Paleohacks Cookbooks

Food , Cooking & Drink

Maximum Nutrition, Minimum Interference!

The Paleo Diet and similarly, the Paleo Recipes you’re about to discover work by two fundamental principles:

  • 1. Put maximum nutrition INTO your body… and…
  • 2. Reduce or eliminate toxins and “interference”.

The first one is obvious. Natural foods from the plant and animal world especially when organic and untouched by the horrors of modern food production and manufacturing are loaded with essential nutrition.

The second principle is just as fundamental, but less apparent. It means that when we avoid toxins hidden packaged/processed food… and the many hidden toxins in commercial meat, fruits and vegetables…

Our bodies begin to clean out and detoxify. This allows our cells to expend less energy in actually fighting off foreign substances and more on rebuilding, growth and rejuvenation.

The result? We look better, feel better, and perform better.

The Paleolithic diet, Paleo diet, caveman diet, or stone-age diet is a modern fad diet consisting of foods thought to mirror those eaten during the Paleolithic era.

There are different variants of the diet; some are predominantly plant-based but the most recent popular variants focus on animal products. The diet avoids processed food and typically includes vegetables, fruits, nuts, roots, and meat and excludes dairy products, grains, sugar, legumes, processed oils, salt, alcohol, and coffee. The ideas behind the diet can be traced to primitive diets advocated in 19th century. In the 1970s Walter L. Voegtlin popularized a meat-centric “Stone Age” diet, and in the 21st century, the Paleo Diet was popularized in the best-selling books of Loren Cordain. As of 2019 the paleo diet industry was worth approximately US$500 million.

In the 21st century the sequencing of the human genome and DNA analysis of the remains of early humans has found evidence that humans evolved rapidly in response to changing diet. This evidence undermines a core premise of the paleolithic diet, that human digestion has remained essentially unchanged over time. Anthropological science has found that the paleolithic human diet was more varied and less meat-centric than had been assumed.

The paleolithic diet is promoted as a way of improving health. There is some evidence that following it may lead to improvements in body composition and metabolism compared with the typical Western diet or compared with diets recommended by some European nutritional guidelines. On the other hand, following the diet can lead to nutritional deficiencies such as an inadequate calcium intake, and side effects can include weakness, diarrhea, and headaches.

– https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Paleolithic_diet