Paleo Diet: Raw Paleo Diet and Lifestyle Forum
Raw Paleo Diet Forums => General Discussion => Topic started by: Josh on April 21, 2009, 10:00:58 pm
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Hi there.
I haven't eaten much raw animal stuff yet, apart from a few raw eggs and a bit of sushi, but this seems place seems more knowledgable than other paleo forums. I wonder if you can help me with a question trying to sort out my macronutrient ratio?
I have been following a roughly 'paleo' scheme for a while...less than 150 g carb a day, c.100g protein and plenty of fat...I've been using coconut, olive oil and avocados as the main source of fat but also fat beef and lamb. To start with I only ate meat and salmon (cooked) and green leaves, then I phased in a few berries, carrots, beetroot etc. I have cheated a couple of times and had a kebab wrapped in a nan or something. I also supplement with AOR ortho core and a couple of other things, so probably doing ok for micronutrients.
I lost a fair few pounds and now have that lean look I see in a lot of paleo people...my skin looks great and I feel strong. For a couple of weeks I had low energy, but now I have all day energy for everyday tasks and don't crave carbs.
However, my brain functioning has not come up to the level of when I was eating healthy 'balanced' meals with wholegrains and starches - hard to explain, but I can't think as quickly and creatively like I have less brain 'energy'. Also I have very little stamina for running and get out of breath very easily.
I've been doing this for about 5 weeks...could it get better than this, or do I need to rethink something?
It seems like the options are
1) There's more fat adaption to take place, I just need to stick it out
2) I need more paleo carbs, berries etc
3) I just need to eat some starchy carbs tubers etc
4) There's some other explanation
Any ideas? I don't really want to ditch the paleo idea as it makes a lot of sense. Oh yeh, I will be starting to ease into raw meat and fish as well.
Josh
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Hi Josh,
When i started raw paleo I read nearly all the posts. I still struggled but it's the best way to learn.
Good luck
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Josh, I think most people on this forum would agree that animal sources of fat and protein are far superior to plant based ones. While extracted fats can be good for transitioning, you will likely find much better results with something like fatty beef, bison, lamb, bone marrow, and suet. The truth is extracts are not really all that paleo (but still MUCH better than other oils you might get).
Some people find they need more in the way of carbs than others. If you do feel the need to add some more carbs, stay away from very starchy carbs such as corn, potatoes, grains, beans, rice and the like, as they will only hurt you in the long run. Add maybe tomatoes, pineapple, papaya if you're looking for something a bit starchy, berries, peppers, if your trying to keep the effective carbs (the ones that end up as glucose) to a minimum.
And definitely don't give up until you've incorporated a good portion of raw red meat into your diet. If you need to cook the outside a little, that's fine as long as you leave some good unheated portion in the center. Try to get the main portion of your calories from animal sources, and supplement as needed with plants.
Experiment and give it some time. Often when transitioning to RP, you can experience some detox and adjustment symptoms which I bet would subside fairly quickly if you switch to primarily fat and meat supplemented with plants, not the other way around. Let us know how it works out for you.
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I have been following a roughly 'paleo' scheme for a while...less than 150 g carb a day, c.100g protein and plenty of fat...I've been using coconut, olive oil and avocados as the main source of fat but also fat beef and lamb. To start with I only ate meat and salmon (cooked) and green leaves, then I phased in a few berries, carrots, beetroot etc. I have cheated a couple of times and had a kebab wrapped in a nan or something. I also supplement with AOR ortho core and a couple of other things, so probably doing ok for micronutrients.
I lost a fair few pounds and now have that lean look I see in a lot of paleo people...my skin looks great and I feel strong. For a couple of weeks I had low energy, but now I have all day energy for everyday tasks and don't crave carbs.
However, my brain functioning has not come up to the level of when I was eating healthy 'balanced' meals with wholegrains and starches - hard to explain, but I can't think as quickly and creatively like I have less brain 'energy'. Also I have very little stamina for running and get out of breath very easily.
I've been doing this for about 5 weeks...could it get better than this, or do I need to rethink something?
It seems like the options are
1) There's more fat adaption to take place, I just need to stick it out
2) I need more paleo carbs, berries etc
3) I just need to eat some starchy carbs tubers etc
4) There's some other explanation
Any ideas? I don't really want to ditch the paleo idea as it makes a lot of sense. Oh yeh, I will be starting to ease into raw meat and fish as well.
