THE ED MYLETT SHOW - The Ultimate Guide to Eating Healthy and Improving Your Diet Feat. Max Lugavere

Episode Date: February 22, 2025

Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices...

Transcript
Discussion (0)
Starting point is 00:00:00 So hey guys, listen, we're all trying to get more productive and the question is how do you find a way to get an edge? I'm a big believer that if you're getting mentoring or you're in an environment that causes growth, a growth-based environment, that you're much more likely to grow and you're going to grow faster and that's why I love Growth Day. Growth Day is an app that my friend Brendan Burchard has created that I'm a big fan of. Write this down growthday.com forward slash ed. So if you want to be more productive, by the way, he's asked me, I post videos in there every single Monday that gets your day off to the right start. He's got about 5,000, $10,000 worth of courses that are in there that come with
Starting point is 00:00:32 the app. Also some of the top influencers in the world are all posting content and they're on a regular basis, like having the Avengers of personal development and business in one app. And I'm honored that he asked me to be a part of it as well and contribute on a weekly basis. And I do. So go asked me to be a part of it as well and contribute on a weekly basis, and I do. So go over there and get signed up.
Starting point is 00:00:46 You're gonna get a free, tuition-free voucher to go to an event with Brendan and myself and a bunch of other influencers as well. So you get a free event out of it also. So go to growthday.com forward slash ed. That's growthday.com forward slash ed. Get groceries delivered across the DTA from real Canadian superstore with PC Express.
Starting point is 00:01:07 Shop online for super prices and super savings. Try it today and get up to $75 in PC Optimum Points. Visit superstore.ca to get started. This is The Admired Show. Hey everyone, welcome to my weekend special. I hope you enjoy the show. This is the Ed Mylet Show. Hey everyone, welcome to my weekend special. I hope you enjoy the show. Be sure to follow the Ed Mylet Show on Apple and Spotify.
Starting point is 00:01:33 Links are in the show notes. You'll never miss an episode that way. We're going to talk about eating today. And Max Lugavere is going to be here for the second time. We're going to talk about nutrition, your body, cooking your food correctly. And it's incredible. And he's one of a kind. He's just the best in the world at what he does. So Max, welcome back, brother.
Starting point is 00:01:49 So good to be here. My man. I'm really excited to share all this stuff. They were really stupid thing to start out with. My stomach's growling. And you're like, I'm going to tell you why your stomach's growling. There's a mechanism in there. So there is, so why is my stomach growling? It's super interesting. You know, oftentimes when our stomach growls, we think it's because we're hungry, right? And in part, it's probably time for us to eat
Starting point is 00:02:09 when our stomach gives us that indication. But the reason why the stomach is growling, it's owed to a system in our GI tract called the migrating motor complex. And the migrating motor complex, it's like this completely underappreciated mechanism that gets going after about 90 minutes of not eating. So after about 90 minutes of not eating, we feel like we're giving our digestive system
Starting point is 00:02:28 a rest, but actually that's when this process kicks up. And what it does is it sweeps debris, dead bacteria, food particles that haven't been fully digested. It sloughs off dead epithelial cells from the stomach down all the way past the small intestine to the large intestine. So it's essentially called a housekeeping weight. It can help prevent SIBO, which is small intestinal bacterial overgrowth, which a lot of people suffer from.
Starting point is 00:02:55 So people that have GI issues when they eat, they'll have from otherwise benign foods, feelings like indigestion, gas, bloating, stuff like that. It's because we are constantly subverting this housekeeping weight, which is so essential to our digestive wellbeing, by eating constantly throughout the day. So the fact that your stomach is growling means that your housekeeping wave is functioning,
Starting point is 00:03:17 cleaning the small intestine, and keeping your digestive system healthy, essentially. Eating throughout the day. So before we get into the book, by the way, what's great about the book is that it's not only the nutritional guy, but you also rank things too on like, the terminology that you use is like,
Starting point is 00:03:34 okay, good, best, better, right? And I like that as well, cause it kind of gives a rank. I love to rank things. I always do it with my friends like, one to 10, how much do you like this guy? One to 10, how good was that song? So you rank things in the book,
Starting point is 00:03:46 but I wanna ask you first, like a really basic thing overall. If you walked into my kitchen or an average person's kitchen right now, before we get into detailed stuff, what would you tell them to throw? What would you probably go look for and throw out of their kitchen immediately? Is there something in there?
