Long time no post! I've heard lots in the media about the "Dukan Diet" lately, so I decided to look it up. Apparently this diet has been popular in France for some time, but has only just really made it here to Australia, and at a casual glance it looks scarily similar to the Atkins diet. The big issue with low-carb diets like Atkins and Dukan is that although most people lose some weight, they actually get less healthy, sometimes dramatically so - such as the sudden cardiac death of a 16-year old. It is timely that the latest two videos on NutritionFacts.org relate to Atkins-style low-carb diets. No surprise that for anyone wanting to lose weight and get more healthy, I reckon a whole-food plant-based diet is the way to go. It's pretty simple really - eat more plant products in their most unrefined state and get rid of animal products and refined sugars, fats and oils. If you like something a bit more programmatic, there are plenty of possibilities, eg. the Engine 2 Diet or Joel Fuhrman's Eat to Live are two of the more commercially successful.
Part 1:
Part 2:
Persistent good health via a plant-based diet; vegan recipes, adapted to be oil-free and using Aussie ingredients.
Friday, February 3, 2012
Wednesday, October 26, 2011
The Mad Cowboy
Howard Lyman, aka "The Mad Cowboy
PS I have removed ads from the blog - they were ugly and not making any money to put towards charity anyway.
Tuesday, October 25, 2011
Bias in nutrition research
One of the most confronting things I have discovered this year is just how pervasive big agri-business is in spreading misleading nutritional information. One way they do this is to fund or sponsor research studies (see video above). Although it is at the end of the book, one of The China Study's most interesting sections was about this. Not only do the big dairy, meat, egg, etc companies and associations sponsor research that just happens to come out with favourable results, but they have representatives on all the important decision-making boards, committees, councils, including those that formulate dietary recommendations, such as the food pyramid taught in schools. If I had not read about it from a reputable source and seen it corroborated numerous times since, I would have just put it down to crazy conspiracy theorists, but it is scarily true. Do you find it hard to believe that dairy can really be that bad for you? Where does this warm and fuzzy glow about dairy come from? In part, taste preferences dictated by our hard-wired tendency to seek high calorie, high fat, high protein, animal-based foods. But, we are also assaulted from a young age by dietary recommendations and advertising telling us that dairy is an essential part of a healthy diet - recommendations drafted with the help of dairy industry representatives!
Well, most of the detailed information in this area comes from the USA. It couldn't be that bad here in Australia, could it? Wrong! Here is a recent example I saw; Meat and Livestock Australia (MLA) fund research projects each year. This is a small blurb circulated around university research offices earlier this year:
MLA's Human Nutrition Research Program is seeking applications for expressions of interest for research projects which will increase understanding of the Nutritional value of red meat, contribution of red meat to health and effective, healthy and sustainable red meat dietary strategies for promoting health and managing health conditionsHow unbiased could the research possibly be when the grant descriptions are as loaded and directional as this? Oh, and by the way, you can read more here, including how the Australian Government matches MLA funding dollar-for-dollar. That's right, our tax dollars go towards helping a red meat industry body fund studies "to provide credible and sound nutrition evidence to support the essential role of Australian red meat in a healthy diet." Meanwhile, billions more of our tax dollars go to treating cancers every year, with even the very conservative Cancer Council admitting that red meat consumption is associated with increased cancer risk.
Saturday, October 22, 2011
Book Review: The 4-Hour Body by Tim Ferriss (Pt 2)
The author of this book is a marketing aficionado and he has accrued himself a very sizable following - one of his blog posts has over 4,600 comments! The book has been in the best-seller lists since publication December last year, particularly in the US, it has been right at the top of "diet" bestseller booklists and it has over 1,500 reviews on amazon.com already. By comparison, The China Study - published 2006 and possibly the most remarkable book I have ever read - has 'only' ~ 1,000 reviews. The 4-Hour Body is a fairly lengthy book, coming in at 592 pages; I think large parts of it are based on Tim Ferriss' blog posts. In fact, you can read much of the content of parts of this book for free by reading old posts on Tim Ferriss' blog.