I choose answer number 4. If you are eating anywhere close to 150 grams of carbohydrates a day, then your body is burning carbs primarily. There is just no way you are fat adapted, because your body will burn the toxic carbs first if it is bombarded with them. If you want to burn fat as fuel, then give up the carbs completely, or nearly so. I know it seems counter intuitive to many, and it may seem like a scary thing to do.
Twelve days into my nearly zero carb adventure and I feel better than I have in years. I eat liver or oysters once every 2 weeks and some very small amounts of seaweed and herbs only as carb sources. But then, I very gradually had been cutting down carbs for months. I was obviously already keto adapted, as I have had no symptoms of brain fog, poor performance or anything, even though I train for taekwondo and strength regularly. No cravings for salad, avocados, nothing. I might eat these things once in a while, but for now, this is the life!
You may want to experiment, Josh. Stay off of any carb you have to cook in order to eat, first and foremost, for a month, then reassess. That means no bread, tubers, etc. If you are having symptoms from that, I would say you may have candida issues. Good luck!
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Josh,
It will take you many months to fully adapt to a significant dietary change. Your body can't run on fat as long as there are any significant carbs in your diet. Adaptation to fat and ketones requires the cells to add mitochondria as they are the power houses that allow the cells to burn fat. This will take about 3 months or maybe more. In the mean time you may have periods that you feel low on energy.
You'll have to get into a ketogenic state for your brain to transition to using ketones and clear the 'fog'. You can measure this in your urine with Ketostix. If you are dumping ketones in your urine it is an indication that there are not enough carbs in your diet to meet your body's current high glucose demand and body fat will be broken down to produce free fatty acids, glucose (from the glycerol molecule in the triglyceride), and ketones (another form of carbohydrate that the body manufactures to replace glucose). The brain will then convert to using ketones directly for fuel rather than the now scarce glucose, and you'll start to notice a positive mood shift as well as significantly increased alertness.
To get into a state that will encourage your body to create ketones (which is the first stage in converting to burning fat as primary fuel) you'll probably have to reduce carb intake to 30g or less per day. You'll have periods where you really feel run down and other periods where you feel great, but over about 8 to 12 weeks you'll be feeling on top of the world.
Glad to answer specific questions, and you may find my journal on this forum useful in understanding what to expect,
Lex
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Thanks a lot for the info...that's seriously useful. 3 months is a lot longer than I have seen elsewhere...I'll stick it out and see what happens.
I'm probably doing about 75g of carb a day at the moment...I guess if I go down to 30 it would be best to get into raw organ meats etc to get enough vits and minerals.
@Guittarman03 I'm not knocking what you say, as I'm far from clear about anything, but what are the reasons that animal fats are superior? The extracted ones are easy to measure out, and seem to be the staples of some healthy cultures FWIW.
I'll be in the archives dusting off the old posts...
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Thanks a lot for the info...that's seriously useful. 3 months is a lot longer than I have seen elsewhere...I'll stick it out and see what happens.
Josh, Adaptation takes much longer than popular wisdom would suggest. As an example, we are told that you can eat as many calories as you want as long as it is fat, and you won't gain weight. Many experiments have been done to "prove" this point. The problem is, most of these "experiments" were just a few weeks at the longest. My experience was that when I raised the fat ratio in my diet, I LOST weight for the first couple of weeks, but then, surprise, surprise, over 4 months I gained about 10 lbs.
Another common belief is that if you eat a zero carb diet then you will have large amounts of ketones in your urine. Again, tests have been run for several weeks at a time and sure enough, everytime, the participants in the study dump large amounts of ketones in their urine. I've monitored my ketones now for about 4 years. Here's what I've found. At first I dumped ketones in large amounts for months. I assumed this would continue, but then noticed they dropped off after a year or 18 months. What happened? Well, interestingly enough, my weight stabilized. As long as I'm not making changes to diet composition or activity level, and my weight stays constant, then ketones are present but in the Trace to Level-1 stage. If I make sudden demands on my body by increasing activity levels above normal, reduce food intake, or significantly increase fat ratio of my food, I will start dumping large amounts of ketones again until my body stabilizes at the new level of whatever change was made. This can take several months so whenever I make a change as an experiment, I always run the experiment for at least 4 months and often longer.
