Friday 28 February 2014

Paleo pancakes or bread

I'm not 100% sure whether this is paleo, but it just has a better ring to it then LCHF.
I have read various recipes for pancakes/bread and have let them permeate around my brain for a while.  Today I really felt like something with more of a carb feel.  So I threw together these, and I think that they tasted pretty good and had a decent texture.


1/2 can coconut cream (I used the solid cream on top and used the liquid bit for something else)
1/2 cup of LSA (Ground Linseed, Sunflower and Almond)
2 tablespoons of coconut flour
2 tablespoons of psyllium husk
6 eggs
1 teaspoon baking powder
1/2 teaspoon vanilla ( I was aiming for something sweet-ish, if I wanted a savoury version I would omit this)

Beat together eggs and coconut cream.  Mix in vanilla and dry ingredients.  Fry in a pan in melted butter.
I served mine topped with a hunk of butter and a sprinkle of cinnamon.
I found it quite sweet enough, but I have been sugar free for a number of weeks now.

Wednesday 26 February 2014

Week three and we see progress

I know it's only two days since I posted the week 2 progress, but the measurements for week two were taken a week ago.  I was just slack in getting them onto my blog.
before, day 2

Another week down and as I gazed at the numbers on the scale this morning I realised that I had dropped another kilo. So I am now 74kg.  My size 16 pants do feel quite loose and this is born out by my measurements this week.

Waist 90cm
ribs 85.5cm
hips are still staying pretty much the same.  But I have tended to always have slim-ish legs and carry my weight around my middle.
week 1

Lets line up the photos from the three weeks and see how they compare. Before, week 1 and week 3....


 week three (this week)
I am not seeing a huge difference from  front on between each of the weeks. I know my photography is dodgy and blogger is being a right pain with its formatting.  I am having all sorts of trouble posting these photos on here.  The formatting keep jumping around on me.
I will post side on photos, there seems to be more obvious progress there.
before shot at day 2
I realise that given I weighed myself on day 3 and had lost three kilos already,  this probably isn't a true "before" shot. I had no idea at day 2 that weight loss would be so dramatic.
 week 1, hmmm not sure.
I don't think the photo shows much difference.  I wish blogger would let me line them all up next to each other.  I either don't have the technical know how or blogger's formatting rules suck.
 week 3, this week.
Yeah I can see progress. 8cm from my waist, 7.5cm from my ribs and 5kg. There is something happening, for sure.
A typical day's food is as follows:
Breakfast:
Muesli made with nuts, seeds and coconut flakes. Around 100ml cream. A handful of frozen blueberries.
cup of tea
Lunch:
Salad of mixed leaves, cucumber, tomato, capsicum, snow peas and a hunk of meat, egg and cheese. Either all three or whatever I have on hand.
cup of dandelion tea
Dinner:
Meat of some variety with either steamed vegies or a salad.  I try to add sour cream or butter to dinner to try and up the fat content.  I am finding it hard to add fat to things and it mostly seems to be in the form of dairy.  Before this LCHF diet I wasn't really a dairy eater, so I'm not sure about the inclusion of so much of it into my diet now.
For snacks I have nuts or  full fat yoghurt and sometimes mix double cream with my yoghurt. I drink heaps of water, I find I am quite thirsty.  I have another cup of dandelion tea before bed.
I am not hungry, but still do wish I could sneak something sweet sometimes.  Every now and then I will satisfy my sweet desires by sucking slowly on a frozen blueberry.
Until next week.........





Monday 24 February 2014

Progress week 2

I'm a bit behind with getting the week 2 progress written up.  It's almost time to weigh in and measure up for week 3.  But I did take the readings last week, I just haven't gotten around to recording them on the blog until now. And I didn't get around to taking a photo. Oh well.

Progress has definitely slowed after the lightning take off from week one.  I still feel tired and am not sure that my body has quite converted itself to being keto-adapted. I went out for dinner during the week and easily left the rice and bread roll on the side of the plate.  I used the pat of butter to eat with my chicken.  I did eat the cream and cheesecake for dessert, but resisted with no difficulty at all the chocolate mud cake that was placed in front of me. I am starting to feel less like I need to snack, though MKR does still get me feeling like eating when I watch that.

Last week I put on 2kg so my weight went back up to 75kg.
But..
My body measurements changed, so the fat is being redistributed around my body.
Day 10 my waist was 93.5cm, whereas day 14 it was 91cm. 
At day 10 my rib cage measurement (the smallest bit of me) was 90.5cm and by day 14 was 87cm.  To me it's under the rib cage that has all of those major organs, so cm's lost there should be significant. I have noticed that I can go 2 notches tighter on my bra and have tightened the shoulder straps too.

