Guest guest Posted September 11, 2003 Report Share Posted September 11, 2003 Suze, I had problems eating enough at night as well. They've gone away, and probably will for you over time too. Ori isn't necessarily agianst eating during the day, so I think it would make sense to eat a little during the day. You might need to ease your way in, eat very little during the day, but do it when hungry/famished... but over time your stomach will adjust to fitting more food in at once. It would help to do your work out prior to eating your meal. I also think it helps to have a small amount of caffeine or to do 20 minutes of exercise whenever the famished or otherwise bad feelings come on. Chris Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 11, 2003 Report Share Posted September 11, 2003 Hmm... Ori says to eat the protein first, then the carbs. My meal looks something like this: 3 raw egg yolks 1/2 lb raw heart 1 glass kombucha 3 egg ommelette 1 quart kefir stir fry of vegetables bowl of ice cream 1 more quart kefir perhaps more ice cream (homemade, low-sugar, blueberry) bowl of wild blueberries 1 slice sprouted rye Manna bread with lots of butter Chris In a message dated 9/11/03 4:33:38 PM Eastern Daylight Time, honeysuckles@... writes: > Are you eating a meal of salad, then meat, then carb and then hoping to eat > more later? Maybe that doesn't work. (I haven't tried it.) > > What we do is eat a meal that consists of salad. Later we eat protein. > Later we eat carbs. (Mostly it's the kids eating the carbs as hubby and I > eat the most salad and meat and are full.) > > Besides that idea, are you doing anything different than you did the first 3 > days? > " To announce that there must be no criticism of the president, or that we are to stand by the president, right or wrong, is not only unpatriotic and servile, but is morally treasonable to the American public. " --Theodore Roosevelt Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 11, 2003 Report Share Posted September 11, 2003 Suze, Are you eating a meal of salad, then meat, then carb and then hoping to eat more later? Maybe that doesn't work. (I haven't tried it.) What we do is eat a meal that consists of salad. Later we eat protein. Later we eat carbs. (Mostly it's the kids eating the carbs as hubby and I eat the most salad and meat and are full.) Besides that idea, are you doing anything different than you did the first 3 days? Rhea Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 12, 2003 Report Share Posted September 12, 2003 In a message dated 9/11/03 7:38:27 PM Eastern Daylight Time, honeysuckles@... writes: > Please let me know what he says in the book. Maybe the salad reference was > for those who want to eat during the day and that's when I'm supposed to be > eating my salad, but I'd rather not. I have seen clearly that if I don't > eat during the day my energy is great and if I do eat I'm tired and moving > slow by 2 or 3 PM. > Rhea, I have no idea! I don't have the book either. Funny you got that impression from what you've read, b/c from the articles/interviews and posts on this list I was under the impression everyone was supposed to eat some protein first, and those who wanted to lose fat were supposed to eat all the protein first. Hmm... Chris Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 12, 2003 Report Share Posted September 12, 2003 > Hmm... Ori says to eat the protein first, then the carbs. Are you saying no salad before the protein? I haven't read the book, just his interviews and the magazine and newspaper write-ups on his diet. Is salad first for those who don't want to lose weight? Hmm, wondering where I got the idea to eat a salad first in the evening and then protein. Well, it has been working. LOL Please let me know what he says in the book. Maybe the salad reference was for those who want to eat during the day and that's when I'm supposed to be eating my salad, but I'd rather not. I have seen clearly that if I don't eat during the day my energy is great and if I do eat I'm tired and moving slow by 2 or 3 PM. Rhea Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 12, 2003 Report Share Posted September 12, 2003 >>>Are you eating a meal of salad, then meat, then carb and then hoping to eat more later? Maybe that doesn't work. (I haven't tried it.) ---->a couple of times,i think, i ate salad first. and sometimes with the protein. i'm so famished that salad doesn't always cut it...i need something filling and fast! LOL >>>What we do is eat a meal that consists of salad. Later we eat protein. Later we eat carbs. (Mostly it's the kids eating the carbs as hubby and I eat the most salad and meat and are full.) ---->so the salad fills you up for a bit? do you eat during the day? i've done NO carbs, carbs *after* protein and carbs *with* protein. LOL. can't seem to get enough food in no matter the sequence. >>>>Besides that idea, are you doing anything different than you did the first 3 