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Low-Carb High-Fat (LCHF)

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The LCHF Kitchen

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“Your body is not a temple, it’s an amusement park. Enjoy the ride.”

-Anthony Bourdain (1956-2018)

LCHF is not a diet. It’s a philosophy and a lifestyle, so everyone will have a slightly different take on how to do it. I’ll be explaining here how it works out for me personally, but there are also some general features.

The most notable one is that LCHF meals celebrate the enjoyment of food. Most diets, it seems, are designed to punish the dieter: he has sinned and he must pay penance, with small portions and tasteless ingredients. But as long as you give your body real food to work with, it will tell you all by itself when you’ve had enough: you’ll get an “I’m full” signal at the correct point. The LCHF kitchen, then, is always full of real food. LCHF as a philosophy overlaps somewhat with the slow-food/back-to-the-land movement, and you’ll find a lot of adherents with a foot in both camps.

As explained in the first article, there are at least two stages of an LCHF-based diet plan: induction and maintenance. For those with a weight-loss goal, as opposed to general heath concerns, there’s a weight-loss phase in the middle. What you have in your kitchen will vary depending on which phase you’re in, but there are several things you will never have:

-Sugar

-Sodas and fruit juices

-White sliced bread and frozen pizzas

-Bags of dried pasta and white rice

-Prepared pasta sauces and packet sauces

-Microwave meals (typically rice- or pasta-based)

-Cookies, cakes, sweets, crisps, and other plastic-wrapped detritus that advertisers tell us we can’t live without

-Oblong breaded objects that may or may not contain chicken meat

-Margarine, faux spreads (“0% fat!”) and cheese with a “Z”

-Low-fat milk and low-fat yoghurt

Don’t feel bad if your cupboards are full of this stuff. We’ve been told from our earliest years that they’re good for us, or at least harmless. Our parents and schools gave them to us. Food conglomerates tell us that we have ‘busy lifestyles’ and that we have no choice but to buy their products. I’ve thoughtlessly eaten these things and even fed them to my kids. But now it’s time to take back control.

You may be starting to panic at this point. If you can’t eat a pasta meal when you get home from work or the gym, what are you going to do? You’re tired and you’re grumpy. You want to eat and you want to eat now. Now now now.

There are workarounds for this – we’ll get to that later – but LCHF is a radical lifestyle change. It involves a lot more cooking than you might be used to. The good news is that, like any skill, cooking becomes much easier and quicker the more you practice, and most cultures would be appalled by the British habit of outsourcing an important bodily function – eating – to corporations that really don’t care if we live or die, as long as we live long enough to make some profits for them. Cooking, and eating what you’ve cooked, is not just a way of ensuring you get the right sustenance, it’s a source of pride in a job well done and a way of bonding with your nearest and dearest. It’s a deeply emotional act, and eliminating it from your life eliminates a great wellspring of enjoyment.

Therefore, the LCHF kitchen is full of ingredients, not meals. Vegetables, mostly. You’ll have a basket of onions, garlic, shallots and carrots, and maybe some celery and leeks (the ingredients of a mirepoix or soffritto). In the fridge you’ll have sweet peppers, chilis, tomatoes. Definitely a cauliflower, some broccoli/calabrese, and a piece of pumpkin or squash. And you’ll be buying salad vegetables regularly, or preferably growing them in your vegetable patch, along with a few herbs. Milk and yoghurt will be the full-fat kind, and you’ll have proper butter and cheese (for cooking, not for sandwiches). In your freezer you’ll have meat: not just chicken breast and lean pork, but full-of-flavour cuts like beef shin and pork belly roasting joints. Eggs will be a dietary staple, so you’ll have at least a dozen on hand at all times.

You may be panicking again: I can’t afford to eat like Gordon Ramsay. Surprisingly, you almost certainly can, even if you’re in dire financial straits. Eating like this is often cheaper – or at least no more expensive – than eating beige objects of dubious provenance from plastic packets. In another article I’ll explain how to obtain good-value ingredients and offer some recipes for family favourites like chicken nuggets, burgers, and fruit yoghurt: I guarantee you can make gourmet versions of these for roughly the same price as the supermarket version.

