Seems better researched than anything else I’ve ever read, and is equally indictive of the sort of medical consensus opinion which says saturated fat is bad for you.
How’s your weight and waist/neck/wrist measurments (assuming you don’t have DEXA or immersion or something), now, compared to before you read the Perfect Health Diet?
It’s unfortunate that “calories in, calories out” and “saturated fats are bad” are both general medical consensuses (wow, that word is actually in dictionaries) - it seems very likely the first is true and the second false, but both issues have the same “medical consensus saying they’re true vs fringe expert saying they’re all wrong” dynamic.
The Perfect Health Diet recommends you don’t go zero carb, and it’s very hard to find Paleo non-sugar based carbs (other than sweet potatoes) so white rice is recommended as being not as horrible as the alternatives.
I read some of the comments—the carbohydrates recommended in the book work very well for some people (and better than a very low carbohydrate diet), but there are some people who don’t do well on them.
I would be much more interested in an attempted refutation of the Perfect Health Diet by Jaminet & Jaminet.
http://perfecthealthdiet.com/
Never heard of that one before. What’s the reason for your interest in it?
Seems better researched than anything else I’ve ever read, and is equally indictive of the sort of medical consensus opinion which says saturated fat is bad for you.
I agree. I’ve read the Perfect Health Diet several times and it has had a big impact on my diet.
How’s your weight and waist/neck/wrist measurments (assuming you don’t have DEXA or immersion or something), now, compared to before you read the Perfect Health Diet?
I’m 5 foot 10 inches and have gone from around 170 to 150 pounds. More importantly, my Cholesterol has greatly improved going from
Whole Cholesterol 150 to 232; Triglycerides 98 to 69; HDL 33 to 76; LDL 98 to 142.
Despite what you might have heard, higher Cholesterol (if it’s accompanied by more HDL) is better.
It’s unfortunate that “calories in, calories out” and “saturated fats are bad” are both general medical consensuses (wow, that word is actually in dictionaries) - it seems very likely the first is true and the second false, but both issues have the same “medical consensus saying they’re true vs fringe expert saying they’re all wrong” dynamic.
From a cursory overview, that looks very similar to a standard paleo diet, but without the caveman verbiage or naturalistic fallacy.
Similar, but recommending white rice is utter heresy.
Edit: Looks like I was wrong about the heresy. I must have been confusing paleo with relatively mainstream worries about refined grains.
The Perfect Health Diet recommends you don’t go zero carb, and it’s very hard to find Paleo non-sugar based carbs (other than sweet potatoes) so white rice is recommended as being not as horrible as the alternatives.
It might be a gray area according to some, but heresy seems like a little much. A google search has only two results in the first page saying that it’s bad, with the rest saying it’s fine. Robb Wolf (a paleo advocate) says that rice is OK for active, healthy people (ctrl+f “rice”), and Mark says that white rice isn’t bad.
I read some of the comments—the carbohydrates recommended in the book work very well for some people (and better than a very low carbohydrate diet), but there are some people who don’t do well on them.