days? ------>thinking...well, all i can think of is that i'm not eating enough food the night before. this morning i was really hungry first thing in the morning which is not typical for me. and i think it's because i didn't eat enough last night. before the warrior diet i only ate two meals a day anyway...one in the late morning usually - which often was just a kefir smoothie, and one either early evening or at night. also, i got on the scale at the gym today and saw that i lost 2-3 lbs. in the past week! yeowsa...i don't *need* to lose weight, although in the *short* term i don't mind if it cleanses toxins, for example. no wonder in some recent photos i thought my face looked drawn and thinner than usual (when i lose weight it comes off my face and chest *first*. arghh!) but i certainly have not been trying to lose weight. maybe it will just take my body time to adjust. i just don't want it to think we're going back to a *starvation* diet like i did when i was a teenager. i have this fear that my body will think i'm not going to feed it enough as when i was a teen, and go into overdrive to build up my fat stores as a safety net :-( Suze Fisher Lapdog Design, Inc. Web Design & Development http://members.bellatlantic.net/~vze3shjg Weston A. Price Foundation Chapter Leader, Mid Coast Maine http://www.westonaprice.org ---------------------------- “The diet-heart idea (the idea that saturated fats and cholesterol cause heart disease) is the greatest scientific deception of our times.” -- Mann, MD, former Professor of Medicine and Biochemistry at Vanderbilt University, Tennessee; heart disease researcher. The International Network of Cholesterol Skeptics <http://www.thincs.org> ---------------------------- Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 12, 2003 Report Share Posted September 12, 2003 >for the past few days i've become weak and famished by early afternoon. not >like the first 3 or 4 days of not eating during the day. i think the problem >may be that i simply can't seem to eat enough at night! i eat about a meal's >worth of food, then am too stuffed to eat more later on. this is not good! >the weakness has interfered with my work and energy level. i'm still waiting >on the book, so can't use it as a reference as to how to remedy this >problem. any suggestions? should i just resolve to eat a little something >during the day? what about just starting the eating phase earlier? if i >snack around 2 or 3 p.m. i'll be able to get more food into myself and >relieve the weakness and concentration issues. You know, one thing might be how much starch you are getting. The Warrior Diet DOES rely on your liver having enough glycogen. It isn't ketogenic. A lot of people on this list concentrate heavily on fat and protein, both of which fill you up quickly. But unless you are in a ketogenic state, your body wants stored glycogen AND stored fat to make it through the fasting times. So you might be not storing enough glycogen, or, you are storing it but cannot access it (I'm not sure all the reasons for this, but it seems to happen). Have you tried eating, say, a big baked potato for dinner? (with a steak, for sure!). Also, you don't have to concentrate all your eating into one meal. Eat a meal, then have dessert, then a snack ... If you are really gaining fat, then I'd guess you are getting enough calories. But you might be retaining water or something ... you should NOT be having concentration issues. I got a little " fuzzy " during the day and eating a banana cured it. Which is another point ... are you eating raw foods during the day? You can have all raw fruits and vegies and some protein (cooked or otherwise)... Ori says he eats up to half a chicken during the day. Us overweight people have plenty of " reserve " but you might not.; -- Heidi Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 12, 2003 Report Share Posted September 12, 2003 >> Please let me know what he says in the book. Maybe the salad reference was >> for those who want to eat during the day and that's when I'm supposed to be >> eating my salad, but I'd rather not. I have seen clearly that if I don't >> eat during the day my energy is great and if I do eat I'm tired and moving >> slow by 2 or 3 PM. The salad is for everyone ... you should start your meal with a salad. Some of the is was for enzymes, I think. Basically raw food is " daytime food " so you don't eat much raw food in the evening, but greens are the exception. People who eat raw heart are also obviously the exception ... I've been eating raw fruit during the day, partly because it is EASY and that was one of my goals (getting out of the kitchen some!). I do start my evening meal with a salad and/or soup, which fills me up. But for you folks who are SKINNY, I think you need to use whatever works. For what it is worth, there was a post here awhile back about the caloric density of raw vs. cooked foods. Raw foods are often better for you, but