Starting point is 00:04:00 Good question. I, you know, what I find to be, I used to be a lot more dogmatic about macros and carbs, fats and things like that. I think that my perspective, especially with Genius Kitchen, I really think that the major problem with the standard American diet and at the root cause of all of the modern ills that we're seeing burdening society from obesity, overweight, the increasing rates of cardiovascular disease, autoimmunity really stem back to our overconsumption of ultra-processed foods. These are the foods that are packaged, they're shelf stable, minimally satiating and highly
Starting point is 00:04:32 calorie dense. These are the foods that really underlie the obesity epidemic. Now you can take the most obvious offenders like sugar sweetened beverages, which are purported to be the cause of about 200,000 deaths annually worldwide, just from sugar sweetened beverages alone. That's how toxic they are. I mean, once one or, you know, the occasional indulgence in your favorite sugar sweetened soda, not the end of the world, but the problem with foods that contain added sugar and sugar sweetened beverages are really at the epicenter of this problem because they're
Starting point is 00:05:04 so easily consumed is that we have no biological requirement for sugar and it's not satiating at all and provides no nutritional value. So you could basically eat all of the calories that you require in a day, get all of the nutritional, you know, all of the nutrients that you need and then throw 200 calories of high fructose corn syrup
Starting point is 00:05:24 soft drink on top of that. And that really is what people are doing. And that's why we're seeing, you know, this, this just crazy rates of ever of our expanding waste lines and the like. Well, the thing about not being full, you and I talked about last time a lot. That's my layman's version of it, right? Is something I had not really thought about before that when I'm eating these processed foods that although I've intake the same amount of calories, say as a handful of nuts or something like that, I'm not satiated. I'm still hungry when I'm eating these processed foods that although I've intake the same amount of calories say as a handful of nuts or
Starting point is 00:05:45 something like that I'm not satiated I'm still hungry when I'm done right so when you say just curious when you say sugar sweetened drinks like that you come on all of them even the artificially flavored ones anything at all that's any kind of basic carbonated drink that we're finding any grocery store well you don't want to you definitely don't want to drink your calories but the sugar sweetened beverages, I think, are the worst. And that's because it has zero capacity to satiate your hunger.
Starting point is 00:06:12 So you could drink, I mean, look at the size of soda of like beverages at fast food joints these days. Massive. They're getting bigger and bigger and bigger. And that's because we just don't tire of drinking these products. I'm not that worried about artificial sweeteners, although my personal preference is to go
Starting point is 00:06:29 for more natural sweeteners, you know, erythritol, stevia, monk fruit, and things like that. But you- You do like stevia. Yeah, stevia I'm okay with. I mean, it has an aftertaste, which isn't ideal, but you mentioned satiety, which is really important, I think, to unpack for people.
Starting point is 00:06:41 The three characteristics of a food that make a food satiating, that make it fill you up so that you get that gratifying feeling of fullness after eating it is water, protein and fiber. So those are the three things that you want to look out for in any food. If you want to avoid over consuming that food, water makes a food satiating. Because if you think about it for a hunter gatherer, one of our hunter gatherer ancestors, when water ceased to be available, where were the next best place that a hunter gatherer would look for hydration? Food.
Starting point is 00:07:11 Food. Food is full of water, right? Mm-hmm. Fresh produce, even meat is a good source of water. So if you're dehydrated, you're likely going to eat more. So that's why water should be one of the first places that you look to. The second thing is fiber. Fiber, we have no biological necessity for it. It does make life better. Fiber
Starting point is 00:07:28 consumption is associated with longevity. Can I ask one thing on that? Yeah. Don't you talk about in the book though that it actually has some LDL particle removal capacity? It does, yeah. Especially viscous gel forming fibers, in particular psyllium husk. So a lot of people take psyllium husk for regularity, but there's like this amazing side benefit of psyllium Husk and that is that it traps LDL particles in the form of bile acids in the gut. And it's one of these like really easy interventions that can have a small but significant effect on your lipid, on your lipid profile. It can also trap excess levels of hormones like
Starting point is 00:08:03 estrogen, which is one of the reasons why fiber consumption seems to be associated with reduced risk of breast cancer, which is one of these hormone sensitive cancers. So fiber is really incredible. It seems to do all these amazing things. It's not an essential nutrient. You see a lot of these people on the carnivore diet thriving with seemingly zero fiber intake. Right. And fiber, of course, it's also a surrogate, you know, dietary fiber intake is probably also like a surrogate marker for just an overall healthy dietary pattern. Now, if you're eating a lot of fiber, you're not the typical person consuming the standard
Starting point is 00:08:37 American diet, right? Yeah. You're eating probably more salads, more veggies and things like that. But fiber is satiating because it mechanically, it absorbs water and stretches out the stomach, turning off the hunger hormone ghrelin. So that's the second aspect of food that you wanna make sure that you're seeking out in order to be satiated.