I find it interesting that there was no weight lose, in fact a slight gain and yet there were more cm's lost that week than in the first week. It will be interesting to see what the next weeks weight and measurement bring.  I really hope that I start to reap more energy out of this diet, because so far I feel a bit drained.  (But then baby isn't sleeping real well either, so perhaps it's non diet related).

Friday 14 February 2014

Day 10 update

I am still in a state of disbelief about how much and how quickly the weight falls off by eating LCHF.  I keep jumping on the scales each day to see if they are lying about yesterday's weight and low and behold another kilo has disappeared.  Maybe I am dreaming, and I will wake up soon and discover it has all been in my imagination.

It does seem to be true however, fat does not make you fat.  Sugar and refined carbohydrates do.  And a calorie is not a calorie in the traditional sense, it is all to do with how your body metabolises its food.  Eating carbohydrates is like pouring fluid into a blocked up funnel.  Eventually you overload the funnel and the excess pours out (or get stored as fat in the analogy relating to our body) However your body in ketosis seems to be an incredibly efficient user of what goes into the funnel, there are no blockages, and excess energy requirements are taken out of your body's fat stores.  It just seems like a more sensible way to run your body, by not glugging it up and making it sluggish and slow.

I do have more energy now, but still feel I haven't quite hit my strides yet.

I am fairly sure that the less than pleasant taste in my mouth is the ketosis at work.  Some people test their urine with special strips from the pharmacy, but I am reasonably sure I can tell my body is in a keto state by the taste in my mouth.  Hope I don't have bad breath.  I haven't asked anyone yet if I do.  It also feels like a good hit of something lovely and sweet would sort that out too.  Yes I still feel like some lovely desserts, but it's not a bad craving, just a little bit tempting.

So the new measurements, let's compare:
The most dramatic change has been my weight.  In just 10 days:
At day 1 it was 79kg, 10 days later it is 73kg.  6 kilos or one stone in the old money in just ten days.  That is crazy, I've never experienced anything like it.  And this is coming from me who had a very severe gut bug where I barely ate and anything I did eat ran virtually straight through me.  I lost weight that time, but not that fast.

Ok waist measurement at the narrowest point is slightly less impressive, especially as this is the area where I am supposed to get a bit thinner.
At day 1 I was 92cm, 10 days later I am 90.5cm
My tummy that measured 98cm on day 1 is now 93.5cm which is a bit more impressive.
My hips are unchanged and are still 108cm.

Visually, I think that I look thinner in my arms and upper body, I don't think it is very noticeable around my middle at all.  I was going to post photos but I don't think with my ordinary photographic skills they will show much change from day 2.

Anyway, I still feel a bit dubious about my scales, my brain doesn't want to believe what my eyes see.  Perhaps if I drop below the magical 70kg mark I might finally believe.  Let's see what the new week brings.......

Wednesday 12 February 2014

Day Seven Feeling pretty good

Day seven already and I haven't felt in anyway food deprived.  I have been able to eat as much as I wanted so long as it was low carbohydrate.  I have missed a few carby things, but the deprivation of the sweet tooth has not been difficult at all.

Today I started to research some recipes for vegetarian recipes using LCHF principles.  My vego daughter thinks I have slightly lost my marbles, but none the less I still need to provide food for her.  My Carnivore sons are loving all the meat, but I also feel like I would like to try the odd vego meal too.

So LCHF vego version seems to go heavy on cheese, eggs, nuts and cream. Also the soy protein alternatives and tofu.  We have all of this in the house, so it shouldn't be a big problem.  Usually, though, when I'm getting sick of meat I am not particularly in the mood for eggy or cheesie things either.  A tofu and nut stir fry could be the go.  Also a vego lasagne made with eggplant as the noodle layers and lots of cheese could be really nice as the acid in the tomato can help with the cheese.

Looks like there are fun times ahead experimenting in the kitchen.  Just hope the weather cools down a bit as 32 degrees Celsius  (as advertised for the weekend) is too hot for oven cooking.  I have had to put off making my next batch of beef jerky, as it's just too hot to have the oven running ( even on low) all day.

Today's menu
Breakfast
Same as yesterday, love this coconut muesli with mango, blueberries and cream.  So refreshing on a warm summer's morning.

Snack
Just nibbled on some cold meats while I packaged them up for the freezer.  I bought a heap from the shop yesterday and have broken them up into smaller portions and put them into the freezer to use as needed.  We are quite well stocked now.  I am wondering how the thinly sliced hot salami would go if I dehydrated it jerky style.  Next time I make beef jerky I think that I might try a few pieces and experiment with which thickness would be best.