Basically, the author says he has spent a lot of time "self-experimenting" and the book details what he has found. I'm going to try to summarize each chapter in a single sentence each, followed by some analysis.
Basically, the author says he has spent a lot of time "self-experimenting" and the book details what he has found. I'm going to try to summarize each chapter in a single sentence each, followed by some analysis.
Sunday, October 16, 2011
The tomato effect
I don't want this blog to become just a syndication of NutritionFacts videos, but I thought this one was too good to pass over. It is also highly relevant, considering the focus I have previously put on diet and heart disease - including the work of Caldwell Esselstyn.
Check out these lines from one of the papers highlighted:
The fact that a low-fat, fibre-rich vegan diet is likely to reduce risk for most types of cancer, ischemic heart disease.. obesity, diabetes, hypertension, osteoporosis, multiple sclerosis, gallstones, renal stones, appendicitis, diverticulitis, hiatal hernia, varicose veins, hemorrhoids, and possibly the chief metabolic complications of pregnancy - disorders which collectively are responsible for the majority of the deaths and hospitalizations in Western society - should be sufficient to recommend it....I suspect that the simple injunction, 'Do not eat animal products' has the potential to do more for world health than all of the abstruse wisdom in all of the world's medical libraries.
Saturday, October 15, 2011
Book Review: The 4-Hour Body by Tim Ferriss (Pt 1)
When I started this blog, one of the first things I wanted to do was write some reviews of books that I have read this year that have launched me down this health + nutrition road. Or, as some may call it - obsession! :) The problem is that some of these books are so packed with good info (yes, I'm looking at you, China Study), it is daunting to even think about reviewing them. Yet, what has really delayed me is that I wanted to go through these books in a roughly chronological order, so it shows how my thinking has evolved over the course of the year. The speed bump comes due to the fact that "The 4-Hour Body" was the first book I read on this journey, but it is a probably the trickiest for me to write about. I have decided to "serialize" my review into multiple blog posts, so that it is less daunting!
Around the start of this year, I was feeling rather unhealthy. I felt unfit, unwell in many respects and overweight. The latter might come as a surprise to people who have known me for any length of time, as I have always been of very slender build (a greyhound as I heard one GP say). Indeed, for my height, the number on the scales was perfectly normal. But, I knew I was 8-10 kg or so heavier than when I felt my healthiest, and after a very inactive past few years, it certainly wasn't muscle. A pot-belly on a skinny dude isn't much more use than on a solid guy. In fact, percentage-wise its probably even worse! Perhaps most worryingly, I found it hard to stay on top of sugar cravings and unhealthy snacks. So, I had a vague idea I wanted to lose some fat, "get in shape" and most importantly, feel healthy again.
Another bit of background - I read fairly widely, and often in areas that may surprise some people, eg. investment books, organic gardening, motivational, parenting, biographies, productivity, popular science, psychology, etc. One book I read not too long ago was "The 4-Hour Workweek" by Tim Ferriss. I'll let you read up about it if you have never heard of it. Even if I only take something small from books like that, I find they give me some inspiration. It was certainly an intriguing book at the time.
When I found out early 2011 that Tim Ferriss had another book, despite the title, I was interested in reading it.
Next installment coming soon...
Friday, October 14, 2011
Eggs and cholesterol
I was confronted with wall-to-wall ads for "World egg day" when I visited Yahoo today. The video above covers some of the reasons why you might want to make it "World egg-less day."
Yet, vegans and other ethical eaters would not eat eggs even if they were the extremely healthy. Why so? Don't the hens just give up the eggs for us to eat? What's the harm? "Battery hens" or "cage eggs" are the common responses - hens being forced into incredibly tight wire cages in lightless barns, unable to move or see daylight. Yet, vegans and many other ethical eaters don't eat "free range" eggs either. What's with that?! Well, there are two ways of looking at it. The vegan ideal is to avoid contributing to animal exploitation, so it wouldn't matter how well the hens are treated - they could be in your backyard - they are still being exploited. What about people who abstain for less idealistic reasons? Two main things:
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