Tempting as it may be to jump straight in and try the recipes, do read the following chapter on blood types first. This provides background information on the origin of blood types, how our blood type can affect our health and how it interacts with the food we eat. Food recommendations are also given and these are complemented by the food lists, which provide a further guide on what each blood group should and should not eat.
To get you started we have created one week of menus for each season and for each blood type. In addition we felt it useful for you to have seven days of menus appropriate for all blood types. This will allow you to occasionally feed all blood groups at your table. The menus can be found at the back of the book, along with the recipe list that allows you to tell, at a glance, which recipe is suitable for which blood type. And for anyone still unsure of the benefits of following the diet we have included case histories for each blood type – these real life experiences are from patients who have experienced the turnaround in health that comes with following the blood type diet.
We trust that you will get pleasure from shopping and choosing the freshest foods in your markets and stores, enjoy the cooking process and savour the dishes you create. Lastly we believe you should leave the table feeling well nourished but with no heaviness in the stomach, and safe in the knowledge that what you just ate is on its way to building a healthy body and balanced mind. Enjoying that light, healthy feeling is our aim.
Good health and happy eating.
Karen Vago and Lucy Degrémont
Paris, September 2001
While the authors of this work have made every effort to ensure that the information contained in this book is as accurate and up-to-date as possible at the time of publication, medical knowledge is constantly changing and the application of it to particular circumstances depends on many factors. Readers should always consult a qualified medical specialist for individual advice before making any changes to their diet. This book should not be used as an alternative to specialist medical advice. The authors and publishers cannot be held responsible for any errors and omissions that may be found in the text, or any actions that may be taken by a reader as a result of any reliance on the information contained in the text which is taken entirely at the reader’s own risk.
13 tips for a healthy body
1 Breathe in clean air. Oxygen is our first nutrient.
2 Drink plenty of natural or filtered water.
3 Eat according to your blood type.
4 Eat plenty of vegetables and fruit.
5 Choose organic meat, where available.
6 Choose wild fish rather than farmed fish as much as possible.
7 Avoid eating in a stressful situation. Wait for a calmer time.
8 Chew your food well. Deal with each mouthful before adding another one.
9 Add supplements when appropriate to deal with a deficiency, a health issue and for prevention.
10 Give priority to managing your stress level. If necessary consult a nutritional practitioner who can help strengthen your adrenal glands.
11 Exercise both in and outdoors.
12 Live with happy thoughts.
13 Each day allow yourself quiet moments on your own.
the four blood types made easy
One of the most important aspects of health is the food we put in our bodies. Until recently, recommendations for food choices have mainly been based on the nutritional content of foods: how much of a particular vitamin or mineral does it contain, what is the fibre content, are the essential fatty acids unadulterated? Another trend has been to point an accusing finger at meat, whilst encouraging a greater consumption of grains. In my practice as a nutritionist, I have seen many type O patients for whom this type of macrobiotic diet has been a catastrophe. Relief was their understandable reaction on being told that not only was it okay for them to eat meat, but necessary if they wanted to be in good health. So should we be vegetarians or carnivores, follow the macrobiotic or paleolithic diet? What about the Mediterranean way of eating? However, the answer to the question of which diet suits us lies in who we are and not in what the diet is. What we eat interacts with each of us in a very particular way and that relationship is governed by our genetic makeup.
A food is not healthy or unhealthy per se. It interacts with us in a healthy or unhealthy manner. The work of Doctors James and Peter D’Adamo has enabled millions of people around the world to experience this. Peter D’Adamo has done a colossal job of furthering the findings of his father, Dr James D’Adamo: namely that your blood type (O, A, B or AB) is the key to what you should eat.
How Did These Findings Come About?
Dr James D’Adamo, a naturopathic physician, observed that while some people did well on the typical vegetarian diet recommended in renowned European health spas, others did not. Following this initial observation he spent many years trying different diets on each of his patients until eventually he surmised that there must be something in our blood that determines what we should be eating. Little by little, food choices according to ABO blood typing became obvious. Those with blood type A, it seemed, benefited from a virtually meat-free diet with protein provided by soya and fish, while Os did well on a meat-based diet that avoided grains and milk products. These findings set the stage for his son’s later scientific scrutiny.
Peter D’Adamo, a naturopathic physician in the making at that time (1980s), took advantage of university requirements to undertake research – and naturally he chose his father’s field. What he was looking for was any information that could connect blood types to certain diseases, and if such information would give any weight to his father’s ideas. Sure enough there it was. The prevalence of stomach cancer in blood type A was related to low gastric acid. This could explain why As should avoid meat – they did not produce enough gastric acid, which is essential for the complete digestion of animal protein. There was also relevant information on blood type O. This blood group is more prone to gastric ulcers – a condition usually caused by a highly acidic environment in the stomach. As James D’Adamo had discovered years before, Os could and should eat meat because they have the necessary acidic environment in the stomach to digest it properly.
This was just the beginning of the ongoing research into the relationship between ABO blood types and disease, and how selecting the right foods and living the right life can protect you.
Human Evolution and Blood Types
The four different blood types, O, A, B and AB, didn’t appear on earth all at the same time. The first three are a product of human evolution and the latter the consequence of As and Bs intermingling.
Man as we know him today appeared on this planet around 40,000BC, in eastern Africa. A branch of anthropology that investigates humankind’s biological differences has concluded that our ancestors and the first men on earth, the hunter-gatherers, were blood type O. All mankind at that time, and for approximately the next 20,000 years, had the same blood type. Around 20,000BC a combination of increased population and depleted hunting grounds forced the hunter-gatherers to migrate to western Africa and the Asian and European continents. As our hunter ancestors adapted their diet and lifestyle to a different environment, their body also underwent a radical change. A new blood type appeared in response to a new man: the farmer. He cultivated grains, reared animals and lived in communities. Type A evolved from type O.
It was another 5,000–10,000 years before another blood type made its appearance as an evolutionary step from the original blood type O: type B. This appears to have been the result of hunter-gatherers