they are also often less calorically dense. I.e. a raw carrot gives you less energy than a cooked carrot, because of digestibility etc. Ori uses mainly cooked foods, which might make it easier for him to cram 4,000 calories into an evening. His quote are from times when people were cooking their food too. Paleo people didn't cook their food, but they appear to have been really skinny. Healthy, but skinny. -- Heidi >> Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 12, 2003 Report Share Posted September 12, 2003 In a message dated 9/12/03 2:43:05 AM Eastern Daylight Time, heidis@... writes: > For what it is worth, there was a post here awhile back about the caloric > density of raw vs. cooked foods. Raw foods are often better for you, but > they are also often less calorically dense. I.e. a raw carrot gives you less > energy than a cooked carrot, because of digestibility etc. Ori uses mainly > cooked foods, which might make it easier for him to cram 4,000 calories > into an evening. His quote are from times when people were cooking their > food too. Paleo people didn't cook their food, but they appear to have > been really skinny. Healthy, but skinny. Plus raw food simply has more *volume*. So you have less space to fit the same amount of calories. Chris Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 12, 2003 Report Share Posted September 12, 2003 You know, one thing might be how much starch you are getting. The Warrior Diet DOES rely on your liver having enough glycogen. It isn't ketogenic. A lot of people on this list concentrate heavily on fat and protein, both of which fill you up quickly. But unless you are in a ketogenic state, your body wants stored glycogen AND stored fat to make it through the fasting times. So you might be not storing enough glycogen, or, you are storing it but cannot access it (I'm not sure all the reasons for this, but it seems to happen). Have you tried eating, say, a big baked potato for dinner? (with a steak, for sure!). ------>initially i wasn't eating many carbs except maybe a half pint of kefir after my workout...and NT ice cream after dinner, which has maple syrup in it. then, i started eating fried potatoes after my meal, then *with* my meal. oh, and i guess beer would count as carbs and i've had that typically with a pre-dinner snack of cheese and crispy almonds, but not every day. but it's true that there've been days when i didn't get much carbs at all. >>>>Also, you don't have to concentrate all your eating into one meal. Eat a meal, then have dessert, then a snack ... ----->usually i do start with a small snack of cheese and nuts, then move on to a meal. but i'm typically so hungry that i eat a lot in one meal - steak, a big pile of spinach, fried potatoes/onions/peppers, kimchi and a glass of kefir. followed by a big bowl of ice cream. which fills me up for the rest of the night. i guess i'm having problems stretching out the eating phase due to both hunger and my work schedule, because i often work at night after dinner and don't have time to keep preparing food. >>>If you are really gaining fat, then I'd guess you are getting enough calories. But you might be retaining water or something ... you should NOT be having concentration issues. I got a little " fuzzy " during the day and eating a banana cured it. ---->yeh, i've had a banana a few times. yesterday i was too weak and fuzzy brained to respond to some posts, so i had a half glass of kefir, which did the trick. would kefir be an " ok " thing to snack on? it would be the easiest thing for me to snack on and seems to do the trick. >>>Which is another point ... are you eating raw foods during the day? You can have all raw fruits and vegies and some protein (cooked or otherwise)... Ori says he eats up to half a chicken during the day. Us overweight people have plenty of " reserve " but you might not.; ----->is he eating *raw* chicken? i guess i could do that, but i'd want a sauce to flavor it, and that would typically involve fat. i've munched on a banana a few times. and one time i just ate a small bowl of kimchi. what i *have* been doing is always drinking a recovery shake after a workout, which includes about a half pint of kefir, whey (if i have it), goatein, and i recently started adding a yolk, which is what i always used to do. one thing i've noticed since doing the warrior diet is that i'm only eating a fraction of the yolks/eggs that i used to! btw, would NT stock be an ok thing to snack on during the day? or should that be saved for nighttime? Suze Fisher Lapdog Design, Inc. Web Design & Development http://members.bellatlantic.net/~vze3shjg Weston A. Price Foundation Chapter Leader, Mid Coast Maine http://www.westonaprice.org ---------------------------- " The diet-heart idea (the idea that saturated fats and cholesterol cause heart disease) is the greatest scientific deception of our times. " -- Mann, MD, former Professor of Medicine and Biochemistry at