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Date: | Mon, 7 Aug 2006 16:19:47 -0700 |
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Also check works by Richard MacKarness: /Eat Fat to Grow Thin/
[available on Internet - do a search] - he talks of saturated versus
un-, etc. I can recommend Stefansson's /The Fat of The Land/ if you can
find a copy of that now rare book. Maybe as an estimate of the fat
ratios, this may help: Stefansson mentions a "course dinner" that he
devised for hosts to serve him during his 1-year experiment of meat-only
diet (under medical supervision and measurement) and contained the
following:
"Hors d'oeuvres: caviar served on slices of white chicken breast each
about the size and thickness of a fifty-cent piece.
Soup: Broth made by boiling meat-in some cases bone.
Fish: Any kind of fish boiled or baked; if fried, then in bacon fat.
Entree: Lamb chops. Most hostesses preferred to garnish with bacon.
Dessert: Gelatin, solely of meat origin and made according to a recipe
which I got hold of somewhere.
Demi-tasse: black coffee" (...or black tea, both often eschewed by
Stefansson, and drank small amounts only to satisfy the hostess)
[Note the absence of eggs and dairy.]
Note also that he and his team members ate a meat-only diet for more
than 5 years during expeditions - not under any type of medical
supervision. During some extended periods of time, fish were not
available so Caribou and other red meat were exclusively eaten. The
1-year experiment was just a test for the "public" eye.
He also mentions a friend, Earl Parker Hanson who spoke of pemmican:
Type A 80% of calories from fat and 20% calories from lean (meaning a
ratio of 50-50 by weight); Type B was 70% calories from fat and 30% from
lean; Type C 60% of calories from fat and 40% lean. He describes 3/4
pound per day of Type A as"absolutely satisfying", whereas eating well
over one pound per day of Type C would leave him still feeling hungry,
with a craving for fat. He allowed that his 'cravings' constantly
demanded a high fat content, of around 75 to 80 per cent of fat by calories.
Regards,
-=mark=-
[log in to unmask] wrote:
> Greg > So what do you think are more appropriate/accurate/ideal ratios?
>
> I don't know and would defer to others on this list. I do know an
> answer would start with the work of Steffanson and, more recently,
> Phinney. Oh, and of course, Mary Enig:
> http://www.mercola.com/2002/aug/17/saturated_fat1.htm
>
> Jim
>
>
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