From Deseret News archives:

Raw food eatery touts benefits

Published: Tuesday, April 25, 2006 1:43 p.m. MDT
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SUGAR HOUSE — The food is divine — it is the natural way to eat, described one frequent customer at the first raw food restaurant in Utah.

The Living Cuisine, also known by its customers as the raw food bar, opened last July for lunch and dinner. It provides fresh organic food seasoned with familiar herbs.

The exotic taste features foods from India to the Middle East to the Americas, explained owner Omar Abou-Ismail, 26, of Lebanon who moved to Utah in 1997 to attend the University of Utah.

A framed quote by Gandhi sits on the inviting counter where the food is prepared and many customers sit. It reads, "Men often become what they believe themselves to be. If I believe I cannot do something, it makes me incapable of doing it. But when I believe I can, then I acquire the ability to do it even if I didn't have it in the beginning."

The framed quote was a gift from one of the Living Cuisine's customers as a thank you for changing the way this customer was eating. The customer, like Abou-Ismail and his employees, believes eating only raw-organic food makes them healthier and can heal diseases, he said.

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Two years ago Abou-Ismail started eating only raw-organic food and noticed his health improving. At the time he was working in Hawaii as a geophysicist. He began to read nutritional books.

After trying the raw food diet, Abou-Ismail said he was very impressed with how much healthier he felt and continued eating only raw food..

"Eating raw food doesn't mean that everything you eat is raw (uncooked)," Abou-Ismail said, adding a lot of the food is dehydrated at a temperature of 105 degrees F.

Still eating raw, when Abou-Ismail's job ended in Hawaii, he moved back to Utah to be with his family and look for another job in geophysics. However, Abou-Ismail's life changed when his father, at the age of 63, was diagnosed with bladder cancer.

Abou-Ismail began taking care of his father full time while his mother worked, but in December 2004 his father passed away.

"In 2005, I thought, you know it is a new year and I wanted to start my life right because when my father passed away it just really affected me," Abou-Ismail said, noting he didn't want to work as a geophysicist anymore. "I had to find out a way to make a living, but at the same time help people that needed help."

Abou-Ismail decided to use his knowledge of food to help others, he said.

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Living Cuisine Restaurant owners Omar Ismail and Cara Bracken serve fresh organic foods. No animal products are served.

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