Vanderbilt University, Tennessee; heart disease researcher. The International Network of Cholesterol Skeptics <http://www.thincs.org> ---------------------------- Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 12, 2003 Report Share Posted September 12, 2003 >---->yeh, i've had a banana a few times. yesterday i was too weak and fuzzy >brained to respond to some posts, so i had a half glass of kefir, which did >the trick. would kefir be an " ok " thing to snack on? it would be the easiest >thing for me to snack on and seems to do the trick. " Weak and fuzzy brain " for me usually means high cortisol. Which I often get if I eat something I'm allergic to (see if it happens more after one food than another). When I eat something I'm allergic to, all bets are off the next day, I CAN'T stabilize. I just have to snack a little. And I know it isn't lack of glycogen becaue I can measure my blood sugar and it isn't low (we had this discussion, so I won't go into it any more!). That said, a little bit of jerky seems to work really well. Protein seems to work better with cortisol issues than sugar/starch does, for me anyway. Broth works really well too. You could check your pulse too ... see if it is high during the weak/fuzzy periods. >----->is he eating *raw* chicken? i guess i could do that, but i'd want a >sauce to flavor it, and that would typically involve fat. i've munched on a >banana a few times. and one time i just ate a small bowl of kimchi. what i >*have* been doing is always drinking a recovery shake after a workout, which >includes about a half pint of kefir, whey (if i have it), goatein, and i >recently started adding a yolk, which is what i always used to do. one thing >i've noticed since doing the warrior diet is that i'm only eating a fraction >of the yolks/eggs that i used to! You can legally eat anything that doesn't raise your blood sugar. Eggs should be ok, I'd think. Based on his theories, I don't think fat is an issue for the fasting time (he doesn't like it because of toxins etc, and I'd think it wouldn't be good for folks who want to lose weight). I use jerky because part of my goal is to stay out of the kitchen. >btw, would NT stock be an ok thing to snack on during the day? or should >that be saved for nighttime? From a philisophical viewpoint, he likes the idea of raw food during the day. Because the Romans did. But he does cook his meat! So I think stock should be fine. I do eat broth at lunch, if I'm cooking it for the crew. Broth seems to stabilize cortisol really, really fast, esp. if it has salt and garlic. I pour it over some kimchi in a bowl and make " kimchi soup " . -- Heidi Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 12, 2003 Report Share Posted September 12, 2003 On Fri, 12 Sep 2003 08:35:01 -0400 " Suze Fisher " <s.fisher22@...> wrote: >----->is he eating *raw* chicken? i guess i could do that, but i'd want a >sauce to flavor it, and that would typically involve fat. LOL! If he is he certainly didn't mention it in his book or interview. Somehow I don't think so. It Really Was The People's Car http://tinyurl.com/mwbv Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 12, 2003 Report Share Posted September 12, 2003 On Thu, 11 Sep 2003 18:11:15 EDT ChrisMasterjohn@... wrote: >Hmm... Ori says to eat the protein first, then the carbs. > >My meal looks something like this: >3 raw egg yolks >1/2 lb raw heart >1 glass kombucha >3 egg ommelette >1 quart kefir >stir fry of vegetables >bowl of ice cream >1 more quart kefir >perhaps more ice cream (homemade, low-sugar, blueberry) >bowl of wild blueberries >1 slice sprouted rye Manna bread with lots of butter > >Chris > Hey thats a nice looking meal! Ori says to start with subtle tasting foods at first, which generally means salad type foods. The carbs he says to eat at the end of the meal are the starchy ones. It Really Was The People's Car http://tinyurl.com/mwbv Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 13, 2003 Report Share Posted September 13, 2003 >---->yeh, i've had a banana a few times. yesterday i was too weak and fuzzy >brained to respond to some posts, so i had a half glass of kefir, which did >the trick. would kefir be an " ok " thing to snack on? it would be the easiest >thing for me to snack on and seems to do the trick. " Weak and fuzzy brain " for me usually means high cortisol. Which I often get if I eat something I'm allergic to (see if it happens more after one food than another). --->but i only get that way when i haven't eaten enough....on a totally empty stomach. >>>When I eat something I'm allergic to, all bets are off the next day, I CAN'T stabilize. I just have to snack a little. ---->well, that could've been my problem too, but i tend to think it's more likely because i simply couldn't eat enough the previous night. i lost something like 2 or 3 lbs. in a week, so i'm clearly not eating enough to maintain my weight. however, regarding my previous post about