Browse Comments — Raw (as collected)
Close reading of the corpus at each pipeline stage: raw → clean → relevant → coded.
58
comments matched
· page 2 of 3
So true, PureHealth Solutions. What we eat matters, but how we prepare it can be almost as important for what our body actually receives.
Love this, PureHealth Solutions. Most of us go searching for the next supplement, when the easier win might already be sitting on our cutting board. How we cook, soften, chop, or combine foods can quietly change what our body gets from them.
Exactly, AI Health. The “raw vs cooked” debate misses the real point. Our body responds to context. Same food, different preparation, different nutrient availability, and sometimes a very different outcome for our health.
Spot on, Age Well Now. Healthy aging is not always about adding more. Sometimes it is helping our body actually access and use what we are already eating. Small kitchen habits can become long term health habits.
Love how you connected this, Shashank. Same ingredient, different preparation, different result. That lesson shows up everywhere. In the kitchen, in business, and honestly in our health too. What we do with something often matters as much as what we start with.
Great point. Preparation is such an underrated lever. We do not always need more expensive supplements or complicated diets when our body may get more benefit from the same foods prepared in a smarter way.
Absolutely, Alax. Nutrition is rarely black and white. The same food can support our body in different ways depending on how we prepare it, and that makes our everyday choices a lot more powerful.
So true, C.P.That is the best part. Most of us do not need to spend more money on supplements or superfoods when a small kitchen change can help our body get more from what we already eat.
Love this, Sustained Wellness. The changes we can repeat are usually the ones that matter most. A softer onion, cooked spinach, or tomato prepared a different way may not look dramatic, but our body can still benefit from those small choices over years.
Thank you, Fred. That is exactly where this gets very practical. Our gut does not just care what we eat. It responds to how food is prepared, softened, broken down, and absorbed. Sometimes better digestion really does start with a simple kitchen adjustment. 🙏
I totally believe in the power of food as medicine! It just sucks that I cannot eat most of the things listed except for broccoli and tomatoes and I hate tomatoes lol
Nutrition becomes more interesting when you realize preparation methods can change how the body absorbs and responds to the exact same food.
Raw Garlic + Cooked Garlic ≠ same benefit
Prep method × Nutrient = health effect
Small change in prep > big body response.
Interesting Medicine That's such a great extension of the idea — it really does show up everywhere.
In health, in business, in relationships — the inputs matter, but the process matters just as much.
A lead list of 10,000 contacts prepared poorly gets worse results than 500 contacts worked with precision and context.
Same data. Different preparation. Completely different pipeline.
Love the content you're putting out — the way you make evidence-based health insight accessible is genuinely rare. Following for more. 🙏
Nicole Kaminski 🧐🙃
Jofre Ayala, LUTCF®, CPIA® what lol not liking tomatoes? Or my body being allergic to garlic, carrots, mushrooms etc.?
Good morning Nicole. It's the sincerity behind your words that makes your point meaningful.
Good
Healthy cannibals
These AI videos are funny to be honest.
But the content is definitely good. As a fitness expert here its basic to know how to eat any food.
I eat everything but I know to balance it well, if it has all the required nutrients and how it will support my life to be better and fit.