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Getting kids to try new foods is simply an exercise in marketing. Case in point: When I made falafel for dinner one night, I called them chickpea nuggets instead of falafel and my children gobbled them right up. They asked for chickpea nuggets again and it got my mind churning with an idea for an actual chickpea nugget recipe — one with all the flavors and textures of chicken nuggets, but baked and egg-free.

These chickpea nuggets look like chicken nuggets, but are vegan and require only six pantry staples.

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On September 3 Susan Bellhouse and her daughter, Rosanie Duldulao, bought groceries from Costco in Sherwood Park, Alberta. Little did they know that an unwanted house guest — a black widow spider — had tagged along in a bag full of grapes. Known as the quiet killer, the black widow spider’s bite can be fatal.

Days later, when Bellhouse was soaking the grapes before she planned on eating them, the spider emerged. “When I saw the legs, they were really long, and I knew this was not a regular spider. Normally I’m not afraid of spiders, but that one, I was screaming. For a few hours, I didn’t feel right. I was so scared.” says Bellhouse of the incident.

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Even though a kitchen knife exists for just about every task, there are really only three that are essential to every kitchen.

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From Apartment Therapy → The Very Best Shiplap Hacks: Affordable, Reversible & Super-Simple

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Much has been written about the first day of the work week, and most of it isn’t very flattering. Consider, The Bangles: “It’s just another manic Monday / I wish it were Sunday.” Or The Mamas and The Papas: “Every other day of the week is fine (fine), yeah / But whenever Monday comes / You can find me crying all of the time.”

Monday mornings, in particular, are painful — especially for those of us who head back to school, work, or really any daily routine that involves making small talk before your coffee buzz has even kicked in (and when you’d rather be in bed scrolling through your Instagram feed).

In an effort to stave off any further discomfort, here are seven conversations you should never engage in as you begin your week.

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Paleo Debunking real in lineFor today’s edition of Dear Mark, I’m answering three questions that at first glance appear to cast doubt on some of the founding tenets of the Primal Blueprint. First, did a recent study show that low-carb dieting is no better—and perhaps worse—than low-fat dieting at helping you lose body fat? The second is a two-parter: are we hypocrites for “ignoring” the insulinogenic effects of protein, and does a paleo diet actually abolish the beneficial effects of CrossFit?  And third, a new study found evidence of cereal grain consumption in a group of European hunter-gatherers. What gives?

Let’s go:

Dear Mark,

I am a long time follower of your site, and have been eating some sort of “primal blueprint-ish” for roughly 10 years. This lifestyle suits me, I am effortlessly lean and energetic despite pushing 40 and having a small boy and not exercising as much as I should. I like your site above the others, because of your scientific take (I am an engineer ;), always linking to the study you quote. I believe in you, and I believe that YOU believe in the primal blueprint – IMO you are not just a sales person trying to get rich.

However, lately I read a lot on the internet about the Nusi trials, I am sure you heard about it; proving that low carbs is no better than low fat in fat loss (not adressing all the other benefits of low carb). Could you adress this in a post? I would like to hear your comments on this.

Best regards,

Liv Vinter

Thanks for the kind words, Liv. I try to live up to your impression of me every day.

Ah, yes, the NuSi studies. Though you didn’t specify which study concerns you, I can guess.

It’s the most recent one, called “Energy expenditure and body composition changes after an isocaloric ketogenic diet in overweight and obese men.”

They put a bunch of people on an high-carb diet for four weeks, then moved them over to a low-carb, high-fat ketogenic diet for another four. Both diets were isocaloric, meaning they each provided the same number of calories, and were meant to keep their weight stable. These weren’t weight loss diets. They tracked energy expenditure, fat loss, and all the regular body composition markers you’d expect. Turns out that after going keto, fat loss slowed, energy expenditure increased, protein oxidation increased, and they lost a bit of lean mass. Fat loss picked up by the end but it was a wash.