gaining fat, i have to take that back. looking at the back of my thighs, where i have the most adipose fat, i see that i've actually lost fat. i have no idea if i've lost muscle though, it's harder to tell... >>>>That said, a little bit of jerky seems to work really well. Protein seems to work better with cortisol issues than sugar/starch does, for me anyway. Broth works really well too. You could check your pulse too ... see if it is high during the weak/fuzzy periods. ---->i had thought of jerky, but don't like the first batch i made. however it was sitting on my counter in a ball jar, and i decided to try it again this morning, and it was OK. i like the idea of jerky, i'll just have to experiment til i get a flavor i like. this batch was destined for the dogs, but i think *i'll* eat it now. today, i had a handful of (lushious) dried cranberries in the morning. a few hours later i had a banana and small piece of jerky. oh, i probably had a spoon or two of kefir too, when i was making a new batch. no energy problems today! maybe i should just resolve to eat *something* in the morning rather than totally fasting. From a philisophical viewpoint, he likes the idea of raw food during the day. Because the Romans did. But he does cook his meat! So I think stock should be fine. I do eat broth at lunch, if I'm cooking it for the crew. Broth seems to stabilize cortisol really, really fast, esp. if it has salt and garlic. I pour it over some kimchi in a bowl and make " kimchi soup " . ----->hey, that sounds great! i'll try that. and yeh, if ori's eating cooked chicken, i should be able to drink cooked broth, i'd think. Suze Fisher Lapdog Design, Inc. Web Design & Development http://members.bellatlantic.net/~vze3shjg Weston A. Price Foundation Chapter Leader, Mid Coast Maine http://www.westonaprice.org ---------------------------- " The diet-heart idea (the idea that saturated fats and cholesterol cause heart disease) is the greatest scientific deception of our times. " -- Mann, MD, former Professor of Medicine and Biochemistry at Vanderbilt University, Tennessee; heart disease researcher. The International Network of Cholesterol Skeptics <http://www.thincs.org> ---------------------------- Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 13, 2003 Report Share Posted September 13, 2003 > " Weak and fuzzy brain " for me usually means high cortisol. Which >I often get if I eat something I'm allergic to (see if it happens more >after one food than another). > >--->but i only get that way when i haven't eaten enough....on a totally >empty stomach. I USED to get that way, but now a totally empty stomach is ok. However, I have plenty of fat and glycogen stores! I'm just glad I can now use them. If your body is under stress, it produces cortisol Starving is stress. Skipping a meal isn't stress IF you body is used to it and has stored food. IMO. ---->i had thought of jerky, but don't like the first batch i made. however >it was sitting on my counter in a ball jar, and i decided to try it again >this morning, and it was OK. i like the idea of jerky, i'll just have to >experiment til i get a flavor i like. this batch was destined for the dogs, >but i think *i'll* eat it now. > >today, i had a handful of (lushious) dried cranberries in the morning. a few >hours later i had a banana and small piece of jerky. oh, i probably had a >spoon or two of kefir too, when i was making a new batch. no energy problems >today! maybe i should just resolve to eat *something* in the morning rather >than totally fasting. I DO eat if I feel hungry. I try to keep it to a little bit, because I want my body to adapt. Ori recommends coffee too (it realeases fat stores). But it doesn't seem to take much to fill me up, one banana or so. As for jerky ... have you tried my jerky PDF? I found that until I soaked the jerky in kefir, it was tasteless. And often tough. If you don't have kefir you could use yogurt or kimchi juice ... but a 3 day soak adds the NICEST flavor!!!! The batches from my first 10 YEARS went to the animals ... > ----->hey, that sounds great! i'll try that. and yeh, if ori's eating cooked >chicken, i should be able to drink cooked broth, i'd think. He said in the interview, basically anything but starches. Since you don't eat starches much, this should be no problem ... I like the no-cooking philosophy a LOT, but since you eat raw a lot anyway THAT isn't a problem either ;-) I love broth ... I've been making a bunch of it and keeping it in the fridge. Easy to heat up, toss it over kimchi, like I said. The Vietnamese do this and pour it over noodles, greens (mint, kale, etc.) and a little meat for " instant soup " which makes a great first course for dinner too. -- Heidi Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 13, 2003 Report Share Posted September 13, 2003 On Fri, 12 Sep 2003 20:52:28 -0400 " Suze Fisher " <s.fisher22@...