Starting point is 00:08:54 That's big. And then the third thing I would say is protein. Protein is the most satiating macronutrient, more so than carbs, more so than fat. And if you look at ultra processed foods, they tend to be deficient in all three of those things. Okay. Right? Ultra processed foods tend to be some combination
Starting point is 00:09:11 of carbs and fat or both. Usually sodium, wheat flour, stuff like that tend to be very protein deficient. Also protein is the most expensive macronutrient. So it's another reason why these high margin junk foods, right? They all tend to be- They lack it because it's too much to put in there yourself. Yeahutrient. So it's another reason why these high margin junk foods, right? They all tend to be. They lack it because it's too much to put in there yourself.
Starting point is 00:09:28 Yeah, it's too, it's inexpensive. Are we too, so protein, stay on that topic for me. You're going right down to all my questions I wanted to ask you. By the way, here's, it's one of these interviews, everybody, they're where you get to listen in on stuff I wanna know, and it's to your benefit too, right? So, because you don't get a lot of guys like Max in front of you very often.
Starting point is 00:09:41 So protein is like, obviously, you know, you know that I have lifted weights all my life and everyone knows protein, protein, protein. Are we overly obsessed? So are we overly obsessed with protein intake? In other words, have we gone so far, like I try to eat my body weight in protein every single day. So I weigh a couple hundred pounds,
Starting point is 00:10:01 I'm trying to get about 200. For me though, I do supplement different things to get to that 200. So what, you said protein's so critical, but is there a tendency to be overly obsessed with getting so much protein or you can't get enough of it? Yeah, I mean, I think that you can get enough of it, but that is, it's actually self-regulated.
Starting point is 00:10:21 So you really don't have to think about getting too much of it because it's so satiating. I mean, nobody has ever gorged on lean chicken breast, It's actually self-regulated, so you really don't have to think about getting too much of it because it's so satiating. I mean, nobody has ever gorged on lean chicken breast, which is one of the most protein-dense foods there is because it's so satiating. We have these innate hunger mechanisms in our mouths, on our tongues, in our digestive tracts that know it once we've had enough protein. But we do know that the RDA for protein is insufficient for good health, especially for
Starting point is 00:10:44 people like you and like me who are active and who exercise regularly. In fact, the research suggests that we need to consume about double what the RDA is. So the RDA is 0.8 grams per kilogram of body weight every day of protein. We don't use kilograms here in the US. But everywhere else does though. But everywhere else, yeah. So, I mean, I'll break it down in terms of pounds,
Starting point is 00:11:06 but essentially we need double that. So the research suggests that if we want to optimize our time spent in the gym, which we all should, right? We work hard for the gains, right? You should be striving for 1.6 grams per kilogram of lean mass or goal weight. And so that's an important distinction. Cool.
Starting point is 00:11:27 And that breaks down to in terms of pounds point about 0.7 grams per pound of lean mass or goal weight. Okay. And the idea there is you're lean. So for you 0.7 to a whole gram per pound of your body weight, that's sufficient. You're like, you're definitely doing the right thing there, but if you had, say, you know, if you had, um, 50 pounds of fat mass on you that you wanted to lose, then I would do 0.7 to one times what your weight would be minus 50. Okay. Do you consider protein supplements as processed foods? Are those all processed? That's a really good question. I actually don't.
Starting point is 00:12:03 I think protein, protein supplements are great. I personally take them. Good. I think it's, yeah, it's easy to meet your protein goals with protein shakes and also whey protein in particular has been shown to support immune function. Yeah. Which I think is like this nice, happy added side benefit.
Starting point is 00:12:18 It's interesting because when you read Max's book, you would think, because we're gonna talk a lot about plants here in a minute, but there's a lot of meat in there too, and the way to prepare it. And by the way, he actually has a void all the way up to best in terms of foods or ways to prepare them as well in the book. The rankings are, there's some avoid in there.
Starting point is 00:12:35 So I'm learning about sulforaphane. Did I say that correctly? Yeah, sulforaphane. Okay, so talk to us about like having these defense mechanisms in our bodies that we need as well. So go plants and sulforaphane a little bit. Tell us a little bit about that. Yeah, absolutely.
Starting point is 00:12:48 So plants like animals, they don't appreciate necessarily being eaten, right? Plants have an innate drive to survive as well, but plants can't fight off predators. So what they do is they become chemists and they create compounds. This is fascinating right here. Yeah, they create anti-fetent compounds basically that would make smaller animals, mice, insects,
Starting point is 00:13:11 even fungus that serve as toxins to those smaller organisms. This is fascinating. Yeah. And we can see this actually by sulforaphane is a perfect illustration of this because sulforaphane, even though it's one of the most powerful putative cancer fighters, neuroprotectant, cardio protective compounds in cruciferous vegetables like broccoli, cauliflower, and Brussels sprouts,
Starting point is 00:13:38 sulforaphane isn't actually in those plants until the cells of the plants get crushed and chewed up. You're kidding me. Yeah. Okay. You won't find, if you take a raw piece of broccoli, there's no sulforaphane in it. There are two compounds. One is called glucoraphanin and the other is called myrosinase.
