health & wellness rkit Fi7Gyir tO PEES YOUR P0A) oPi7brilt Healthy Eating 84 8 Af t4 tri i New book shares nutrition tips for feeding your baby for optimal health. Suzanne Chessler Contributing Writer A s a very young child, Katherine Erlich did not eat cholent or schmaltz with gribenes, but as a holistic pediatrician, she recommends both for children even under 2 years old. Erlich, who practices in West Bloomfield, is convinced that the very young need a diet filled with animal products, most particularly from ani- mals raised in a natural environment free of chemicals, antibiotics and geneti- cally modified seeds. The doctor's suggestions, the studies that formed the basis for her conclu- sions and resources for parents are pre- sented in a new book, Super Nutrition for Babies: The Right Way to Feed Your Baby for Optimal Health (Fair Winds; $16.99). Erlich met her co-writer, Kelly Genzlinger, as the two tried to bring what they deemed healthier food choices into the Birmingham Public Schools attended by their own children. "The book provides information for everyone although the focus is on babies:' explains Erlich, 42, who graduat- ed from the College of Human Medicine at Michigan State University, did her residency at Beaumont Hospital and has been in private practice for 13 years. "I want people to be aware of potential harm from exposure to food chain toxins present because of pesticides and other chemicals, and I want readers to realize that they are not getting some essential nutrients when using products from ani- mals raised indoors on factory farms:' Specifically addressing infant nutri- tion, Erlich defines many high-quality foods, such as liver, eggs and butter. She explains her evaluation of the benefits derived from them according to age and provides recipes for their use. "Our grandparents knew to make broth with bones, but somehow that information hasn't been passed along," says Erlich, at odds with the way the food pyramid for children has been 92 June 2 012 redesigned with an empha- sis on grains. "Our grandparents didn't see fat as a dietary evil, and there's a reason for that. Children need certain fats (from grass-fed animals, olive oil and coconut oil) for the development and function of every ried to emergency physi- cian Andrew Erlich and the Erlich, who has worked three summers mother of Emily, 13, and Charles, 9. "I always fed them eggs and butter as as a doctor at Tamarack Camps, came to my mother, Joan Simon, fed me, but I focus on the different nutritional needs didn't buy as many organic products for of babies as she worked in a traditional my daughter. pediatric practice and did independent "While I shopped research to help her in stores with organic young patients. products, I started As she acquired looking for farms information, Erlich where animals are moved off on her raised in pastures. own as a consultant, "I brought selec- generally recom- tions from those farms mending diets that into our home, and I return to eating hab found mail-order sup- its of earlier genera- pliers referenced in tions. the book:' Erlich found Erlich and agreement with Genzlinger, who start- Genzlinger, a ed their text by estab- University of lishing an outline and Michigan busi- going back and forth ness graduate who Katherine Erlich in the writing, strong- focused on analysis ly urge the avoidance and gained nutri- of sugar. tional knowledge "The section on raw through independent milk is probably the reading assigned most controversial by the American part of the book," says Association Erlich, who contends of Nutritional that pasteurization Consultants. damages the milk, Erlich believes making it less nutri- food choices popu- tious and more irritat- lar in the past help — Katherine Erlich ing to the body. combat some of the "I drink it, and problems now being my family drinks it. seen with more fre- My son, who had a problem with dairy quency, such as autism, asthma, autoim- products, drinks it twice daily without mune conditions, type 2 diabetes and any adverse effects. many more. "Those really uncomfortable about "My knowledge came after my own drinking raw milk (although prepared children were babies," says Erlich, mar- "Our grandparents didn't see fat as a dietary evil, and there's a reason for that." Super Nutrition for Babies: The Right Way to Feed Your Baby for Optimal Health under sanitary conditions) can retain a large portion of nutrients by choosing milk processed at a lower temperature through vat pasteurization." The most alarming research finding for Erlich had to do with iron needs. "If babies do not have enough iron when they are about 9 months old, they actually can experience permanent dam- age that affects the brain," she says. "That's why it's important that babies are fed meat and not simply reliant on fortified cereals as a source of iron. It's much harder for babies to digest the iron from vegetable and grain sources:' Since writing the book, Erlich has learned about vitamin K2. "When we drink milk and eat butter from grass-fed cows, we get more of that vitamin," she says. "Vitamin K2 takes calcium from our arteries and puts it in our bones and teeth to strengthen them. "Our world is focused on calcium, but what we need to do is maximize our Vitamin D and Vitamin K2 intake. If we don't have enough of these vitamins, we can't absorb the calcium:' Erlich, who graduated from Groves High School and now is a member of Temple Israel, says she acts as an addi- tional resource to what primary care pediatricians do. "I think we are missing an integral part of medicine if we neglect nutrition," she says. "I want parents to focus on nourishment of the body and what that means to disease prevention. "The whole idea of the book was to give patients' families and others the knowledge I have gained?' 7