Re: PaNu - The paleolithic nutrition argument clinic
Well said, Roger. Thank-you.
I'm also partial to coconut oil and macadamia nut oil. Their high smoke temperatures make them good for cooking if one doesn't have lard. I would read with interest your comments on them.
My current naive bias is to notice more the ratio of PUFA Omega 3's and 6's in my diet, and the quality of the Omega 6's especially, which are delicate, so either frequently processed (made harmful with hydrogenation) or rancid. You seem to be recommending more just reducing all PUFA's in the diet. It will likely take more evidence, more convincing, more concurring opinions and more consideration on my part before I am persuaded to just minimize all PUFA's, even the highest quality.
I am pondering the agreements and disagreements between your recommendations and those of Dr. Johanna Budwig. Hopefully you are not too offended that I would even mention her in a reply to you. She is most famous for her cottage cheese and flaxseed oil concoction. Certainly the adoring support she gets in the nutrition columns sets off my BS alarms, as well as do the testimonies "I got up from my cancer deathbed and became cancer free on this simple diet". Seldom does truth lie behind such cover.
However there are some strange (to my non-biochemist mind) similarities (avoid processed oils and refined carbs) and sharp disagreements (on meat.) I wonder how can it be that two seemingly smart people, considering the question of lipids in the human diet, come to such fractured dissent. Do you see how to separate any wheat from the chaff in Dr. Budwig's work? Or is there simply too much chaff to make such an effort worth your time?
Well said, Roger. Thank-you.
I'm also partial to coconut oil and macadamia nut oil. Their high smoke temperatures make them good for cooking if one doesn't have lard. I would read with interest your comments on them.
My current naive bias is to notice more the ratio of PUFA Omega 3's and 6's in my diet, and the quality of the Omega 6's especially, which are delicate, so either frequently processed (made harmful with hydrogenation) or rancid. You seem to be recommending more just reducing all PUFA's in the diet. It will likely take more evidence, more convincing, more concurring opinions and more consideration on my part before I am persuaded to just minimize all PUFA's, even the highest quality.
I am pondering the agreements and disagreements between your recommendations and those of Dr. Johanna Budwig. Hopefully you are not too offended that I would even mention her in a reply to you. She is most famous for her cottage cheese and flaxseed oil concoction. Certainly the adoring support she gets in the nutrition columns sets off my BS alarms, as well as do the testimonies "I got up from my cancer deathbed and became cancer free on this simple diet". Seldom does truth lie behind such cover.
However there are some strange (to my non-biochemist mind) similarities (avoid processed oils and refined carbs) and sharp disagreements (on meat.) I wonder how can it be that two seemingly smart people, considering the question of lipids in the human diet, come to such fractured dissent. Do you see how to separate any wheat from the chaff in Dr. Budwig's work? Or is there simply too much chaff to make such an effort worth your time?
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