Starting point is 00:13:53 You don't have to remember this, but they're basically, these are two compounds held in completely different cellular compartments. And when they unite, which only happens when you chew on the plant. That's incredible. When a critter chews on the plant, you create this sulforaphane compound, which only happens when you chew on the plant. That's incredible. When a critter chews on the plant, you create this sulforaphane compound, which is essentially a pesticide. It's a toxin.
Starting point is 00:14:10 It's a toxin. It's a toxic pesticide that the plant creates itself. Gosh, that's amazing. To protect itself from predation. But the reason why these compounds are beneficial in us were obviously we're much more robust than a mouse or an insect, right? And for many toxins, it's like the dose makes the poison. For an insect, the dose of sulforaphane that they may be getting is going to be a much higher and more toxic dose relative to its body
Starting point is 00:14:36 size. In us, eating sulforaphane, especially at the dose ingested when we chew first of first vegetables is so small, but it still has a protective effect. And this protective effect is owed to a mechanism called hormesis. And hormesis is basically the term given to when small doses of a certain stress or even a certain toxin actually helps to facilitate robustness in the organism. And it's the mechanism by which exercise works. Humans in general. Yeah. Humans it's the mechanism by which exercise works. Humans in general. Yeah, humans in general. The way we develop grit.
Starting point is 00:15:09 I mean, you talk about this on your podcast all the time. And so we essentially get this form of, we ingest and we derive this form of chemical stress from compounds like sulforaphane, polyphenols. The plant kingdom is just like loaded with these compounds. Bro, that blows my way. So you've all know you should eat more plants, right? Or veggies rather, but in this case,
Starting point is 00:15:29 are you hearing this? How much nature has constructed this to our benefit? That's mind blowing that it only materializes when chewed when they are they're combined. And then they have this benefit. By the way, hormesis, I had David Sinclair on the show who's like, I think you know, Dr. Sinclair from Harvard, but he's like the number one longevity dude in the world.
Starting point is 00:15:45 And the whole philosophy of his work is based on the concept of hormesis. When you do cold plunges or exercise or things like that in the body, you're saying there's a mechanism that strives inside our own bodies when these toxins kick in. Absolutely. That's a mind blowing. It beautifully illustrates, I think, the symbiosis of all living things in the sense that you take a plant that's been stressed. Unreal.
Starting point is 00:16:07 Right? And it imparts, it develops a vigor, right? Like a stressed plant, a wild plant. It's got to be scrappy, right? Like out there in the world. And when you eat it, it imparts that vigor onto you. It's like this beautiful circle of life. That's bananas to me. No pun intended. You said fungus earlier. There's this big thing in the book on fungi, right? Like, so I am don't like the taste of like mushrooms and stuff like that. So talk to us a little bit about fungi and why it's good stuff. Yeah. Well, first of all, there, have you, I mean, there are lots of different mushrooms and they all have different flavors.
Starting point is 00:16:42 I probably haven't sampled very well. There's, um, have you tried lion's mane? Have you ever had fresh lion's mane? No. So a lot of people are talking about lion's mane these days because you can find it in various supplements, but now you're starting to see fresh lion's mane pop up at different supermarkets. Okay.
Starting point is 00:16:56 And it has the taste and texture of fresh crab. I'm not even kidding. It's like, it's really delicious. Okay. I will try that. Yeah. You saute it in a little olive oil, maybe some grass-fed butter, salt, pepper. It is so damn good.
Starting point is 00:17:10 And the beautiful thing about mushrooms is that very, um, nutrient dense and low calorie, so you're not getting a lot of calories from mushrooms, but you're getting a lot of really interesting compounds like beta-glucans, which can support immune function. Certain mushrooms have different micronutrient profiles. Some have vitamin D depending on where they grow. Some mushrooms actually create really powerful detoxifying compounds like glutathione. Glutathione is considered the mother of all antioxidants and certain mushrooms like the porcini mushroom
Starting point is 00:17:41 in particular, very concentrated in glutathione, which is great. And one tip, so as you mentioned, the Genius Kitchen, which is one of the reasons why I'm so proud of it, it's not just a cookbook, it's for people to learn actually how to cook, which I thought was so important. And one of the, I think, biggest mistakes that people make, if they're listening to this and they say, well, I don't like mushrooms, I've never had mushrooms that I've liked, one of the biggest, most common mistakes that people make when cooking mushrooms is they rinse them. You never want to add water to mushrooms because mushrooms are already packed with water. All you want to do when you buy mushrooms is brush off any visible dirt that you see,
Starting point is 00:18:14 but you never want to rinse them, unlike other produce. You just want to throw them in a hot pan with some cooking oil, some great oil, like extra virgin olive oil, butter. Is it because once you're cooking them, whatever the gnarly stuff that could be potentially on there by washing is gone by cooking it or there's nothing on there? Yeah. I mean, you neutralize any potential harm that would come from eating something raw, but it's also that mushrooms are like sponges for water.
