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Daily Food Diary for Monday, March 28

Posted by Maureen Diaz on March 29, 2011

I left off yesterday with a bit of a “teaser” for how my day would look food-wise, so here I go with the rest.

Mondays are always extra busy as we are recovering from the weekend and heading off to various activities in the afternoon. With a large chunk of this day spent out of the house,  I try to prepare ahead of time so that we have healthy, energy-giving meals and snacks.

My breakfast of course consisted of 2 eggs fried in butter, 1 1/2 cups of heavy cream with vanilla, stevia, raw maca & cocoa powders (sorry, I forgot to mention the latter 2 ingredients yesterday), fermented cod liver oil and coconut oil. Our children had eggs and whole grain artisan bread with butter which one of our daughters had made over the weekend.

Before we darted out the door I fed my family leftovers consisting of:  soup made with beef stock, mustard greens, ground beef, broccoli, and other assorted vegetables and seasonings; a rich brown rice casserole with loads of cheeses, chacuterrie, cream and butter; and slices of that same bread we had in the morning. I ate a big bowl of soup and a small glob of the casserole (which was really good by the way!), a very small piece of that bread with about 2 Tbsp. of butter, and an uncured beef stick from a local, grass-based farm. Lunch is our main meal of the day, so we really load up.

The kids play basketball on Monday afternoons and have a snack afterwards before going to bible study nearby. So in order to provide them with a nutritious snack free of things we don’t like them to have (sugar, high fructose corn syrup, hydrogenated fat, vegetable oils, white flour, etc.), I made a big pot of kettle corn with coconut oil, butter, popcorn, and just a sprinkling of Sucanat across the top. I grabbed another half loaf of that bread & raw butter, and made a favorite “snack” beverage, raw milk with added cream (about 1/2 heavy, raw cream and 1/2 fresh, raw milk) to which I add 2-3 Tbsp. black strap molasses & 1 Tbsp. vanilla extract per quart. I had a glass of this with a handful of popcorn.

When returning home late in the day the kids, more than the mom, are hungry for more. So they finished off the leftovers, made a few eggs, and cooked up some burger with seasonings. This was all very simple and easy, and they took care of it all themselves while I did other things. I did not need any more food, but went to bed satisfied and ready for rest!

I mustn’t forget the mug of tea with cream, and a cup of smooth, delicious coffee which I enjoyed early in the day. I stay away from coffee for the most part now, or at least am no longer dependent on it. Coffee can really wreak havoc with your body, particularly when it is a type that is very high in caffeine and acidic. Years ago I realized that my daily, if not double-daily, strong coffee habit was causing real damage to my adrenal glands, and thus the rest of me, so I managed to give it up, and stay off of it. Now I can enjoy it as a “treat” now and then. With a grown son who is more of a coffee snob and aficionado than even his mother, I do find myself having it more frequently when he is at home. Which he is now. Most of the time. So… I’ve been having a cup of coffee more frequently, and you will see it appear on this food diary likely every day this week, as we have this wonderful freshly roasted Nicaraguan bean in the house right now…

Anyway, I may grab a daughter and run down to DC for the day with said son, so it will be interesting to see how my food intake looks for the day. But my mug of tea is finished, the cow is awaiting her milking, and my eggs are calling. So we’ll chat more about this later!

Maureen Diaz is a homemaker, mother of 9, Weston A Price Foundation chapter leader & educator, certified LW nutritionist, and producer of 3 cooking DVD’s, including Liberation Wellness Home Cooking. Her DVD’s are available from her website, nourishingtraditionalcook.com

 

 

Posted in Butter, Cheese, cod liver oil, Family Wellness, farm fresh, fresh and local, grains, grass fed beef, health, liberation wellness, Local Foods, Maureen Diaz, Nutrition, raw milk, real food, real foods, saturated fat, vegetables, Vitamin D, Weight Loss, Weston A. Price Foundation | Leave a Comment »

A Week’s Worth of Food Diaries

Posted by Maureen Diaz on March 28, 2011

 

My morning "supplements"

It has been quite awhile since I managed to get anything written here, as I have been concentrating on getting my household re-organized and running more smoothly-a tough task when you have 10 people under one roof! So as I have for weeks been mulling over what/when to write next, I decided this morning that a simple, concise daily food diary may be in order. Not that most people really care about what I eat, but for those who do (and I know there are at least a few), I am starting with today!

So at the close of each day you can look forward to (or not :P ) a post from me detailing what foods are entering my mouth as well as how this food is affecting me. I am working on taking off the winter weight (8#) which needs to come off, as well as the remaining 15# beyond that to achieve my goal. My 30th class reunion is coming up in July, and I am looking forward to looking better than ever for this, my first-ever reunion with old classmates.

I will also mention what my family is eating, where it varies from my own dietary intake. Often people ask what/how I feed my family, and so this should answer some of those questions as well.

I’ll just clue you in now on how my day has started. I had a delicious cup of Republic of Tea Ginger Peach, sweetened just a bit with whole leaf stevia and topped off with a generous dollop of cream. Later I consumed 2 lovely pastured eggs fried in lots of butter and washed down with about a cup of silky smooth fresh heavy cream, flavored with a bit of homemade vanilla & stevia. A Tbsp. of coconut oil & tsp. of fermented cod liver oil are also part of my morning routine. This all makes me feel so good, satisfied, and ready for my very busy day.

I’ll be back this evening with the rest!

Maureen Diaz is a homemaker, mother of 9, Weston A Price Foundation chapter leader & educator, certified LW nutritionist, and producer of 3 cooking DVD’s, including Liberation Wellness Home Cooking. Her DVD’s are available from her website, nourishingtraditionalcook.com

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Posted in Butter, cod liver oil, farm fresh, fresh and local, Maureen Diaz, Nutrition, obesity, raw milk, real food, real foods, Vitamin D, Weight Loss | Tagged: , , , , , , , | 3 Comments »

Whole Foods Offers Customers ‘Customized Nutrition Plan’ Pushing A Vegan Agenda

Posted by Jimmy Moore on March 23, 2011

Last February, I shared with you about a decision made by the executives of the world’s largest health food supermarket chain Whole Foods beginning to aggressively promote a low-fat, vegetarian diet with their “Health Starts Here” campaign. Interestingly, they’re not trying to hide what they are doing either as you can see on this page of their web site outlining their “Four Pillars Of Health Eating” with the call for customers to become “Plant-Strong” by making vegetables the centerpiece of their diet. Their list of 10 Easy Steps To Make A Fresh Start heavily promotes salads, whole grains, vegetables, fruits, legumes, nuts, seeds, and “smaller portions” of lean meats while eschewing refined, processed foods. They even have an in-store “Healthy Eating Specialist” whose job is to work at an in-store kiosk/desk to be there to answer questions from customers about health and healthy eating as well as giving lectures on health and nutrition in the local community–all the while pushing the vegan lifestyle. All of this may sound pretty good to the average Whole Foods customer who tends to be more health-conscious than those people who shop at a traditional grocery store. But they are laying a trap for their customers who may not be as nutritionally savvy about what a healthy diet can actually look like. And it’s really a whole lot worse than we ever thought.

Last week when I blogged about the new vegan propaganda movie called Forks Over Knives coming in May, I received well over 100 comments mostly from vegans who wanted to defend their chosen nutritional plan although I didn’t really criticize it or the film in my post. But “Jill in Chicago” wanted to defend Whole Foods and their “Healthy Eating Specialist” position against being characterized as vegan-promoting. Here’s what she wrote:

The focus of Whole Foods’ Health Starts Here program is not to eat a vegan diet, but to eat whole, unprocessed foods. I am currently in the midst of a Health Starts Here 28-Day Health Challenge, and the Healthy Eating Specialist who is assisting the group does not discourage meat and dairy consumption. The idea is to eat less of them.

