite amount of nitrogen is secured. If, then,
food is taken which has not the requisite quantity, the consequence is,
that more is taken than the system can use, while the vital powers are
needlessly taxed to throw off the excess.
These facts were ascertained by Liebig, a celebrated German
chemist and physicist, who, assisted by his government, conducted
experiments on a large scale in prisons, in armies, and in hospitals.
Among other results, he states that those who use potatoes for their
principal food eat them in very much larger quantities than their bodies
would demand if they used also other food. The reason is, that the
potato has a very large proportion of starch that supplies only fuel for
the capillaries and very little nitrogen to feed the muscles. For this
reason lean meat is needed with potatoes.
In comparing wheat and potatoes we find that in one hundred parts
wheat there are fourteen parts nitrogen for muscle, and two parts
phosphorus for brain and nerves. But in the potato there is only one
part in one hundred for muscle, and nine tenths of one part of
phosphorus for brain and nerves.
The articles containing most of the three articles needed generally
in the body are as follows: for fat and heat-making--butter, lard,
sugar, and molasses; for muscle-making--lean meat, cheese, peas, beans,
and lean fishes; for brain and nerves--shell-fish, lean meats, peas,
beans, and very active birds and fishes who live chiefly on food in
which phosphorus abounds. In a meat diet, the fat supplies carbon for
the capillaries and the lean furnishes nutriment for muscle, brain, and
nerves. Green vegetables, fruits, and berries furnish the acid and water
needed.
In grains used for food, the proportions of useful elements are
varied; there is in some more of carbon and in others more of nitrogen
and phosphorus. For example, in oats there is more of nitrogen for the
muscles, and less carbon for the lungs, than can be found in wheat. In
the corn of the North, where cold weather demands fuel for lungs and
capillaries, there is much more carbon to supply it than is found in the
Southern corn.
From these statements it may be seen that one of the chief mistakes
in providing food for families has been in
changing the proportions of the elements nature has fitted for our food.
Thus, fine wheat is deprived by bolting of some of the most important of
its nourshing elements, leaving carbon chiefly, which, after supplying
fuel for the capillaries, must, if in excess, be sent out of the body;
thus needlessly taxing all the excreting organs. So milk, which contains
all the elements needed by the body, has the cream taken out and used
for butter, which again is chiefly carbon. Then, sugar and molasses,
cakes and candies, are chiefly carbon, and supply but very little of
other nourishing elements, while to make them safe much exercise in cold
and pure air is necessary. And yet it is the children of the rich,
housed in chambers and school-rooms most of their time, who are fed with
these dangerous dainties, thus weakening their constitutions, and
inducing fevers, colds, and many other diseases.
The proper digestion of food depends on the wants of the body, and
on its power of appropriating the aliment supplied. The best of food can
not be properly digested when it is not needed. All that the system
requires will be used, and the rest will be thrown out by the several
excreting organs, which thus are frequently over-taxed, and vital forces
are wasted. Even food of poor quality may digest well if the demands of
the system are urgent. The way to increase digestive power is to
increase the demand for food by pure air and exercise of the muscles,
quickening the blood, and arousing the whole system to a more rapid and
vigorous rate of life.
Rules for persons in full health, who enjoy pure air and exercise,
are not suitable for those whose digestive powers are feeble, or who are
diseased. On the other hand, many rules for invalids are not needed by
the healthful, while rules for one class of invalids will not avail for
other classes. Every weak stomach has its peculiar wants, and can not
furnish guidance for others.
We are now ready to consider intelligently the following
general principles in regard to the proper selection of food:
Vegetable and animal food are equally healthful if apportioned to
the given circumstances.
In cold weather, carbonaceous food, such as butter, fats, sugar,
molasses, etc., can be used more safely than in warm weather. And they
can be used more safely by those who exercise in the open air than by
those of confined and sedentary habits.
Students who need food with little carbon, and women who live in the
house, should always seek coarse bread, fruits, and lean meats, and
avoid butter, oils, sugar, and molasses, and articles containing them.
Many students and women using little exercise in the open air, grow
thin and weak, because the vital powers are exhausted in throwing off
excess of food, especially of the carbonaceous. The liver is especially
taxed in such cases, being unable to remove all the excess of
carbonaceous matter from the blood, and thus "biliousness" ensues,
particularly on the approach of warm weather, when the air brings less
oxygen than in cold.