Wait … didn’t I just tell you those things are unhealthy? The point here is that the packaged version isn’t even food. Supermarket nuggets are made with bone-scrapings, soy filler, and water (phosphates are used to increase water-holding capacity). A mechanically-extruded patty in a preservative-laced bun is not the same as a burger patty made from pasture-raised beef eaten with a salad. Low-fat yoghurt isn’t even yoghurt: it’s made with modified starches, sugar, and milk powder. We’re going to start eating the real thing. So let’s get a little less abstract and examine some meal plans. Here’s what I usually eat for breakfast:

Homemade sausage patty

Home-cured maple syrup bacon

Fried mushrooms and half a tomato

Scrambled eggs or an omelette (2 eggs)

Side salad, which varies depending on season

Small (1tbsp) serving of sugar-free muesli with milk

Small serving of homemade Greek yoghurt with a dash of honey

Moka pot coffee with cream

Yes, that’s one meal. It takes about 15 minutes from staggering into the kitchen to putting plates onto the table.

For many years my habit was to skip breakfast and to eat sandwiches mid-morning. I thought I “didn’t feel like breakfast” first thing in the morning, but as with most habits, that was just me justifying my behaviour to myself. I now enjoy getting up slightly earlier to make and eat breakfast, and to drink a leisurely coffee. Give it a try: the office will seem a slightly nicer place afterwards.

I’m lucky in that I spend very little time in an actual office. When I do, lunch is always the same thing: two tortillas filled with salad, meat, and a fatty dressing (typically mayonnaise-or cream-based, or guacamole). These are easily constructed in the office kitchen, so as long as you have some prepped filler they’re simpler than sandwiches. However, as you can imagine, a big breakfast actually gets you through most of the day, and often I skip lunch altogether, with a pre-workout snack (usually an omelette) at about 4pm.

Yes, tortillas are bread, and if you’re in weight-loss mode or induction, your best option for lunch would be to omit them, ie., eat some meat and vegetables with a fat-based sauce/dressing. However a flour tortilla doesn’t weigh much (about 20g net carbs) and has a low glycemic index. It therefore presents a low glycemic load, which means that it elicits a fairly small insulin response.

Dinner, for me, is something that may not be an option for you: a 火鍋 (pronounced ‘huo guo’) is basically a meat-and-vegetable soup; Google it. It’s a very popular meal in my part of the world, and it really hits the spot after a workout. If you have a large family, it’s an excellent way of getting everyone around the dinner table – and it takes almost no time to prepare. The pot sits in the middle, and everyone dips in and takes what they like. Remember though: no rice or noodles!

Chinese food in general is very LCHF-friendly, and I would encourage some research. A typical Chinese meal for four has five dishes on the table: something with meat, something with eggs and/or dofu (often in a meat-based sauce), and three types of vegetable. While Chinese people will usually eat with a small serving of rice, not everyone does, and a rice-less meal simply requires that you include more fat in the dishes you prepare … and make them a bit bigger. Upmarket restaurants don't serve rice unless you ask for it: rice is "poor people food" and is therefore not part of a special occasion.

Eating from a smallish repertoire of favourites is the best way to save time. You can prep ahead, you can keep things in the fridge or freezer, and you can cook in bulk. In a future article I hope to expand on this idea. However, there’s no getting around the fact that cooking takes time, and that means you’ll have to free up time from somewhere else in your life. By far the simplest way to do this is to switch off the TV: or even better, throw it in the attic and see how you get along without it. You’ll be surprised how little you miss it after a couple of weeks, and you’ll have a couple of extra hours a day to spend on food preparation.

An interesting feature of LCHF-based meals is that you are less likely to experience gnawing hunger. Your body has a lot of stored bodyfat that it can use when your stomach is empty, and although you will still experience a vague drive to eat, the horrible energy 'crash' that occurs with a carb-based lifestyle doesn't really happen. You're less likely to need feeding NOW the moment you arrive home from work, and if you do, some crackers and cheese will take the edge off while you prepare a proper meal.

Everyone has their own tastes and preferences, and LCHF encourages creativity and personalisation. I’ll conclude with a few bullet points:

-Try new vegetables and cuts of meat. Ever tried scorzonera, yacon, or celeriac? How about chevon (goat meat) or duck? If not, now is a good time.

-Wherever possible, make your own. Most of the so-called ‘healthy’ products on display in supermarkets are just … not. That includes the ones touted as LCHF-friendly. In any case, they’re always very poor value for money.

-Lose the big five from your diet – sugar, rice, pasta, bread, and potatoes – and replace them with vegetables and meat. Play any riff on that theme, and you’re doing LCHF.

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moreless profile image
moreless

What a great post, Toad and relegates me to the unadventurous/boring cook category, so I shall have to hope some old British wifies will happen along and appreciate my type of cooking :D

Even in my pre-LCHF days, I cooked from scratch, because I go back to pre-ready meals days. Unfortunately, in my early days of being a wife and mother, the low fat, high carb guidelines were rolled out and wanting to do the 'best' for my family, I dutifully did as I was told!

