I would recommend grassfed ground raw meat and grassfed ground suet/marrow when wheaning (basically what Lex eats), though I would recommend sticking with breastfeeding for as long as you can up to 3-4 years, which is what traditional HGs do. Pemmican appears to have worked well for Ray Audette's son (starting at age one!), who has a genius level IQ (anecdotally supporting my assertion that, if anything, avg Upper-Paleo-to-modern hunter-gatherer intelligence, as well as athleticism, was and is probably superior to avg. modern intelligence, rather than inferior, as so often portrayed -- primitive/RPD does not equal stupid):
10-02-2007, 11:05 PM
Ray Audette
Re: Nutritionally Complete One-Pot Meal
http://www.proteinpower.com/forum/showthread.php?t=3361The only food I know that be eaten exclusively long-term without vitamin or mineral deficiencies is traditional pemmican. It has only two ingredients, raw dehydrated meat and dessicated animal fat ( tallow ).
It was tested as a survival food by Vilhjalmur Stefansson ( perhaps Dr. E's favorite low-carb author ) under a grant from the U.S. Army during the 1930s Ironically only the Luftwaffe used it for this purpose during WW II. Stefansson also used it on several Arctic expeditions to cure scurvy among his crew.
My son Gray-Hawk weaned himself from his mother at age one year and ate pemmican as his only solid food for the next year ( he's 12 now and none the worse for it ).
--Ray Audette
author of NeanderThin
10-05-2007, 10:24 PM
Ray Audette Ray Audette is offline
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Default Re: Nutritionally Complete One-Pot Meal
Most commercial suppliers of pemmican overheat the meat ( health dept. rules ). This renders the resulting pemmican very tasteless and gritty. Good pemmican tastes like beef jerky pate. It's very easy to make.
My ancestors, French-Canadian Voyagers, ate nothing but Pemmican for 6 - 9 months every year while they paddled from Quebec to British Columbia ( and back ) to trade for furs. It is the most concentrated food and thus the best for travel.
Ray Audette
Re: Lowcarbing for decades?
http://www.cyclingforums.com/archive/index.php/t-188444.htmlRay Audette
> Ignoramus19260 wrote:
> > Do you know of anyone who lowcarbed for decades, to maintain weight?
> > How did it affect them?
I have been eating a Paleolithic Diet for 20 years. I eat no grains,
beans, potatoes, milk of other animals or refined sugars. These are
not edible to Primates without technological intervention.
I'm now 53 years old, six feet tall, 150 lbs ( 7% body fat). I no
longer have diabetes or arthritis. I never work out but have
excellent muscle definition and jogers have problems keeping up with
me and my hawk when I take them hunting. I eat like a pig often
consuming 9 hamburger paties ( 3 "triples" hold the buns) when I go to
McDonalds. I have eaten a full pound of bacon every morning for the
entire twenty years.
My son Gray-Hawk has been eating this way since conception. When he
weaned himself from his mother at age one he ate almost nothing but
pemmican ( the ultimate low-carb food)for over one year. He's now nine
and considered a gifted athlete, tested at genius level I.Q. and is a
very gifted artist.
Increased animal fat consumption since the invention of railroads and
refrigeration has added more years to our lives than any other
statistical factor. Recent nutrition studies of hundred year olds
done by a leading medical school ( U of Georgia see biblography at
website))have shown that these long-lived individuals difer from the
rest of us only in that they eat more saturated animal fat than most
people.
Ray Audette
Author "NeanderThin"
www.NeanderThin.comEasy Childbirth on Paleo Diets
http://www.rawpaleoforum.com/off-topic/easy-childbirth-on-paleo-diets/msg16719/#msg16719.... From studies cited by [Vilhjalmur] Stefansson,
hunter-gatherers have far less trauma and labor in childbirth than do
agricultural women. Just removing the hazards of gestational diabetes often
found in modern women ( resulting in very large babies) would improve these
statistics considerably but I suspect much more is involved.
When Gray-Hawk ( seven on May 14th ) was born, it was without doctors or
drugs. We arrived at the mid-wives['] at 3:15 PM and he arrived at 5:20 after
2 hours of mild labor […]. As my prediction, five months earlier, of the easiest birth they had ever seen came true, the midwives bought six copies of my book.
After one year he weaned himself from his mother and would eat almost
nothing but Pemmican for the next year. About the only exceptions were
watered-down fruit juice and pork rinds for teething.
Ray Audette
Author "NeanderThin"