It is found, by experiment, that the supply of gastric juice,
furnished from the blood by the arteries of the stomach, is
proportioned, not to the amount of food put into the stomach, but to the
wants of the body; so that it is possible to put much more into the
stomach than can be digested. To guide and regulate in this matter, the
sensation called hunger is
provided. In a healthy state of the body, as soon as the blood has lost
its nutritive supplies, the craving of hunger is felt, and then, if the
food is suitable, and is taken in the proper manner, this sensation
ceases as soon as the stomach has received enough to supply the wants of
the system. But our benevolent Creator, in this, as in our other duties,
has connected enjoyment with the operation needful to sustain our
bodies. In addition to the allaying of hunger, the gratification of the
palate is
secured by the immense variety of food, some articles of which are far
more agreeable than others.
This arrangement of Providence, designed for our happiness, has
become, either through ignorance, or want of self-control, the chief
cause of the many diseases and sufferings which afflict those classes
who have the means of seeking a variety to gratify the palate. If
mankind had only one article of food, and only water to drink, though
they would have less enjoyment in eating, they would never be tempted to
put any more into the stomach than the calls of hunger require. But the
customs of society, which present an incessant change, and a great
variety of food, with those various condiments which stimulate appetite,
lead almost every person very frequently to eat merely to gratify the
palate, after the stomach has been abundantly supplied, so that hunger
has ceased.
When too great a supply of food is put into the stomach, the gastric
juice dissolves only that portion which the wants of the system demand.
Most of the remainder is ejected, in an unprepared state; the absorbents
take portions of it into the system; and all the various functions of
the body, which depend on the ministries of the blood, are thus
gradually and imperceptibly injured. Very often, intemperance in eating
produces immediate results, such as colic, headaches, pains of
indigestion, and vertigo.
But the more general result is a gradual undermining of all parts of
the human frame; thus imperceptibly shortening life, by so weakening the
constitution, that it is ready to yield, at every point, to any uncommon
risk or exposure. Thousands and thousands are passing out of the world,
from diseases occasioned by exposures which a healthy constitution could
meet without any danger. It is owing to these considerations, that it
becomes the duty of every woman, who has the responsibility of providing
food for a family, to avoid a variety of tempting dishes. It is a much
safer rule, to have only one kind of healthy food, for each meal,
than the too abundant variety which is often met at the tables of almost
all classes in this country. When there is to be any variety of dishes,
they ought not to be successive, but so arranged as to give the
opportunity of selection. How often is it the case, that persons, by the
appearance of a favorite article, are tempted to eat merely to gratify
the palate, when the stomach is already adequately supplied. All such
intemperance wears on the constitution, and shortens life. It not unfrequently happens that excess in eating produces a morbid appetite,
which must constantly be denied.
But the organization of the digestive organs demands, not only that
food should be taken in proper quantities, but that it be taken at
proper times.

[Illustration: An illustration of a human stomach cut away to
display two layers of muscle. Two of the sections of the stomach are
labeled LM and CM.]
Fig. 56 shows one important feature of the digestive organs relating
to this point. The part marked LM shows the muscles of the inner coat of
the stomach, which run in one direction, and CM shows the muscles of the
outer coat, running in another direction.
As soon as the food enters the stomach, the muscles are excited by
the nerves, and the peristallic motion
commences. This is a powerful and constant exercise of the muscles of
the stomach, which continues until the process of digestion is complete.
During this time the blood is withdrawn from other parts of the system,
to supply the demands of the stomach, which is laboring hard with all
its muscles. When this motion ceases, and the digested food has
gradually passed out, nature requires that the stomach should
have a period of repose. And if another meal be eaten immediately after
one is digested, the stomach is set to work again before it has had time
to rest, and before a sufficient supply of gastric juice is provided.
The general rule, then, is, that three hours be given to the stomach
for labor, and two for rest; and in obedience to this, five hours, at
least, ought to elapse between every two regular meals. In cases where
exercise produces a flow of perspiration, more food is needed to supply
the loss; and strong laboring men may safely eat as often as they feel
the want of food. So, young and healthy children, who gambol and
exercise much and whose bodies grow fast, may have a more frequent
supply of food. But, as a general rule, meals should be five hours
apart, and eating between meals avoided. There is nothing more unsafe,
and wearing to the constitution, than a habit of eating at any time
merely to gratify the palate. When a tempting article is presented,
every person should exercise sufficient self-denial to wait till the
proper time for eating arrives. Children, as well as grown persons, are
often injured by eating between their regular meals, thus weakening the
stomach by not affording it any time for rest.