Starting point is 00:18:39 And the aim when you cook a mushroom is to get the water out of it so that the mushroom's natural flavor comes through. Do you look at food like it's actually medicine? I do. You know, I think that I like to say there's a lot of, there are a lot of people in the functional medicine community that like to say that food is medicine. I like to refine that a little bit and add a little bit of nuance.
Starting point is 00:18:56 I think that food is definitely a form of medicine. I think it's certainly a form of preventative medicine. It can be used to help prevent conditions like obesity, overweight, type 2 diabetes. That's uncontrovertible fact at this point. Do I think that it can treat every disease? Not necessarily. I'm not anti-medicine or anything like that. I think that actual medicine has a place, but I think that food also has a place. And I think that we need to not be so dichotomous in our thinking you know I think that there's a place for both so I think that food is medicine I think exercise is medicine medicine I think sleep is medicine I
Starting point is 00:19:31 think hydration is medicine yeah I don't understand why more people aren't conscious of this topic so there's all this stuff now on supplementation everyone's on different supplements right and this is why I'm so excited about your book and you working out everyone kind of knows you're supposed to do it now. Everyone's heard a podcast on meditation. I think most people know they should drink more water. But for some reason, food itself is really still an under-discussed topic, like in general. And for me, one of the things from your work is like I already ate a lot of meat.
Starting point is 00:20:01 Like I've added so much more, so many more vegetables, green vegetables to my diet than I had before after you and I talked for the first time. And one of the things that's really improved for me is my digestion. What don't most people know or understand about digestion that they should in their lives? Such a good question.
Starting point is 00:20:22 Well, I think people don't realize, most people don't realize that digestion begins before you take your first bite. It begins actually, there's called the cephalic phase of digestion. So digestion begins when you're observing the food that you're about to eat and smelling the food. One of the reasons why I think it's so important for people to be seated and to relax and to take a deep breath and to just calm their nervous systems before they begin their meal. Because our stomachs begin to pump out hydrochloric acid, protein digesting enzymes, like pepsin, all before we even take that first bite.
Starting point is 00:21:00 By biting and chewing slowly,wing slowly is crucially important. So we already talked about sulforaphane. If you're rapidly chewing your cruciferous vegetables, you need time for those enzymatic reactions to occur. So the creation of that compound sulforaphane, which activates detox pathways in the body, it's a cardio protective, neuro protective compound, but it needs time to be created. The same thing with alliums like garlic and onions. There's a
Starting point is 00:21:31 compound created when we crush garlic, fresh garlic in particular called allicin. It's an antimicrobial compound, anti-inflammatory. We need to chew slowly because that's where the digestion and the synthesis of many of the most valuable compounds in our food begin to be created in our mouths. Also, this is one of the things that I talk a lot about in Genie's Kitchen as well. Some of our most beneficial produce like beets and arugula are very high in compounds called nitrates. Nitrates are really good for our cardiovascular health because the end product, nitric oxide, in our cardiovascular system basically brings down blood pressure,
Starting point is 00:22:11 it supports blood flow, it's a vasodilator, vasodilating gas that we all create in our blood vessels, also really important for sexual function. I was just gonna say, guys, it's biggie. Yeah, guys, yeah, nitric oxide is super, super important. And the nitrates that are found in foods like beets, a lot of people will take like beetroot supplement, right? To boost blood flow.
Starting point is 00:22:29 But we humans don't actually have the enzyme to convert nitrates in food to nitrite, which then gets funneled into that nitric oxide pathway. It's the oral bacteria in our mouths that reduce nitrate to nitrite, which then can boost nitric oxide in our mouths that reduce nitrate to nitrite, which then can boost nitric oxide in our blood vessels. So for your oral bacteria to have the time to be able to do that, you need to chew your food slowly. So if you're wolfing down a salad that has arugula in it,
Starting point is 00:22:58 that has beets, and you're not taking the time to chew what it is that you're eating more slowly, you're undermining the capacity of your food to be cardio protective. And in tandem with that, it's another it's another reason. And I don't know why I felt the need to mention this in the book, but but I felt it was like really apropos. It's one of the reasons why people should definitely not use antiseptic mouthwash every day, because what you're doing with antiseptic mouthwash
Starting point is 00:23:22 is you're nuking the bacteria in your mouth that basically reduce nitrate to nitrite, which then can actually... They've even an acute swishing of antiseptic mouthwash, antiseptic being the key here, can increase your blood pressure because it basically messes up that nitric oxide pathway. They've also shown that- Wow. Rinsing with mouthwash after exercise can reduce the blood pressure lowering effects of exercise. And people who regularly use mouthwash two times or more per day, and this is about 40% of the population, have 50% increased risk for developing type 2 diabetes because nitric oxide is also involved in the insulin signaling. And they have double the risk of developing hypertension.
