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Life After Carbs

A real person eating (mostly) real food

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A typical day in my life after carbs

By Jim July 17, 2011

Following up on my post "What is a low carb diet?" I'm presenting here a typical day of low carbing.   The day was a Saturday. Breakfast (6:30 a.m.) Most days, I'm an early riser.  The sun comes up, and I'm right there with it. no-filler salmon patty (leftover) two eggs scrambled with butter two mugs of coffee, each with two teaspoons of half-and-half one multi-vitamin for men Morning Snack (10:00 a.m.) Having this mid-morning snack was a-typical.  Often I make it to lunch … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Featured Posts, Food, Low-Carb Basics, Personal Reflection Tagged With: diet, food, low-carb

What is a low carb diet?

By Jim July 15, 2011

The target is to lose weight

When I say that I follow a low carbohydrate way of eating, what do I mean? When you say it, what do you mean? I suspect we might all mean something a little different -- or even a lot different -- if we were to get down to specific foods we include or avoid, or to the number of grams of carbs we consume per day. The title of my blog -- "Life After Carbs" -- implies that I don't eat any carbs at all, but of course that's not true.  The title ought to be interpreted as meaning, "Life after … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Featured Posts, Low-Carb Basics, Personal Reflection Tagged With: Atkins, carbs, diets compared, low-carb

Great foods for a low-carb diet (part 2): seeds

By Jim July 8, 2011

Maybe it's a stretch to call seeds "great food."  Also, a reader new to low-carbing might get the impression that low-carb is a diet for the birds.  That impression would be wrong unless we're talking about birds of prey! Seeds are at least a useful food, packing plenty of nutrition into a tiny space, and I have added a couple of seed products to my diet since going low-carb: sunflower kernels and flax seed meal.  As you can see from the above, neither photographs well.  Roasted sunflower … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Featured Posts, Food, Low-Carb Basics Tagged With: flax seeds, food, low-carb, peanut butter, recipe, rolled oats, sunflower seeds

Great foods for a low-carb diet (part 1): almonds, avocados, macadamias

By Jim July 5, 2011

If you're like me (which you probably aren't, but let's pretend), you may find your food tastes expanding as you adapt to a low carb way of eating.  Over the last few months, I have added several foods to my dietary repertoire, and I have eaten more of some other great foods than I ever did in the past.   In general, I eat more whole foods now than processed/ packaged foods.  Nuts, seeds, berries and fish are classes of foods that I always liked, but eat significantly more of on my low-carb … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Featured Posts, Food, Low-Carb Basics, Personal Reflection Tagged With: almonds, Anita, Atkins, avocados, food, fruits, guacamole, low-carb, macadamias, nuts

Low-carb road-trip eating

By Jim July 1, 2011

Road

When my wife was 11 years old, she was mesmerized by Peter Tork, a member of the Monkees.  Depending on whom you ask, the Monkees were either actors in a TV comedy or musicians in a rock-band.  Or both. My wife would say both, and more, but her focus was always on the blond, hazel-eyed Mr. Tork. It still is. All of this explains why she and I drove to Merrillville, Indiana, yesterday to watch the Monkees (three of the four, anyway) perform at the Star Plaza Theatre.  It was a stop on the … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Featured Posts, Food, Low-Carb Basics, Personal Reflection Tagged With: Anita, breakfast, eating out, low-carb, Monkees, salad, salmon

Cooking top sirloin on the grill

By Jim June 30, 2011

Summer is a great time to be low-carbing. Nothing says low-carb like a big hunk of red meat on an open grill. That's what we ate for dinner last night, and here's how I prepared it. 1. Get yourself a good fire going.  The one pictured here was started 15 minutes before; it wouldn't hurt to wait another ten minutes, but I rarely have that much patience. 2. Plunk down a couple juicy steaks.  This is top sirloin, about a pound and a half, nicely marbled. The cow it came from wasn't … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Featured Posts, Food Tagged With: brats, cooking methods, green beans, steak

Why we snack

By Jim June 29, 2011

Bowl of chips

Do we eat more because we eat more often? Yes, says a study that claims Americans eat 570 more calories per day now than they did 30 years ago because they are eating all of the time. The study's lead author, Professor Barry Popkin of the University of North Carolina at Chapel Hill, told CNN Health that "the real reason we seem to be eating more (calories) is we're eating often."  But is eating frequency all there is to it, or does what a person eats make a difference? To say we are eating … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Featured Posts, Media Watch, News & Commentary Tagged With: carbs, high-carb, low-carb, observational study, snacks

No-filler salmon patties

By Jim June 16, 2011

Before I started eating low-carb, salmon was a minor part of my diet.  If I ate salmon at all, it was in the form of a grilled or broiled salmon steak, usually in a restaurant. I never purchased or prepared canned salmon.  But that has changed. Now I look for sales on canned salmon, and try to always have a few cans in the pantry. Canned salmon is usually wild-caught fish, which has a better reputation for purity than farm-raised fish.  It's typically sold in 14.75 ounce cans, each of … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Featured Posts, Food, Personal Reflection Tagged With: cooking, fish, recipe, salmon

Baked, broiled or deep-fried: how do you like your variables?

By Jim June 12, 2011

Deep fried fish and chips

Study: Baked, Broiled — But Not Fried — Fish Is Good for the Heart – TIME Healthland, May 26, 2011. Want a healthier heart? Try adding fish to your diet. But be careful how it's cooked, a new study warns: baked or broiled fish will boost heart health, but fried fish is probably better left uneaten. Heart failure risk lower in women who often eat baked/broiled fish--American Heart Association, Press Release, May 24, 2011. This study showed that the type of fish and cooking method may affect … [Read more...]

Filed Under: Critiques, Featured Posts, Media Watch, Science Follies Tagged With: cooking methods, fish, heart failure, observational study

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