In deciding as to quantity
of food, there is one great difficulty to be met by a large portion of
the community. The exercise of every part of the body is necessary to
its health and perfection. The bones, the muscles, the nerves, the
organs of digestion and respiration, and the skin, all demand exercise,
in order properly to perform their functions. When the muscles of the
body are called into action, all the blood-vessels entwined among them
are frequently compressed. As the veins have valves so contrived that
the blood can not run back, this compression hastens it forward toward
the heart; which is immediately put in quicker motion, to send it into
the lungs; and they, also, are thus stimulated to more rapid action,
which is the cause of that panting which active exercise always
occasions. The
blood thus courses with greater celerity through the body, and sooner
loses its nourishing properties. Then the stomach issues its mandate of
hunger, and a new supply of food must be furnished.
Thus it appears, as a general rule, that the quantity of food
actually needed by the body depends on the amount of muscular exercise
taken. A laboring man, in the open fields, probably throws off from his
skin and lungs a much larger amount than a person of sedentary pursuits.
In consequence of this, he demands a greater amount of food and drink.
Those persons who keep their bodies in a state of health by
sufficient exercise can always be guided by the calls of hunger. They
can eat when they feel hungry, and stop when hunger ceases; and thus
they will calculate exactly right. But the difficulty is, that a large
part of the community, especially women, are so inactive in their habits
that they seldom feel the calls of hunger. They habitually eat, merely
to gratify the palate. This produces such a state of the system that
they lose the guide which Nature has provided. They are not called to
eat by hunger, nor admonished, by its cessation, when to stop. In
consequence of this, such persons eat what pleases the palate, till they
feel no more inclination for the article. It is probable that three
fourths of the women in the wealthier circles sit down to each meal
without any feeling of hunger, and eat merely on account of the
gratification thus afforded them. Such persons find their appetite to
depend almost solely upon the kind of food on the table. This is not the
case with those who take the exercise which Nature demands. They
approach their meals in such a state that almost any kind of food is
acceptable.
The question then arises, How are persons, who have lost the guide
which Nature has provided, to determine as to the proper amount of food
they shall take?
The best method is for several days to take their
ordinary exercise and eat only one or two articles of simple food, such
as bread and milk, or bread and butter with cooked fruit, or lean meat
with bread and vegetables, and at the same time eat less than the
appetite demands. Then on the following two days, take just enough to
satisfy the appetite, and on the third day notice the quantity which
satisfies. After this, decide before eating that only this amount of
simple food shall be taken.
Persons who have a strong constitution, and take much exercise, may
eat almost any thing with apparent impunity; but young children who are
forming their constitutions, and persons who are delicate, and who take
but little exercise, are very dependent for health on a proper selection
of food.
It is found that there are some kinds of food which afford nutriment
to the blood, and do not produce any other effect on the system. There
are other kinds, which are not only nourishing, but
stimulating, so that they
quicken the functions of the organs on which they operate. The
condiments used in cookery, such as pepper, mustard, and spices, are of
this nature. There are certain states of the system when these
stimulants may be beneficial; such cases can only be pointed out by
medical men.
Persons in perfect health, and especially young children, never
receive any benefit from such kind of food; and just in proportion as
condiments operate to quicken the labors of the internal organs, they
tend to wear down their powers. A person who thus keeps the body working
under an unnatural excitement, live
faster than Nature designed, and the constitution is worn out
just so much the sooner. A woman, therefore, should provide dishes for
her family which are free from these stimulating condiments.
It is also found, by experience, that the lean part of animal food
is more stimulating than vegetable. This is the reason why, in cases of
fevers or inflammations, medical men forbid the use of meat. A person
who lives chiefly on animal food is under a higher degree of stimulus
than if his
food was chiefly composed of vegetable substances. His blood will flow
faster, and all the functions of his body will be quickened. This makes
it important to secure a proper proportion of animal and vegetable diet.
Some medical men suppose that an exclusively vegetable diet is proved,
by the experience of many individuals, to be fully sufficient to nourish
the body; and bring, as evidence, the fact that some of the strongest
and most robust men in the world are those who are trained, from
infancy, exclusively on vegetable food. From this they infer that life
will be shortened just in proportion as the diet is changed to more
stimulating articles; and that, all other things being equal, children
will have a better chance of health and long life if they are brought up
solely on vegetable food.