Lunch
garlic creamy chicken
dandelion tea

Snack
Piece of cheese

Dinner
Lamb rump steak and salad and feta cheese


Exercise
walked to school and back

I think that I will hold off weighing myself until tomorrow.  Then I will have had a full week eating LCHF and be able to compare with my measurements from last week.  I am looking forward to that.

Tuesday 11 February 2014

Day 6 - Will my bowels ever move again?

I am still sleeping really badly and not getting anywhere near enough sleep at night.  It's hard to know if it is the diet or the external factors that I mentioned in yesterday's blog.  I seem to spend the first two hours of the night from about 11pm to 1am wide awake, just laying in bed wondering if I should actually get up and do something useful.  Needless to say I haven't managed to derive any great amounts of energy from this diet yet, a good night's sleep must surely help in that department.

My dodgy gums turned out to be the precursor to an ear infection.  My left ear feels sore, but is improving, I think.

I feel quite thirsty today, so have been drinking a lot.

After starting the day lamenting the fact that I hadn't poohed for 3 days, and wondering what is happening in the downstairs elimination department, I have finally had some action. Up to that point not a lot, in fact nothing had been happening.  I didn't feel uncomfortable, I didn't feel like I needed to go. I felt just fine.  But three days, going on four with no movement?  Is that normal?

It reminds me of those fully breastfed babies that sometimes go up to 10 days without a poo.  When they do eventually poo, it is a big one.  It goes everywhere.  Luckily, it was quite normal. Good now I can stop obsessing about it, I promise not to write anymore about my bowels.

I am guessing that a radical change in diet, like removing a large proportion of carbs is going to take some adjusting to.

Today's menu is:
Breakfast
Coconut flake muesli with mango a couple of blueberries and fresh cream.  It is an absolutely delicious breakfast, yummo.

Lunch
Two roast chicken legs and some breast meat
coconut cream and chai seed ball rolled in cocoa
cashew, almond and macadamia nuts
dandelion tea

Dinner
roast chicken, bacon, egg and salad with Caesar dressing

Exercise
Walked to school with Harry
Swam in pool

Monday 10 February 2014

Day 5, and the natives are getting restless

Sixteen year old son looking decidedly underwhelmed
Actually, one of the natives, aka my sixteen year old son, came to me while I was in the shower (no less) and reported that the crowd was rioting.  For some reason, my first thought was the winter Olympics.  So I asked him what crowd.

He told me there were, wait for it...... no bikkies in the cupboard, so nothing to eat for school.  He would have to settle for a vegemite sandwich.....again!

So basically, the crowd wasn't rioting as such, I prefer to think of them as revolting.

I pointed out that there was ample cold sliced meats and salad in the fridge for sandwiches, and that we weren't buying bikkies anymore, so get used to it.  Previously, our sweetest biscuit in the cupboard were McVites digestives, but 16 year old son was pretty fond of packing himself a handful of digestives, half a packet of rice crackers and a juice popper for his day at school.

I am lucky in that my three older children all want to make their own lunches for school.  That saves me a job, even though the kitchen does tend to look like a bomb hit it after they are finished.  A few years ago the 16 year old decided that he didn't like sandwiches, so his school lunches have been a bit ordinary ever since.  The other two pack a pretty good lunch. 
They started the year knowing that there would be no more juice poppers, drinks would have to be water only. I am still buying them bread, even though I don't eat bread myself.  The fridge is full of salad, cold meats and cheeses. There are also nuts and we are still making our way through a glut of mangoes. So they just have to think a little harder to come up with school friendly lunches and snacks. There is no way that there is 'no food'.  And there is no way that they will starve.  They just have to get used to less sugar and less refined carbohydrates. I am sure they will cope.

As for me.
Another ordinary night's sleep, I really hope that that improves soon. I don't think that it has anything to do with the change in eating as I have three things that are conspiring to keep me awake:
1. It's hot and humid
2. I have a breastfed baby who wakes at least once in the night, usually more like three or four times, and
3. There is an industrial machine that is running all night long, it has a very annoying vibrating hum, that is quite frankly driving me nuts.

I haven't poohed for two days.  Wonder when that when that will happen?  From explosive watery diarrhoea to nothing, weird.
Gums are still a bit dodgy too.