Fast forward 40 years and I've now reverted to what Granny taught me and then some!

I'm a big fan of bulk cooking and freezing, in fact I'm addicted to it. I have 4 freezers stuffed to the gunwales with homemade ready meals, but I continue to cook!

I make all the meals I used to make, but substitute the carb content with vegetables, or occasionally use things like quinoa, bulgur wheat, or sweet potato, instead of bread/pastry, rice, white potato and pasta.

So, lasagne can be made with aubergine, or butternut squash slices, curries can be served over cauliflower rice, or cabbage, shepherds pie can be topped with mashed celeriac/sweet potato/butternut squash.

Sauces can be made with cream and gravies can be made with meat juices and liquidised veg to thicken.

Homemade mayo and coleslaw are the perfect accompaniment to salads and here's a recipe from a past member of this forum

healthunlocked.com/lchf-die...

At the beginning of my journey, I panicked about macro percentages and carb counting and it made the whole experience a bit of a nightmare, so I stopped worrying about it and trusted my instincts. I can't have done too badly, as I lost over 100lbs and didn't end up with any awful ailments and even managed to run a marathon, without carb loading! :)

I choose not to eat breakfast and fast between 8pm and 12 noon.

Lunch is generally a salad, soup, or omelette.

Dinner is meat, or fish based, with loads of veg. I try to keep root vegetables and legumes to small, occasional amounts (apart from onions, which feature in every meal!), but pack in the above ground veg.

I rarely eat chicken now and never eat cottage cheese! A lifetime of yoyo dieting put me off both! I love fatty cuts of meat, as they have the most flavour.

I get through a lot of cream, butter and cheese.

I use olive oil, butter, lard and dripping for cooking and coconut oil for spicy food, as I don't like my plainer meals to have an obvious taste of coconut.

I don't snack. If I'm hungry between meals, which is a rare occurrence, my 'go to' fix is a hunk of cheese and a coffee with cream.

I don't eat a lot of fruit, but am partial to berries and cream and a frozen berry/cream ice-cream is delicious. I eat other fruits occasionally, but not daily.

I try to choose as many different colours and types of vegetable that I can, but living extremely rurally, with the wrong kind of weather, means the more exotic varieties are not to be found and are therefore not on the menu. I'm not averse to frozen veg either, for speed and convenience.

NB If it has a barcode, a list of ingredients and a traffic light system of labelling, you probably shouldn't be eating it :)

TheAwfulToad profile image
TheAwfulToadAmbassador in reply to moreless

That response really ought to have been an article all by itself, although you've basically filled in all the details I missed out. You're absolutely right that most traditional meals have a low-carb equivalent. Even the great British roast is easily modified (by replacing potatoes with cauliflower or roasted squash).

My experience with carb-counting is the same as yours: it's really only necessary during induction, and after that it's a pointless exercise. Similarly, I don't avoid carbs obsessively - everyone has a different carb tolerance threshold, and for most people (ie., those who are not insulin-resistant or diabetic) it's fine to eat 100g or so of net carbs. That's still about one-quarter of the recommended (Government-standard) amount.

I find a dash of coconut oil, combined with butter, is nice for cooking omelettes. The coconut flavour is imperceptible, but it adds a certain something.

Your comment about breakfast is interesting in the context of intermittent fasting; I find it quite funny that people actually think a 12-hour break without food counts as "fasting" - endless snacking and nibbling seems to be the modern norm - but I.F. does have some valid science behind it and it does suit some people. LCHF complements I.F. very well precisely because it allows you to go a long time between meals without discomfort. I stopped eating for three days once just to see what would happen - the answer appears to be "not much", although I was certainly ready for a meal on day three!

It's great to hear stories like yours and I really hope more people come along and share theirs. There's nothing like a concrete illustration to dispel myths.

cheritorrox profile image
cheritorrox in reply to moreless

this is very helpful - thank you. I'm still at the confused and obsessive stage but TheAwfulToad and your post are definitely making stuff a bit clearer!

moreless profile image
moreless in reply to cheritorrox

You're welcome, cheritorrox :)

You may like to read the What's Happening Today thread on the Weight Loss forum too :)

cheritorrox profile image
cheritorrox in reply to moreless

good stuff! Some of the discussion about actual quantities scares me a bit - I only eat 150 - 200g total but dont feel hungry (lots of iced water may help). I had same problem when trying to reach a calorie target only then I'd deliberately eat e.g icecream just to increase the daily total!

moreless profile image
moreless in reply to cheritorrox

If you follow a low carb programme, then calorie counting isn't required. You eat to appetite.

lucigret profile image
lucigret

This is a brilliant post Toad :) It has made me realise just what a huge change I have made to my store cupboards over the past year and how much healthier I feel now that I have cut the beige/white carbs.