But, though this is not the common opinion of medical men, they all
agree that, in America, far too large a portion of the diet consists of
animal food. As a nation, the Americans are proverbial for the gross and
luxurious diet with which they load their tables; and there can be no
doubt that the general health of the nation would be increased by a
change in our customs in this respect. To take meat but once a day, and
this in small quantities, compared with the common practice, is a rule,
the observance of which would probably greatly reduce the amount of
fevers, eruptions, headaches, bilious attacks, and the many other
ailments which are produced or aggravated by too gross a diet.
The celebrated Roman physician, Baglivi, (who, from practicing
extensively among Roman Catholics, had ample opportunities to observe,)
mentions that, in Italy, an unusual number of people recover their
health in the forty days of Lent, in consequence of the lower diet which
is required as a religious duty. An American physician remarks, "For
every reeling drunkard that disgraces our country, it contains one
hundred gluttons--persons, I mean, who eat to excess, and suffer in
consequence." Another distinguished physician says, "I believe that
every stomach, not actually
impaired by organic disease, will perform its functions, if it receives
reasonable attention; and when we perceive the manner in which diet is
generally conducted, both in regard to
quantity and variety of
articles of food and drink, which are mixed up in one heterogenous
mass--instead of being astonished at the prevalence of indigestion, our
wonder must rather be that, in such circumstances, any stomach is
capable of digesting at all."
In regard to articles which are the most easily digested, only
general rules can be given. Tender meats are digested more readily than
those which are tough, or than many kinds of vegetable food. The
farinaceous articles, such as rice, flour, corn, potatoes, and the like,
are the most nutritious, and most easily digested. The popular notion,
that meat is more nourishing than bread, is a great mistake. Good bread
contains more nourishment than butcher's meat. The meat is more
stimulating, and for this reason
is more readily digested.
A perfectly healthy stomach can digest almost any healthful food;
but when the digestive powers are weak, every stomach has its
peculiarities, and what is good for one is hurtful to another. In such
cases, experiment alone can decide which are the most digestible
articles of food. A person whose food troubles him must deduct one
article after another, till he learns, by experience, which is the best
for digestion. Much evil has been done, by assuming that the powers of
one stomach are to be made the rule in regulating every other.
The most unhealthful kinds of food are those which are made so by
bad cooking; such as sour and heavy bread, cakes, pie-crust, and other
dishes consisting of fat mixed and cooked with flour. Rancid butter and
high-seasoned food are equally unwholesome. The fewer mixtures there are
in cooking, the more healthful is the food likely to be.
There is one caution as to the mode
of eating which seems peculiarly needful to Americans. It is
indispensable to good
digestion, that food be well chewed and taken slowly. It needs to be
thoroughly chewed and mixed with saliva, in order to prepare it for the
action of the gastric juice, which, by the peristaltic motion, will be
thus brought into contact with every one of the minute portions. It has
been found that a solid lump of food requires much more ti me and labor
of the stomach for digestion than divided substances.
It has also been found, that as each bolus, or mouthful, enters the
stomach, the latter closes, until the portion received has had some time
to move around and combine with the gastric juice, and that the orifice
of the stomach resists the entrance of any more till this is
accomplished. But, if the eater persists in swallowing fast, the stomach
yields; the food is then poured in more rapidly than the organ can
perform its duty of preparative digestion; and evil results are sooner
or later developed. This exhibits the folly of those hasty meals, so
common to travelers and to men of business, and shows why children
should be taught to eat slowly.
After taking a full meal, it is very important to health that no
great bodily or mental exertion be made till the labor of the stomach is
over. Intense mental effort draws the blood to the head, and muscular
exertions draw it to the muscles; and in consequence of this, the
stomach loses the supply which it requires when performing its office.
When the blood with its stimulating effects is thus withdrawn from the
stomach, the adequate supply of gastric juice is not afforded, and
indigestion is the result. The heaviness which follows a full meal is
the indication which Nature gives of the need of quiet. When the meal is
moderate, a sufficient quantity of gastric juice is exuded in an hour,
or an hour and a half; after which, labor of body and mind may safely be
resumed.
When undigested food remains in the stomach, and is at last thrown
out into the bowels, it proves an irritating substance, producing an
inflamed state in the lining of the stomach and other organs.
It is found that the stomach has the power of gradually
accommodating its digestive powers to the food it habitually receives.
Thus, animals which live on vegetables can gradually become accustomed
to animal food; and the reverse is equally true. Thus, too, the human
stomach can eventually accomplish the digestion of some kinds of food,
which, at first, were indigestible.
But any changes of this sort should be gradual; as those which are
sudden are trying to the powers of the stomach, by furnishing matter for
which its gastric juice is not prepared.
