LizStreithorst
Senior Cook
Y'all would hate me.
I agree it would be very nice if I could do that too, but I find that even a taste of something like that puts me in a serious craving mode similar to an alcoholic never being able to drink again. So far I've lost 40 lbs on under fifty carbs a day, sometimes half of that, in the last seven months. I know I could have done better with more exercise though. I see to it that my Souschef gets his carbs with my low carb dinners, but even at that, he's lost 11 lbs, and he's happy too.
Y'all would hate me.
I guess it depends on your definition of many. I think that low carb would be accurate for the traditional diets of all the Arctic and most of the sub-arctic people. It was also traditional for at least some of the tribes of the Great Plains, of the Namgis First Nation (British Columbia), and of the Maasai.I'm not so sure about that. Maybe in the far northern latitudes, where wheat, rice, barley, buckwheat, millet, potatoes, etc., don't grow well, but the diet of most of the ancient agricultural societies was based on some sort of grain.
I guess it depends on your definition of many. I think that low carb would be accurate for the traditional diets of all the Arctic and most of the sub-arctic people. It was also traditional for at least some of the tribes of the Great Plains, of the Namgis First Nation (British Columbia), and of the Maasai.
I specified indigenous people, because they were (some still are) eating a low carb diet long before the 1800s. I wasn't saying that most people ate a low carb diet, just that some people were.I guess I'm not sure why you specified indigenous people. They seem to be (and have always been) a small minority of the world population and you're talking mostly about geographic areas where grains don't grow well, if at all (without modern farming methods).
I am back on my Ketogenic Diet...
I am back on my Ketogenic Diet...