Posts Tagged ‘liberation diet’
Posted by Kevin Brown on April 30, 2012

Partial but very important truth about one of biggest problems in the American Diet/
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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Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged: kevin brown, liberation diet, liberation wellness, sugar, Weston A. Price Foundation | Leave a Comment »
Posted by Kevin Brown on April 13, 2012
Join us at Turkey Hill Farm for these engaging and enriching upcoming events!
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A New Season, A New Roster of Great Events!
At Turkey Hill Farm, we look at each season as an opportunity to learn and engage with our world in a new way. This spring, we’re exploring how the farm and field can sustain our bodies, how the natural world provides bounty for the eyes and souls, and how our changing times offer us new opportunities to engage with each other and the planet. We hope you’ll join us for a shared experience that will enrich us all. Pre-registration is required for all events, and space is limited. For more information or to register, please call Stuart and Margaret at 802-728-7064 or send us an email. We look forward to hearing from you.
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Broth Making, Crème Fraiche and Grain Preparation for Optimal Nutrition and Digestion
Sat April 14th, 10:00 am – 1:30 pm
Join Margaret in The Farmer’s Kitchen to learn the art of making a delicious chicken broth that will heal the body and soul, as well as a simple technique for cooking the most succulent chicken imaginable. We’ll complement this by creating the European-style sour cream called creme fraiche and utilize the whey from the process to soak and prepare grains for optimal nutrition and digestion. The result? A delicious, nutrition-packed lunch enjoyed by us all. Tuition is $60 and includes all ingredients, lunch, take home recipes, and a packet of culture.
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Living Resiliently in Turbulent Times
A Presentation/Workshop with
Carolyn Baker
Sun April 29th, 3-5 pm with a Potluck to follow
We are living in uncertain, turbulent times. Many of us are anxious about how we will navigate through increasingly unstable economic and social structures, or how we’ll prepare for an era unlike anything we have ever experienced. Through a combination of mythical storytelling, discussion, mindfulness practices in nature, and practical tools for cultivating resilience, you’ll learn strategies to empower yourself to feel resourceful and grounded in an uncertain future, create a sense of inner peace, forge a contemplative relationship with nature, and connect with other like-minded people who share your concerns and passions. Carolyn’s visits to Turkey Hill Farm are always popular, and space is limited. The cost of attendance is $10. We suggest you get in touch as soon as possible to reserve your space.
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Wild Foods: Gathering and Preparing an In-Season, Wild-Crafted Lunch
Sat May 12th, 10:00 am – 3:00 pm
This popular class focuses on what is in season in the forest, on the farm, and in the garden. We introduce how to safely identify and respectfully harvest wild foods, talk about the health benefits of these plants as ingredients, and prepare a delicious and creative lunch from the bounty that the edible landscape has to offer. Get back to your culinary roots (literally)! This class is held rain or shine, so please dress for the elements. Tuition is $65 per person. If, however, you’d like to register with your mom as a Mother’s Day outing, we’ll be happy to reduce the registration cost to $55 for each of you. Please register early, as class size is smaller than usual for this active and engaging class.
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In Other News
Unfortunately, our May 6th gathering of the Weston A. Price Foundation needs to be canceled. Instead, join Margaret that day for a fantastic workshop at City Market in Burlington – she’ll be creating an appetizer, main course, and dessert made with wild-crafted ingredients. Visit City Market for all the details. We’ll keep you updated on future Weston A. Price Foundation meetings as they are scheduled.
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Posted in add, Alzheimer's, Ancel Keys, Artherosclerosis, bees, Big Agriculture, big pharma, blood cholesterol, Blood Serum Cholesterol, blood sugar, Cheese, Chef, Cholesterol, cholesterol and health, Christian, Christine Kennedy, Chylomicron, Cinnamon, coconut, coconut oil, cod liver oil, Congress, exercise, faith, Family Wellness, FDA, Food freedom, grains, grass fed beef, gums, HDL, health, heart disease, LDL, liberation diet, liberation wellness, lobbying, Nutrition, raw milk, VLDL, weston price | Tagged: annette presley, antibiotic, bacteria, bible, cancer, cholesterol, Diet, disease, Events, exercise, fda, food, Food and Drug Administration, germ theory, god, health, healthcare, healthy-living, kevin brown, liberation diet, liberation fitness, liberation wellness hour, maureen diaz, motivation, Nutrition, obesity, outdoors, Pasteur, pharmaceuticals, restaurants, soy, sugar, Travel, United States, vacation, vaccine, visionary trainers, wapf, Weight Loss, Weston A. Price Foundation, Women With Dreams | Leave a Comment »
Posted by Kevin Brown on January 4, 2012
The power of putting your intentions “out there.”