Today's menu
I was a bit decadent this morning and had the following for breakfast:
Chai seeds soaked overnight in coconut cream, vanilla and cinnamon.  These tasted very rich and naughty.  I was supposed to use coconut milk instead of cream I think, as instead of being porridge like it was quite solid.  I was thinking about rolling them into balls and coating them in cocoa or coconut and then being able to eat them as a snack.
Mango and fresh cream  ( I guess this is my limit of carbs for the day, but I've had three days on very low carb, and those mangoes need eating.  It's not every year we get a mango glut like this)
Snack:
Havarti cheese
Lunch:
Bacon and eggs and salsa
Havarti cheese

Dinner:
Chicken thigh in creamy garlic sauce with "zucchini noodles"
mushrooms and cauliflour

Snack:
coconut muesli and cream  - watching MKR makes me really hungry.  All those carbs in the pasta and dessert....yum.


Watched a promo for Cereal Killers today.  That guy ate 70% of his calories from fat.  I am really struggling to fat-ify my diet.  I have the mental block that I still think saturated fat will clog my arteries and I just don't find all that fat very palatable.  I still find myself discarding the fat off my meat and fatty chicken skin.  I am no where near being able to eat straight butter.  I do like the A2 cream and cheese however.

Exercise was mopping the floors in the house.

Sunday 9 February 2014

Day 4 and another kilo disappears?

Couldn't sleep last night, so woke up late and pretty tired.
My gums are a bit swollen too, so something must be lacking in my diet somewhere.
Besides that feel pretty good today, not overly hungry or craving sweets.
The tiredness left me through out the day too.

Today's menu
Breakfast
Finished off the bolognaise sauce
cup of tea

Lunch
ham slices rolled around pesto and salad mix
a few pieces of brie
dandelion coffee
a few nuts

Snack
very small mango
communion wafer

Dinner
Garlic prawns and fish on shredded lettuce, carrot, snow peas, red onion and cucumber.
butter and cream garlic sauce
coconut muesli with cream

Exercise
Went sailing for about an hour, capsized and swam a bit too, lol.

I weighed myself after breakfast again today to see if yesterday's 3 missing kilos would turn up.  I didn't have any diarrhoea yesterday. Surprisingly, another kilo seemed to disappear.  Is someone messing with my scales?

I decided to check my waist measurement and found that absolutely nothing had changed there.  So It is a complete mystery to me where that 4 kg has disappeared from, hope it wasn't my brain, lol.  Having only taken three measurements in the beginning, I guess it could have been from anywhere, but it certainly wasn't around my waist, the only bit of me that seems to cause the health authorities concern.

Funny, with that 4 kg weight loss it puts me right in the middle of my preferred weight range, yet still almost 20cm too wide in my middle.  Ah, what's a girl to do?

Keep eating fat and avoiding carbs, the experiment continues.....

Saturday 8 February 2014

Day Three - Miraculous weight loss?

Last night following dinner I had a little bit of a headache.  I though here we go, another withdrawal symptom.  I was quite tired yesterday, so after I had a bit of a lie down and a rest the headache disappeared. 

Today I feel fine.

Just to be stupid I decided to jump on the scales, as if anything could have happened in less than three days.  The scales showed my weight at 75kg....what????
No that's not possible, On day one when I weighed in I was 79kg.  I jumped off the scales and checked that they were calibrated correctly, and then I moved them to the exact spot on the floor where I had weighed myself on Thursday.  They showed 76kg.  Is that possible?  To lose three kilos in less than three days?

Weight loss that is that quick is dangerous, isn't it?  Yes I have had diarrhoea but not chronic stuck on the toilet bowl, tummy bug type diarrhoea.  Just the couple of times I went each day it was a bit liquid.

I haven't starved myself.  Far from it.  I have eaten as much as I wanted, with snacks.  I just haven't eaten much in the way of carbs.  This experiment has suddenly just gotten a whole lot more interesting, I am intrigued to see where it goes from here.

Today I ate
Breakfast:
Still going with the left over bolognaise sauce ( got one more serve to go for tomorrow)

Lunch
Leftover roast pork from last night's dinner
roast pumpkin, roast onion, fetta, walnuts, salad leaves, cucumber, tomato and red capsicum with lemon juice and flaxseed oil dressing.
Soy decaf cappuccino

Snack
two slices of cheese

Dinner
BBQ steak and lamb chop
salad
pesto
salsa

Exercise
More housework, focused on doing squats while I picked up all the crap off the floor.  With four kids, one of them a toddler there are a huge number of opportunities for picking stuff up off the ground.
Swam laps in pool

Thursday 6 February 2014

Day two - The "before" shot

Not sure that my photography is much good, but here are a couple of pre-diet photos taken with my mobile phone.  I should have taken them on day one, but here they are on day two, I'm sure it wont make much difference.


Dreadful photography, but hey it gives a pretty good representation of where I am at now, and the fact that my face is blurred, can only be a good thing, lol.

