The big one is total avoidance of vegetable oil (so stick to animal fats, butter, olive oil, avocado oil). The next biggest is refined carbs particularly anything with fructose (which includes table sugar) except maybe a piece of fruit. Then high fat, moderate protein, low carb diet: >60% fat, 20% protein (there's disagreement on this number), <20% carbs. Eat eggs (pastured if you can afford it), beef (grass fed if you can afford it), dairy (again grass fed if you can afford it), veggies (although some go carnivore). Then there's intermittent and extended fasting if you need to drop weigh quick or just for the general health benefits. I do OMAD and I'm less hungry on average than when I ate three meals and who knows how many snacks per day.
Can confirm this works (also lost 50+ pounds in less than a year doing much the same thing). And I am also less hungry on average on OMAD.
I'll add that once your body is used to it and you've "fixed" your metabolism you don't have to be as strict about it if you don't want to be. I'll make a pizza from scratch maybe once a week at most, but in the grand scheme of things it doesn't really matter because I don't eat much in the way of carbs the rest of the week; so it averages out (and even then the carbs from the pizza dough is still maybe half of the 300+ grams/day recommended by mainstream nutritionists, so I would still be considered to be eating "low carb" according to them which is pretty crazy to think about).
I would like to subscribe to your newsletter. What's the nutshell version of far right health advice, specifically in regards to nutrition?
The big one is total avoidance of vegetable oil (so stick to animal fats, butter, olive oil, avocado oil). The next biggest is refined carbs particularly anything with fructose (which includes table sugar) except maybe a piece of fruit. Then high fat, moderate protein, low carb diet: >60% fat, 20% protein (there's disagreement on this number), <20% carbs. Eat eggs (pastured if you can afford it), beef (grass fed if you can afford it), dairy (again grass fed if you can afford it), veggies (although some go carnivore). Then there's intermittent and extended fasting if you need to drop weigh quick or just for the general health benefits. I do OMAD and I'm less hungry on average than when I ate three meals and who knows how many snacks per day.
Can confirm this works (also lost 50+ pounds in less than a year doing much the same thing). And I am also less hungry on average on OMAD.
I'll add that once your body is used to it and you've "fixed" your metabolism you don't have to be as strict about it if you don't want to be. I'll make a pizza from scratch maybe once a week at most, but in the grand scheme of things it doesn't really matter because I don't eat much in the way of carbs the rest of the week; so it averages out (and even then the carbs from the pizza dough is still maybe half of the 300+ grams/day recommended by mainstream nutritionists, so I would still be considered to be eating "low carb" according to them which is pretty crazy to think about).