Today marks my 1 year “anniversary” as a blogger! I started my first post with a list of five goals for the past year and I when I went back to look at them, I realized that I did accomplish most of them. In some cases I exceeded my goals. Before I can put my new goals out there, I feel like I need to express some gratitude for the people who helped me this past year and reflect on what I have learned in the process.
So, in abbreviated form, here’s what I put “out there” for last year:
1. Lose 10 pounds– did this and more. Lost about 15- 20 pounds in last yr and saw body fat % drop by about 1/
3. What worked for me was saying it to others, finding a supportive gym community (thanks all the peeps at O2 Fitness! And the body pump and pilates crew. And thanks Kat for believing in me during some personal training sessions early in the year), continuing to find some new challenge to shake things up when I hit a plateau (Thanks Ramblin Rose and the two triathlons that I did but would never have thought I could do!, Dr. Stew and Total Body Fitness, Terrance and bootcamp), the midnight run ladies (you know who you are… the fun faces I meet at the corner really early when it is still dark and push me to run when I sometimes would rather be sleeping!) and really walking the eating walk of putting the right foods into my body (Thanks Dr. Cowan for suggesting Liberation Diet, and thanks Kevin Brown for your encouragement also).
2. Keep learning about traditional food preparation– because this is not as “measurable” a goal, it is hard to say but I count this as a “win” because I keep doing that every day. I had no idea that I would start in the Natural Chef Program at Central Carolina Community College this past year, but because I knew I was looking for ways to strengthen my culinary skills, it just felt right to jump in when I found out about the program. I also kept learning on my own to cook healthier and do that every day.
3. Eat More Greens: I know, also not terribly “measurable” but I DID eat more greens this past year. And I did get the Vitamix that I wanted… (thanks to my husband for getting it for me for my birthday
and I have to say that I use that thing every day…multiple times. I started adding more pureed greens to smoothies, to soups, to meatloaf; you just never know where you will find greens lurking! Even Kale Chips! which turned out to be one of my most read blogs of the year. I have even made some progress in getting my kids to eat a bit more greens so I am counting this as a “win” also.
4. Eat More Oysters: I made several trips to Squid’s during happy Oyster hour last year and I have added putting canned oysters on salads in a pinch when I need some protein. I am laughing out loud as I write this because I totally forgot about this goal until now and just realized that maybe that was part of why I was drawn to try those Rocky Mountain Oysters!
5. Keep the Crock Crankin’: And yes, I did that also. There are times, like right now, when my crock is empty and so I have not achieved all I wanted, but I made many, many batches of kraut this year and enjoyed both eating and sharing these with friends so I’m going to say 4.5 out of the 5 goals set for the year.
I don’t think I would have had that success if not for this blog and putting those “intentions” out there. So if you are one of the 4,000 hits that came to my blog this past year, Thank YOU for helping me! I hope that somehow by sharing some of my story, I might be able to help others as well. That’s what really motivates me and brings meaning to this reflection.
I’d like to inspire anyone who has read this far to find a way to be good stewards of the gifts that God has given them and use them to help others. It helps to write some of our goals down–some stretch goals and some most likely to be attainable with some effort on our part. While it is good to be as measurable as we can in stating our goals, it is also ok to just note an interest area and then be open to new opportunities as they arise.
So now that I have expressed my gratitude, I feel ready to write my 2012 goals but I think I just wrote a post already! I’d rather savor the lessons of 2011 and I will put my 2012 intentions in my next blog post! I know you are busy….me too! Hope you’ll journey some more with me in 2012!