Today the sweets cravings are not too bad.  I had a brief moment at 3pm, that's the danger time for me.  I think by not having carbs for lunch, I'm not having the rebounding sugar low at mid afternoon.

I also think that it has definitely helped the transition to have dabbled with the diet a bit before hand, that is, reducing carbs and changing my consumption of fats to the more desirable fats.
Still, I am having watery diarrhoea that is slightly explosive.  Very strange, I didn't expect this. I seem to be weeing more too.  I wonder if this is where the early weight loss that is attributed to 'fluid' comes from?

I am also feeling a bit tired, but Ellie did wake up more times than usual last night, so I could just simply be sleep deprived.

Today I ate:
Breakfast
Bolognaise sauce (still finishing off left overs)

Snack
plain yoghurt, coconut flakes, walnuts, sunflower seeds, pumpkin seeds.
slice of cheese

Lunch
salad of mixed leaves, carrot, red capsicum, tomato, cucumber, snow peas, red onion, walnuts, feta cheese, salami and flaxseed oil and lemon juice dressing.

I couldn't finish mine as I was full, so gave it to Steve to finish.
Harry was offering lollies around, but I had no trouble declining the offer.

Snack

Cup of tea

Dinner
Roast pork
roast veg
steamed veg

Exercise: Didn't get to walk Harry to school this morning, so just the general activity from doing light house work, hauling baskets of washing and small children around.

So, by and large feeling pretty good, bring on day three.....

Day 1 - the weigh in

Time to bite the bullet and get started on this thing.

First things first, however, I need some base line measurements to see if there are any effects.  I am not going to get my blood checked, as I hate having blood tests, so the previous results from other historical tests will just have to do.

Today's weight: 79kg
Height : 175cm
BMI : 25 which I calculated from this site.  They have categorised me as 'overweight', even though their own information that follows says this:
Healthy Weight (BMI 18.5 to 25)
You are a healthy weight for your height. But we recommend that you also check your waist measurement.
Aim to keep within the ideal weight range by eating a healthy, well-balanced diet and exercising regularly. Most adults should be active for 30 minutes on most days.
For older Australians, your general health may be more important than being mildly overweight. Some researchers have suggested that a BMI range of 22-26 is acceptable for older Australians.
 
 
Also the graphic that they show of the figure looks nothing like my body shape.  The women in the line drawing has much smaller boobs.  As I am breastfeeding, I'm pretty sure that I am carrying a couple of extra kilos in my breast tissue, and this would be perfectly normal.  Hence the problems with BMI's there are so many exceptions to the rules.
 
So I moved onto the waist measurement page and there is no joy there.  Their information says:
 
Your waist measurement compares closely with your body mass index (BMI), and is often seen as a better way of checking your risk of developing a chronic disease.
Measuring your waist circumference is a simple check to tell how much body fat you have and where it is placed around your body.  Where your fat is located can be an important sign of your risk of developing an ongoing health problem.
Regardless of your height or build, for most adults a waist measurement of greater than 94cm for men and 80cm for women is an indicator of the level of internal fat deposits which coat the heart, kidneys, liver and pancreas, and increase the risk of chronic disease.
 
So how did I do? Abysmally.

Today's waist circumference:  98cm.  Yep that's right, almost 20cm too fat.  That's huge. I must have some fat organs sitting in my abdomen.

Another indicator is waist to hip ratio. With that you measure your waist and your hips and then divide the waist measurement by the hip measurement.  Wonder how I did there?

Today's hip measurement : 108cm.  So, 98/108 = 0.9

Hmmmm, women are meant to have a waist to hip ratio of 0.8 or lower and men are meant to have one of 1.0 or lower.  Kinda makes me wonder how accurate all this stuff is.  I've never had a cinched in waist.  Some women, even with fairly high body fat, still seem to have a defined waist line.  I've always kind of had a boy shape with boobs.  I'm not sure that my ratio would change greatly with weight loss anyway.  I'd still have essentially the same shape, just in a smaller size.

The other thing that I wonder about waist size is that the area you measure, that is, between the top of the hip bones and the bottom of the ribs is out side the area of the essential organs, that presumably are the ones that are at risk when they are fatty caused by visceral fat. So if they are fat and stretching your abdomen, wouldn't they be stretching your rib cage out further and the proper measurement should be perhaps about where your bra sits? Or at least between the bottom of your boobs and the top of your waist.  That's pretty much where all those organs that are at risk sit.