@Guittarman03 I'm not knocking what you say, as I'm far from clear about anything, but what are the reasons that animal fats are superior? The extracted ones are easy to measure out, and seem to be the staples of some healthy cultures FWIW.
Plant fats have a really terrible lipid profile. Almost completely made up of Omega6 and Omega9 fatty acids. They also contain plant esters that our bodies are not really equipped to handle. This is why people that are allergic to Soy Beans or Walnuts, or Wheat or other plant material, are allergic to the oils as well. PolyUnsaturated Fatty Acids are also a major issue. Our bodies are designed to process and use saturated fatty acids and not the immense levels of PUFAS found it plant oils.
Some studies have linked high consumption of plant fats to cancer as well as degenerative diseases like Alzheimer's and dementia. Our brains and nerve tissues are about 50% Omega3 fatty acids. Our bodies can make a little of this from the other fats but it is very low quality and causes problems. Studies have been done on the IQ of children, where the mother had a high intake of Omega3 fatty acids while carrying the child and IQ is consistently 6 to 10 points higher than children from a mother deficient in Omega 3. Most plant oils have NO omega3 fatty acids at all.
Grass fed red meat animals have both the saturated fat our bodies need for fuel as well as the omega3 fatty acids needed for tissue, brain, and nerve development and function. Grass-fed animal fat consistently tests out at between 25% and 50% Omega3.
Most plant fats test out at 0% Omega3 fatty acids, and animals fed an unnatural diet of grains in a feed lot, often have Omega3 levels of around 3% or so. Another thing you may not have thought about, Where on earth would our ancestors have gotten concentrated plant oils? It takes a bushel of corn to get one cup of corn oil - that's a lot of corn. And how on earth would they have extracted it with crude tools of pointed sticks and sharp rocks and no jars or vessels to hold it. Also, most of the plants from which we extract oil didn't even exist 10,000 years ago, much less 100,000 years ago.
Here's a web page with some basic information that you can follow up on:
http://www.texasgrassfedbeef.com/focusing_on_nutrition.htm
Lex
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Thanks for the info Lex. I'm not taking a position one way or the other, in fact keen to try out raw beef, but just to try and play devils advocate - from what I've read virgin coconut oil is pure saturated fat... some 'paleo' types are into it because it contains a lot of medium chain triglycerides which they find good for energy. A staple of the Kitavans who experience good health.
Virgin olive oil is 80% monounsaturated fat then the ratio of omega 3 to 6 can vary...however
Another health benefit of olive oil seems to be its property to displace omega-6 fats, while not having any impact on omega-3 fats. This way, olive oil helps to build a more healthy balance between omega-6 fats and omega-3 fats.
- from wikipedia.
Possibly why the mediterranean diet is ok for health in certain ways?
Cheers, Josh.
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Strictly speaking, coconut oil is no more paleo than carrot juice. You need technology to extract it, in the form of electric motor driven extractors. Eating coconut flesh is fine, but man, it's a pain in the butt to crack and eat them. Animal fat just has to be sliced to be eaten. So, if you want saturated fat, why buy an inferior, highly processed for of it that has no omega 3s whatsoever? Olive oil can be obtained by smashing olives by hand (or foot).
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Coconut and olive oil are high in salicylates which is toxic to humans.
I picked a ripened olive off a tree last week and had a nibble, it tasted inedible.
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Ripe olives must be soaked in brine to make them edible.
Simple enough that they could still be paleo.
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Ripe olives must be soaked in brine to make them edible.
Simple enough that they could still be paleo.
Hmmmm, simple? And just where would paleo people get the containers to soak them in? I spent 3 years working for Early California Foods at their olive processing plant. The brine process (commonly referred to as "Spanish" olives), takes months of soaking and brine exchanges which we did in wooden barrels. We often forget that what we accept as routine didn't exist at all 100,000 years ago.
Also, olives, like coconuts and other foods that are often referred to as part of the universal diet of early man are highly regional and only available to a very small segment of the earth's population. It is modern processing and transportation that has taken coconuts, olives, and their byproducts out of their small regions and made them available in markets all over the world.
Nope, I seriously doubt that olives or olive oil was used by paleo man (2.5million to 75,000 years ago). Mesolithic? (75,000 to 10,000 years ago) - maybe, Neolithic? (10,000 years ago to present) - yes.
