Bacon Causes Cancer, Eat This Instead | Anna Herby, RD

“Processed meat refers to meat that has been transformed through salting, curing, fermentation, smoking, or other processes to enhance flavor or improve preservation. Most processed meats contain pork or beef, but processed meats may also contain other red meats, poultry, offal, or meat by-products such as blood.

Examples of processed meat include hot dogs (frankfurters), ham, sausages, corned beef, and biltong or beef jerky as well as canned meat and meat-based preparations and sauces.”

– WHO

Here are some specific recommendations discussed:

Bacon Alternatives:

Tempeh bacon: A great, healthy option with a smoky flavor that can be fried or dry-fried for crispiness (23:51).

Shiitake mushroom bacon: Using mushrooms with liquid smoke creates a salty, crunchy, and delicious alternative (25:34).

Flavor swaps: Instead of using bacon for flavor in dishes like beans, use liquid smoke or smoked paprika (24:54).

Burger Alternatives:

Plant-based patties: For a meaty transition, options like Beyond or Impossible burgers are noted as healthier than standard beef (26:47).

Whole-food options: For more wholesome, minimally processed choices, the speakers recommend:
Tofu: Can be baked and served in sandwiches or buns (28:10).

Homemade bean burgers: A delicious, low-fat, and high-fiber alternative (28:33).

Actual Veggies: A brand that makes patties directly out of whole vegetables (27:18).

PlantStrong Burger Mix: A convenient mix featuring ingredients like oats, seeds, quinoa, and mushrooms (29:01, 41:15).

General Dietary Advice:

Fiber is key: Swapping meat for beans, lentils, and whole grains feeds your gut microbiome, which then produces cancer-fighting, anti-inflammatory compounds like butyrate (30:02).

Transition approach: You don’t have to change everything overnight. Small, consistent swaps are effective and help you move away from processed animal products toward a healthier, plant-based pattern (40:17).

They Build Homes Using Just Soil and Bags

Nader Khalili was the Iranian architect who invented this method in 1990 in the USA. He was a professor at Southern California Institute for Architecture. This
structure can resist against floods, fires and earthquakes. Those in the video are students. His work is on display in the Southern California high desert.

https://calearth.org/

2026 ‘Dirty Dozen’ produce: Nearly 100% tested positive for pesticides, including ‘forever chemicals’ – ABC7 Los Angeles

Check out the spinach in this article!

https://abc7.com/post/2026-dirty-dozen-produce-100-tested-positive-pesticides-including-forever-chemicals/18762912/

Inside America’s Healthiest City… (not what you think – it’s the beans!)

In the United States, 1 in every 3 adults will develop cancer in their lifetime. That’s not a rare disease. That’s the baseline. But in Loma Linda, California — one of the world’s most studied Blue Zones — that number significantly drops.

– Same country.
– Same hospitals.
– Dramatically different outcomes.

And the answer isn’t a supplement or a surgery. It’s something they cook every-single-day.

This video explores how residents of Loma Linda, California, a documented Blue Zone, achieve significantly lower cancer rates and longer lifespans compared to the rest of the United States, focusing on their dietary habits rather than medical interventions (0:35-1:06).

Key Longevity Factors:

Daily Legume Consumption: The foundation of the Loma Linda diet is eating beans, lentils, or chickpeas daily, specifically at the midday meal (4:37, 8:20). Legumes provide fiber that produces butyrate for gut health, selective prebiotics for the microbiome, and phytic acid to bind excess free iron (6:02-8:11).

Anti-inflammatory Spices: Residents use turmeric daily, paired with black pepper to increase absorption by 2000%, which inhibits the molecular pathway responsible for inflammation and cancer proliferation (9:48-11:27).

Garlic: Consuming raw or lightly cooked garlic four or more times a week modulates the gut microbiome and provides direct anti-inflammatory benefits (11:51-12:15).

Elimination of Processed Meats: A non-negotiable aspect of this approach is completely removing processed meats to reduce cancer risk (8:47-9:00).### What to Avoid:

The video warns against relying on isolated antioxidant supplements (like Vitamin E or beta carotene), citing studies that show they can increase cancer risk, whereas obtaining these nutrients through whole foods remains protective (2:15-3:22).

Summary of the 90-Day Protocol:

Tier 1: Eat half a cup of legumes daily and eliminate processed meat.

Tier 2: Rotate between different legumes, add turmeric/black pepper and garlic, and stop taking isolated antioxidant pills (14:48-15:20).

Tier 3: Rebuild protein intake around legumes, nuts, and tofu (18:02-18:24).

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Conclusion:

EAT MORE BEANS!

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Editor’s Comment:

Key Bean Varieties

– Lentils: Green, brown, red, black

– White Beans: Cannellini, Great Northern

– Common Beans: Black, kidney, pinto, adzuki

– Others: Lima beans, mung beans, split peas (green/yellow)

– Soy: Edamame

Recommendation:

To search “beans” on this website, click on the 3 stacked lines & type.

What’s Up With Loma Linda, CA?

https://www.bluezones.com/explorations/loma-linda-california

Loma Linda, California is a global outlier in health data, famously recognized as the only “Blue Zone” in the United States—a region where people live significantly longer than the national average.

Why Loma Linda Stands Out
The city’s unique health profile is largely attributed to its high concentration of Seventh-day Adventists, who follow specific lifestyle and dietary principles. Research from the Adventist Health Studies at Loma Linda University shows significant reductions in cancer compared to the general U.S. population:

* Overall Cancer Incidence: Residents have a 30% lower incidence of all cancers combined.

* Specific Cancer Reductions:

* Lung Cancer: 79% lower risk.
  
* Colorectal Cancer: 38% lower risk.
  
* Breast Cancer: 15% lower risk among women.

* Longevity: Men in this community live approximately 7.3 years longer, and women live 4.4 years longer than their California counterparts.

Factors Driving Low Rates
The “Power 9” lifestyle habits of Loma Linda residents are credited for these outcomes: [1]

* Plant-Based Diet: Many residents are vegetarians, consuming high amounts of legumes, whole grains, fruits, and nuts.

* No Smoking or Alcohol: The community largely abstains from substances strongly linked to cancer.

* Nut & Tomato Consumption: Frequent nut consumption is linked to a 50% lower risk of heart disease and increased lifespan, while high tomato intake (3–4 times a week) is associated with a 70% lower risk of ovarian cancer in women.

* Community and Faith: A strong sense of purpose, regular physical activity (like walking or pickleball), and a weekly 24-hour “Sabbath” rest contribute to lower stress levels.


[1] [https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov](https://pmc.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/articles/PMC11556529/)