I grew up on a defunct farm in the backwoods of New Hampshire, where there seemed to be more moose than people. What we lacked in culture and playmates for the kids, though, we made up for in wild beauty of the 60 acres of woods behind our house.
When gathered around the table at the end of the day, we always knew where our dinner had come from. The greens, broccoli and carrots had been freshly picked just minutes before; sweet, spicy and savory flavors were grown in our mom’s carefully-tended herb garden; and the eggs were produced by the dwindling flock of chickens that had managed to outwit the neighborhood dogs.
When the parsnips were finally ready for harvest, the whole family would get together in the backyard and pluck them from the frosty ground and gather around dad’s cast iron skillet for a snitch of the spicy, sweet root fried in real butter.
But by the time I reached my early 20’s, bacon and butter were off the menu. I’d fallen hard for the fat-free, low-calorie diet praised by the media and health magazines.
I nibbled on fat-free whole-grain crackers, nonfat yogurt, and zero-calorie Jell-O and sipped on cholesterol-free soy milk. I swapped real butter for zero- cholesterol vegetable oil spread, and replaced farm-fresh eggs with 100% whole wheat bagels with nonfat cream cheese and zero-calorie jam from the supermarket.
But instead of being a strong, vital twenty-four-year-old, I had the flab, high blood pressure, and health problems of an unhealthy man twice my age.
Despite the fact that I lived on impossibly low-fat diet foods recommended by doctors, diet books, and checkout-aisle magazines, I was fatter and sicker than ever. Something needed to change.
Fed up, I scoured medical textbooks, underground bodybuilding manuals, and the nooks and crannies of the Internet to find the perfect protocol to drop my excess fat and regain my vitality.
I quickly discovered that everything I thought I knew about diet was wrong.
When I a new nutrition plan based upon my research, it looked more like my wild childhood than my doctor’s strict recommendations. Eager to be my own guinea pig, I gave it a whirl.
When I started my new “diet,” I did the opposite of what most well-meaning nutritionists might tell you and abandoned my fat phobia. I chowed down on the most delicious and rich foods of my life—real butter, scrambled eggs, fresh veggies, rich meats, coconut, aged cheese, steak, and chocolate.
When I stepped on the scale, I was shocked. I had lost 20 pounds of flab in 40 days. This fat loss revealed a lean, muscular body and washboard abs that could be slapped right on the cover of a fitness magazine. More important, I had more energy and gusto than I’d felt in my entire life.
In The Wild Diet, you’ll find that we are not meant to starve ourselves or count calories. We’re wired to eat and live well without getting fat. That’s what we’ve been doing effortlessly for thousands of years, in fact, before we started following the wrong advice.
Going back to our roots, The Wild Diet focuses on simple ingredients from fresh plants and healthy animals raised as nature intended.
WHAT TO EAT TO BURN FAT
The Wild Diet features foodie-friendly indulgent meals that will help you program your body to burn fat instead of sugar.
Prioritize fresh produce, nutrient-dense fats like grass-fed butter, and meat from healthy animals. You should be eating ⅔ plant foods and ⅓ protein and fat.
Fill yourself up in this priority:
- Vegetables should make up more than half of your plate. Eat as many greens and colorful, non-starchy veggies as you’d like!
- A palm-sized portion of animal protein such as grass-fed beef, chicken, turkey, pork, eggs, or wild seafood.
- Round out the meal with good fats (in moderation) from meats, avocado, coconut, avocado, olive, or nuts like almonds, pecans, macadamias or walnuts.
- Eat fresh fruits (in moderation) as treats.
- Ditch added sugars, breads, and gluten grains. For breakfast, bacon and eggs are back on the menu!
- If you are an athlete or have a high metabolism, consider a side of nutritionally-dense starch such as a boiled sweet potato to enhance muscle recovery. Note: If carbs slow your fat loss, eat extra protein or veggies instead.
HOW TO STOCK UP ON WILD FOODS
Just about everything you need to follow The Wild Diet can be found in your local supermarket. Stick to the perimeter of the store where you can find fresh, whole foods. Remember: real food is perishable.
Prioritize the following when possible to get the highest quality foods raised as nature intended:
- Organic
- Local and farm fresh
- Grass-fed and/or pasture-raised animals, eggs, and dairy
- Wild-caught fish and seafood
- Virgin, cold-pressed, and unprocessed oils
A plate of real food — like fresh veggies, fruits, nuts, and perhaps a bit of pasture-raised meat — contains the protein, fiber, healthy fat and micronutrients your body needs to satiate your appetite. So next time you feel hunger pangs, stop depriving yourself and fill up on real food instead.
The Wild Diet follows this principle: eat fresh, simple, whole foods from healthy plants and animals and be skeptical of processed food products. Ditching your low-fat diet and going Wild triggers your body to utilize fat as its main fuel source, and many people experience rapid weight loss as a result.
When you reduce your consumption of processed grains, sugars and other simple carbohydrates in favor of healthy plants and animals, you will be shocked by how quickly you can reverse the damage of decades of poor eating and take your health back into your own hands.
Find out more about The Wild Diet by clicking here.
What discoveries have you made about your own health? Leave a comment below to share your story with us.
Ty says
The plate image shows fat being less than fruits. It would seem better to reverse these two. Especially when considering that fruits are a treat as stated . Starches should be generally avoided in my opinion or only on occasion.
I am currently on a ketogenic diet and can see how the wild diet could be implemented ketogenic if fruit and fat recommendations were reversed.
Miriam Kearney says
I’m with the previous commenter. As a person with Diabetes II I am on a Ketogenic diet to manage my insulin response. Fruit which has fructose, not glucose goes directly to the liver for processing and should be fairly restricted to avoid overworking the liver (which when diabetes is present is already overworked). The wild diet sounds pretty much what I eat save the fruit. Good stuff.