> wrote: > " Weak and fuzzy brain " for me usually means high cortisol. Which >I often get if I eat something I'm allergic to (see if it happens more >after one food than another). > >--->but i only get that way when i haven't eaten enough....on a totally >empty stomach. > Unless I miss my guess, water fasting (or eating nothing) can produce high cortisol, at least intially, and the best way to counteract that is with some fluids and light exercise. Usually works like a charm. It Really Was The People's Car http://tinyurl.com/mwbv Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 14, 2003 Report Share Posted September 14, 2003 > " Weak and fuzzy brain " for me usually means high cortisol. Which >I often get if I eat something I'm allergic to (see if it happens more >after one food than another). > >--->but i only get that way when i haven't eaten enough....on a totally >empty stomach. >>>>I USED to get that way, but now a totally empty stomach is ok. However, I have plenty of fat and glycogen stores! I'm just glad I can now use them. If your body is under stress, it produces cortisol Starving is stress. Skipping a meal isn't stress IF you body is used to it and has stored food. IMO. ------>i've not had the weakness/fuzziness the past several days since i've had a few things to eat when i do get hungry. yesterday i had some beef broth, a banana, a few small pieces of jerky and handful of cranberries throughout the day until the evening and that was fine. on days that i work out i am having a small recovery shake and that seems to keep me satiated for a long time. this is usually around 4 pm. i also seem to be able to eat more at night now and not feel overly stuffed, so maybe my body is adjusting. i did lose a few lbs. since starting this last week, but that may have been in the initial days when i wasn't able to eat enough at night. i don't have a scale at home, but there's one at the gym. i'll keep an eye on my weight to see if i'm still losing or if the loss plateaus. ---->i had thought of jerky, but don't like the first batch i made. however >it was sitting on my counter in a ball jar, and i decided to try it again >this morning, and it was OK. i like the idea of jerky, i'll just have to >experiment til i get a flavor i like. this batch was destined for the dogs, >but i think *i'll* eat it now. > >today, i had a handful of (lushious) dried cranberries in the morning. a few >hours later i had a banana and small piece of jerky. oh, i probably had a >spoon or two of kefir too, when i was making a new batch. no energy problems >today! maybe i should just resolve to eat *something* in the morning rather >than totally fasting. >>>>I DO eat if I feel hungry. I try to keep it to a little bit, because I want my body to adapt. Ori recommends coffee too (it realeases fat stores). But it doesn't seem to take much to fill me up, one banana or so. ------>coffee releases fat stores? really? is it the *caffeine* or some other component of coffee? >>>As for jerky ... have you tried my jerky PDF? ----->yes, i used it as a guide. thanks again for providing it. :-) >>>>>I found that until I soaked the jerky in kefir, it was tasteless. And often tough. If you don't have kefir you could use yogurt or kimchi juice ... but a 3 day soak adds the NICEST flavor!!!! The batches from my first 10 YEARS went to the animals ... ---->LOL! they must be disappointed now that you've figured out a way to make it tastey to *humans*. well, i did soak mine in kefir for a day or two, i believe. BUT, i think i only used sea salt for flavoring, but not enough. so it came out tasting like sour meat with little other flavor. the consistency is good, but i also used a low quality meat - minute steak - that came in paper-thin slices. next time, i'd like to get a better quality cut and slice it myself. and then use more seasoning. maybe i will try something like turmeric, cumin, ground cardamom and cayenne. that should give it a nice flavor. > ----->hey, that sounds great! i'll try that. and yeh, if ori's eating cooked >chicken, i should be able to drink cooked broth, i'd think. >>>He said in the interview, basically anything but starches. ----->so as not to raise insulin levels right? wouldn't a big ripe banana do that? or other sweet fruit? or not? Suze Fisher Lapdog Design, Inc. Web Design & Development http://members.bellatlantic.net/~vze3shjg Weston A. Price Foundation Chapter Leader, Mid Coast Maine http://www.westonaprice.org ---------------------------- " The diet-heart idea (the idea that saturated fats and cholesterol cause heart disease) is the greatest scientific deception of our times. " -- Mann, MD, former Professor of Medicine and Biochemistry at Vanderbilt University, Tennessee; heart disease researcher. The International Network of Cholesterol Skeptics <http://www.thincs.org> ---------------------------- Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 14, 2003 Report Share Posted September 14, 2003 In a message dated 9/14/03 9:02:24 AM Eastern Daylight