Extremes of heat or cold are injurious to the process of digestion.
Taking hot food or drink, habitually, tends to debilitate all the organs
thus needlessly excited. In using cold substances, it is found that a
certain degree of warmth in the stomach is indispensable to their
digestion; so that, when the gastric juice is cooled below this
temperature, it ceases to act. Indulging in large quantities of cold
drinks, or eating ice-creams, after a meal, tends to reduce the
temperature of the stomach, and thus to stop digestion. This shows the
folly of those refreshments, in convivial meetings, where the guests are
tempted to load the stomach with a variety such as would require the
stomach of a stout farmer to digest; and then to wind up with
ice-creams, thus lessening whatever ability might otherwise have existed
to digest the heavy load. The fittest temperature for drinks, if taken
when the food is in the digesting process, is blood heat. Cool drinks,
and even ice, can be safely taken at other times, if not in excessive
quantity. When the thirst is excessive, or the body weakened by fatigue,
or when in a state of perspiration, large quantities of cold drinks are
injurious.
Fluids taken into the stomach are not subject to the slow process of
digestion, but are immediately absorbed and carried into the blood. This
is the reason why liquid nourishment, more speedily than solid food,
restores from exhaustion.
The minute vessels of the stomach absorb its fluids, which are carried
into the blood, just as the minute extremities of the arteries open upon
the inner surface of the stomach, and there exude the gastric juice from
the blood.
When food is chiefly liquid, (soup, for example,) the fluid part is
rapidly absorbed. The solid parts remain, to be acted on by the gastric
juice. In the case of St. Martin,*
in fifty minutes after taking soup, the fluids were absorbed, and the
remainder was even thicker than is usual after eating solid food. This
is the reason why soups are deemed bad for weak stomachs; as this
residumn is more difficult of digestion than ordinary food.
* The individual here referred to--Alexis St. Martin--was a young
Canadian, eighteen years of age, of a good constitution and robust
health, who in 1822, was accidentally wounded by the discharge of a
musket which carried away a part of the ribs, lacerated one of the lobes
of the lungs, and perforated the stomach, making a large aperture, which
never closed; and which enabled Dr. Beaumont (a surgeon of the American
army, stationed at Michilimackinac, under whose care the patient was
placed) to witness all the processes of digestion and other functions of
the body for several years.
Highly-concentrated food, having much nourishment in a small bulk,
is not favorable to digestion, because it can not be properly acted on
by the muscular contractions of the stomach, and is not so minutely
divided as to enable the gastric juice to act properly. This is the
reason why a certain bulk of
food is needful to good digestion; and why those people who live on
whale-oil and other highly nourishing food, in cold climates, mix
vegetables and even saw-dust with it to make it more acceptable and
digestible. So in civilized lands, fruits and vegetables are mixed with
more highly concentrated nourishment. For this reason also, soups,
jellies, and arrow-root should have bread or crackers mixed with them.
This affords another reason why coarse bread, of unbolted wheat, so
often proves beneficial. Where, from inactive habits or other causes,
the bowels become constipated
and sluggish, this kind of food proves the appropriate remedy.
One fact on this subject is worthy of notice. In England, under the
administration of William Pitt, for two years or more there was such a
scarcity of wheat that, to make it hold out longer, Parliament passed a
law that the army should have all their bread made of unbolted flour.
The result was, that the health of the soldiers improved so much as to
be a subject of surprise to themselves, the officers, and the
physicians. These last came out publicly and declared that the soldiers
never before were so robust and healthy; and that disease had nearly
disappeared from the army. The civic physicians joined and pronounced it
the healthiest bread; and for a time schools, families, and public
institutions used it almost exclusively. Even the nobility, convinced by
these facts, adopted it for their common diet, and the fashion continued
a long time after the scarcity ceased, until more luxurious habits
resumed their sway.
We thus see why children should not have cakes and candies allowed
them between meals. Besides being largely carbonaceous, these are highly
concentrated nourishments, and should be eaten with more bulky and less
nourishing substances. The most indigestible of all kinds of food are
fatty and oily substances, if heated. It is on this account that
pie-crust and articles boiled and fried in fat or butter are deemed not
so healthful as other food.
The following, then, may be put down as the causes of a debilitated
constitution from the misuse of food. Eating
too much, eating
too often, eating
too fast, eating food and
condiments that are too stimulating,
eating food that is too warm or
too cold, eating food that is
highly concentrated, without a
proper admixture of less nourishing matter, and eating hot food that is
difficult of digestion.
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