Have they changed the RDI for selenium? It used to be 3 brazils per day. I've certainly eaten more than that on occasion, with no problems (except T2D!)I'd be very nervous of a butter made with brazil nuts - too much selenium might not be a good idea. Just one brazil nut meets daily needs apparently. Though there's a nut butter mix known as ABC made from Almonds, Brazils & Cashews made by Melrose (not sure if that's an Australian only company though).
https://nutgourmet.wordpress.com/2010/04/30/brazil-nuts-the-dr-jekyll-and-mr-hyde-of-the-nut-world/
My weight loss appears to have slowed/stalled recently and it appears to have coincided with extra fats appearing in my diet, most noticeably cream in various guises.
Probably time to experiment with removing some of the dairy fats.
I've been thinking that my love for cheese, thick cream and butter may be behind the slowdown of my weight loss. I'm testing a dairy-free diet for a while (ghee instead of butter and almond milk or coconut cream instead of cream). I seem to be eating an avocado a day (very easy to pack for lunch, with crunchy veg and some oily fish) and find it very satiating.Sid, it's probably not the fat, if you're doing LCHF, it's more likely to be the milk proteins in the cheese. Cheese is generally zero carb or extremely low carb but milk protein does cause insulin to rise.
Sid, it's probably not the fat, if you're doing LCHF, it's more likely to be the milk proteins in the cheese. Cheese is generally zero carb or extremely low carb but milk protein does cause insulin to rise.
I'm testing a dairy-free diet for a while (ghee instead of butter and almond milk or coconut cream instead of cream)
I remember Mark Sisson recommending it as well. Unfortunately, I can't find macadamia oil here - at least not in my regular supermarkets. I'll make an effort to search online for it, as soon as I've finished the 2 kg tub of ghee my overenthusiastic OH bought a week ago... (expires 1 month from opening, apparently!)I've been reading Dr Colin Champ's book, "Misguided Medicine" and he has quite a long analysis of various oils and I'm now more glad than ever that my favourite oil is Macadamia - apparently it's highest in monounsaturated fat (85% cf. 75% olive oil), contains the most antioxidants of any pressed oil, contains minimal linoleic acid (which is cancer promoting), plus it's the most structurally sound oil for cooking (even more so than olive oil, butter or lard). Plus it tastes great
I remember Mark Sisson recommending it as well. Unfortunately, I can't find macadamia oil here - at least not in my regular supermarkets. I'll make an effort to search online for it, as soon as I've finished the 2 kg tub of ghee my overenthusiastic OH bought a week ago... (expires 1 month from opening, apparently!)
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