Time, s.fisher22@... writes: > ----->so as not to raise insulin levels right? wouldn't a big ripe banana > do > that? or other sweet fruit? or not? Oh, you just asked the question I was going to ask part way through your post. Don't you folks think eating *bananas* defeats the whole purpose of not eating starch? An *unripe* banana to my understanding has starch anyway, which means bananas must have some non-fructose sugar, and that much fructose I'd expect to reak havoc with insulin anyway, certainly as much as bread or potato. Chris Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 14, 2003 Report Share Posted September 14, 2003 In a message dated 9/14/03 10:36:27 AM Eastern Daylight Time, jopollack2001@... writes: > At what point in our evolutionary history did warriors > drink coffee? Several thousand years ago, but no one can pin a precise date on Ethiopian coffee domestication. Chris Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 14, 2003 Report Share Posted September 14, 2003 In a message dated 9/14/03 11:37:53 AM Eastern Daylight Time, heidis@... writes: > Fructose doesn't seem to raise insulin levels, and it's ok with him > (as long as it is raw). A lot of body builders eschew fruite because > it gets stored as fat too readily, because it DOESN'T go through the > usual insulin pathway. I'm not sure how this jibes with the low-carb > approach ... if fruit turns directly into fat, it shouldn't raise > glycogen/glucose levels either. But diabetics DO seem to need > insulin to handle fruit? Anyway, I do eat fruit during the day > and it doesn't seem to make me hungry afterward (whereas > a cracker on an empty stomach leaves me STARVING in 3 hours). Heidi, This is simply not true. Fructose unquestionably raises insulin levels, which is why, like you say, diabetics need insulin for fruit! Fructose produces maybe 30% less insulin, but the idea that you can eat a whole banana on an empty stomach and not produce significant insulin in response to it isn't much more than wishful thinking. Chris Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 14, 2003 Report Share Posted September 14, 2003 In a message dated 9/14/03 11:48:18 AM Eastern Daylight Time, heidis@... writes: > Coffee is fairly recent, but a lot of hunter/gather type > societies have some stimulant or another they use. > Coca leaves come to mind. Teas of one sort > or another seem to be universal, and some of those > have stimulants. Recent to whom? Maybe recent to Arabians, but Ethiopians were drinking coffee a loooooong time ago. According to Diamond, the date is up for grabs, and no one's really sure whether they were domesticating plants before or after the arrival of Southwest Asian plants. But in any case it was thousands of years ago. Like you said, stimulants seem universal. Ethiopia's got the coffee, West Africa's got kola nuts, Asia has green and black tea, Americas have coca, tobacco, etc, all of which were used by traditional cultures. One of the groups Price studied, and I think it was the Aborigines but don't remember for sure, chewed on coca all day long to suppress appetite and maintain energy while fasting and hiking etc. Whoever it was I believe it was the same folks who ate clay to prevent queasy stomachs. If it was the Austrailian Aborigines, iirc they were paragons of health. Chris Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 14, 2003 Report Share Posted September 14, 2003 --- Heidi Schuppenhauer <heidis@...> Ori recommends coffee too (it > realeases fat stores). But it > doesn't seem to take much to fill me up, one banana > or so. > At what point in our evolutionary history did warriors drink coffee? It isn't working for n, who drinks quite a bit of coffee but is STILL 100lbs overweight! Jo ________________________________________________________________________ Want to chat instantly with your online friends? Get the FREE Messenger http://mail.messenger..co.uk Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 14, 2003 Report Share Posted September 14, 2003 >i also seem to be able to eat more at night now and not feel overly stuffed, >so maybe my body is adjusting. i did lose a few lbs. since starting this >last week, but that may have been in the initial days when i wasn't able to >eat enough at night. i don't have a scale at home, but there's one at the >gym. i'll keep an eye on my weight to see if i'm still losing or if the >loss plateaus. I appreciate your comments ... someday I'll be skinny then I'll wonder how this works for skinny people. Well, skinny muscular people. My muscles seem bigger too ... part of that, I think is the exercise, but I've also heard they " plump up " when they store glycogen. Since you are training your body to store lots of glycogen for the next day, that would make them bigger too. The glycogen is important: your muscles use a lot of it for " quick response " energy (like swordfights or lifting weights!) as well as using a little to help