Like Moreless, I also believe in batch cooking. Saves so much time during the busy periods and no excuse not to eat healthily.

Rignold profile image
Rignold

Another excellent post Toad. And excllent response Moreless.

I m again in almost full agreement (apart from the Low fat yogurt : I eat a large quantity of fat free Greek Yogurt every day as my last meal when I need to get my calories and protein up but have maxed out on my fats. It is simple and it is expedient) .

I confess I am no fan of bulk cooking. Too many years of cooking/preserving/curing seasonal harvests and large animals while subsistence smallholding have ruined making more than one meal at a time for me. I hate to meal prep, I hate planning the week's meals in advance. the thrill for me is thinking "what shall we eat today?"

I have not always followed this kind of diet, indeed during the time I was doing ultra distance running I ate very high carb and almost vegan. I quite enjoyed the challenges of that approach too, and ate a good and varied array of dishes.

However my diet, style of exercise and consequently body composition are diametrically opposed to that now, and I feel genuinely far better for it. Whilst I don't entriely go with all the dogma of the 'Primal' movement, it is fairly close to my lifestyle and outlook now.

To that splendid quote from the late great Tony Bourdain I would add the two maxims I generally follow. The first from Greg Glassman:

"Eat meat and vegetables, nuts and seeds, some fruit, little starch and no sugar. Keep intake to levels that will support exercise but not body fat."

and the second from Michael Pollan:

" Eat food. Not too much. Mostly plants."

It always seems to shock the ardent 'plantbased' activists when LCHF/Keto/Paleo/Primal adherents eplain that the largest part of their food intake is in fact vegetables.

TheAwfulToad profile image
TheAwfulToadAmbassador in reply to Rignold

The nice thing about LCHF is that there's so much leeway for individual preference. You seem to have an extremely active lifestyle and you've tuned the diet to make it work for you.

I'm not a fan of the Primal/Paleo/Raw Foods movements because I think they oversimplify what the natural world delivers and what our ancestors were capable of. There are many different climates on the planet that all deliver their own unique combination of ingredients for us to work with. I have a similar accusation for those who advocate a "balanced" diet: what they suggest as the ideal is not physically possible without large amounts of fossil fuels, complex refrigeration and storage technology, and subsidized international trade.

Cooking seems to be quite important for health: some argue that the discovery of (controlled) fire propelled human evolution at an accelerated rate for the last 100,000 years. Not sure I buy that, but at the very least cooking expands the range of things we can eat without poisoning ourselves: far from being "full of nutrients" when they're raw, a large number of potential plant foods are not safe to eat unless cooked. Same goes for meat, of course, for different reasons.

I have yet to find a more succinct summary of what/how to eat than the Michael Pollan quote.

>> It always seems to shock the ardent 'plantbased' activists when LCHF/Keto/Paleo/Primal adherents explain that the largest part of their food intake is in fact vegetables.

Yeah, I've noticed that in the other threads!

Basically we're vegetarians who still eat meat ;)

DeeD123 profile image
DeeD123

Thank you. I enjoyed reading that

mdr1000 profile image
mdr1000

Hiya, good post. I didn't know this group existed.

I get frustrated with the amount of unnecessary starch that's everywhere in ridiculous quantities and of a poor quality. This is particularly evident when you are pushed for time or eat out, though I did find a place in Scotland that had a dish of roasted vegetables in the side orders section of the menu as if it were the most normal thing in the world!

TheAwfulToad profile image
TheAwfulToadAmbassador in reply to mdr1000

>> I didn't know this group existed.

I figured some people wouldn't - hence the crossposting elsewhere.

>> I get frustrated with the amount of unnecessary starch that's everywhere in ridiculous quantities and of a poor quality.

Yeah, it really annoys me when I eat out and find that literally EVERYTHING comes with a vast serving of chips. Once you've eaten a LCHF diet for a few years it actually becomes physically impossible to ingest large amounts of starch. A little bit still tastes good - as in, a slice of toast with your fried egg or a small serving of cake - but a huge pile of potato or pastry just makes you feel uncomfortable and bloated.