That’s all well and good and I certainly wish Jill the best as she pursues her own weight and health goals with whatever diet she is choosing to follow. To me it’s all about finding the plan that will work for you, following it exactly, and then continuing to do that for the rest of your life. But what about those people who don’t know which plan is right for them? Is there a way to get a customized nutrition plan that will help them determine what their diet should look like? Whole Foods seems to think so through their partnership with Eat Right America doing direct marketing with the customers of their stores encouraging them to take a survey to see how to eat optimally for your health. What Whole Foods customer wouldn’t be interested in something like that? One of my readers forwarded an e-mail she received from a friend of hers who wanted to pass along this “amazing offer” from Whole Foods giving away “FREE customized nutrition plans to get you started or keep you motivated on your health journey.”

Gee, how nice is that? All you gotta do is go to the “Eat Right America Challenge” web site, enter or obtain an access code, fill out a survey about your eating, exercise and lifestyle habits as well as you health and they’ll spit you out the perfect diet just for you, including a personalized 28-day nutrition and eating plan that they say “really is a great resource…to Whole Foods Market customers.” They encourage people who take this survey to come back in to visit Whole Foods after you receive your diet plan to consult with the “Health Starts Here” station to speak with the “Healthy Eating Specialist” about learning more about “your path to a healthier life.” Don’t you just love how syrupy sweet and innocent they make this all sound? It’s a lot more dastardly than these unsuspecting Whole Foods customers even know!

So what’s the real deal here? I wanted to find out and share this with you so your friends, family and co-workers don’t get suckered into thinking this is a legitimate way to know which diet is right for them (if you want to have a REAL test done to determine the correct nutritional makeup of your diet for you based on how your body metabolizes food and nutrients, then you might consider getting the FitTest done from GetYourHealthTested.com). Maybe what they conclude about the kind of diet you should be eating is right for you…maybe not. But this survey is not based on anything scientific methodology regarding your specific situation. It’s deliberately meant to mislead you into thinking what you are currently doing is causing harm to your health and that there is only one solution to preventing your health from getting worse than it is. As you can imagine, the basis for the questions asked in this survey heavily leans on conventional wisdom about the relationship of consuming animal-based fats and proteins to developing heart disease, obesity, cancer, diabetes and other chronic diseases and the supposed virtues of consuming plant-based foods as a way to obtain optimal health. Let’s take a look at what it was like for me to take this survey for myself plugging in information about my diet and lifestyle.

I began by visiting the Challenge web site where they welcomed and congratulated me for taking “the first step toward a healthier more nutritious lifestyle” through my own “Personal Nutrition Report”:

The survey started off by asking me some basic demographic information about who I am in a “detailed assessment designed to accurately predict your health future.” Eat Right America is described as “a cause, a passionate desire to enable America’s families to live a life of ‘true’ health.” They do this by promising the results of their survey will give you a “personally-designed, nutrition prescription, that can dramatically extend your life expectancy and lower your risk of life-threatening diseases.” Wow, sounds like they’ve found the Fountain Of Youth miracle cure-all for all of life’s health woes. We shall see. They then asked questions about the current state of my health and what my typical diet looks like:

Two things stood out to me about the diet portion of the survey–they put eggs in with white meat and there was no designation for “grass-fed” or “pastured” foods. So any red meat consumption listed on the survey could be grain-fed or grass-fed. It obviously didn’t matter to them whether you consumed higher-quality meats or not (an it’s only gonna get even worse in a moment, though). I made it through the 15-minute survey so I could receive my own “Nutrition Prescription customized for Jimmy Moore”–they made it just for me (yeah right!):

You get a form letter from Dr. Scott Stoll who is a member of the Whole Foods Medical Board who explains that the “solution we have created for you is easy to understand, simple and fun for you and your family to adopt, and represents a proven methodology that is guaranteed to deliver the results you desire.” WOW! What in the world could this miracle of all miracles be that will end my weight and health struggles forever? They then explain about what the “Nutrition Prescription” is all about discussing the implementation of the “Nutritarian Lifestyle” from vegan physician Dr. Joel Fuhrman juxtaposed with the typical Standard American Diet and why this new way to eat is allegedly better for you. They even show you a graph of what your current diet looks like compared with SAD:

I think it’s interesting they lump meat and dairy together in the same category and apparently list foods like bacon in the “Processed Foods” section. Do you think they put things like tofu and skim milk in with the “Processed Foods” when they are both OBVIOUSLY highly-processed? I wouldn’t bet the house on it. Continuing through my personal assessment, the news only got worse. I was chastised for consuming too much red meat, animal products, and full-fat dairy while eschewing whole grains and more vegetables. They point to my diet as the reason why my health is at great risk for disease:

For several pages, I receive a lecture on why my cholesterol is too high which puts me at risk for a heart attack (I’ve previously explained in this post that cholesterol testing is a lot more sophisticated these days than ever before and that measuring particle size is much more relevant than LDL or total cholesterol). They claim my LDL (explained as “the most accurate determinant of risk” of coronary artery disease) should be below 80 mg/dl to “maximize reversal” of heart disease, but there was nary a mention of HDL “good” cholesterol in the equation. Additionally, they use the body mass index (BMI) to determine the obesity of an individual stating that it “is a fairly reliable indicator of body fat for most people.” The say my BMI at 251 pounds on my 6’3″ body frame puts me at a “significantly increased risk of heart disease, diabetes, and cancer.” Oh, now isn’t that nice? They’ve got a rude awakening coming when none of this actually happens to me as they’re trying scaremonger these poor Whole Foods customers into thinking they have to eat a vegan diet. Oh yes, that sticky little detail is coming up soon. But first they need to continue to put the fear of God in me about my current health before they swoop in to the rescue with their miracle plan to save me:

They say I’m at a “very high risk” of sudden cardiac death if I don’t “take action immediately” despite the fact that my heart scan score in 2009 showed zero calcium buildup in my arteries. My risk of stroke is also “very high” because they think blood clots will happen because of my diet. And with a fasting blood glucose score of 83, they still put me at “significant risk” for getting diabetes because I’m not eating and exercising the way they think I should be. They weren’t finished yet piling on more warnings about what my current diet is doing to my risks for developing cancer and osteoporosis (this is actually starting to get funny if they weren’t so serious about it):

So I’m at “high risk” for developing cancer because of my eating and fitness choices and they will help me “identify those choices” that will be better for me. HA! Then with my bone health, it’s the same song and dance. What I’m doing right now ain’t good enough–but there’s something better that we think (hope and pray to God) you’ll like…or something like that. What exactly are the culprits in my devastatingly, hanging-by-a-thread health right now? Let’s take a look:

My full-fat dairy loving, caffeinated tea guzzling, saturated fat-laden meat eating, and salted food consumption is what they think is killing me. Gee, if these are all of the problems with my diet right now, then why am I in the best health of my entire life? Why do I feel so good if I’m just one bunless bacon cheeseburger away from saying so long to this world? And how did eating so “unhealthy” bring my weight down by triple digits, get me off of three prescription medications for good, and have me doing things I would have never thought possible just a few years back? I, of course, know better and have all the confidence in the world about my healthy low-carb lifestyle. But what about those people who take this survey and believe it’s the gospel truth? They read this and think, “Oh my God, what can I do to stop this devastation from happening to me?” Enter the Eat Right America eating plan:

They try to convince you this is a good thing by stating at the top of the page that this is all about “Nutrition Excellence & Health” and then proceed to explain what they mean by that. To become a “Nutritarian,” all you have to do is eat lots of fruits and vegetables, beans, nuts and seeds, cut down on your animal-based food consumption opting for “healthier options in this food group” (hmmm, lemme guess–ones that are lower in saturated fat?) and eat much less of foods that are “empty of nutrients or toxic” like refined sugars, white flour, processed foods and fast food. On the final point, I think we can agree, but Dr. Fuhrman is hung up on meat being such an unhealthy part of any diet plan. He sees meat in the same vein as low-carbers look at high-fructose corn syrup. It must be avoided as much as possible except for maybe the once-in-a-while “treat.” That’s nothing more than utter nonsense and ignorance. What exactly does the Nutritarian Food Pyramid look like? Check it out for yourself:

What a bassackwards food pyramid this is! Equating eggs and meat with processed foods and sweets is being intellectually dishonest. Sure, those non-starchy vegetables are an excellent addition to any diet (including a low-carb one), but why the damnation of foods that are equal in their nutrient density to veggies such as red meat, fish, eggs, oils, and the like? There’s no explanation for this other than the insinuation that consuming these foods that contain saturated fat will lead to serious health consequences down the road. But there is no evidence supporting such a claim. Even still, here comes the kicker–”My Personalized Eating Plan” according to the great purveyors of nutritional truth and wisdom at Whole Foods:

And THERE IT IS! All of this nonsense about how horrible my health is, what the dietary “cause” of my health decline is, what a good diet should look like and all the rest was nothing more than a setup for this moment. The diet they are recommending that I begin eating immediately to overturn the issues associated with my “poor” diet is one that is 96% plants, 3% meat and dairy, and 2% processed foods/snacks. REALLY?!

While technically this isn’t a vegan diet because there are very small amounts of meat allowed on this plan, it might as well be. Meat isn’t a condiment to me–it’s the lifeblood of a healthy low-carb lifestyle change that has given me vibrant health like nothing else I’ve ever done before. I don’t need to consume 96% of my calories from plant sources which includes high-carb whole grains, beans, fruits and all the rest. I’m doing just fine livin’ la vida low-carb. Can I tell you how much this angers me that they would try to pull something so incredibly deceiving to people who will likely buy into it hook, line and sinker? This is disgusting because there is no education about the wonderful nutrients contained in meats or the health consequences for some people who consume carbohydrate-rich foods. That to me is ethically wrong to deliberately withhold information from the consumer that could help them make the most informed decision about their health.

They require a 28-day pledge to doing the following: eating at least one large salad, at least a half-cup of beans/legumes, at least three fresh fruits, at least one ounce of raw nuts/seeds, and at least one large double-sized serving of steamed green vegetables on a daily basis while avoiding the “most harmful food habits” that include eating barbequed, processed meats or commercial red meat, fried foods, full-fat dairy like cheese and butter, soft drinks of all kinds both diet and sugary, and white flour. It sure sounds a whole lot like a vegan diet to me with all of those restrictions on what can be consumed on this diet. They also say to chunk any foods that contain over 200mg sodium per serving and to use a blender to liquify your vegetables to drink. Oh, but they help you come off of your “meat habit” (as Dr. Neal Barnard described it in my podcast interview with him last year) beginning in Day 8 of this 28-Day plan:

Isn’t it interesting how they took great pains to explain that this meal plan isn’t vegan, but then pushed the need to “reduce your intake of animal foods” from your diet? If meat is part of being a “Nutritarian” as they claim, then what’s this concept of “your desire for animal foods (will) diminish over time?” Meat is most certainly NOT a condiment in a healthy diet no matter what Dr. Fuhrman and his lackeys at Whole Foods wants you to believe. Meat is where the REAL nutrition is found and you’re depriving your body of some incredible health benefits by trying to eliminate it from your diet completely. Just ask Lierre Keith or Denise Minger.

By Day 15, they encourage you to “change the focus of your meal from meat to vegetables” and they assure you will get plenty of protein by consuming greens, beans, nuts and seeds. The gradual move to eating “less meat” is in full force by week three of the plan and it reaches the climax by the time you enter the final week of the 28-Day Challenge when “you are eating much less animal foods,” oils, milk/dairy products, sugar, coffee/tea and caffeine, and a whole lot more veggies, fruit, beans, nuts and seeds. Lest you think none of this survey really has anything at all to do with Whole Foods, then you would be sorely mistaken:

Yes, you too can become a “Nutritarian” nerd by hopping in your car and driving to your nearest Whole Fools…Whole Paycheck…er, I mean Whole Foods Market to pick up these books, CDs and DVDs to provide you more vegan-based propaganda to fool you into thinking this is the best option for your health. This partnership Whole Foods has made with the vegan diet is intentional and should ostracize any customer who chooses to eat an animal-based diet. That includes virtually every Paleo and low-carb dieter on the planet. If you ask me, a company that is THIS invested in promoting a dietary agenda like this doesn’t deserve the support of people who disagree with it. They’ve drawn a line in the sand and dug in their heels on trying to make this “Nutritarian” diet the ONLY way for Whole Foods customers to get healthy. We should vote with our dollars about what we think about this and send Whole Foods executives a clear message: YOU’RE NOT PUSHING A VEGAN AGENDA DOWN OUR THROATS!

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Jimmy Moore is the popular blogger, podcaster and author of Livin’ La Vida Low-Carb who lost 180 pounds on the Atkins diet in 2004 and quickly established himself as a highly influential layperson in the field of health and nutrition. His wildly successful Livin’ La Vida Low-Carb Blog has been educating, encouraging and inspiring readers since 2005 and his accompanying iTunes podcast The Livin’ La Vida Low-Carb Show with Jimmy Moore is one of the most listened to health broadcasts online today featuring hundreds of enchanting interviews with the leading voices in the world of diet and healthy living! Jimmy’s latest book compiling all the knowledge he has learned along his journey is called 21 Life Lessons From Livin’ La Vida Low-Carb: How The Health Low-Carb Lifestyle Changed Everything I Thought I Knew. He lives in Spartanburg, SC with his beautiful wife Christine and their four crazy cats!

Posted in Butter, cancer, Cheese, Cholesterol, cholesterol and health, diabetes, Dietary Cholesterol, grains, grass fed beef, health, heart disease, jimmy moore, livin lavida lo-carb, motivation, Nutrition, obesity, Paleo, plant-based diets, real food, red meat, saturated fat, vegetables, Weight Loss, wellness | 1 Comment »

Under the Microscope: Raw versus Pasteurized Milk

Posted by Kevin Brown on March 1, 2011

By Kevin Brown

Originally posted at www.thedietsolution.co.uk

Written by: Sean Croxton http://undergroundwellness.com/

Meet Charles North.

A smooth talker and astute businessman, Mr. North forever altered more than 40,000 years of nutritional wisdom with a new invention and a little fear. The year was 1907, a time when milk was mostly produced by happy grass-fed cows and rightfully consumed in its raw form. With his newly invented batch-processing pasteurization machine in tow, North made it is own personal mission to rid the country of raw milk-induced disease.

The problem was that there was no raw milk disease epidemic. Yet, that did not stop the inventor from traveling through small towns alerting the people of an outbreak of illness in the previous town he had visited. Drinking unpasteurized milk caused the illness. The solution was his machine. The story was fictional.

