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.htmLex