Phil,
Since I'm not really into fish, I've never tried fermented fish oils. From your description it doesn't sound real appetizing so I think I'll pass, at least for now.
LOL, understandable. I found it both tough to handle and strangely appealing from the start, a la whiskey (the "water of life") and other strong, beloved sustenance, but it turns a lot of folks off, of course. Also strangely, I'm still not a big fan of butter, despite experimenting again with it recently, trying it with some warm French-press coffee in the morning, or mixing it into one of my homemade broths. I don't find it gives me as much of a taste or health kick and seems like Milquetoast in comparison to good 'ol stinkfish oil, though it's fattiness is mildly pleasant.
Despite the minor differences, it is interesting how similar your recent experiments are to mine. Butter and other animal fat, broth and salt are there in both cases. Except you tend to have more butter broth and red meat I tend to have more butter coffee and fish. I would actually prefer the red meat too, but I found it too constipating in my case. I never moved beyond that phase like you did, instead it just got progressively worse for me. Switching to emphasizing eggs, fish, organs and broths seems to have helped me. I do suspect that you're right about red meat being more of a natural food for humans than seafood, though, I'm just still too screwed up to take advantage of that, unfortunately.
Speaking of red meat, there's a bit of a backlash against it in the Paleo blogosphere recently due to concerns about ferratin overload. It's being blamed by Danny Roddy, Anthony Colpo, Chris Kresser and others for carb intolerance, insulin resistance, early mortality, etc. I know that doesn't bother you in the slightest, but did you tell me whether your ferretin levels have ever been tested and what they are? If you did, I apologize for forgetting. Personally, I don't notice any differences in carb tolerance and blood sugar if I eat fish vs. red meat, but maybe I'm just not paying enough attention?
I use a product called "Better Than Bouillon"
Heh, I tend to avoid any product that has "better than" in the name or advertising (maybe I've been spooked by "better than butter" products that turn out to be WAY worse
). Currently I make my own broths, though I do use a gelatin product to add extra collagen to my broths, as connective tissue problems are one of my strongest negative historical health tendencies.
It is the only concentrated beef or chicken base that I've found that has zero MSG.
Cool.
Most of the popular bouillon products are nothing but MSG with some food color and artificial flavors so if you want to try this read the labels
Wow, thanks for the tip.
I use KerryGold grass-fed butter. It is expensive but tastes wonderful.
I'm using a local product. I've found that Vermont has some of the highest quality food products in the USA. It's like Vermont is becoming the gourmet hippie state. Just wish they weren't so expensive.
You can also use coffee or tea as the base and just whip in the butter. If you use coffee or tea as your base I suggest that you use unsalted butter. I use salted butter in my broth because part of my reason for drinking the broth is to increase my salt intake. My version is sort of a blend of Dave Asprey's idea for Bullet Proof Coffee, and Phinney & Volek's suggestion that VLC'ers and ZC'ers increase sodium intake by drinking one or two cups of meat broth everyday.
Wow, what a coincidence. That's basically what I've been doing--I've been semi-participating in the Bulletproof butter-coffee experiment going on. Can't say I've noticed any difference so far, other than increased jitteriness (which he attributed to alfatoxin-contamination, but I've also noticed from his allegedly splendiferous coffee--interestingly, his is the greenest coffe I've seen, though he doesn't mention heat/temperatures), but it's been fun. I suspect that one reason I haven't noticed benefits following his protocol, is that I was already eating plenty of animal fat.
Slàinte mhath!
As for AGEs in butter, Chris Masterjohn has another take, FWIW (I have no idea how on-target it is, but I try to consider all the credible opinions):
http://blog.cholesterol-and-health.com/2010/10/is-butter-high-in-ages.html