To the naked eye, milk treated by North’s machine did not appear much different from its raw predecessor. And to the fearful mind, it was safer to consume.

More fiction. Let us take a closer look.

The Grand Designer engineered raw milk with a vital microstructure intended to provide nourishment and to complement proper digestive function. Milk’s structure consists of somewhat of a separation of powers. Its protein and fat components are meant to function independently with little to no interaction. In her book Deep Nutrition: Why Your Genes Need Traditional Food, Cate Shanahan M.D. takes us under the electron microscope to show us a side of milk seldom seen.

“…we can see the casein micelles, which are amazingly complex. Imagine a mound of spaghetti and meatballs formed into a big round ball. The strands of spaghetti are made of protein (casein), and the meatballs are made of the most digestible form of calcium phosphate, which holds the spaghetti strands together in a clump with its tiny magnetic charge. This clumping prevents sugar from reacting with and destroying milk’s essential amino acids.”

Dr. Shanahan goes on to describe the fat globules, each one unique in size and enclosed in their own phospholipid membranes. These membranes are home to various specialized proteins that protect the globule from bacterial infection. Other proteins act like special transit passes, signaling the intestines to absorb the globules without inspection. This feature allows for effortless fat digestion without the assistance of the gallbladder. As long as the fat remains disconnected from the aforementioned casein and calcium, everything runs smoothly. When the components get too close for comfort, it can be a bumpy ride.

After the heat and strain of pasteurization and homogenization, the organized world that was raw milk comes to resemble a war zone. The population of beneficial bacteria that once protected the milk (as well as its consumer) from infection is wiped off the map. The utilitarian structures of the fat globules are destroyed as the homogenization process forces them through microscopic holes. The transit passes that allowed for easy digestion go missing. This slows the digestive process, thus the myriad of digestive disturbances experienced upon consumption of pasteurized milk including gas, bloating, and constipation.

“Processing can render milk highly irritating to the intestinal tract, and such a wide variety of chemical changes may occur that processed milk can lead to diarrhea and constipation. During processing, the nice, soft meatball of colloidal calcium phosphate fuses with the fatty acids to form a kind of milk-fat soap. This reaction, called saponification, irritates many people’s GI tracts and makes the calcium and phosphate much less bioavailable and more difficult to absorb. Processed milks contain anywhere from one-half to one-sixth the bioavailable minerals of the fresh products.”

The heat of pasteurization also denatures amino acids. These damaged proteins remain in the milk where they can become toxic, allergenic, and inflammatory. And if that were not enough, an enzyme called xanthine oxidase can hide within the fat globules, passing intact through the intestinal barrier and into circulation. This is not supposed to happen. In its unpasteurized form, xanthine oxidase is broken down and rendered inactive by the digestive process. When it passes intact into circulation it wreaks havoc on our arteries causing atherosclerosis, as well as free radical damage. Ouch.

Times have changed. And so has our milk. Raw milk was once adorned for its nourishing, immune-building, disease-protective benefits by people the world over. Now it is feared. But what is to be feared is its pasteurized, homogenized, so-called “safer” alternative; a lifeless source of digestive dysfunction, damaged proteins and fats, inferior nutritional value, and clogged arteries. Not to mention the sick cows from which it comes.

One hundred years later, Charles North’s story is still being told. Despite the fact than no outbreak of illness has ever been attributed to raw milk from grass-fed cows, we remain steadfast in our willingness to trade a milk product that causes imaginary illness for one that actually contributes to poor health.

Mr. North would be proud.

Source: Deep Nutrion: Why Your Genes Need Traditional Food by Catherine Shanahan, M.D.

Kevin Brown is President of Liberation Wellness and co-author of the Liberation Diet. He serves as a Fellow on the National Board of Fitness Examiners, and is president of Visionary Trainers. Kevin and his wife Tracy are Chapter leaders for the Weston A. Price foundation, a non-profit organization that is helping restore real food to its rightful place in the American diet.
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Acorn Pancake

Posted by Beck Anderson, RYT 200 on February 26, 2011

Here it is!  The Acorn Pancake recipe I drooled over in the Liberation Wellness Hour.  The recipe tastes much better than a “squash pancake” initially sounds.  I mix large batches so breakfast is a no-brainer because at 5:30 a.m. I’m usually half asleep.  We usually have an egg or bacon or yogurt with it to add more protein and probiotics.

Ingredients:
Medium sized Acorn Squash
3 Eggs
2 – 3 Tb nut butter

Directions:
Bake Squash at 350 for 1 hour.  Deseed and peel squash, mix with eggs and nut butter.  A hand mixer or food processor work really well.  Fry in ghee or other animal fat.

Toppings:
Butter, more nut butter, berries, homemade raw yogurt, honey, maple syrup, nuts or seeds and more!

Recipe courtesy of GAPS, Dr. Natasha Campbell-McBride.

 

 

Beck Anderson, RYT200 is a Certified Nutritionist and Registered Yoga teacher in the Menominee, Michigan and Green Bay, Wisconsin area. Via phone, she has been able to help clients achieve their personal health goals. Visit Wellness Hammock for more information. Twitter. Facebook.

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Journalist David Gumpert Says The Battle Over Raw Milk Goes Much Deeper Than Milk

Posted by Jimmy Moore on February 22, 2011

In Episode 446 of “The Livin’ La Vida Low-Carb Show with Jimmy Moore,” we welcome to the show two very special guests to share about the work they are doing to promote health living. First up is a mini-interview with a former guest named Adam Kosloff who has written a new e-book entitled The Low-Carber’s Survival Guide. He’ll go into further detail about why he wrote this e-book and what he hopes people will get out of it. Then in the primary interview, we’ll hear from David Gumpert talking about his fantastic book The Raw Milk Revolution: Behind America’s Emerging Battle Over Food Rights (read my review here). What you’ll quickly realize as you listen to David speak is that this ongoing debate over raw milk goes much deeper than milk!

Listen to David Gumpert describe his vantage point in the raw milk debate:

  • Why he got interested in the intersection between health and business
  • How all the raids on small farms over unpasteurized milk caught his attention
  • How he became so jaded by the actions of the Food & Drug Administration (FDA)
  • What the possible motivation is for the FDA opposing real foods like raw milk
  • The tremendous growth in the raw milk market share in recent years
  • What the pasteurization and homogenization process does to the milk
  • The extreme processing that goes into creating grocery store milk
  • Why whole milk sold in stores isn’t the same as whole raw milk from the cow
  • Why milk in stores usually comes from a mixture of 100 cows
  • The dramatic difference in the taste and look of real food
  • His interaction with the famous real foods farmer Joel Salatin
  • Why raw milk is more of a “proxy issue” for the overall food rights debate
  • Some of the most horrific stories of the raids on farms in the middle of the night
  • The outrageous comments made by judges regarding raw milk/real food rights
  • How the raw milk movement is continuing to grow despite opposition
  • The health benefits of consuming raw vs. pasteurized dairy
  • Why there is a lack of research in the United States conducted on raw milk
  • What average people can do to make a real difference with this issue
  • Why people need to get involved politically to bring about change
  • The importance of buying more food from local farmers than the grocery store
  • How raw milk cheese is the next front in the battle over raw milk

    There are three ways you can listen to Episode 446:

    1. Listen at the iTunes page for the podcast:

    2. Listen and comment about the show at the official web site for the podcast:

    3. Download the MP3 file of Episode 446 [46:39m]:

    THANK YOU SO MUCH FOR FINANCIALLY SUPPORTING THIS PODCAST! If these twice-weekly podcast interviews from the most provocative and thought-provoking diet, fitness, and health experts have helped you in any way over the past few months and years, then help us keep it going by clicking on the DONATE button on the official podcast web site. We love making these exclusive interviews available to you at no charge so that the positive low-carb message can get out there to the people who need to hear it the most. We are so grateful for your generous donations of any amount so we can keep this going all throughout 2011 and well beyond. I have a fantastic group of fresh new expert interview guests lined up for your listening enjoyment and can’t wait for you to hear them in the coming months! Go to PayPal.com and you can give your gift to the e-mail address livinlowcarbman@charter.net. Your continued financial support and listenership is essential and we THANK YOU so very much for your support!