Lex
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Just a correction:- The Mesolithic era only started c.20,000 years ago at the earliest - it's merely used to describe the transition from the Palaeolithic to the Neolithic, and, IMO, isn't a true epoch at all:-
http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mesolithic
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Something to think about thanks. Although the more I read about nutrition, the more I suspect that no food is free of potential downsides -\ :)
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Something to think about thanks. Although the more I read about nutrition, the more I suspect that no food is free of potential downsides -\ :)
What downside have you found for meat? I've had personal experience of the downsides of dairy, grains, and excessive fruits and veggies. Haven't had any problems with red meat and fat.
Lex
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Hmmmm, simple? And just where would paleo people get the containers to soak them in? I spent 3 years working for Early California Foods at their olive processing plant. The brine process (commonly referred to as "Spanish" olives), takes months of soaking and brine exchanges which we did in wooden barrels. We often forget that what we accept as routine didn't exist at all 100,000 years ago.
Also, olives, like coconuts and other foods that are often referred to as part of the universal diet of early man are highly regional and only available to a very small segment of the earth's population. It is modern processing and transportation that has taken coconuts, olives, and their byproducts out of their small regions and made them available in markets all over the world.
Nope, I seriously doubt that olives or olive oil was used by paleo man (2.5million to 75,000 years ago). Mesolithic? (75,000 to 10,000 years ago) - maybe, Neolithic? (10,000 years ago to present) - yes.
Lex
Seawater would probably do, contained in a tidal pool.
Yes, regional, but still could have been as paleo as soaking coffee beans which are also regional.
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Seawater would probably do, contained in a tidal pool.
Yes, regional, but still could have been as paleo as soaking coffee beans which are also regional.
A bit of a stretch if you ask me. My tools are sharp sticks and rock shards and I'm going to carry handfuls of little bitter olives to a tide pool that washes things away with every high tide, so I can let them soak for 6 months to wash out the taninns to make them edible - yup that's the ticket.
Personally I don't think olives OR coffee beans are a paleo food, but hey, each can decide for themselves.
Lex
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My tools are sharp sticks and rock shards and I'm going to carry handfuls of little bitter olives to a tide pool that washes things away with every high tide, so I can let them soak for 6 months to wash out the taninns to make them edible - yup that's the ticket.
Those are hunters' tools. Gatherers' tools might have included nets or baskets or whatever could have been woven. Easy then to confine some olives in a pool, although I don't know why they would have done it other than out of curiousity.
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Clearly olive oil is a very processed food. I'm open to the idea of processing things like rendering fat and drying meat for preservation, maybe even pressing fruits and nuts/seeds for extractions, but olives are out of the question. First of all even modern olive trees grow fruit that is very offensive to the taste buds until processed with brine, why on earth would paleo man bother collecting it in the first place? I could see collecting something that tastes good right off the tree or vine, like fruit or nuts, and then storing them and perhaps learning how to extract an oil or juice, but to collect something that tastes like crap and then spend hours learning how to soak it in brine (which they couldn't just get at the store) seems insane. Not to mention the fact that wild olive trees probably have more small and bitter fruit than the commercially grown ones of today, an even worse tasting initial product. Then after all that there's the oil extraction. It's so many steps for an inferior oil, as far as I know the only reasonably healthy plant oils are coconut, palm seed and macadamia nut because of coconut and palm seeds saturated nature, and the macadamia having the best omega 3 to 6 ratio in the plant kingdom that I've heard of. There's flax but that has a lot of weird chemicals, lignans and such, and the way it gets all chia pet when you soak them I doubt anyone would ever think to try and extract an oil from that mush.
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Not a processed food, and questionable if it was a food.
Get ripe olive, which is a fruit, and may have been the only edible fruit at the time, probably did not even have to climb a tree. Put in tidal pool in sea. (Sea is made of brine)
Cover with basket/net/whatever. Put rock on top.
Come back in six months.
Paleo folks must have been doing something with those big brains. Why not a fun experiment?
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You could come up with a story like that about any Neolithic food. I see it highly unlikely given the reward vs. work needed that anyone would have bothered with that kind of food gathering. You could either spend an afternoon hunting and take down an animal that could feed you and your family and friends for a week, or spend just as much time gathering bitter little fruits, go to the shore if you happen to be near the ocean, make a container for them, leave them there and hope some animal doesn't eat them in the SIX MONTHS you say they should be left, then go all the way back and have maybe one meal out of it, and a poor meal at that (compared to a wild animal carcass). Not to mention they would have to somehow have learned that the salt water could transform the inedible fruit into something halfway decent tasting. I think a more likely story would go see tree, pick fruit, take a bite, spit it out and don't bother with it anymore.
