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Category: > Health > Learn How To Properly Food Combine with this Quick Guide!

Learn How To Properly Food Combine with this Quick Guide!

Jul 3, 2013 Carly Fraser Save For Later Print

Last Updated: Apr 11, 2020

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Woman in jeans and warm sweater holding bowl with fresh salad, avocado, beans, roasted vegetables, close-up

Learning how to properly food combine is incredibly important, especially if you are trying to get rid of bloating and to improve your digestion.

As soon as I started to properly combine foods, my irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) disappeared and that is what got me hooked (I also believe raw living foods helped me get rid of IBS, because there are more enzymes present in uncooked food which helps support your gut, and helps to achieve healthy flora).

If you are combining too many different foods at once, then slower digesting foods may get in the way of faster-digesting foods and can cause problems with fermentation which leads to gas and bloating.

Eating two foods that have different, or opposite digestive needs, the digestive juices become confused because they are trying to meet the requirements and adjust to the pH of those foods at the same time (which is nearly impossible).

The nourishment our bodies receive is determined by what we digest and assimilate, not simply by what we eat.

Certain combinations of foods may be digested much easier and allow us to assimilate the nutrients faster, than other food combinations.

Learning how to properly combine your food will help improve your health by removing digestive distress. It is even noted by many individuals who start combining their food properly that their “food allergies” disappear.

Fermentation is also an issue with combining the wrong foods; properly combining your foods relieves this fermentation which then relieves indigestion and heartburn.

How to Properly Food Combine

Below is a quick guide to help you learn how to properly combine your fruit and vegetables and return yourself to a state of health and wellness:

Water & Liquids:

Drink 15-20 minutes before a meal, or drink 1-2 hours after eating a meal

Melons: (e.g., watermelon, cantaloupe, honeydew, santa claus melon, etc.) 

Best eaten alone, do not combine well with other foods (digest very quickly – if you eat melon, be sure to eat it in the morning on an empty stomach). Melons are more than 90% liquid, and leave the stomach quickly if they are not backed up and fermented by combining with other foods, or slower-digesting foods eaten later in the day.

Sweet Fruit: (e.g., bananas, dates, papaya, all dried fruit, figs, jackfruit, mamey sapote, longan, mangosteen, persimmon, sapote)

Combine well with most sub-acid fruits and low-starch vegetables (particularly cucumber, celery and light leafy greens; I would not combine sweet fruit with anything more than these low-starch vegetables). Do not combine well with acid fruit, fats, or high starch vegetables.

Sub-Acid Fruit: (e.g., apples, blackberries, blueberries, raspberries, cherimoya, cherries, grapes, loquat, lychee, mango, nectarine, peach, pear, plum)

Combine well with sweet fruit, acid fruit and low-starch vegetables. Do not combine with more than one other fruit at a time (for example, don’t eat sub-acid fruit with sweet fruit AND acid fruit, just eat sub-acid fruit with sweet fruit, or sub-acid fruit with acid fruit; e.g., eat a pear with papaya, or eat a pear with an orange, but don’t eat a pear with a papaya with an orange, because the papaya and orange will ferment)

Acid Fruit: (e.g., cranberries, grapefruit, kiwi, strawberries, kumquat, lemons, limes, oranges, pineapple, pomegranate, tangerine, tomato)

Acid fruits combine well with sub-acid fruit and low-starch vegetables (as well as some higher starch vegetables; this mainly applies to tomatoes), as well as fatty fruits, nuts and seeds. Do not combine acid fruit with sweet fruit!

Fatty Fruit, Nuts & Seeds: (e.g., avocado, durian, olives, all tree nuts like pistachios, walnuts, almonds, macadamia nuts, cashews, and seeds like hemp seeds, sunflower seeds, pumpkin seeds, and chia seeds)

Combine well with low-starch vegetables and high-starch vegetables as well as acid fruit. Do not eat more than one fat at a time. For example, don’t eat avocado and nuts, since these proteins digest at different rates. Fats combine very well with simple leafy green salads!