    What did you think about what you heard from David Gumpert regarding the fight over real food rights in America centered around raw milk? Tell us how this interview impacted you in the show notes section of Episode 446. Pick up your own copy of The Raw Milk Revolution, check out the official web site of David Gumpert, and get engaged in his “The Complete Patient” blog. Coming up on Thursday, I’m so excited to share with you a special episode highlighting a double-feature with two of the most prominent rising young stars in the real food/low-carb world who are seeking to bring healthy eating to the peers and the rest of the world. Birke Baehr, who will turn 12 years old on Thursday when this podcast airs, will be here to share about how he got so interested in real food living–including his awesome TEDx NextGeneration Asheville speech in 2010. Then we’ll hear from high school senior Sarah Czipowski who you’ll find to be one of the most articulate and outspoken 17-year olds you’ll ever hear on the subject of nutrition and health! I am so thrilled to be able to bring you Birke and Sarah later this week.

    If you have something to share about what you heard on “The Livin’ La Vida Low-Carb Show,” then drop us an e-mail at our dedicated podcast e-mail address–LLVLCShow@gmail.com. We’d love to hear from you about what you think about the show, interview guest suggestions (although keep in mind I’m fully booked up through October 2011), show topics, and anything else you want to share!

    If you love this podcast, then we personally invite you to become a member of “The Livin’ La Vida Low-Carb Show Fan Club!” Get special behind-the-scenes access to your favorite podcast, including the highly-coveted transcripts of past interviews, audio snippets of upcoming podcasts, see who I have scheduled for interviews and the ability to have me ask them YOUR questions, and so much more! It’s exclusive material for you uber-fans of “The Livin’ La Vida Low-Carb Show” and I appreciate your support of my work. In fact, we just uploaded a whole bunch of PREVIEW audio of the upcoming interviews in the coming months, including a special full-length episode of my upcoming new podcast “Low-Carb Conversations With Jimmy Moore & Friends.” And my very heavy recording schedule for March will be posted later this week with the interviews that will air during the summer (get your questions in early for these guests). SIGN UP TODAY!

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    Jimmy Moore is the popular blogger, podcaster and author of Livin’ La Vida Low-Carb who lost 180 pounds on the Atkins diet in 2004 and quickly established himself as a highly influential layperson in the field of health and nutrition. His wildly successful Livin’ La Vida Low-Carb Blog has been educating, encouraging and inspiring readers since 2005 and his accompanying iTunes podcast The Livin’ La Vida Low-Carb Show with Jimmy Moore is one of the most listened to health broadcasts online today featuring hundreds of enchanting interviews with the leading voices in the world of diet and healthy living! Jimmy’s latest book compiling all the knowledge he has learned along his journey is called 21 Life Lessons From Livin’ La Vida Low-Carb: How The Health Low-Carb Lifestyle Changed Everything I Thought I Knew. He lives in Spartanburg, SC with his beautiful wife Christine and their four crazy cats!

  • Posted in Big Agriculture, Butter, Cheese, farm fresh, FDA, fresh and local, government, health, homogenization, jimmy moore, livin lavida lo-carb, Local Foods, low fat dairy, Media, Money, motivation, Nutrition, pasteurization, processed food, raw milk, real food, real foods, saturated fat, wellness, Weston A. Price Foundation | Leave a Comment »

    Poached Pears

    Posted by Beck Anderson, RYT 200 on February 21, 2011

    No reason to feel guilty for indulging in dessert: all ingredients are real food comprised of healthy fats, fruit and a real seetener.

    Prep time: 5 minutes
    Cook time: 10 minutes

    ingredients
    2-3 Pears
    Butter
    handful of Walnuts (properly prepared)
    a dash of real Maple Syrup
    Cream or Whipping Cream

    directions
    Cut pears into chunks and sauté with plenty of butter and maple syrup.  Serve warm with nuts and cream sprinkled over the top.

    Beck Anderson, RYT200 is a Certified Nutritionist and Registered Yoga teacher in the Menominee, Michigan and Green Bay, Wisconsin area. Via phone, she has been able to help clients achieve their personal health goals. Visit Wellness Hammock for more information. Twitter. Facebook.

    Posted in Butter, real food, real foods, recipes, saturated fat, Sprouted Nuts | 3 Comments »

    Low-Carb News & Health Headlines For February 2011

    Posted by Jimmy Moore on February 16, 2011

    One of the pleasures of doing my job of blogging and podcasting about the healthy low-carb lifestyle is my constant daily exposure to all the health media that exists today. Just type in “health” in a Google search and you’ll find over 1.5 billion results in less than a second. “Diet” gives you another 278 million results and even “low-carb” garners over 9 million. Information is everywhere at our fingertips, but trying to cut through it all can be overwhelming for a lot of people. Who can you trust? What can you believe is accurate versus who’s just trying to sell me something to make a buck?

    I admit it’s not and easy task trying to figure it all out, but there’s one thing I always do to help remind myself about what is most important–if what is being shared in a magazine article, newspaper column, or television report doesn’t match up with what I know to be true based on the facts as I know them, then I’m immediately skeptical and will do my own investigation. Too often people become trustworthy of others by buying into a health headline as the gospel truth without doing their own due diligence to verify that what they are saying is true. One of my readers e-mailed me about this yesterday stating his theory that we’ve lost the “skill of critical thinking” because of our inadequate public education (he recommended the book The Underground History of American Public Education for evidence of this).

    Perhaps that’s somewhat true that as a culture we’d rather be told what to believe rather than spending the time to investigate it ourselves. Or maybe our lives have become so encompassed in just doing the day to day stuff of life that we can’t possibly try to go behind everything we read somewhere, hear on the radio or watch on television to make sure it’s right. Regardless of our reasons for being this way, I do think we have a responsibility to question any source of information that seems out of place or that doesn’t make sense based on our own life’s experiences. It’s why I try to read any low-carb news and health headline looking at it through the prism of what has made me who I am. Even if I agree with the information presented in a news story about health, I try to double check everything and make sure it is on the up and up. Don’t take my word for it–see for yourself if what I’m sharing matches up with what you know to be true and act accordingly. It’s this rebirth of cognitive thinking that will help bring low-carb nutrition to the forefront again.