>> in Scotland that had a dish of roasted vegetables

I'm genuinely surprised :)

mdr1000 profile image
mdr1000 in reply to TheAwfulToad

...yes, it had green things in it!

So Sad to read that much-adored celeb "chef", Anthony Bourdain, who had passed. Couldn't believe he was only 61. RIP. :(

dailymail.co.uk/news/articl...

My downfall is definitely eating fruits, which are not the right types. I really need to build more muscles as I was bed bound almost for ten years and lost a lot of muscle mass. Do you guys take any supplemens to beef up your stamina? Gaining weight was the first step but now gaining muscles is a priority.

Aprilbday profile image
Aprilbday in reply to

Congratulations on your amazing road to complete recovery!

TheAwfulToad profile image
TheAwfulToadAmbassador in reply to

oooh ... being bed-bound does terrible things to a body. Glad you're bouncing back.

I suppose you could ask your doctor to prescribe a couple of short courses of nandrolone - which I think is still in the BNF. Under the circumstances he probably would. Apart from that, there is no "supplement" that will really make much difference. Just time and effort.

I would strongly recommend interval training for both fast performance gains and for general stamina/fatigue issues. Make sure you have plenty of protein in your diet - at least 1.5g/kg, preferably more.

I wouldn't worry too much about the fruit. The issue with fructose, as with most things, is a matter of degree. A banana is fine. A glass of orange juice (=5 oranges worth of free fructose) is not.

Not quite, but thank you for the kind words.

Titania70 profile image
Titania70

Thanks for the interesting article and following comments.

ohsofierce profile image
ohsofierce

Thanks for this post, very informative! I feel surprised yet hopeful reading this, when I've done lchf I strictly limited myself to 20 grams of net carbs a day. But if a tortilla is 20 and you have 2 for lunch then may I assume that say 80-1// grams of carbs is also ok? What put me off a bit is that with only 20grams of carbs I felt even vegetables were limited and I do love love love myself some veggies! Also I get really sick of eating cheese. At first I was like oh my goodness the luxury of having cheese! But then it got to the point where I couldn't stand the thought of any more cheese or another egg. I'm not a huge fan of meat and was struggling getting enough fat into my diet ...

TheAwfulToad profile image
TheAwfulToadAmbassador in reply to ohsofierce

As Hidden said, there's no real need to stay at the 20g/day levels for more than a couple of weeks. You're quite right, it does get boring after a while! Some people like to stay very low, for various reasons, but "LCHF" isn't really the same thing as "keto". It just means what it says - lower carbs and higher fat than the Govenment-Issue Diet.

The meaning of "low" varies from person to person, and you have to calibrate it for yourself. You'll see different numbers from different people. Atkins gave the most sensible advice on the subject: let your carbs rise slowly (over weeks or months) by introducing foods that you like. If you see that your fat loss has stopped (or you're getting fatter), back off a little. For people who are recovering from T2 diabetes, the stopping point will probably be around the 50g/day mark. For the average normal person it may well be up to 140g, although i disagree it's necessary to eat that much. Let your body figure out what's necessary.

Me personally, my carb intake varies a lot. Most days I'm <100g because I still don't eat any starchy veg or flour-based products. The tortillas are not a regular thing - they're a convenience food that I use when I'm in the UK. Occasionally I'll eat starchy veg; for example yesterday I had tonkatsu and ate about three-quarters of the rice that it was served with (ie., about 100g net carbs), but I do that very rarely. This, however, is a maintenance diet. If you're still in the fat-loss phase, I'd keep it below 50g/day, but there's no need to stick with the ultra-restrictive induction menu.

As a rough rule of thumb, you should be in induction for 10-30 days, fat-loss for about 6 months, and then transitioning into maintenance by the 12-month mark.

Oh ... also worth mentioning that as your carbs rise your fat intake falls. That is, you can back off somewhat on the added fat; no need to gorge on cheese if you're not in the mood for it! The point, after all, is to get your body burning its own fat stores.

One other thought: the primary source of fat in LCHF should be things like olive oil, coconut oil, butter, oily fish (mackerel etc), and oily veg (avocado, some legumes). Nothing wrong with animal fat, but if yourself eating fewer veg and more animal protein to keep your carb count down, something's amiss. Focus on veg-based recipes that can carry those oils/fats, even if they're nominally "high-carb" veg like onions or sweet peppers.

ohsofierce profile image
ohsofierce in reply to TheAwfulToad

Thanks! This is good to know :) sounds like I actually have instinctively been doing the right thing (aside from a few blips). Thank you!

ohsofierce profile image
ohsofierce

Thank you!!

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