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    Starch is truly slave food

    Literature Review
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    • MauritioM
      Mauritio @Ismail
      last edited by

      @Ismail yeah another smart move.
      I think him and his son had like 10 000 children. Some ridiculous number.
      Many million asians today still have Genghis Khan DNA 🧬

      Dare to think.

      My X:
      x.com/Metabolicmonstr

      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
      • W
        wester130 @Androsclerozat
        last edited by

        @Androsclerozat if starch is slave food, what is PUFA in metaphorical terms?

        AndrosclerozatA 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
        • onliestO
          onliest @Androsclerozat
          last edited by

          @Androsclerozat

          I personally thrive on sourdough, brioche and potatoes. My carb consumption is about 50/50 on sugar/fruit vs. starches.

          Starches are more satiating than sugar and very tasty if cooked well. If red meat is the sine qua non of aristocratic cuisine why don't you give up peating and do raw carnivore 👍 👍 👍

          AndrosclerozatA 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
          • Butter GirlB
            Butter Girl @Mauritio
            last edited by Butter Girl

            @Mauritio said in Starch is truly slave food:

            @Milk-Destroyer I'm convinced that Genghis khans empire was build on milk consumption.

            It made them strong and flexible.
            They drank a lot of horse milk, which has nutritional benefits over starch already. But not just that when other armies ran out of food during siege, they never did, because they had their horses with them. They drank their milk, ate their meat and used their dung for fire.

            Maybe the empire collapsed when they stoped being nomadic, built cities and stopped consuming as much milk.

            "...between 30 percent and 50 percent of their summertime dietary calories come from dairy products. These range from mare’s milk (men will consume up to eight liters of fermented airag a day), to lightweight, calorie-dense curds that can be transported and stored for up to two years—in all, more than 20 different dairy-based foods. "

            https://www.harvardmagazine.com/2020/08/right-now-did-milk-build-mongol-empire

            That’s very interesting. And they didn’t drink “skim” milk but the full fat milk of the horse.

            Did they also drink cow’s milk? (Edit: looked at the link) Yes they did, as well as other “milks”.

            Milk is the backbone of civilization really. Why mess with it?

            GreekDemiGodG 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
            • GreekDemiGodG
              GreekDemiGod @Butter Girl
              last edited by GreekDemiGod

              Idk, I see plenty of starch eating people in my country enjoying a vibrant and healthy youth in their 20s and 30s, at least. Being energetic, euphoric, extroverted, lean, with clear skin, good looking with developed maxilla.
              Perhaps, they just have good genetics, good microbiome from their mother.

              Butter GirlB AndrosclerozatA 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
              • P
                Peatful
                last edited by

                Who’s not a slave?

                One act of obedience is better than one hundred sermons.

                -DB

                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                • BioEclecticB
                  BioEclectic @Mauritio
                  last edited by BioEclectic

                  @Mauritio
                  And prior to Genghis Khan and even Muhammed's time nomadic ruminant pastoralists, an offshoot of ancient dairying cultures, were chiding more settled agricultural folks. It may all be myth but i've even read that they would hurl barbs about raising pigs.

                  As an aside, i've heard much good about camel's milk, and even an honorable mention of donkey's milk. Shrug.

                  Imo the best our current society can do with starch is to prepare it correctly and or stay away from the ones that don't agree with us. And i agree, if starch shares partial blame for decline the young can often get away with eating more while maintaining some vibrancy.

                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                  • Butter GirlB
                    Butter Girl @GreekDemiGod
                    last edited by

                    @GreekDemiGod said in Starch is truly slave food:

                    Idk, I see plenty of starch eating people in my country enjoying a vibrant and healthy youth in their 20s and 30s, at least. Being energetic, euphoric, extroverted, lean, with clear skin, good looking with developed maxilla.
                    Perhaps, they just have good genetics, good microbiome from their mother.

                    I believe *some starch is important, yes. But I was mainly commenting on the importance of milk in civilization.

                    It’s like the foundation of it, the backbone. Societies wouldn’t have thrived without milk in some form.

                    1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                    • AndrosclerozatA
                      Androsclerozat @wester130
                      last edited by

                      @wester130 said in Starch is truly slave food:

                      @Androsclerozat if starch is slave food, what is PUFA in metaphorical terms?

