![]() ![]() I don't know about her claims - a lot of them are disputed. In Food Matters, another documentary I watched, I adored this woman named Charlotte Gerson, author, nutritionist and daughter of Max Gerson, who knows something about treating cancer with vitamins. ![]() And if the results on the all-new Joe Cross were anything to go by, I wanted this too. And these are needed to keep heart disease and cholesterol and diabetes and cancer away. Can juicing really do that? All this time, I thought it was a waste because you drink sugar concentrate and consume no fibre, so what's the point? Turns out the micronutrients are what you get from juicing. Joe Cross took to juicing, lost his flab, regained his health, looked 10 years younger and turned into one of those poster boys for washboard abs - surf's up, baby! I got curious. The opening sequence had Joe Cross, a 100- kg overweight Aussie, stuck with an autoimmune disease, jiggling his massive belly into the camera. Great name, I thought, and it sounded fun, so I played it. And that's when I realised what I'd been missing out on.įat, Sick and Nearly Dead was the first one I watched. But when Netflix entered our lives, I saw some interesting-sounding titles on the menu. Given that the topics are of endless interest to me, I find it surprising that it never occurred to me earlier to seek out these documentaries. Forget binge watching - till October last year, I hadn't watched a single documentary on food or nutrition. ![]()
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