See the thing with waists, is that they are supposed to be the smallest part of your abdomen. You know, like an hourglass shape, for women.  But my body, and I suspect a lot of other bodies don't work like that.  My smallest part of my abdomen is around my rib cage.  If I move the measuring tape until I find the narrowest part of my abdomen, it is actually about 5cm higher than where I am told that my waist is supposed to be.  This is evidenced by examining myself in the mirror.  So if I measure where the most obvious narrowing of my abdomen is (both visually and according to the tape measure)  my 'waist' measurement is actually: 92cm.

Ok, still no where near 80cm.  But if I was harbouring heaps of fat around my organs, surely I'd expect that number to be higher.  That new number gives me a waist to hip ratio of 0.85, which is better.  Now all I have to do is get fatter in the thighs, no just kidding.


So just to labour the point, lets do some more calculations, see if I can work out my body fat percentage.  Now this is not going to be pleasant.

According to the book Protein Power, this is how you determine body fat:

Add together your hips and abdomen then subtract your height.

Here goes: (92 + 108 = 200)- 175 = 25

Following their charts it would look like this:

abdomen =36 inches which is 25.6
hips = 42 inches which is 50.24

add these together

25.6 + 50.24 = 75.30

now subtract height = 68.5 which is 41.60

75.30-41.60 = 33.7 percent fat.  Wow that's a lot.

Now calculate lean body mass, this will be interesting, and depressing, I suggest.

total weight X %body fat = weight of fat.   I am almost too scared to do the calculation.

79kg X 33.7% = 26.6kg

So therefore my lean body weight ( in a parallel universe, I think) would be body weight minus fat weight.

79kg-26.6kg = 52.4kg

Now no fat on my body would likely kill me, so 52.4 kg is not realistic.  So what is realistic, how much fat should I have and therefore would be able to add to my lean body weight.  I am guessing it's not 26kg worth.

Again, according to Protein Power, the ideal body fat percentage for a female aged 41-50 is 22-28%. So at 33.7% I am riding over that amount.

Calculated lean body weight = 52.4kg which is 120 pounds
Ideal body fat range 22-28%
step 1 subtract each percentage from 100
100%-22% = 78%
100%-28% =72%
step 2 divide your lean body weight by each of the numbers from step 1
120/78 = 1.54
120/72 = 1.66
step 3 multiply each number by 100, this will be your ideal range.
1.54 X 100 = 154 pounds which is about 70kg
1.66 X 100 = 166 pounds which is about 75kg

So my healthy weight range is 70-75kg.  That's only 4kg to lose, I can't imagine 4kg or even 9kg would shift 20cm of belly fat off me.  It is going to be very interesting to see just how my body composition changes over the next few months.

The final thing is to calculate my protein needs based on my lean body weight.  I am doing this as a point of interest, but as I will more me focusing this diet on low carb/high fat, the protein will just have to come along for the ride.

30g or less of carbs/ day
25g of fibre/ day (this maybe hard without carbs to deliver them)
8 glasses of water / day
Exercise, which I have covered by walking to school with Harry everyday

For protein intake, every pound (don't you love American books) of LBM or lean body mass requires 0.6g of protein.
 My LBM is 120 pounds so that means I require 72 grams of protein per day, minimum.
Or about 24 grams/ meal.

Okay, now that that is all worked out, what did I actually do today?

Breakfast:
Leftover bolognaise sauce from last night's dinner (no pasta, obviously)
lunch:
100g chicken breast
2 slices of edam cheese
snack:
nuts
Dinner
pan fried lamb rump
fried onions, mushrooms and tomato
steamed vegetables

snack
piece of beef jerky
slice of cheese

Exercise:
Walked to school and back with Harry.

Interestingly I watched a TV show tonight on ABC that measured BMI and body fat.  It said that women with body fat percentage below 35% was good.  So that makes me feel better.  :)

Feelings

I think that I coped really well today and without suffering too much from hunger or cravings.  When it was time to cook dinner I didn't feel particularly hungry, I just cooked it because it was dinner time.  I didn't crave dessert afterwards either.

While watching MKR I did feel like dessert when I saw the trifle dessert course come out.  I countered that with my snack of beef jerky and cheese.

I had a sudden burst of diarrhoea tonight which was interesting. I feel a bit light headed and tired.

Lets see how day two goes tomorrow...








Tuesday 4 February 2014

Basic guidelines to get started with

I already mentioned in a previous blog that our family conveniently has two series of birthdays which neatly coincide with the big eating fests in our culture.  Four of us are spread over the Christmas to Australia Day season and the other two occur around Easter.  So that gives me a good excuse to relax dietary rules and enjoy the trappings of the seasons.