                      Poison/adrenaline food

                      1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                      • AndrosclerozatA
                        Androsclerozat @onliest
                        last edited by

                        @onliest said in Starch is truly slave food:

                        @Androsclerozat

                        I personally thrive on sourdough, brioche and potatoes. My carb consumption is about 50/50 on sugar/fruit vs. starches.

                        Starches are more satiating than sugar and very tasty if cooked well. If red meat is the sine qua non of aristocratic cuisine why don't you give up peating and do raw carnivore 👍 👍 👍

                        Seems fine 50/50
                        If it doesn't numb your emotions
                        Keep going
                        I ate yesterday some rice due to lack of money
                        Now not depressed but neither deep emotions
                        It feels ok but I couldn't imagine falling in love

                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                        • AndrosclerozatA
                          Androsclerozat @GreekDemiGod
                          last edited by

                          @GreekDemiGod
                          If combining starches with drugs that increase intestinal permeability, such as caffeine, increases inflammation till of the point becoming delusional ego-driven, and meanwhile with sugar it doesn't happen
                          Then starches are not optimal
                          Even with perfect digestion, some starch particles will still enter the bloodstream

                          When I was alcoholic, the most rage and delusion I had after starches
                          If we live in a suboptimal environment, and gut is the most affected, then shouldn't we focus on easily digestible foods?

                          1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                          • SitaruimS
                            Sitaruim
                            last edited by

                            I get 0 symptoms from starch and I enjoy it thoroughly, you don't have to go on a tirade just because you don't tolerate it

                            AndrosclerozatA 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                            • AndrosclerozatA
                              Androsclerozat @Sitaruim
                              last edited by

                              @Sitaruim said in Starch is truly slave food:

                              I get 0 symptoms from starch and I enjoy it thoroughly, you don't have to go on a tirade just because you don't tolerate it

                              I exaggerated a bit
                              I have good digestion on it
                              But it feels different not eating it, mentally
                              Have you tried without it?

                              One friend tried to explain me how it feels to eat kilos of toroco oranges
                              It was hard to believe that you can get euphoria out of it and he always used the phrase "You don't know until you know"

                              Milk DestroyerM SitaruimS 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                              • Milk DestroyerM
                                Milk Destroyer @Androsclerozat
                                last edited by

                                @Androsclerozat I understand what you mean. Even when I am experimenting and feel like I am doing comparatively well eating starches, it feels like some aspect of my conciousness is missing. Probably not a part that's necessary for day to day wagie life but I like having it there none the less.

                                1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                • SitaruimS
                                  Sitaruim @Androsclerozat
                                  last edited by

                                  @Androsclerozat I have tried going starchless but haven't noticed much change. I feel like a lot of people decide a priori that some aspect of their diet is at fault, then they change it and claim quickly thereafter to have made a breakthrough.
                                  In orthorexic people, or in those who are always changing their diet, I claim that their so-called improvement is nothing more than a short burst of euphoria, or a heightened placebo effect, since they were obviously biased toward the new diet before adopting it.
                                  Of course, a lot of people discover food intolerances this way, which is perfectly fine, I'm just referring to those people who conclude that X food is poison every three months

                                  1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                  • banquos-ghostB
                                    banquos-ghost
                                    last edited by

                                    When suffering from chronic digestive issues, I've found that well-cooked starches, like white rice, potatoes, and oats, are better tolerated than simple sugars—and by well-cooked I do mean boiled for thirty minutes and mushy, but that's what digests easiest. I've never had a single issue with eating white rice boiled in bone broth; no matter my state of health, I can always digest it just fine.

                                    Also, while I have tried eating only fruit for my carb source, I've found that it causes some lower-bowel discomfort and never fully satiates.

                                    But the true slave diet, since we're on this topic, is one where you daily ingest chemically-contaminated, highly-processed, PUFA-laden, poison-laced food, with neither the will nor the knowledge to eat something that actually promotes, and not destroys, your health. Moreover, it's the lack of courage to comply with that health-promoting diet, especially when others may view it as unorthodox.

                                    And, I should emphasize, to blindly follow any diet, be it one based on Ray Peat's work or another doctor's, without regular reflection and adjustment based on your body and health, is itself a form of slavishness!

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                                    • E
                                      Ecstatic_Hamster
                                      last edited by

                                      starch is far, far better for us, than sugar. Most of us will get fat and have blood sugar problems on sugar, but well cooked starch, WITH a little fat, works very well.