Starting point is 00:24:05 Okay brother, okay I gotta start chewing my food slower and I'm gonna drop my do you antiseptic mouthwash so. Is there any, I have so many things I'm gonna ask you, by the way I told you guys you never heard a show like this before so you're gonna write down stuff down and learn stuff. Is there any downside, because we're gonna talk about some other stuff here in a minute and then some of the stuff in the book on preparation is just awesome. However, is there any downside to eating a plant based or too many plants or anything like that that we can you overdo that or is there no downside?
Starting point is 00:24:34 Yeah, I love this question. Um, I think there is, I don't, I don't prescribe a one size fits all diet. It's right. People, people have different tolerances for fiber quantity for various compounds in food. You know, I have a friend who, if he goes within six feet of an allium, which is like garlic, onions, leeks, he gets the worst digestive discomfort ever. Um, so everybody's different.
Starting point is 00:24:56 Um, and I also think that there's this push, especially from the vegan community to just eat as much fiber as possible. We know that fiber is beneficial, but if you from one day to the next start eating, if you go from what is typical, which is 15 grams of fiber per day, which is pretty low, I'll admit, to the goal that some people espouse
Starting point is 00:25:17 of being 150 grams a day of dietary fiber, you're just setting yourself up for constipation, for all kinds of digestive issues. I was gonna ask you, do you need to drink more water if you're gonna take in that kind of fiber? You just need to you need to go slowly and you need because essentially what it is is you need to cultivate the The microbiome essentially the gut microbiota the gut flora to be able to assimilate all of that fiber. Okay, this fiber I mean the thing about fiber we don't absorb it fibers fiber because it passes through the small intestine undigested and it becomes a
Starting point is 00:25:44 Fiber is fiber because it passes through the small intestine undigested and it becomes a fermentable substrate for the 30 trillion bacteria that live in the colon, in the large intestine. But you need to cultivate that bacterial community first. The bacteria of the person listening to this compared to somebody in the Hasda tribe, for example, or in Inuit, we all have these different microbial constitutions. We all have these different, you know, microbial constitutions and, um, some of that's like cultural and, and by it's over time, it's materialized. It's, this may seem basic, but this is true. Correct. That's why some guy from American goes to Mexico on vacation for a long time.
Starting point is 00:26:15 Though the foods or the waters there affect their digestion differently than somebody who grew up correctly. Right. Cause you don't have the same immune system. You don't have the same antibodies. You don't have the same gut flora. I mean, the gut is where the majority of our immune system is stationed. So, I mean, the gut plays a huge role in immune function. What about fish? So you say in the book, know your fish.
Starting point is 00:26:34 Know your fish. Yeah. What's the deal with that? Why? Well, fish is really important, especially from the standpoint of brain health, which is, you know, my- It's your go-zone. Yeah. My number one passion. Fish is medicine when it comes to the brain, we have the most robust body of evidence that the compounds in fish, whether it's the omega three fatty acids preformed plug and play ready to go for your brain or
Starting point is 00:26:57 protective antioxidants like astaxanthin, um, all really, really beneficial from a brain health standpoint, there've been studies that have shown us that one to two servings of fish per week can help prevent dementia in people genetically at risk for developing Alzheimer's disease. Prevent dementia one to two times a week. Is there a particular type of fish that you would recommend over another one?
Starting point is 00:27:19 Yeah, I would definitely recommend the wild fatty fish. So salmon is a great option. Sardines also a good option. I mean, whenever they look at, this is how epidemiology works. They look at the population level and they say, who's eating fish? Who isn't?
Starting point is 00:27:33 And the people who eat fish, regardless of what kind of fish it is, tend to do better. Right. You know, so we can't be snobs about this, right? That's why in my book, actually, that's why I have good, better, best. Because to me, like, if all you're able to access is canned tuna, right? If like that's all, have good, better, best. Because to me, like if all you're able to access is canned tuna, right?
Starting point is 00:27:46 If like that's all, if you live in a food desert and that's the only kind of fish that you have access to, that's still better than not eating fish. Ideally you want, you know, to, to opt more frequently for a fatty fish like salmon, because it's going to be higher in those omega-3 fatty acids. Um, and wild is preferred over farmed, but any kind of fish is beneficial from the standpoint of the brain. Fish is also great in minerals like selenium, like vitamin D.