    Here are some low-carb news & health headlines for February 2011 to help get you started:

  • Have you seen what they’re doing in Canada to promote healthy living this year? The Canadian Broadcasting Corporation (CBC) is pushing a project called Live Right Now designed to help show how “Canadians can live a healthier lifestyle.” Well, there’s nothing wrong with that, right? Not exactly. You see, one of the new television shows they are pumping out to the public is called Village on a Diet featuring the people of Taylor, British Columbia attempting to change their lifestyle with the help of a dietitian, a chef, a psychologist, two personal trainers and a medical doctor. It all sounds innocent enough. But as this brilliant opinion piece from Margaret Wente explains, this show just “pretends that all you need to lose weight is a lot more exercise, a healthier diet and a dose of good old-fashioned will power.” In other words, it’s The Biggest Loser redux (see for yourself in this promo video). One of my Canadian readers noted that “these poor people in this village are being subjected to a high carb (near vegetarian) diet. The chef is preparing meals with chick peas, tofu, etc. and several people are complaining because they’re not losing weight.” It’s tragic! A BETTER exhibition of how a Canadian community could lose weight and get healthy effortlessly is the 2008 CBC Newsworld documentary My Big Fat Diet from filmmaker Mary Bissell and low-carb researcher Dr. Jay Wortman. We certainly need a lot more projects like this one instead of more high-carb, low-fat diets combined with the exercise-’til-you-drop approach. Take a look at Dr. Wortman’s reaction to Village On A Diet.
  • I found this column on Everyday Health outlining the “8 Keys To Low-Carb Eating” which was kinda interesting. There were some pretty good tips like “all carbs are not equal,” “eat protein at every meal,” and “avoid processed food…especially those that contain high-fructose corn syrup.” But there was also a lot of really bad advice like “limit saturated…fats, such as butter, animal fats,” “don’t cut out…all breads or dessert,” and “do some sort of exercise, such as walking, every day.” While I’m sure this column derived from Woman’s Day means well with the advice given, it’s just too conflicting with what we know to be accurate for people who are livin’ la vida low-carb.
  • Have you heard about this study on a potential “cure” for Type 1 diabetes from University of Texas Southwestern Medical Center? By eliminating or greatly diminishing the role of glucagon, it controls high blood sugar levels in Type 1 diabetics without the need for insulin which is currently the primary way to treat it. While this is exciting research, it is only focused on mice and is questionable whether these findings can be extrapolated to humans. But according to the report on this study in ScienceDaily, it appears that glucagon plays a much greater role in this than insulin. This is something worth paying more attention to as more research is conducted.
  • I absolutely love and adore Dana Carpender because she’s not afraid to tell you exactly what she thinks about her own personal low-carb lifestyle–and that even includes explaining “Why I’m Not A Purist.” You go Dana! I’ve long been subjected to the smug sneers and judgment of people who think my diet should look a certain way over the years and that if I do it any differently than what they call for that I’m not a genuine low-carber. It’s absurd to force what you think is right about diet on anyone–simply present your case and share the evidence you have in support for what you are claiming, but don’t mandate it on them as an ultimatum. That’s the way I think is most effective at getting your point across and then respecting the decision made by the individual. Get more common sense wisdom about low-carb living from Dana Carpender on her brand new (and blazing hot!) podcast “Dana’s Low-Carb For Life!”
  • The boo birds about the new USDA 2010 Dietary Guidelines are out in force and continue in this Minneapolis-St. Paul, Minnesota-based Star Tribune column from Paul John Scott where he makes the case that Americans have been too trusting about what they’ve been told is healthy for them to eat. He notes that more of the same bad advice just “isn’t going to work” and that we need to fire up the spirt of people like the late Jack LaLanne if we’re gonna get serious about weight and health in America. Scott acknowledges the work of people like Gary Taubes to help shift this paradigm back in the right direction and that it’s only a matter of time before the preponderance of the evidence becomes much too significant to ignore. AMEN! Don’t miss registered nurse Jackie Eberstein’s take on the new Guidelines.
  • One in nine adults around the world are currently obese which is DOUBLE what it was in 1980. That adds up to over a half billion clinically obese adults walking around right now according to a report by the World Health Organization (WHO). Of course, they’re using body mass index (BMI) as the measuring stick for determining if someone is “obese” or not and these statistics don’t even take into account the people who are “metabolically obese normal weight” as Dr. Mary Vernon puts it. So I kinda take statistics like these from WHO with a grain of salt with the caveat that it’s not just how much people weigh but the state of their health that matters most (blood lipids, blood glucose levels, Vitamin D levels, etc.). And measuring that is a bit more tricky than doing a simple BMI statistical analysis.
  • It’s so good to have Dr. Kurt Harris back blogging again after some gentle prodding from me during his “Encore Week” podcast interview last month. This man is one of the more brilliant thinkers on diet and health in the low-carb/Paleo blogosphere and we’re all better off learning from his insights when he’s sharing them early and often. That’s not to say that everything he is sharing I necessarily agree with–but he certainly will make you think about what you believe. Case in point is his recent post “No Such thing as a macronutrient part II – Carbohydrates” where he makes the claim that “glucose and starch in the DIET are not poisons in a healthy human.” Hmmmm. He goes on to say that gluten grains are much worse for your health than legumes/starchy carbohydrates and that staying out of ketosis and keeping your glycogen stores topped off is ideal (a la the concepts promoted by Paul Jaminet who is my podcast interview guest coming up on March 7, 2011). Give it a read and share what you think!
  • Portion control has come on strong as the new dietary trend being promoted by so-called health “experts” around the world. We heard it from the minions at the USDA during their press conference about the new Dietary Guidelines and now their UK equivalent is getting in on the act. The Food Standards Agency recently conducted a food survey detailing that portion sizes have grown exponentially compared to just twenty years ago. They note in the article that everyone should be using their hand to determine if the amount of food they are eating is appropriate or not. HOGWASH! Find foods that will satisfy your hunger, nourish your body, and give you enjoyment at appropriate portion levels and this whole portion control nonsense is a moot point. That’s why eating a healthy high-fat, moderate protein, low-carb diet works so well because the portion control is built-in naturally to the foods you are consuming. When we take the focus off of arbitrary portion control, then perhaps we could make a dent in both the amount and kinds of foods people are consuming.
  • Weight loss is really all about “calories in, calories out,” right? That’s what the really smart people talking about health keep telling us all the time, so it must be true. They’ve convinced people like Sonja Rose who wrote this column last week about a bogus study from Harvard researcher Frank Sacks which I blogged about two years ago (and don’t miss my two follow-up posts calling out Dr. David Katz for his comments on this study as well as the genius analysis of this study done by Dr. Richard Feinman). The calorie hypothesis continues to be perpetuated despite evidence that proves total calories aren’t as important as the quality of those calories. Nevertheless, you’ll get a kick out of the USDA chart of daily calorie consumption recommendations that Sonja shares. How close does it come to the actual number of calories YOU eat?
  • Well shazam! It seems we really have been lied to about “cholesterol-lowering” statin drugs according to this study published in the Texas Heart Institute Journal. Researchers out of Seoul, South Korea concluded that regardless of whether an individual has been diagnosed with coronary artery disease (CAD) or not, statin therapy does not decrease the proportion of small, dense LDL…but in fact increases it.” Perhaps this is why those statin drug commercials that seemingly run every other ad on television these days never mention LDL particle size measured in tests like the NMR Lipoprofile. Unfortunately, most doctors are still clueless about understanding cholesterol. It seems our friend Justin Smith is right when he says they have $29 billion reasons to lie about what these drugs are actually doing!
