Dorothy,
First, no, my wife doesn't eat as I do. She is Greek (born and raised in Greece in the mid 1940's) so food as a social thing is very important to her. She suffers from diabetes, gall stones, very high triglycerides, cholesterol off the charts, blocked bile ducts (requiring medical intervention every couple of years), and rheumatoid arthritis that is slowly disfiguring the joints in her fingers. She knows that she can control much of this with diet, but in her words "I eat what Greeks eat", and that's the end of that. It is her life and she makes her choices just as I make my choices and we both must live with the consequences of our decisions.
We have a very high tech kitchen. We cook on two $3,000 Gaggenau induction hobs. We have a $7,000 Dacor convection oven and other nice toys. We have a second full Bosh Stove in the garage (the "Dream Kitchen") as well as a second refrigerator and my freezer, which competes for space with my table saws, metal lathes, mills, and workbench etc. Why all the kitchen stuff? Well I'm famous for my Chocolate Chip, Coconut Macadamia Nut, and Oatmeal cookies and killer apple pies. I've often baked 150 dozen cookies, and 30 apple pies over a weekend for charitable events. I've also done dozens of wedding cakes, and my wife bakes bread regularly. We host family gatherings several times per year and it is not unusual to have 50 people or more attend. If we aren't hosting then another member of the family is (my wife has four sisters within a 30 minute drive or so, and yes, they have many of the same health problems as my wife), and all share cooking duties. In short, even though I don't cook anything I eat, or eat anything I bake, our kitchen gets lots of use. I'll be making a Pistachio Chocolate Swirl cake for my daughter's mother-in-law's birthday on Sunday.
I don't recommend that anyone be as strict as I am. I do so because of my age, my previous vegan lifestyle, and the health problems I created for myself. For most people I recommend that they eat mostly red meat and fat, drink mainly water, and choose one or two of the following each day: a small serving of vegetable, small salad, piece of fruit, or a small serving of a starchy root vegetable. There is certainly no magic in Zero Carb and I'm not even sure Zero Carb is desirable or necessary for most people, and that includes me. I just continue with it because it is working well for me at this time and it is simple and convenient. I assure you that if I start to see problems of any kind I'll take my own advice and add in a few veggies, small salad, bit of fruit or the occasional starchy root. If/when this occurs, I'll dutifully report it here.
As for Slankers high fat ground beef, I order it on occasion and find that it consistently measures out at about 18% fat which is still a little low. Yes, I know that they say it is 22% but they don't actually test it. They just add about 20 lbs of fat to every 100 lbs of lean meat and assume it will come in around 22%. This is very simple to do at the packing house as it requires no skill or fancy measurements. Here's how the numbers work out:
100 lbs of lean meat containing about 2% fat which is 2 lbs of actual fat.
add in 20 lbs of fat and your total weight is now 120 lbs.
Take the 22 lbs of fat (20 lbs you added and 2 lbs that were in the lean meat) and divide it by the total weight of 120 lbs and you end up with 18.3% fat by weight. Surprise! this is almost exactly what I measure when I test it.
With the pet food coming it at 16-17% fat, it is clear that I still have to add a good bit of fat to get to my normal average of about 25%. If I'm going to have to add fat any way, why pay $5/lb for some of it just because they add it to the ground meat at the packing plant. I may as well just purchase cheaper fat and add all the fat myself. By saving that $1 per day, at the end of the month I have $30. I can purchase about 30 lbs of local fat with $30 which, when combined with Slankers normal ground beef and pet food, is enough fat to meet my dietary needs for about 3 months. This means that by April, my savings have paid for all the fat I will need for the entire year.
Lex