Also over the summer/ Christmas period we have an abundance of beautiful fruit.  I love the stone fruit season. In particular we grow our own mangoes (in a good season). This season is a good one for mangoes and our two trees are laden.  There is no way I can pass this up.  If I was a caveman I would be taking full advantage of the bounty, so that is what I intend to do.

So rule #1 apart from the initial 3 day detox, If I grow the fruit I am allowed to eat it.
rule #2 I get to have a break from the low carb regime from my birthday in mid December through to Harry's birthday at the beginning of February and also for about a month around April/May coinciding with Steve and Sarah's birthdays and Easter.

Soymilk
As soymilk is our milk of choice and in reality I use such a small amount of it, a splash or two in my cups of tea throughout the day, I have decided that I can continue to consume it.  The brand we use is made from the whole soybean, is non genetically modified, relatively low in added sugar and has a bit of omega 3 in it.
so rule # 3 I can use small amounts of soymilk in the diet.

I also make soy yoghurt out of the  above soymilk, it is unsweetened and quite nice on it's own or with something else.  That is also permissible.

Grains

Rule # 4 No grains.  Nothing more really needs to be said.

Seeds and nuts

Rule #5 nuts are good, seeds are too in small amounts.

Sweeteners

I haven't decided about whether I will put some stevia in the cupboard or not.  I am not a big fan of artificial sweeteners, but they might be necessary in certain situations.  In the initial phase though, I am retraining my sweet sensors, so artificial sweetness is not needed.  I'm gonna have to get used to things not tasting so sweet.

Rule #6 Dextrose is ok for a little bit of sweetness later in the diet.  Will review the use of stevia then too.  Rice syrup is expensive and suddenly really difficult to find in the supermarket.  Not sure why, I always used to buy it a few years ago.

Vegetables
Rule #7  Apart from potatoes and corn I am not going to be too uptight about vegies.  I'll stick with a variety, more salads in hot weather and soups in cold weather.  I will watch that I don't consume too many goitrogens or excessive vitamin K, given my blood clot history.

Meat and fat

Rule #8  Again, I'm not going to stress too much about meat and its relative fat content.  I am going to eat what tastes good and try my hardest to get grass fed, free range and happy humanely raised animals to eat.  I will cook with coconut oil, olive oil and also use light olive oil in salads.  I will use butter on vegies and eggs.  Cream is ok too, just fresh poured out of the bottle is yum.

Drinks

Rule #9
Water, tea, herbal teas, dandelion coffee, decaf cappuccinos, and chai tea are all allowed.

And just to keep things even, I need a rule #10

Legumes

I'm gonna eat legumes at this point in time.  I need to read up more and find more evidence as to why legumes are no good.  So at this stage they are still on the menu.


It will be interesting to review this set of rules at Easter and see how good my compliance was and whether they need any tweaking.  But this is my starting point, now to take the plunge........




D Week

The time is drawing ever nearer.

The last of the family birthdays are over and we finally have a clear stretch until Easter to really give this diet a good go.

The run up time has been a chance for me to read up on everything that I can find about the different variations of the diet.  The latest book I am reading is Grain Brain, which I am particularly interested in seeing as mum is suffering from dementia.  It is such a horrible disease.

Mum had a reasonably healthy diet, she always maintained a sensible weight and she exercised regularly.  The two most notable things about mum's diet was her breakfasts and the obsession she had with eating fruit. 
She firmly believed that breakfast was the most important meal of the day.  She took to this idea with gusto.  Her mornings always started with a cup of warm water with a teaspoon of salt.  Not sure why she did this, maybe some sort of cleansing thing.  Then she made herself a big, and I mean BIG, bowl of cereal which consisted of a number of cereals; for example, weet-bix, all bran, muesli, and sultana bran. Then she would top her bowl of cereal with some more 'healthy' grains, any combination of: lecithin, unprocessed bran, and oat bran. Then on top of that she would slice up an entire banana, a goodly portion of dates, prunes and sometimes some stewed fruit.  This monstrosity would then need a full pint of milk to be mixed with it in increments so that she could get it all down.

But it didn't stop there. After all, breakfast is the most important meal of the day. Mum would then cook herself a piece of toast which she would top with margarine and Vegemite and eat with a cup of tea.  In later years her tea changed from black tea to green tea as she found out about the importance of antioxidants.  If mum was having a particularly strenuous day, that is, on the days she played tennis, she would also throw in a hard boiled egg with her toast for good measure.  And just when you thought that this woman could not possibly fit anymore food in, she would finish off breakfast with a fresh sliced orange.

