Guest guest Posted November 30, 2003 Report Share Posted November 30, 2003 Loren Cordain is hardly the guru of the Paleo diet, he is only one of hundreds who wrote something dogmatic about it! The only tenable description of the Paleo Diet is " It does not contain very much of the foods that have been developed by farming. I would never accept the following brief report of Cordains interpratation of the Paleo Diet. Note the Authors point out the inconsitencies and conflicts they attribute to Cordain! Just key " Paleo Diet " into Google and you will get enough references to keep a fast reader busy for months following the labyrinth of cascading articles. Then make up your own mind. Also Read about Winston Price and his journeys. I read somewhere that what Price wrote is so thorough and detaild that it is heavy going. This excerpt appeared in Wise Traditions in Food, Farming and the Healing Arts, the quarterly magazine of the Weston A. Price Foundation, Winter 2002 This page was posted on 04/28/03 See the Complete HTML version at: http://www.westonaprice.org/nutrition_guidelines/macronutrientland.html By Sally Fallon and Mary G. Enig, PhD Here is the Excerpt: Similar to the Zone Diet is the Paleo Diet, proposed by Loren Cordain.9 Although Cordain notes in his own published papers that hunter-gathers " relished certain fatty portions of the carcass including brain, marrow and depot fat, " 10 his own diet is much lower in fat than the typical Paleolithic diet (which can be as high as 80 percent of calories as fat).11 The diet is very high in protein with typical proportions of 33 percent protein, 25 percent carbohydrate and 42 percent fat. He promotes lean meat, shellfish and some organ meats over cheese, whole milk, sausage and fatty meats, because they have a high protein-to-fat ratio. Only six eggs are allowed per week, because the protein-to-fat ratio of eggs is low. The rest of the diet consists of fruits, vegetables and nuts but no grains or legumes. Salt is forbidden in the Paleo Diet. Cordain's analyses found a range of 59-66 percent of saturated in the depot fat that hunter-gatherers relished, but he advises his readers to cut all the fat off our meat and replace butter and lard with olive oil, flaxseed oil, walnut oil, canola oil, mustard seed oil or avocado oil, because these oils contain " heart-healthy " monounsaturated fatty acids. He recommends organ meats but they don't show up very often in the recipes and the skin comes off in his chicken recipes, even though chicken fat is rich in monounsaturates. (We haven't yet figured out why people who write diet books foster such a hatred for the part of the chicken children love the most—the crispy, succulent skin.) Cordain admits that his diet contains virtually no vitamin D but he says that Paleolithic man got his vitamin D from the sun. (How he did that in cold northern climates is not explained.) There are no good sources of calcium in this diet either and the vitamin A it supplies is inadequate for all that protein. No sweets are allowed in Cordain's diet, of course, but his logic breaks down when he recommends diet sodas instead. The Paleo Diet ends up being lower in fat than almost all traditional diets. Moreover, it contains no sources of concentrated carbohydrates that the body could turn easily into the saturated fat it needs. And without grains or rice or potatoes to provide carbohydrate calories, you have to eat a lot of vegetables to get the carb proportion up to even 25 percent. Children and even grown men who hate vegetables might have trouble on this diet, and there are no high-fat or high-carb comfort foods that make mother's cooking something they would want to come home to. Like the Zone Diet, the Paleo Diet is one created by professors rather than food providers faced with the challenge of putting satisfying meals on the table day in and day out—meals their families will actually eat. ---------- ---- Table 5: Fat Content in Common Foods Coconut Milk 89% Avocado 88% Salad with Oil and Vinegar Dressing 86% Rib Eye Steak 81% Peanut Butter 77% Cheddar Cheese 74% Hamburger 68% Eggs 65% Potato Chips 63% Mackarel 59% Tuna Salad 56% Caviar 52% Whole Milk 50% Ice Cream 47% Lean Beef (brisket) 43% Apple Pie 39% Cookies 38% Pepperoni Pizza 32% Salmon 32% Oysters 21% Skim Milk 4% Lima Beans 4% The only protein foods that can be consumed without surpassing the USDA guidelines of 30 percent or less of calories as fat are shellfish, skim milk and legumes. The Alice-in-Wonderland logic of the US Dietary Guidelines means that apple pie and cookies are healthier than eggs, whole milk and cheese. Coconut milk, avocado, salad dressing, steak and peanut butter are off the charts and can't be included in any diet that conforms to the Food Pyramid unless combined with foods very high in carbohydrate and low in fat such as bread and pasta. ---------- - --- Outgoing mail is certified Virus Free. Checked by AVG anti-virus system (http://www.grisoft.com). Version: 6.0.545 / Virus Database: 339 - Release 11/27/03 Quote Link to comment Share on other sites More sharing options...
Recommended Posts
Join the conversation
You are posting as a guest. If you have an account, sign in now to post with your account.
Note: Your post will require moderator approval before it will be visible.