From what I can see, they didn’t exercise. While that helps isolate the effect of the diet, it’s not how most people improve their body composition. Strength training in the absence of any other dietary intervention increases lean mass retention. You can diet anyway you want—low-carb, keto, low-fat, low-calorie, high-protein—but you’d better lift some heavy things if you want to keep your muscle. These people didn’t even lift, so it’s no wonder they lost a little lean mass on the keto diet.

Their protein intake was rather low. If you’re going to try a ketogenic diet without weight training, you’d better increase your protein intake.

They failed to give the diets in a randomized sequence, going from high-carb to low-carb.  We all know those first four weeks of a diet (any diet) are the best. The weight just flies off. After the first few weeks, though, weight loss slows down. These people transitioned to keto just as they were coming off the rapid fat loss. They’d exhausted their “newbie gains.” They’d already lost a good amount of weight, whereas they hadn’t lost any weight going into the high-carb period. If you flipped the timeline and had subjects go low-carb before going low-fat, you’d likely see the reverse happen: quicker weight loss on low-carb, slower weight loss on low-fat. I would have liked to see half the subjects start on low-fat and half start on low-carb.

The diets weren’t weight-loss diets and this wasn’t a fat loss study.

They were isocaloric weight maintenance diets. The primary objective of the study was to track any variation in energy expenditure between the two diets. Body composition changes were secondary outcomes. And since this wasn’t a fat loss study, it wasn’t designed to draw accurate conclusions about fat loss as the primary point of investigation. If it were, then there would/should have been different procedural methods in place.

One obvious confounding factor? There was inadequate time for fat-burning machinery to ramp up. Going from a high-carb (and high-sugar—almost 25% of calories) diet to a ketogenic diet isn’t seamless. It takes time to adapt. That’s why fat loss slowed for the first leg of the keto portion, only picking up speed after a couple weeks. It also explains the increased protein oxidation and loss of lean mass reported in the first leg of the keto arm: they had to sacrifice lean tissue to convert into glucose via gluconeogenesis until they achieved full ketoadapation and glucose homeostasis.

Coming into the keto diet fully carb-loaded is great for physcial performance, but impairs fat loss. You’ll burn off most of that glycogen before dipping into endogenous fat stores.

It’s a cool study, just not the utter demolition of low-carb people are claiming.

This article appeared on my newsfeed today on my phone and really messed me up mentally. Would love for your wise insights. This turned everything I know upside down. ahhhhh!

Jennifer

There are two parts to this article.

The first deals with the insulinogenic effects of dietary protein. Ignoring  the strawman the author lays out (“paleo people all say insulin is the root of all evil so why do they eat five pounds of insulinogenic animal flesh a day?”), I’ll address the insulin stuff.

Yeah, dietary protein increases insulin. So what? Insulin isn’t evil. I’ve never said that (remember the strawman thing?). Insulin helps drive glycogen and protein into muscles. Those are extremely important tasks.

And there is a ton of evidence that the most insulinogenic protein of all—whey—improves metabolic health and body composition.

For instance:

It spikes insulin initially but reduces the area under the curve, improving glucose tolerance in type 2 diabetics.

It reduces fasting insulin in overweight and obese adults. Every minute of elevated fasting insulin inhibits your ability to burn fat.

The second part is also laughable: the claim that a paleo diet nullifies the beneficial effects of doing CrossFit.

First of all, they were “asked” to follow an ad-libitum paleo diet. They weren’t monitored in a metabolic ward. The researchers didn’t prepare and deliver paleo meals to the subjects. There wasn’t a control group. It was a total slapdash affair—give them a few rough guidelines and hope for the best. That’s understandable, given that health major undergrads putting together a thesis rarely have access to the funding necessary for human randomized controlled trials.

Second, about those “deleterious changes” to blood lipids. Take a look at Dr. Andro’s take on the study. Pay close attention to the nifty charts he made.

Those with high HDL at the start lowered theirs. LDL and non-HDL cholesterol also increased a bit by study’s end. That’s it. Those are the “deleterious” (what a powerful word, that) changes. Oh, and subjects who had normal HDL at the start of the study increased their HDL by the end.