Also posted at Kelly the Kitchen Kop
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Posted in Big Agriculture, Family Wellness, Food freedom, heart disease, liberation diet, liberation wellness, Nutrition, raw milk, weston price | Tagged: BodyPump, Central Carolina Community College, fitness, god, kevin brown, liberation diet, Oyster, Rocky Mountain oysters | Leave a Comment »
Posted by Kevin Brown on November 2, 2011
Real Food advocate Pam Killeen speaks with host Kevin Brown about the Michael Schmidt hunger strike and the human rights issues connected with it
for more information go to http://www.facebook.com/groups/supportmichaelschmidt/
and http://www.facebook.com/profile.php?id=671393100
Kevin Brown is president of Visionary Trainers, an In-Home Personal Fitness Company, and Co-Author of the Liberation Diet, a Real-Food traditional diet program that is helping many attain excellent health and normal weight. Kevin serves as a fellow on the National Board of Fitness Examiners, and is the principle force behind the online fitness website LiberationFitness.com 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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Posted in Family Wellness, liberation diet, liberation wellness, Nutrition, raw milk, weston price | Tagged: Hunger strike, kevin brown, liberation diet, liberation fitness, liberation wellness, liberation wellness hour, Michael Schmidt, money bobm, Nutrition, Pam Killeen, raw milk, sally fallon, weston price | 3 Comments »
Posted by Maureen Diaz on July 27, 2011

Chilled Tomato-Basil with Cucumber Soup
With all the bounty coming in from the garden and orchard, I thought I would quickly share today’s lunch menu with you; perhaps it will prove inspiring.
First, a fresh tomato-basil with cucumber soup, raw, made in my Vita Mix (an indispensable tool). Everything from the garden, except the garlic (sadly, we haven’t managed to fit that in yet).
Sopprasetta Salami, aged cheddar.
Gingered Carrots and Sauerkraut with garlic & jalapeno.
Organic, un-cured sausage sautéed with butter, olive oil, onions, garlic, tomatoes & green pepper and topped with raw Monterey Jack farmstead cheese. Served over a bed of buttered brown rice spaghetti, for the men in the family (I pass on the grains for now).
And for dessert a smoothy (which, actually, was served first
): raw, whole milk yogurt made yesterday/overnight with our own fresh milk, just-picked blackberries from the orchard, a hint of vanilla & a touch of honey.
How difficult is that? Not at all, I assure you, and everyone seems quite satisfied
Now go ahead-toss a tasty, but simple, meal together for your family with farm-fresh foods and produce from your garden, patio, or local farmers’ market!
Maureen Diaz is a homeschooling mother of 9, a WAPF chapter leader, and a certified LW Nutritionist. She also has produced 3 cooking DVD’s including her latest, Liberation Wellness Home Cooking. Check out & order her DVD’s on her website, www.nourishingtraditionalcook.com
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Posted in Butter, Cheese, Family Wellness, farm fresh, Fermented Foods, fresh and local, LCHF, liberation diet, liberation wellness, Local Foods, Maureen Diaz, raw milk, real food, real foods, Uncategorized | Tagged: Butter, liberation diet, raw milk | 1 Comment »
Posted by Kevin Brown on June 20, 2011

Las Vegas entertainer Danny Gans, an impressionist who sold more tickets on the Strip than the Rat Pack or Elvis Presley, died early Friday, his manager said. He was 52.
Las Vegas entertainer Danny Gans, an impressionist who sold more tickets on the Strip than the Rat Pack or Elvis Presley,died early Friday, his manager said. He was 52.
Gans, best known for his touching impersonation of entertainer George Burns, began a five-year headline gig at tycoon Steve Wynn’s Wynn Las Vegas hotel in February. Prior to that, he spent 11 years at the Mirage.
Gans earned Las Vegas Entertainer of the Year honors 11 years in a row in the reader poll conducted by the Las Vegas Review-Journal but was not well known beyond Las Vegas.
The cause of death was unknown. Gans’s manager Chip Lightman expressed his shock at the impressionist’s passing.
“The guy was healthy as an ox,” Lightman said. “I spoke to Steve Wynn several times this morning and both of us were shocked. I was with Danny the day before yesterday. Healthy as an ox. I mean, all he ate was egg whites and spinach and worked out religiously.”
Gans was a former minor league baseball player who turned to performing after a career-ending injury.
He appeared as a player in the film “Bull Durham” and found success in his 1995 one-man show in New York before moving the next year to Las Vegas.
He is survived by a wife and three children.
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George Burns, often imitated by Danny Gans, lives to 100 years, eating eggs, regular fasting, smoking cigars, and occasional drinks.

