I don't "pour" honey. Our ancestors didn't exactly match and measure things out in precise proportions or doses, which are modern practices.
I understood you mix honey and meat before ingestion, am I wrong? All animals and our pre-fire ancestors precisely dosed everything they ate by using their olfactory and gustative senses.
As I pointed out, a fresh raw animal carcass and various plant foods contain both carbs and proteins within them, so that in nature it's impossible to avoid mixing carbs with proteins
Yes. Probably, the formation af AGEs in the stomach occurs only in insignificant amounts in normal conditions.
and food combining theories are thus largely irrelevant to the natural world.
In nature, there’s not so many possibilities to combine various foods because they are usually distant in space.
It's not a good sign if one's digestion is so poor that one can't even eat more than a microscopic amount of honey with meat.
I don’t eat honey with meat. I eat it alone and I have no problem digesting it. I
currently can’t eat more then half a teaspoon because it’s too sweet and it triggers a mouth burning feeling; not because I can’t digest it.
Bee brood IS meat.
Sorry for my misunderstanding of English. I thought “meat” = “viande” in French and for me it meant flesh of mammals, reptiles, marsupials and birds. Fish, shellfish, eggs, worms and insects were not “meat” for me, but perhaps it’s only a matter of language?
To each their own, but the original poster's question was regarding how to increase appetite, not how to avoid eating too much.
Ah… but if you eat too much, then won’t your appetite eventually decrease? On the contrary, if you eat little or no food for a while, wouldn’t your appetite subsequently increase?
I would think having any two types of food separately is the more natural way and probably easier on your system in general. With the exception of fermented plants and leafy greens, as this would have been available in the stomach contents of a fresh kill. I've never seen a bear catch a salmon, carry it over to a beehive, dip it in honey, and then eat it. They just eat it and worry about what else is available the next time they are hungry.
Exactly. This way was the norm during billions of years until some hominids were “smart enough” to mix and process different foods before ingestion.