  • Did you know that being vegan could put your heart health at risk according to a new study published in the Journal of Agricultural and Food Chemistry. Chinese researchers found that a diet devoid of animal fats leave the cardiovascular health of people who eat that way at risk. Low HDL cholesterol and high levels of homocysteine are the primary culprits in this elevated risk of cardiovascular problems. The lack of omega-3 fats and Vitamin B-12 in a vegan nutritional approach is what will “undermine the whole thing.” Well it’s about time somebody exposed the genuine deficiencies in the vegan diet with all the negative press about the health impact of high-fat, low-carb diets that’s been thrown around out there over the years. These issues aren’t anything new thanks to former vegans like Lierre Keith trumpeting the cause for consuming more animal-based foods.
  • Wanna hear something pretty wicked? Check out the latest cancer screening technology called Single-Photon Emission Computerized Tomography (SPECT) which can detect a tumor as small as two millimeters rendering the standard and very expensive PET scan obsolete. The biotechnology company Cell>Point says the patient is injected with (get this!) SUGAR along with some radioactive isotopes because the “cancer cells are attracted to the sugar, so they eat it up.” WOW! We’ve long known that sugar is one of the worst possible things a person with cancer could ingest because it literally “feeds” the cancer cells, but here’s new technology using that fact as a means of helping doctors locate cancer faster. I’m thankful that this technology was created, but I’d love to see stronger recommendations by public health officials about giving up sugar and starchy carbohydrates as a means for preventing cancer. You would think they would put two and two together at some point. They should take a look at the research of people like Dr. Thomas Seyfried at Boston College if they truly care about this indelible connection between carbs and cancer.
  • We’ve always heard that butter will kill you, but a Sicilian couple took that to the next level recently. They suffocated the woman’s ex-husband with butter and told police he died in a drunken stupor thinking the butter would all melt away. But they didn’t realize that remnants of the butter would show up in the man’s airways. BUSTED! I don’t know why this story intrigued me, but it did.
  • Do you trust the scientific method for gathering evidence in support for or against a hypothesis? That’s what Jonah Lehrer at The New Yorker wanted to know in his column “The Truth Wears Off: Is There Something Wrong With The Scientific Method?” His thesis is that so many studies begin to look increasingly irrelevant as future research debunks many of the findings of the original experiment. Lehrer notes that there seems to be something happening that pushes researchers into noticing patterns in their data that don’t actually exist. This is a curious observation on his part in light of what has happened historically in nutritional science. Take, for example, Ancel Keys who saw patterns in his data that told him that saturated fat consumption leads to heart disease back in the 1960s. If he were still alive today, I wonder if he’d still see that correlation in light of all the new science that has emerged in the half-decade since. One would think he would if for no other reason than to save face for hedging his entire career on it!
  • Have you heard all the buzz about how drinking diet soda will increase your heart attack risk lately? Although I gave up my desire for diet soda in May 2010, I still think studies like this are ridiculous. How do they know it’s the diet soda of all things that led to the greater risk of a stroke or heart attack? The truth is they don’t. Interestingly, the American Dietetic Association weighed in on this research stating “to suggest that they are harmful with no credible evidence does a disservice to those trying to lose weight or maintain a healthy weight.” I tend to agree with them (for the first time ever!) and would hope this would be looked into more closely. Getting off of aspartame is definitely a positive that most anyone drinking diet soda should strive for, though.
  • The evidence is growing in support of the benefits of engaging in exercise in a fasted state. This study published in the February 2011 issue of American Society For Nutrition found that dietary protein digestion and absorption is enhanced by exercise prior to consumption by their elderly study participants. In fact, this is still an open randomized, double blind clinical trial looking for new patients seeking to observe the condition known as sarcopenia, or the loss of lean muscle mass. I’ll be interested in seeing more results from this research in the coming years.
  • Have you ever wanted to educate yourself better on all the various sugars and sugar alternatives out there? Then you need to read “The Many Faces Of Sugar” for so much information on this subject your head will explode! ENJOY!
  • I’m sure Dr. Robert Lustig will be smiling when he hears the details about this studypublished in the March 2011 issue of Diabetes, Obesity and Metabolism concluding that fructose really is a lot worse for your brain health than glucose. According to this Chicago Tribune column about the study, the leader researcher Dr. John Purnell at Oregon Health and Science University showed that the brain responds very differently to the introduction of fructose into the body compared with glucose–glucose raises neural activity for upwards of 20 minutes after it is infused compared with fructose DECREASING neural activity for a similar amount of time. The control substance saline had no impact at all. This is really intriguing as we seek to determine whether or not it’s the KIND of sugar your body responds to or just sugar in general.
  • Did you hear about Miss San Antonio Domonique Ramirez getting stripped of her crown last week? The pageant board accused her of “gaining excessive weight” among several other indiscretions. Yep, they said she was getting to be too fat and the spokewoman even went so far as to say Ramirez needed to “get off the tacos, get off the chips and the soda” stating these foods were “what these kids eat” at the age of 17. Gee, that’s kinda harsh! And get this–she’s 5’8″ tall, weighs 129 pounds and is a size 2! Oh yeah, that’s just horribly obese. Sheez! Ramirez is fighting to keep her crown. GOOD FOR HER! And we wonder why young girls have such a complex about their weight.
  • Wanna live to be 100 years old? Then eat a cheeseburger every single day according to New Zealand centurion Catherine Reddoch. She’s been doing this for 20 years straight! This was pretty hilarious in light of all the hysteria about consuming dietary fat leading to a shorter life. Forget about the focus on McDonald’s they had in the story, it’s cool this awesome lady would say she doesn’t care about all the hysteria about what she should be eating. She said she thinks she should weigh more than she does…but she doesn’t. Gee, I wonder why?
  • Oh no! I’ve been missing out on getting carbs into my active lifestyle after all this time because Active People Need Their Carbs, Too. The sports nutrition “expert” quoted in this column says you’re depriving your muscles of fuel when you restrict carbohydrates like bread, cereal, rice, pasta and potatoes. Really? We’re back to that argument again? This ignorant “expert” goes on to explain that someone wanting to exercise should load up on 50-100g carbs within a couple of hours of engaging in it coming from foods like granola bars, fruit, whole grain toast with peanut butter and jelly, fruit smoothies, or a bowl of cereal with milk. Then when the exercise is finished, she wants you to eat even MORE carbohydrates to “refuel for your workout the next day.” REALLY? Uh, okay. NOT! I haven’t eaten that many carbohydrates in one sitting in a very long time and I workout quite often engaging in resistance training, interval training, competitive volleyball, and yoga. Never do I feel the need to carb up before or after these activities because I’ve trained my body to use fat for fuel in the absence of carbs in my diet. That’s the way the body can function optimally even at high-performance levels. This sports nutritionist should ask Swedish athlete Jonas Colting about her flim-flam theories on carbohydrates!
  • THANK YOU Time magazine for telling me how to live longer: Switch to a whole grains diet! Yeah right! According to a new study published in the February 14, 2011 issue of Archives Of Internal Medicine, a high-fiber diet is needed to reduce the risk of death from heart disease, infectious or respiratory diseases, or really any cause. They found a 22 percent decrease in the risk for those people who consumed 25+ grams of dietary fiber daily. This fiber business is quite controversial within health circles, even in the low-carb community. I do think it’s been overblown as something necessary when you’re on a healthy low-carb lifestyle as we heard from Fiber Menace author Konstantin Monastyrsky on my podcast in November 2008.