Mr Burns reported that he ate eggs and fasted 1 day a week- sounds like the Liberation Diet-
According to George Burns…I like eggs because they’re so versatile. They can be poached, fried, scrambled, boiled-soft-boiled, hard-boiled, medium-boiled-shirred, and Benedicted. It’s amazing how many things you can do with an egg after a chicken gets through with it.
Also he said – Sunday I eat nothing. I may have a martini or two… or three… but NO food…
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Posted in liberation wellness, Nutrition | Tagged: Bull Durham, Butter, cholesterol, Danny Gans, Diet, disease, Elvis Presley, George Burns, health, healthcare, kevin brown, Las Vegas, Las Vegas Nevada, liberation diet, liberation wellness, liberation wellness hour, low fat, New York, Nutrition, obesity, raw milk, saturated fat, Steve Wynn, vitamin A, weston a price, weston price, Weston Price Foundation | Leave a Comment »
Posted by Kevin Brown on June 10, 2011
Liberation Diet author Kevin Brown talks about the healthy eating wisdom of the Bible
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Posted in Uncategorized | Tagged: bible, Butter, Fellow, Food and Drug Administration, health, kevin brown, liberation diet, liberation wellness, liberation wellness hour, motivation, Non-profit organization, Nutrition, United States, weston price, Weston Price Foundation | Leave a Comment »
Posted by Kevin Brown on April 28, 2011

The scale of the human tragedy of abortion in New York City demands action. But what can we do? In such a large city the task can seem daunting, but we must do what we can.
http://nyc41percent.com/
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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Posted in Family Wellness | Tagged: Abortion, Fellow, god, health, kevin brown, liberation diet, New York City, Non-profit organization, Nutrition, United States, vodpod, wellness, Weston Price Foundation | Leave a Comment »
Posted by Kevin Brown on April 20, 2011
Here is a short but powerful testimonial from one of our students..
I am deeply affected by the stabilizing effect of the Nourishing Traditions and Liberation Wellness lifestyle.
I feel like I am nourished at the cellular level. and that I have likely been malnourished and dare I say starving for most of my life.
I do have some issues of anger and sadness about the greed-driven health misinformation that has led to such states of illness and dis-ease in our world and trust that I will work through these to be of service to myself and others over time.
Molly
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Posted in liberation diet, liberation wellness, Nutrition, raw milk | Tagged: Butter, Fellow, fitness, health, kevin brown, liberation diet, liberation wellness, Non-profit organization, raw milk, United States, visionary trainers, Weight Loss, Weston Price Foundation | Leave a Comment »
Posted by John Chisholm on February 8, 2011
My impression has been that when Reader’s Digest starts carrying articles about a topic, it’s no longer of interest to just a few people on the fringe. When I ran across the February 2011 article on Gary Taube’s book, Why We Get Fat—and What to Do About It, I saw that the cogent and traditional way of eating is really gaining traction against the low-fat and high-carb conventions.
Parts of the messages of Kevin Brown and the Weston A. Price Foundation are starting to penetrate mainstream awareness. It’s encouraging, even though awareness by the mainstream press is still incomplete and still lags behind the more knowledgeable champions of healthy eating. Jimmy Moore posted an article on Gary Taube’s book months ago. (Jimmy also provided a convenient link to a podcast of his interesting interview of Gary Taube— good stuff.)
Conventional Wisdom Is Not Holding Up
Taube’s book echoes what Kevin Brown has been saying for years, in Kevin’s own book, in his lectures, and on his website: the standard American diet has been making the population overweight, obese
and prone to disease. These observations challenge the simplistic thinking that says calories are calories no matter where they come from. In fact, the body responds to different types of dietary calories in different ways, and the low-fat, high-carb diet upsets the body’s ability to regulate fat tissue properly. Eating fat doesn’t lead to more fat storage in the body; eating high amounts of carbs leads to the insulin resistance that increases fat storage. The high-carb diet also correlates to increased incidence in a multitude of diseases, from heart disease, cancers, diabetes, and even gum disease.
The mounting evidence of researchers and mainstream publications who report on the failure of the standard American diet is like the proverbial handwriting on the wall. Animal-produced foods are eventually going to lose their demonization. So now what? Do we turn to the supermarket aisles for the cheapest and most readily available animal-produced foods? Not unless we want to trade in one set of health problems (obesity, diabetes) with another set (degenerative diseases such as arthritis and cancers).