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Olives couldn't be more neolithic if they tried. Months of soaking? sounds like a lot more fun than taking down a woolly mammoth or being at war with another tribe.
Red meat and fat is the perfect food, someone once claimed they knew someone who is allergic to red meat. That would have to be a one a million thing. I've heard of people being allergic to water and sunlight as well.
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You could come up with a story like that about any Neolithic food.I think a more likely story would go see tree, pick fruit, take a bite, spit it out and don't bother with it anymore.
Until someone says that the fruit of the olive tree is not the same size as in paleo time, it could have been used.
The stupid caveman idea gets tiring. The could have been more intelligent, must have had forsight and may have been capable of all we do. How much work does it take to throw olives in a tidal pool and cover them?
If you wonder why they did not invent a high technology civilization, read the news every day of modern man, whose life is mostly short nasty and brutish. Paleo man was too smart to poison himself.
Nobody has claimed that they lived on olives, or what they might have been used for.
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I haven't found any downsides to meat. I've just become cynical enough to suspect that there must be some :)
I think I and other people sometimes go through a process...when I was a kid food was food - fish fingers, oven chips, burgers, roasts..enjoyed it all thoroughly.
Then start trying to lose weight and be healthy as a teenager, but only consider the idea that too much fat is are bad and it's good to eat your veggies. Then have a few health issues and start to look into it a bit more - gluten in grains so eat potatoes...hold on nightshades aren't good for you...how about yams then? But carbs in general cause glycation...ok then try a low carb paleo diet. What about all those AGE's in cooked meat though? And those long lived cultures that eat a plant based diet? How about eating veggies then...but OMG dangerous phytochemicals.
I hope raw meats are the perfect food, but I wouldn't be suprised if there's a compromise to be made somewhere.
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Red meat and fat is the perfect food, someone once claimed they knew someone who is allergic to red meat. That would have to be a one a million thing. I've heard of people being allergic to water and sunlight as well.
I've come across several cases. Those were to cooked meat, though. You've got to bear in mind that even though red-meat-allergy isn't one of the top 5 food-allergies, it's a fact that allergy-rates have been rising inexorably in the last few decades.
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The stupid caveman idea gets tiring. The could have been more intelligent, must have had forsight and may have been capable of all we do. How much work does it take to throw olives in a tidal pool and cover them?
I'm not arguing that they couldn't do it, I'm asking why would they? They didn't have any salads to need olive oil and vinegar dressing.
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I've come across several cases. Those were to cooked meat, though. You've got to bear in mind that even though red-meat-allergy isn't one of the top 5 food-allergies, it's a fact that allergy-rates have been rising inexorably in the last few decades.
Food allergies are on the increase for so many reasons but the main reason for food allergies is that we are eating foods which are not really human foods in th first place. Things such as milk, peanuts, seafoods, eggs.
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I'm not arguing that they couldn't do it, I'm asking why would they? They didn't have any salads to need olive oil and vinegar dressing.
Guessing, IIRC classical Greeks used the oil instead of soap, and scraped it off with a special tool; maybe lamps? There are probably a lot more uses than I can think of.
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Classical Greeks are well within the Neolithic. I believe I could think of many uses for olive oil as well, but none of those seem to me to be appropriate for paleolithic people given the amount of work vs. benefit picking olives, soaking them, and then pressing the oil would give them. I'm also sure that rubbing animal fat on your skin would work better than olive oil, and it's a lot easier to acquire in a paleolithic environment.
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I have really enjoyed learning about olives. I had no idea!
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I believe I could think of many uses for olive oil as well, but none of those seem to me to be appropriate for paleolithic people given the amount of work vs. benefit picking olives, soaking them, and then pressing the oil would give them. .
Work? What work? The ladies would have done it.
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I don't know how to make an oil press even with free access to technology and materials. I don't think I could make a press and container for oil with naturally occurring materials in the wild. And if I could, I would assume it would take a lot of work and that I wouldn't bother in that kind of survival situation.