    How’s that for a low-carb news and health headlines update? Got anything interesting about diet, nutrition and healthy living you’d like to share with me. Send me the link anytime to livinlowcarbman@charter.net. THANKS for helping me stay on top of all the very latest information about health!

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    Jimmy Moore is the popular blogger, podcaster and author of Livin’ La Vida Low-Carb who lost 180 pounds on the Atkins diet in 2004 and quickly established himself as a highly influential layperson in the field of health and nutrition. His wildly successful Livin’ La Vida Low-Carb Blog has been educating, encouraging and inspiring readers since 2005 and his accompanying iTunes podcast The Livin’ La Vida Low-Carb Show with Jimmy Moore is one of the most listened to health broadcasts online today featuring hundreds of enchanting interviews with the leading voices in the world of diet and healthy living! Jimmy’s latest book compiling all the knowledge he has learned along his journey is called 21 Life Lessons From Livin’ La Vida Low-Carb: How The Health Low-Carb Lifestyle Changed Everything I Thought I Knew. He lives in Spartanburg, SC with his beautiful wife Christine and their four crazy cats!

  • Posted in Butter, cancer, Cholesterol, cholesterol and health, Food Addiction, government, grains, heart disease, insulin, jimmy moore, livin lavida lo-carb, longevity, Media, Nutrition, obesity, saturated fat, Weight Loss | 2 Comments »

    My Apology and the Truth

    Posted by Annette Presley on February 12, 2011

    I apologize to everyone who has struggled with their weight. I spent fourteen years blaming you for being lazy and gluttonous and then I gave you advice that just made you heavier and more miserable and then I blamed you again when my advice didn’t work. I’m truly sorry for believing the lies myself and then passing them on to you. Now that I know better, I want to set the record straight about some things and liberate you from false beliefs.

    1.   Overweight and obese people are not lazy gluttons. Eating too much and exercising too little does not cause obesity, they are side effects of gaining weight. The more weight you carry, the more fuel you need to feed it and the less inclined you are to exercise because of the need to fuel the excess weight. The good news is that you are not eating too much and exercising too little.

    2. Genetics does play a role in weight, so you do not have 100% control over it. Your genes determine where you accumulate fat and how thin it is possible for you to be. Not everyone can achieve a size 2 and not everyone can get to a size 16. Naturally, we all want the genes that prevent us from getting fat, but the bad news is that genes are not fair. Some of us have genes that keep us from getting fat and some of us have genes that make it super easy for us to get fat. For some, trying to achieve the supermodel look will only lead to failure, depression and more weight gain. For women, some will have nice voluptuous breasts and others will have not so nice voluptuous hips or bellies. That’s life, it’s not always fair.

    3.  The diet advice from the ‘nutrition authorities’ over the past 25 plus years has contributed to expanding waistlines in both children and adults. The low fat, food guide pyramid diet has also contributed to heart disease, diabetes, metabolic syndrome and cancer. The bad news is that you’ve been lied to all your life about how to maintain a reasonable weight and following the bad advice has made it easy for you to gain weight and difficult for you to lose weight.

    4.   Diet plays a significant role in weight management. The good news is that there is something you can do to improve your weight, but it involves a complete change in the way you think about weight, food and activity. It’s obvious from both science and observation that the low fat, high carbohydrate diet (food guide pyramid) has led to obesity, so it makes sense, and science confirms it, that doing the opposite might reverse the damage. If you want to know more about the science, I highly recommend the book Why We Get Fat and What To Do About It by Gary Taubes. Taubes does an excellent job at presenting the science in a very clear, understandable and straightforward way. Carbohydrates drive insulin and insulin is the only hormone in the body that causes you to store fat. There are also other hormones and enzymes that play a role in weight management, too, so if you struggle with weight, it would be a good idea to have your hormone levels checked as well as your thyroid. Getting those things under control will help you lose weight. Cutting down on the carbohydrates, particularly starchy vegetables such as potatoes, peas and corn, grains and sugars will reduce insulin levels and therefore reduce the amount of fat stored in your body.

    5. Exercise will not help you lose weight. The good news is you don’t have to bust your butt at the gym anymore. Exercise does have other benefits so don’t sit on the couch all day, but it will not help with weight loss. Too much exercise, in fact, can make it harder for you to lose weight because it increases appetite, particularly for carbohydrate rich foods; you will just end up eating more and storing more fat.

    The only way to lose weight and keep it off is to reduce the amount of carbohydrates you eat such as starchy vegetables, grains and sugars. You can eat as much protein and fat as you want which may sound too good to be true, but it is. Next time I’ll give you some steps to take on making the switch from high carb to low carb.

    There is hope, so stop beating yourself up and don’t take a beating from anyone else, either.

    Annette Presley RD LD, Chief Nutritionist for Liberation Wellness

    Annette has been a registered dietitian for over 19 years and discovered several years ago that every thing she learned in school was wrong and the nutrition advice we dispense in this country actually causes heart disease, cancer, diabetes and obesity.  She is now dedicating her life to getting the truth out so people can live a truly healthy life.  She is founder of Find Your Weigh online at findyourweigh.com.

    Disclaimer: Annette Presley RD LD provides nutrition advice and counseling regarding lipid disorders that is not universally accepted as evidenced-based practice in dietetics.  This nutrition advice is neither sponsored, endorsed, approved nor recommended either by the United States Department of Agriculture (USDA), Food and Drug Administration (FDA), National Institutes of Health (NIH) or the American Dietetic Association.  As such, prior to beginning nutrition counseling with or suggested by Annette Presley RD LD, it is strongly recommended that you consult your physician.

    Posted in Artherosclerosis, blood cholesterol, Blood Serum Cholesterol, Butter, cancer, Cheese, Cholesterol, diabetes, exercise, Family Wellness, Fear, government, grains, health, heart disease, insulin, liberation diet, liberation fitness, liberation wellness, longevity, Nutrition, obesity, saturated fat | 3 Comments »

    The Evolution of Home Schooling

    Posted by Kevin Brown on February 10, 2011

    Anne Gebhardt’s kids are learning about geography — in her dining room in Bedford, Texas. It’s not your typical schoolhouse, but it’s one that Gebhardt says is serving her six children well. “We can teach our religious values to our children freely,” says Gebhardt. “We can teach anything that we want.” Gebhardt is part of a growing trend. Across the county, an estimated 1.5 million children are home schooled and that number’s growing. In the span of eight years, home schooling has grown nationally by almost 75 percent. The reasons parents choose to home school vary. According to the National Center for Education Statistics, 36 percent of home schooled children stay at home for religious reasons.

    Twenty one percent don’t like the environment in traditional schools. Another 17 percent are home schooled because their parents are dissatisfied with the academic instruction that’s available to them in traditional schools. “We’ve become more experimental about the way we offer education to children,” says David Chard, Dean of the School of Education and Human Development at Southern Methodist University. “Many parents are able to provide strong educational opportunity for kids,” he added. But it’s not all about reading, writing and arithmetic. Chard said he worries home schooled students may be lacking in less tangible subjects, things like developing social or coping skills. Programs have sprung up over the years to help with that.

    In Texas, the state with the largest number of home schooled kids, there are athletic leagues and learning “co-ops” where kids may attend classes with other children on a variety of subjects. John Manning helps organize the Home School Athletic Association in Dallas. He says the group has grown by leaps and bounds over the past decade, not just because the number of home schooled students has increased, but also because most parents realize the need for this kind of activity. “What’s important to us,” says Manning, “is to try to provide opportunities that kids in any school, public or private, have.” One of Anne Gebhardt’s kids says she feels anything but deprived. Eighteen year old Meghan Gebhardt graduated from home school last year and has been taking online college classes while planning her next move. She said she feels like her education was better than what she could have received in any traditional school, public or private. “The parent, because she knows the kids, she knows how they learn,” Meghan Gebhardt said. “She can shape the way she teaches so they can learn better.”

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