Bad food Affects Us. Bad Food Also Affects Our Animals
We humans do get all kinds of health problems from eating foods that our ancestors never ate and that we weren’t designed for, such as highly-refined grains, sugars and fake oils (care for cottonseed, anyone?). Similarly, the livestock animals that produce our meat, eggs and milk get all kinds of health problems if forced to eat feeds that they weren’t designed for. In agribusiness’s factory farms, the food that the animals were designed for, such as natural pasture grass, is replaced by commercial feeds that are both cheaper and cause quicker weight gain, for bigger profits. The only thing that suffers is the health of the animals, and of the people who eat the unhealthful animals.
A mainstay of feeds for rapid weight gain is GMO corn, which has been shown to cause organ failure in animals, mostly in the kidneys and liver, but also in the heart, adrenal glands, spleen and blood. Another important constituent of feed is cheap protein in the form of animal renderings, which is all the animal byproducts scraped up and thrown out by the factory slaughterhouses, such as bone,
feathers, eyeballs, offal, hair, hooves, diseased organs and the occasional bits of metal (from animal-ID-tags), plastic, and some restaurant grease. Many rendering factories also accept roadkills and carcasses from animal shelters, and add them to the mix. To replace the mineral and chlorophyll of natural grass, the feeds for cows usually incorporate ground-up corn stalks and corn plant leaves that are left over after the crop of corn has been harvested; they can make up more than half the feed.
The feeds’ formulas are then topped off with hormones, to force rapid weight gain, and antibiotics, to combat the pathogenic infections that are bound to assail the animals. The animals on factory farms are kept in pens whose floors (of dirt or concrete) are covered with the animals’ feces and urine, which become an ideal breeding ground for pathogenic bacteria.
It’s Not Smart to Subvert Nature
Grazing animals that are designed to eat grass (e.g., with multiple stomachs) and that were never meat eaters have been forced to eat feed that their systems can’t handle, including bits of animals of their own species. Mad cow disease is just the most severe outcome so far of these unnatural farming practices. Other more common diseases and organ failures are inevitable for the animals subjected to modern factory farming. But agribusiness has figured out how to adjust feeds and hormones so skillfully that they can bring the animals up to harvest weight quickly enough to be killed just weeks before organ failure would debilitate the animals.
The result of all this tinkering with Mother Nature is to produce the most meat (or eggs or milk) for the cheapest cost. But it’s not really a healthful practice to keep eating food produced by animals pumped up on hormones and antibiotics and on the verge of disease.
The Right Food Raised Right
The truly healthful alternative to an ineffectual diet that’s low-fat and high-carb is to get our food from traditional farming, that raises livestock by having them graze (literally eat living grass). The
animals are healthy because they’ve spent their whole lives feeding on their traditional diet in their natural environment: sunlit pastures where they absorb vitamin-D and the living enzymes and minerals from the grass. As a bonus, grazing in pastures is much better for the environment than force-feeding artificial diets in confined animal feeding operations (CAFOs). The grazing keeps alive the native species of grasses as well as the food chain of animals that dwell there, from insects to small mammals to top predators. Grazing also does not lead to the concentrations of fecal and urine waste that typically pollute the land around the CAFOs.
Cheap, fake foods that look the same as real are not “just as good” as traditional foods. People are starting to question whether they’re eating the right things. Let’s keep going to make sure we’ll all have access to the right food raised in the right way. Let’s support our natural farmers and buy real food that’s been raised by them.
John Chisholm is co-owner of a small company that makes Good-Gums, a toothpaste-replacement that supports the body’s ability to heal its gums. When WAPF Chapter Leaders started carrying Good-Gums, John started learning and practicing Weston A. Price dietary principles, as lucidly explained by Kevin Brown’s Liberation Wellness. Already a regular exerciser and feeling pretty healthy, John didn’t anticipate how well his body would further respond to unprocessed, full-fat, pasture-raised foods.
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Posted in Big Agriculture, diabetes, Food Safety, gmo, grains, grass fed beef, health, heart disease, insulin, jimmy moore, kevin brown, liberation diet, liberation wellness, obesity, Vitamin D, wellness, Weston A. Price Foundation | Tagged: antibiotic, CAFOs, cancer, disease, fat tissue regulation, gmo corn, grazing livestock, health, high carb, liberation diet, low fat, low-carb, obesity, renderings, wapf, weston a price | 1 Comment »