Some of the most vital and widely cited benefits of CrossFit are the improvements to physical fitness and body composition. Since paleo clearly “abolishes” CrossFit benefits, those must have taken a real beating. Right?

Actually, subjects lost an average of six pounds and 4% body fat while improving VO2max.

I’m not worried about a few minor changes to controversial biomarkers like LDL and HDL (that may actually be transient responses to weight loss) if it means improvements to the markers that we know have strong connections to health and heart disease risk—body fat, body weight, and physical fitness. What about you?

The REAL Paleo diet included bread: Ancient dental plaque reveals crops were on the menu in the Balkans 8,600 years ago.

Here they go again.

Mark

Indeed. Okay, okay.

Of course some hunter-gatherers ate grains. They had to. Someone had to.

It’s not as if one day every single hunter-gatherer across the world unstrung their bows, developed a healthy fear of animal protein and artery-clogging saturated fat, converted their spears to shovels, and began planting wheat, barley, and various other cereals. It was a transition happening all over the globe at different rates. That’s why you see folks in what’s now Israel experimenting with growing plants as early as 23000 years ago, legit-yet-nascent agriculture in the Levant by 10000 BC, wheat reaching the British Isles by 8000 BC, Arctic peoples subsisting almost exclusively on sea creatures and tundra animals until a hundred or so years ago, and small pockets of foragers still living as full-fledged hunter-gatherers today.

And that’s exactly what this group of Balkan hunter-gatherers was: a transition between the foraging hunter-gatherer lifestyle and the neolithic agricultural lifestyle. They’ve even got an era that describes this transition. The Mesolithic (middle or intermediate stone) era was the transition between the Paleolithic era (old stone) and Neolithic era (new stone). That’s precisely when many hunter gatherers were transitioning (there’s that word again) into new ways of life, experimenting with new food sources like grains and legumes, and figuring out how to raise them as crops. So this news doesn’t negate anything. It’s exciting, actually. We know this transition happened, and now we get to examine a group of people in the middle of it.

That’s it for today, everyone. Thanks for reading!

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The post Dear Mark: Did Three New Studies Debunk the Primal Blueprint? appeared first on Mark’s Daily Apple.

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Monday, Monday! Seriously can’t trust that day. For many of us, Monday is a big, painful transition from the light and playful weekend to the heavier obligations of the work week. Five long days of stress and routine stretch out in front of us as we stand bleary-eyed in our Monday morning kitchens, groping for the Chemex and trying to remember/forget what time our first meeting is.

But it doesn’t have to be that way. Here are 10 ways to help you master your Monday and make it work for you.

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You might know that avocado is delicious on top of a salad or smeared on toast for breakfast, but that’s not all this buttery kitchen hero can do. The next time you stumble upon cheap avocados, pick a few up and try one of these unique recipes. From adding avocado to macaroni and cheese, to turning it into crispy fries, these recipes unlock avocado’s true potential.

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Chungah Rhree, the blogger behind Damn Delicious and creator of some of the most popular recipes on Pinterest, knows an effortless dinner is one that comes together with just one pan. This combination of steak and vegetables falls firmly under that definition. In this recipe, the veggies get a head start in the oven, with the steak added in after and broiled to desired doneness.

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20 Cooks, 20 Knives: This month, we’re taking a close look at a chef’s most important tool: her knife. We asked 20 cooks, amateurs and professionals, to share their favorite knives and the stories behind them. While chef’s knives featured prominently, no two were exactly alike, and there were also a few surprises.

Geoff Baumberger

Profession: Executive Chef
City: Santa Monica, CA
Instagram: @TheGBaum

A recent transplant to Los Angeles (via New York and Phoenix), Geoff runs the kitchen at Ocean Prime in Beverly Hills. There, he’s putting his brand-new knife to work. When he’s not slicing and dicing, he’s exploring the tasty restaurant offerings of his new city.

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