Also weren't paleolithic people usually nomadic to an extent? Sure they could still go back to the place they put the olives and all, but carrying around all kinds of things to make it and containers when they move somewhere else, it just adds to my mind the unlikeliness of this happening.
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A lever and two flat rocks, sit on it. It's not like they were into commercial production, and small quantities might have been OK.
If they did it, and I don't know that they did, they would have done it for some reason that seemed good to them. Trying to imagine the thought of those who lived in a world so alien to us can be interesting but it comes down to "garbage in garbage out" as the geek wrote.
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I agree that paleo living is the best guidline to what our bodies need. But it is conceivable that some aspects of modern life have equalled or improved over the paleo. I wouldn't necessarily rule something out because it's not strictly paleo.
I'm not saying that olive oil is or isn't such a case.
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I agree that paleo living is the best guideline to what our bodies need. But it is conceivable that some aspects of modern life have equalled or improved over the paleo. I wouldn't necessarily rule something out because it's not strictly paleo.
I usually put it in a little different way but say essentially the same thing. We have to live and function in the modern world and this requires compromises. Though there are no Woolly Mammoths or Saber Toothed Tigers, we can still do our best to adhere to the basic principals that got our species to where it is today. The best evidence we have is that our paleo ancestors were top level carnivores and ate a diet predominantly of meat. Whether there were any significant plant materials in the diet we will really never know for sure. What little evidence is available seems to point to a very minor role of fruits and vegetables, and these would have been highly seasonal - especially in the northern and southern latitudes outside of the tropics. Evidence also seems to suggest that we come from the African Savanna which is an immense grassland area with little in the way of fruits and other edible plants, but teeming with large grass eating animals.
Based on this, I've set my own personal dietary guidelines such that I try to make the best choice possible in any situation. I first choose any kind of meat over fruits and vegetables, but if starving would eat whatever is available. I then will choose red meat over pork, pork over fowl, and fowl over fish (in that order). Next, raw is preferable to cooked, rare is preferable to medium, medium is preferable to well done. Finally, I want the animal who's meat I'm consuming to have eaten it's natural diet - usually grass - but will eat grain fed if that is all that is available.
Following the above guidelines I've seldom found a situation where I couldn't make do. If the choices are really poor, I just eat as little as possible, often to be polite, and then eat my normal food when I get home. When attending a party situation, I usually eat just before I go, and then it is easy to not eat the junk as I'm not hungry.
I spend zero time trying to come up with convoluted ways that our early ancestors could have been able to create a modern 'processed' food requiring a good bit of technology when there is no evidence of the necessary technology existing at the time. Especially when there would seemingly have been no need for the processed food in the first place. Processing olives to extract the oil or even make them edible is an order of magnitude removed from hunting animals and/or the simple gathering of edible fruits.
Lex
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All I know is, olive oil kinda burns and makes me belch. Suet does not.
Don't get me wrong though, if I could eat some garlic bread soaked in olive oil with no negative effects, I totally would. I used to love that stuff.
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Thanks...that's a really good summary of your position.
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I have no problem with raw olives and consider them palaeo, but olive-oil just doesn't count as a Palaeo food given the preparation required etc.
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I have no problem with raw olives and consider them palaeo, but oliv-oil just doesn't count as a Palaeo food given the preparation required etc.
This started as a note that raw olives are inedible; I agree.
Soaking in seawater seems a simple thing if someone wanted edible olives for whatever reason - bait for the frumious bandersnatch for instance.
I too don't see the point of oil.
Correct me if I'm wrong, but the nasty taste of modern olive oil is because the seed is also crushed in the press.
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A bit of a stretch if you ask me. My tools are sharp sticks and rock shards and I'm going to carry handfuls of little bitter olives to a tide pool that washes things away with every high tide, so I can let them soak for 6 months to wash out the taninns to make them edible - yup that's the ticket.
Personally I don't think olives OR coffee beans are a paleo food, but hey, each can decide for themselves.
Lex
Damnit I love this man.
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Ripe olives (black), after a few weeks in a fresh place, are delicious. No work (except gathering and storing them).
Instictos eat them in huge amount.
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Ripe olives (black), after a few weeks in a fresh place, are delicious. No work (except gathering and storing them).
Instictos eat them in huge amount.
Interesting! I'd always thought they must be soaked in brine/seawater. What does this mean "a fresh place"?