Starting point is 00:28:10 See guys, I gotta tell you, I did not eat almost any. And then, and actually, when you and I talked the first time and then reading the book, I'm like, I gotta eat more salmon. I just don't make these choices. The other thing about the book, I think it separates it from anything else too,
Starting point is 00:28:24 is actually the preparation parts of it. So you talk about the book, I think it separates it from anything else too, is actually the preparation parts of it. So you talk in the book, I want to go through some things about just stuff that's got flavor that you recommended. I want to give the whole book away because I want everybody to go get the book, which you need to go get the book. Here's why you should go get the book. There's not another one in its category like it.
Starting point is 00:28:39 In other words, if you want to go get a book on intermittent fasting, there are multiple books on that topic you could go get, all of which are probably pretty good, right? But this topic of the preparation of the food and the way that he talks about eating like a genius, I just don't think there's another one like it. So that's my endorsement, number one. But the idea of like, so extra extra virgin olive oil is in the book. Yes.
Starting point is 00:29:00 Okay. Talk about it. Like one, it's tastes good, but number one, why is that something that we should be considering using, and you give recipes and stuff in there in preparation of our food. Oh, I even have an extra virgin olive oil cake, a grain-free gluten-free extra virgin olive oil cake
Starting point is 00:29:15 in the book, with no sugar added, by the way. I love extra virgin olive oil. It's one of these foods that just for years I've been obsessed with, and humans have been pressing olives to make extra virgin olive oil for thousands of years at this point. It's almost is a perfect food. And especially when you compare it to these grain and seed cooking oils that are so heavily marketed, dirt cheap to produce, high profit margins, toxic to the bodies and to our bodies
Starting point is 00:29:42 and the quantity that we're consuming them today. Extra virgin olive oil has super heart healthy, monounsaturated fat, which is the best fat to consume liberally. It's actually a kind of fat called oleic acid, which is the most abundant fat found in nature. Breast milk is rich in oleic acid, beef has very high in oleic acid, so is wild salmon. But oleic acid, olea is actually, it means olive. So we discovered this fat in olive oil centuries ago. And now we know how beneficial it is. It actually, it helps prevent inflammation. It helps make our LDL lipoprotein particles more
Starting point is 00:30:21 resistant to oxidation and more resistant to adhesion to macrophages, which is where this sort of like atherosclerotic process begins. So it's a really healthy fat from the cardiovascular standpoint and brain health relies on cardiovascular health. So it's the primary oil that I use in my cooking and that I recommend using as a sauce
Starting point is 00:30:41 and you can cook with it. A lot of people don't realize that there's a lot of misconceptions about that. But the other thing about extra virgin olive oil is aside from the fact that it's a very healthy fat, it's got a superpower that no other fat has. And it's that it contains a compound called oleocanthal, which is essentially an anti-inflammatory compound
Starting point is 00:31:00 that is as anti-inflammatory as low dose ibuprofen. Whoa. Yeah. So over-the-counter pain relieving medications that are anti-inflammatory as low dose ibuprofen. Whoa. Yeah. So over-the-counter pain relieving medications that are anti-inflammatory, they have side effects. Actually, chronic use of ibuprofen is associated with cardiovascular events. But extra virgin olive oil, you're getting all of the benefit, all of the anti-inflammatory effect,
Starting point is 00:31:21 essentially, of a low dose of that, but without any of the negative side effects. You're kidding me. And by the way, none of the taxing on your kidneys or liver. There you go. Either, right? Exactly.
Starting point is 00:31:30 There's all these little things in the book, like I'll mispronounce stuff, but it doesn't matter because I understand the concepts of things. So you're talking about cooking with butter. Then there's like, you're like, ghee. Like there's this thing, ghee, that you talk about in the book, right? So everyone else is listening,
Starting point is 00:31:42 it's probably going, you don't know what ghee is? No, I didn't know what ghee was. So what is ghee and why are you so high on it? So ghee is a great fat, so is butter. And we can talk about the differences in the two. They're similar, ghee is derived from butter. It's clarified butter, essentially. So you take butter, you boil it gently,
Starting point is 00:31:58 and then you skim off the milk solids. And what you're left with is this pure fat that's very well tolerated for people that are even the most dairy sensitive because it's free of lactose and it's free of casein. That's big for a lot of people. Yeah. It's great for high heat cooking. It's a staple in Indian cuisine.
Starting point is 00:32:13 That's probably the type of cuisine most known for utilizing ghee. But actually butter and ghee, while I use it and I love it and it's definitely a part of my diet. I talk in the book about how for certain people, butter actually can raise levels of LDL, which is the lipoprotein associated with cardiovascular disease, right? And this is actually kind of interesting and it's distinct from cream.
Starting point is 00:32:43 Now, this is kind of mind blowing. A lot of people don't realize this, and it's distinct from cream. Now this is kind of mind blowing. A lot of people don't realize this, but butter, butter is made from cream. And is it, you take cream, you turn it, you get butter. That churning process disrupts a compound in the cream called milk, fat, globule membrane, and it makes the butter more prone to driving up levels of LDL. Whereas no other dairy product has that problem. So you can consume all the dairy fat you want from cream, from hard cheese and things like that.