                                      That is how most of the not-fat world eats. We can augment and improve with dairy.

                                      Starch is not slave food. It is very healthy and how virtually everyone who lives a long time eats. WITH dairy.

                                      LucHL yerragY 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                      • LucHL
                                        LucH @Ecstatic_Hamster
                                        last edited by

                                        @Ecstatic_Hamster said in Starch is truly slave food:

                                        starch is far, far better for us, than sugar. Most of us will get fat and have blood sugar problems on sugar, but well cooked starch, WITH a little fat, works very well.

                                        Everyone won't agree on this subject.
                                        RP found both OK as long as the quality is present and you listen to your body. I can develop this last point if desired.
                                        Shortly said: starch is good as long you go easily to stools twice a day, to avoid stagnation in the second part of the colon. otherwise, dysbiosis will come soon.
                                        Of course you manage well with counter-arguments: oxalates or arsenic in some cases.
                                        Yes, dress your carbs and it will be fine, provided you have no problem with digestive enzymes.
                                        For fruits, you avoid most of the time seeds and vary (...).
                                        For vegetables, you have to manage well legumes (anti-proteinase) and you take into account the specifities: like sulfur for kale or other cruciferous, or oxalates / lectines.

                                        Vary and adapt oneself to the situation / to the tolerances.

                                        And don't tell me you have problem with insulin if you drink OJ or eat yoghurt, whenever you do it in the wrong way. I don't drink 20 cl OJ after a pancake with syrup or 200 gr Greek yogurt with a tsp sugar and 2 slices of bread.
                                        Have you ever heard of Jessie InaupschĂ©? => Dress your carbs! And eat by listening to your body sensations. If you're still / if your liver is still recoverable. 😉

                                        1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                        • yerragY
                                          yerrag @Ecstatic_Hamster
                                          last edited by yerrag

                                          @Ecstatic_Hamster said in Starch is truly slave food:

                                          starch is far, far better for us, than sugar. Most of us will get fat and have blood sugar problems on sugar, but well cooked starch, WITH a little fat, works very well.

                                          That is how most of the not-fat world eats. We can augment and improve with dairy.

                                          Starch is not slave food. It is very healthy and how virtually everyone who lives a long time eats. WITH dairy.

                                          I knew it. Someone would talk sense.

                                          People that don't do well on high glycemic carbs would have no choice but to go with starch that is less processed and have fiber to make these starches lower in the glycemic index. Or if they simply reject starch for no good reason, they would have no choice but turn to keto or carnivore, which would not produce better health outcomes in the long term.

                                          When I had poor sugar metabolism, I found eating brown rice and sweet potatoes helped me manage my blood sugar to such extent that my blood sugar became stable and my health improved. After I improved my sugar metabolism to optimal, I went back to eating white rice and white bread (and my meals became more enjoyable) and I came to enjoy sugar, both white and muscovado, as I use them liberally. I came back to drinking and enjoying the satisfying yet guilt-free taste of original Coke.

                                          Life is good when you can make it better by taking advantage of the good properties of starch as you heal and improve your sugar metabolism towards the pinnacle of optimal metabolic health where you can enjoy what you eat what was previously restricted and enjoy it and become more healthy as well.

                                          This is what I consider having your cake and eating it too. Isn't life good?

                                          Temporal thinking is the faculty that’s
                                          engaged by an enriched environment, but it’s
                                          wrong to call it “thinking,” because it’s simply
                                          the way organisms exist... - Ray Peat Nov 2017 Newsletter

                                          Milk DestroyerM 2 Replies Last reply Reply Quote 0
                                          • Milk DestroyerM
                                            Milk Destroyer @yerrag
                                            last edited by

                                            @yerrag I appreciate your personal wisdom on these topics as always yerrag, but I must ask you: what of those of us who are able to consume sucrose without issue but experience blood sugar fluctuations from glucose alone? Here you are saying that consuming the fibrous glucose sources helps with consuming the simple non-fibrous types and also sucrose sources like Cola but what if you handle something like Cola completely fine and it is the glucose sources fibrous or non-fibrous that are afflicting oneself? What is your opinion on such a matter?

                                            yerragY 1 Reply Last reply Reply Quote 0
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