i've had good results with rs myself, so not knocking it in the least bit, but what say you to this
http://www.proteinpower.com/drmike/metabolism/resistant-starch/
I linked to the same article early in this thread.
I took it seriously at first, as you can tell by my early posts in this thread, but there wasn't a lot of evidence in it, and I noticed at least one error, IIRC, so I did some more looking and found loads and loads of evidence suggesting that resistant starch is beneficial and explaining how it works and that it has been a part of the human and pre-human diet for millions of years. I'm so glad I didn't stop looking after reading that article.
Dr. Eades eventually candidly acknowledged in a polite response to Richard Nikoley: "I don’t really know anything about resistant starch," in the comments at
http://www.proteinpower.com/drmike/gerdacid-reflux/gerd-treat-low-high-carb-diet and said he'll take another look at RS when he has the time.
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There aren't many wild foods sold in American markets today. Are bananas, potatoes and beans any less descended from wild foods than other popular market foods? Broccoli isn't wild and didn't exist in its current form 10,000 years ago--should I avoid it because of that? I do think it makes sense to try to eat some wild foods, like Inger does, and I do eat some. And as always I'm not telling anyone what to eat, just sharing what I've learned and my experience, FWIW.
I find I do better by including more RS myself, but I'm not big on evangelizing the skeptical, as I think it's best to try something from a place of knowledge, confidence and positivity, rather than uncertainty, doubt or fear. Good luck to everyone with whatever path you each take.
Raw jicama, singkamas, sauerkraut and kimchi are sources of inulin, rather than RS. Other inulin sources include onion, dandelion root, burdock root, leeks, and asparagus. Some raw RS sources are raw green plantains and raw plantain starch, raw green bananas and raw banana starch, raw young fingerling potatoes (yes, I've found some of them to be palatable with so far no noticeable negative effects) and raw potato starch, raw fermented garbanzo beans and raw GB flour. I'm not sure how raw the bagged flours aside from potato starch are, but I at least haven't noticed any problems from any of them, whereas very-ripe plantains and bananas (rich in glucose) give me major problems. Glucose sensitivity seems to be one of my biggest problems. It took quite a while for me to narrow that down, because most of the focus in the Paleo world is on fructose or starch as the problems (especially fructose), with glucose often being regarded as safer (such as by Paul Jaminet) and with fructose targeted as a "Neolithic Agent of Disease." For me it's the opposite, glucose appears to be much more of a problem for me than fructose, at least in the short-term.
One of the key aspects of RS I wasn't aware of early on, is that colon bacteria continue to generate butyrate from it long after one has finished eating the RS, so that I get steady, clear energy from it throughout the day and it also helps one to sleep through the night (as the brain doesn't run out of energy and signal the body to wake up to get more), though that wasn't a significant problem for me, and improves sleep quality. The beneficial bacteria are like little butyrate factories that can run 24 hours a day. With butter and other animal fats, the available butyrate is less long-lasting.
Inulin and RS are similar but quite different. I didn't get as much benefit from inulin-rich foods as I got from RS, though I think my stomach digestion improved a little bit with raw sauerkraut and I still eat that and other inulin-rich foods. Who knows, maybe I'll learn about a better way to utilize inulin therapeutically in the future, like a raw inulin powder or try again to make my own sauerkraut or something like that. I did also try inulin tablets in the past and didn't notice any benefits from those, though I didn't test my BG at the time, and I didn't have a glucometer then. I may test that some day in the future for comparison.
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I've never noticed any of the food combining problems that other folks talk about. Maybe I'm lucky that way.
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Iguana explained in the past that the protein portion of meats is what ferments, while the fats do not. In the example of raw fermented fish oil, the protein is fermented in order to separate and preserve the oil. Some say that antioxidants in properly fermented animal foods like raw fermented cod liver oil prevent the fats from going rancid. I posted what I found on that in a discussion of RFCLO. The RFCLO only went rancid on me once when there wasn't much left and I left it out of the fridge too long in unusually warm summer weather. Of course, it's hard for most Americans to understand the difference between fermented and rancid, which both sound "rotten" to many, but I certainly could taste the difference.
I've decided that I haven't noticed significant enough benefits from RFCLO to justify the cost, and people with pyroluria symptoms reportedly tend to produce omega 3 too easily and accumulate too much, so I doubt I'll buy any more of it. I did come to like the strong fish taste, though even that mellowed with time and got a bit boring.
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Eric's correct that probiotic microbes that can make it to your colon require a (mostly) anaerobic environment, because the colon is mostly anaerobic. A former member here who is quite experienced and knowledgeable in fermentation named Satya set me straight on this. I don't know where Aajonus got his ideas on "high meat." They don't match anything I've seen reported regarding traditional Eskimo or Scandinavian practices or by Satya.
The meat I processed using Aajonus' recommended "high meat" method with relatively frequent airing out did get broken down into fluid eventually. My best guess is that this was due to mostly aerobic bacteria, but highly aerobic bacteria cannot survive in the colon for long, if they manage to make it that far.