This breakfast process was epic.  It would take her ages to get through it all.  She would start before any of us even got up, and was still going as we were leaving the house for our various daytime activities.  The whole breakfast was like a ritual and mum relied on it to 'keep her regular'. She also tried to value add her breakfast with as many of the health food fads that were going around. She really did take the ' breakfast is the most important meal of the day' adage to a whole new level.

Of course, after all that breakfast she didn't need morning tea, and she would have a reasonably small lunch.  Lunch was often an egg or perhaps sardines on toast.  In later years, she became obsessed with having banana sandwiches for lunch.  Usually lunch was finished off with a cake, slice or bikkie with her cup of tea.

Mum was pretty good, she tended not to snack on junk, so generally didn't have afternoon tea either.  Though in later years when us grown up kids came to visit, she would (sociably) join us with cakes or bikkies for morning or afternoon tea.  She was good, though, and never over ate the sweet snacks.  I can't say that I was that self controlled. What she did eat a lot of, though, was fruit.  She loved fruit and would eat numerous pieces per day. She always had an apple a day, usually a Granny Smith, and during stone fruit season she would add in peaches or nectarines between meals.  She loved pears too and would always eat at least one of those a day in season as well. Rockmelon was also a particular favourite and dessert would quite often be sliced fruit and ice cream. After all fruit is good for you, right?  Therefore, more must be even better.

Dinner was pretty much the meat, potatoes and three veg.  Dad had gall and reflux problems, so food had to be kept pretty simple to keep him comfortable.  We didn't always have dessert, but it was definitely a preferred option when we could.  Mum credited herself as coming from a long line of sweet tooths, in fact they were just good eaters all round. A favourite family saying from her childhood was 'better food bills than doctor's bills'.

In the evening mum would finish her day with a cup of tea and usually a couple of wheatmeal biscuits.  She loved her fibre and whole grains.  These helped keep her bowels moving and her appetite under control. She would have a piece of fruit before dinner and also later at night before her evening cup of tea.

Basically, she had what would be regarded as an incredibly healthy diet.  It was well balanced, with plenty of fruit and veg and supplemented with a few of the fashionable super foods of the time. So for someone like mum to come down with such a devastating form of dementia is perplexing.  I know that my current diet is no where near as 'good' as hers.  It freaks me out a bit that she could eat so mindfully, healthily and still succumb to the ravages of that dreadful disease.  I wonder what if anything that she could have done differently. When you hear all the recommendations from the experts about how to ward off disease, mum was doing all that.

Her weakness for sweets did become more apparent as she aged ( I suspect the dementia was starting to kick in) and she, in an almost child like way, started to prefer dessert over main course.  She started to get a bit naughty and fill up on strawberry milk shakes and eat minimal main course so that she could get onto dessert. I thought that it was just the dementia bringing out the child in her.  But now a few years down the track, I am starting to read that dementia is possibly type 3 diabetes.

As the books say, correlation is not causation, but it has been noted that people suffering with dementia seem to have a very sweet tooth.  A handy way for nursing home staff to administer oral medication is by lacing it with jam or honey.  The dementia patients suck it down and look for more.

Does the sweet tooth cause the dementia or the dementia demand sweets? Or is there only coincidence and no cause and effect here at all?

One of the more interesting experiments of going sugar and grain free will be to see if (short term at least) the brain feels sharper.  Every now and then I get the odd brain fog day.  I often wonder whether this is a symptom, that will increase in frequency as I age to the point where I slip into dementia. I remember with mum's dementia diagnosis, she really didn't get the final diagnosis until we had effectively eliminated every other possible reason for her behaviour.  It was like we had to physically trip over it before we could accept it as true. Because the beginning stages are a slow progression that mimics so many other conditions, not the least of, just plain old fashioned ageing.

I am calling this D Week as it is the week to get started.  The kids have been warned, and have had a few weeks to get used to the idea.  They have been allowed to eat and drink and indulge the last of their favourite foods.  The popper of juice in their lunch boxes has been discontinued, much to many complaints.  I have put bread and pasta in the freezer, if they desire it enough they can go and make their own.  I personally wont be eating or cooking rice, pasta, bread, potatoes or any other grain.  If they want to supplement they can, but I shall not be doing it for them.  There is still a bit of sugar in the cupboard, once it has gone, it will be dextrose or nothing for them.  I will buy them honey and unsweetened breakfast cereals if they so desire, but I shall not be eating them.  Basically they are welcome to stick with their unsweetened grains and if they want sweet stuff, they can eat honey or go out buy their own......

I have already started cooking with the good oils and have ample butter in the fridge.  The Nutellex is still there too if they so desire, but I will stick with butter and the yummy A2 cream I have found.

Now it's time to just pick the day, and do that three day detox..........