Can someone please explain this?--raw fresh squeezed orange juice gives me bad throat mucus....
No explanations, I guess. How about has anyone else noticed this, especially with pasteurized OJ?
Why couldn't it work equally as well or better if raw Primal versions of these foods were substituted
The last 6 days or so, I've been eating a mostly-raw paleo version of Ray Peat's dietary reccomendations....
Thanks for letting us know that you're putting it to the test, SileIndigo. Please let us know how it goes. What have you been eating so far?
With some minor tweaking, Storm's sample daily diet could easily be converted to something probably acceptable to most cooked-Paleo diet gurus:
16oz coffee
6-8tbs gelatin (great lakes)
1 fresh whole orange
pastured or raw pastured butter
1/2 - 1 can native forest coconut milk
some type of meat usually 8oz
a few raw egg yolks
some heavily cooked yams, potatoes occasionally, or even some rice
And with some more serious tweaking it can be made raw Primal/Paleo:
16oz+ water or sun/air-dried tea
marrow
1 fresh whole orange or other fruit/berries
raw butter or marrow/suet/brains
fresh coconut water or flesh
some type of raw meat usually 8oz
a few raw egg yolks
raw carrots or parsnips
Fatty fish appears to be the biggest disagreement between Peat and Paleo gurus. Here's how someone summarized Peat's view on fatty fish:
"Fatty fish like salmon and herring should be avoided because their fat content is mostly unsaturated; as a general rule, cold blooded animals like fish tend to produce unsaturated fats while warm blooded animals like cows and pigs tend to produce saturated and monounsaturated fats. Cod and sole are good fish, since they have the marine minerals (especially selenium), but low fat content. Tuna is good as protein, but the fat it contains is highly polyunsaturated; eating once a week, especially with homemade coconut mayo should be safe.of course"
http://forum.lowcarber.org/showthread.php?t=419742Based on that commenter and other sources, the main differences between Peat and cooked Paleo appear to be these:
> avoidance of fatty fish like salmon and herring (and fish oil) and preference for lean fish and shellfish
> more positive talk than usual about industrially processed sugar, Coca Cola, tortilla chips fried in coconut oil, popcorn popped on the stove in coconut oil and then salted & buttered, and "occasional" grains like masa harina, oats, and white or brown rice.
> more emphasis on milk (preferably raw) and potatoes and yams than MOST (not all) cooked and raw Paleo/Primal/Traditional diet gurus (and these foods have been growing in popularity in Paleo circles)
> recommends food combining of carbs with proteins
If the above info is correct, the general sense I get is Paleo lite: a less restrictive form of cooked Paleo, except that it also restricts fatty fish. It should appeal to anyone who doesn't want to give up the foods that Ray Peat adds to strict interpretations of cooked Paleo diets, especially milk, sugar, Coca Cola, OJ, coffee and fried tubers and tortilla chips, and doesn't mind giving up fatty fish, which would probably include most Americans.