High Starch Vegetables: (e.g., carrots, beets, peas, winter squashes (acorn, butternut), water chestnuts, parsnips, potatoes, sweet potatoes, corn, plantains, broccoli, cauliflower)

These vegetables can be eaten with fats, and low-starch vegetables, however I wouldn’t suggest eating them with more than one fat at a time. For example, I would not eat an avocado, nuts and a potato, but avocado and potato are fine.

Low Starch Vegetables: (e.g., sprouts, leafy greens, hearty greens (kale, collards), herbs, bok choy, celery, radishes, sea vegetables, mushrooms, cabbage, jicama, asparagus, okra, cucumbers, green beans and wax beans, fennel, peppers, zucchini, green onions, eggplant, celery, onions, leeks)

These vegetables combine very well with all of the previously mentioned fruit and vegetables. Always remember that the simpler the meal, the simpler the digestion. Keep your meals under 6 ingredients to allow the body to digest the foods properly and assimilate all the available nutrients.

 Click the chart below to print out a larger version for your kitchen!
food combining chart
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Filed Under: Food Education, Health Tagged With: food combining, health, vegetables

Carly Fraser

About the Author

Carly Fraser has her BSc (Hons.) Degree in Neuroscience, and is the owner and founder at Live Love Fruit. She currently lives in Winnipeg, Manitoba, with a determined life mission to help inspire and motivate individuals to critically think about what they put in their bodies and to find balance through nutrition and lifestyle. She has helped hundreds of thousands of individuals to re-connect with their bodies and learn self-love through proper eating habits and natural living. She loves to do yoga, dance, and immerse herself in nature.

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Comments

  1. Jacinta Cole says

    Sep 7, 2013 at 6:59 pm

    Does this also apply to juices? Thank you Carley

    Reply
    • Carly Fraser says

      Sep 13, 2013 at 9:33 pm

      Yes it does! 🙂 Thanks for asking!

      Reply
      • Jacinta Cole says

        Sep 18, 2013 at 11:12 am

        Thanks for getting back to me about this. x

        Reply
  2. Jonathan Castro says

    Oct 4, 2013 at 4:06 pm

    So food can ferment inside our stomach? does that mean we get probiotics in the process?

    Reply
    • Carly Fraser says

      Oct 4, 2013 at 10:26 pm

      No, we do not get probiotics from fermentation in the stomach. Fermentation from bad food combinations leads to ill health – bloating, gas, constipation, heart burn, etc.

      Reply
    • Jill says

      Dec 11, 2016 at 5:58 pm

      Wow that is a great question. I have never thought of that. Anyone out there know??

      Reply
  3. Cel says

    Feb 26, 2014 at 10:37 am

    Best blog post I’ve seen written on the topic yet! Where do dehydrated vegetables fall in this list? Can I eat dried fruit after tomatoes sinc dried fruit digests slower?

    Reply
    • Carly Fraser says

      Feb 28, 2014 at 7:41 pm

      Thank you! Dehydrated vegetables? Hmm, well all dehydrated fruit and vegetables should technically be re-hydrated in water before consuming. At that point, you would treat them as they are in their fresh state. All dried fruit, without being hydrated again is considered “sweet” and shouldn’t be combined with water rich foods, and should be eaten alone. Dried fruit should definitely not be eaten with tomatoes! This will cause major tummy issues!

      Reply
  4. Fads says

    Apr 30, 2014 at 8:45 am

    I love fruit salads, which fruits are the best to combine for my fruit salad ? Hoping to hear from you soon. Thank you kindly :>

    Reply
    • Carly Fraser says

      Apr 30, 2014 at 9:22 pm

      Anything sweet can go with sub-acid. Sub-acid and acid are fine. Sweet and acid are a definite no-no

      Reply
  5. oh says

    May 9, 2014 at 4:45 pm

    so, no lime juice to keep my sliced bananas light?

    Reply
    • Carly Fraser says

      May 9, 2014 at 6:53 pm

      You bet!

      Reply
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  1. 8 Secrets To Banish Belly Bloating | Live Love Fruit says:
    Feb 28, 2014 at 11:05 pm

    […] ferment in the stomach, creating a gaseous combination that leads to buddha-belly bloating! Click HERE to learn how to properly combine your foods! It is also important to learn to properly chew your […]

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