Lose your wheat tooth

Remove wheat and other closely related grains,
especially rye, barley, corn, and oats, and
your taste perception changes:
flavors become sharpened, more pronounced. It
leads people to say such things as
“I used to hate Brussels sprouts, but
now I love them.” Or “I can no
longer eat fast food because of the excessive
sugar, salt, and synthetic flavors.”
Removing the taste distortions of wheat and grains
also sharpens your sensitivity to
sweetness, making formerly tasty, sugary
treats sickeningly sweet. Many find that candy
bars, soda, or sugar in their coffee become
intolerable, so cloyingly sweet that they are
inedible or undrinkable.
Combine these alterations in taste perception
with removal of the factors in
wheat and grains that increased appetite,
and those of us following the Wheat Belly
lifestyle have no problem avoiding sweets: we
lose our desire for them and they taste awful
when we eat them.
So when people contemplating the Wheat Belly
lifestyle declare “My problem is not
wheat or grains—it’s sweets!”
they are failing to understand the taste-altering
and appetite-reducing benefits of banishing
wheat and grains from their lives. Having a
persistent sweet tooth is distinctly
uncommon after removing wheat and
grains, though the effect may require several
days to weeks to fully develop. The primary,
driving problem is therefore not the sugars for
most people; it’s the wheat and grains.
Lose the wheat, lose the grains, lose desire
for sweets.
I still recognize that an occasional lightly
sweetened dessert or treat may be fun to have,
or you need them to entertain company, enjoy a
holiday dinner, or please the kids or
grandkids—the social obligations you may
have. This is why I provide recipes here and
through the Wheat Belly cookbooks. I learned
years ago that have this occasional option for
indulgences to navigate social situations
increased adherence and satisfaction with this
program without risking re-exposure
to the awful effects of wheat and grains.
However, if you are among the minority of people
who have a sweet tooth persist even after you make
the leap to being wheat- and grain-free, then
consider this:
- Are you truly wheat/grain-free?
Or are you continuing to be exposed to a grain
component in, for instance, your nutritional
supplements or prescription drugs that continues
to stimulate appetite and distort
taste?
- Are you still limiting fats and
oils? If so, stop it! There is NO health
advantage to limiting fats and oils. Use more
butter, coconut oil, olive oil, and choose fatty
cuts of meat and eat the fat. Never choose low-
or non-fat dairy products. And if some of your
oils are medium-chain triglycerides, MCTs, this
will reduce your desire for sweets even
more.
- Do you have small intestinal fungal
overgrowth, SIFO? Fungi, such as Candida
albicans, glabrata, and tropicalis, have the
peculiar capacity to stimulate your appetite for
sugar. It’s creepy to know that fungi have
control over some aspects of the human mind and
behavior. When fungi
proliferate and ascend up the gastrointestinal
tract–small intestinal fungal
overgrowth—they can stimulate your desire
for sweets, tricking you into consuming a food
that they like to consume, since fungi thrive
on sugars.
- Do you lack Lactobacillus
reuteri in your intestinal microbiome and
thereby have lower blood and brain levels of
oxytocin? Recall that
L reuteri is a microorganism that
most people harbored in their intestinal
microbiome up until the mid-twentieth century.
Most modern people no longer have this species,
part of the disaster of changes inflicted on
bowel flora in twenty-first century life. Because
L reuteri has the unique capacity
to provoke hypothalamic release of oxytocin that
is a powerful appetite suppressant, lacking
L reuteri and thereby oxytocin may
underlie a continuing desire for sweets. Remedy:
make
L reuteri yogurt.
You can appreciate that the Wheat Belly lifestyle
is not just about banishing grains, nor
limiting carbs or calories. Unlike a simple diet
program, the Wheat Belly (and Undoctored)
lifestyles take health and life several steps
further for maximum health advantage.
The original WBB post is currently found on the:
Infinite Health Blog, but accessing
it there requires an unnecessary separate blog membership. The copy of it above is
complete, and has been re-curated and enhanced for the Inner Circle membership.