Francois, thanks again for replying. I 100% agree with your views on nutrition and how one should approach nutrition as our ancestors did but no-one really knows what exactly they had available to them. Yes they were finding good foods but was it predominately meat or tubers or fruit etc or is this what you are trying to say - that it doesn't matter what raw you eat really as long as it is RAW and edible (and tasty) then it should be good for you?
Yes, roughly that, but unprocessed and not neolithic such as milk and grain, and of course, not modern such as chocolate and pastry. The art of cooking and spicing just distorts the whole interaction between the animals (humans included) and their food so that the equation on which all the animals have based there nutrition for billions of years:
Good = good
(meaning what smells and tastes good is good for the animal’s health)
became corrupted:
Good = perhaps bad
(which means something can be tasty but bad for the health)
With cooked, mixed and processed food, the only alternative becomes to try to resort to science and analytical knowledge to know what to eat and how much. This is an inextricable process and even the best expert wildly disagree because apprehending the whole picture of the almost infinitely complex biochemical reactions between the various animal organisms and their nutrients is ways beyond the capabilities of our science and knowledge. Nevertheless, all the nutritionists foolishly try to do exactly that.
But if we place ourselves in a pre-fire Paleolithic nutritional situation by excluding all Neolithic, cooked, processed, mixed and seasoned stuff, we can try to rely on our instinct to know what and how much to eat… and see what happens. Following GCB and others who have experimented it since the 60’s, I’ve tried it also from January 1987 on and I saw that the instinctive regulation works fine.
Good night!
Francois