burn fat. >------>coffee releases fat stores? really? is it the *caffeine* or some >other component of coffee? The caffeine. Some body builders take large amounts of caffeine to help lose fat. Which works, I guess, esp. if you don't have the ability to get fat out of fat cells easily (which the WD is supposed to help train your body to do). Fat cells release lipids all the time, but caffeine increases the process. If you then USE UP the fat, then great, you lost weight. Otherwise they float around for awhile and get re-stored as fat. >---->LOL! they must be disappointed now that you've figured out a way to >make it tastey to *humans*. >well, i did soak mine in kefir for a day or two, i believe. BUT, i think i >only used sea salt for flavoring, but not enough. so it came out tasting >like sour meat with little other flavor. the consistency is good, but i also >used a low quality meat - minute steak - that came in paper-thin slices. >next time, i'd like to get a better quality cut and slice it myself. and >then use more seasoning. maybe i will try something like turmeric, cumin, >ground cardamom and cayenne. that should give it a nice flavor. Oh yeah, you need spices! This last batch I put in a lot of cumin, which was good. I talked to a lady who grew up in South Africa -- she is a doctor now, and I was asking her how come the biltong didn't give her food poisoning etc (they just hung it in the garage to dry). She thought it might be the spices ... it was very spicy, she said, with lots of cumin. Or the salt. >----->so as not to raise insulin levels right? wouldn't a big ripe banana do >that? or other sweet fruit? or not? Fructose doesn't seem to raise insulin levels, and it's ok with him (as long as it is raw). A lot of body builders eschew fruite because it gets stored as fat too readily, because it DOESN'T go through the usual insulin pathway. I'm not sure how this jibes with the low-carb approach ... if fruit turns directly into fat, it shouldn't raise glycogen/glucose levels either. But diabetics DO seem to need insulin to handle fruit? Anyway, I do eat fruit during the day and it doesn't seem to make me hungry afterward (whereas a cracker on an empty stomach leaves me STARVING in 3 hours). -- Heidi Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 14, 2003 Report Share Posted September 14, 2003 >At what point in our evolutionary history did warriors >drink coffee? Coffee is fairly recent, but a lot of hunter/gather type societies have some stimulant or another they use. Coca leaves come to mind. Teas of one sort or another seem to be universal, and some of those have stimulants. >It isn't working for n, who drinks quite a bit of >coffee but is STILL 100lbs overweight! > >Jo I would encourage him to keep a food log and see exactly how much he IS eating and tweak it. A lot of people reach a plateau when the body adjusts to the food. And my general motto in life is: " when what you are doing isn't working, try something else! " . Low carb and other diets that don't count calories (like the WD) still can't get around the laws of thermodynamics. When a person weights 300 lbs, it takes more energy to LIVE than it does when they weight 200. Fat and protein are more filling than carbs, but you can still live on them without losing fat, and that seems to happen to a lot of people. -- Heidi Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Guest guest Posted September 14, 2003 Report Share Posted September 14, 2003 --- Heidi Schuppenhauer <heidis@...> wrote: > >> I would encourage him to keep a food log and > see exactly how much he IS eating and tweak it. > A lot of people reach a plateau when the body > adjusts to the food. And my general motto in > life is: " when what you are doing isn't working, > try something else! " . > We are trying to increase carbs. I suspect his problem is stress. While he doesn't feel stressed at all, I suspect he is just used to living with it, as he certainly has a number of symptoms as laid down by Schwarzbein in TSP2. He is just eating a few carby things each meal time. He can't be doing with counting every gram that passes his liips - it seems he would rahter be fat than become obsessed with dieting. And i can appreciate that, as i have become obsessed and there are times I am miserable becasuse of it. Jo > Low carb and other diets that don't count calories > (like the WD) still can't get around the laws of > thermodynamics. When a person weights 300 lbs, > it takes more energy to LIVE than it does when they > weight 200. Fat and protein are more filling than > carbs, but you can still live on them without > losing fat, and that seems to happen to a lot > of people. ________________________________________________________________________ Want to chat instantly with your online friends? Get the FREE Messenger http://mail.messenger..co.uk Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
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