Starting point is 00:33:12 The consumption of full fat dairy is actually associated with better cardiovascular health with the exception of butter, because it lacks this milk fat globule membrane. So for people that are worried about, have risk of cardiovascular disease, butter is one of those foods that I'm like, yeah, enjoy it sometimes, you know, I got the, it tastes great,
Starting point is 00:33:30 it's fairly nutrient dense for a fat, but it's not one of these fats that I, that I'll go overboard with. Okay. Unlike extra virgin olive oil. What about salt? What's our, what's our, or do we have misconceptions about salt in general?
Starting point is 00:33:42 I know the answer because I'm, I need your stuff, but I want to talk about that. So what, let's talk about salt. I love talking about salt. Salt is one of the easiest ways to elevate your cooking. I mean, salt, salt is the one ingredient that takes a single ingredient food, right? Like a piece of meat and turns it into a steak. Sure it does. Right. You need salt. It's all you need. So I'm a huge fan of salt. And I think that blows my mind hearing you say that. Okay. Yeah. Well,
Starting point is 00:34:04 not anymore, but without reading, I would have blown my mind. It's I mean, a piece of meat by itself is a missed opportunity, right? You got to add salt. And yeah, I think that we've been misguided when it comes to salt. A lot of, you know, the nutrition orthodoxy will say, you got to limit your salt, cut out salt, stop adding salt to your food. But actually only 11% of the salt that Americans ingest every day comes from home cooking and the salt that they add with their salt shakers. The vast majority of sodium that your average American ingests every single day comes from fast food, restaurant food and ultra processed foods, canned foods and things like that. So it's not the salt doing the damage, it's the fact that it's associated with those foods or is it a different type of salt? No, it's the foods that the salt. It's the associated foods. Yeah. About 25% of the population are sensitive to sodium, so they're what are called
Starting point is 00:34:57 salt-sensitive hypertensives. So that's still a minority, right? But about 25% of the population, if they eat a lot of salt, they'll see their blood pressure go up by 5% or more and that That statistic or that proportion is higher among people who have hypertension already But for the vast majority of people they can eat all the salt that they want and not see that they're and not see their blood pressure go up if sodium is an issue though, and not see their blood pressure go up. If sodium is an issue though, and you are a salt sensitive,
Starting point is 00:35:28 if you do find yourself sensitive to salt, I still wouldn't say don't salt your food. I would say cut out the packaged processed foods, the fast food, and you can continue of course to add salt to your food to make it palatable because even the healthiest foods in the supermarket aren't gonna be tasty unless you add salt to them. So by us telling people to stop adding salt to their foods, and by the way, the number one source of salt in the American diet, the number one
Starting point is 00:35:53 isn't canned food. It isn't processed meats. It's bread and rolls. That's the number one source of sodium in the American diet. Breads. Breads. Breads. Yeah. Do you eat bread? You know, I really don't. Your face just said you didn't.
Starting point is 00:36:06 No, yeah, I don't eat bread. I eat bread, I'll eat bread like, you know, like an almond flour-based bread, because for me, you know, nut consumption is associated with good health, and nuts are very nutrient-dense. So if I can find like a good, like, quote unquote, paleo bread, you know,
Starting point is 00:36:22 I'll go to town on that. You will. And look, if I'm traveling and there's a really good like sourdough put in front of me, like I'll try that occasionally. But bread is not a staple in my diet. That was my next question. So obviously I want people to get the book because they, and by the way, you should be cooking more. You should be home cooking more. And, but let's say you're not tonight. So to your point, I was going to ask you that. So I'm going out to order, I'm in a restaurant, there's a lot of people eat out
Starting point is 00:36:47 or going to eat out inevitably. What's just a good guide when eating out to eat for our brains, to eat for our heart, to eat for our longevity, but yet still enjoy the meal? Do you have a guide you kind of give yourself when you do that? Yeah, I mean, and I want people to eat out. Like eating out is one of the great aspects of modern life eating out with friends
Starting point is 00:37:06 I love I love to eat out now You can't control every single variable when you're eating out and you shouldn't try to right? You don't know what kinds of oils are gonna use in the restaurant and so I think you need to give yourself a break and you need to Not try to control every variable control the controllables and I think when going out to a restaurant, the things that I look for, I base my meal around a protein. So whether that's a piece of steak. Now I try to eat when I'm home,
Starting point is 00:37:31 100% grass-fed, grass-finished beef. When I'm out at a restaurant, yeah, I really appreciate if a restaurant offers that, but most restaurants don't. And so I don't drive myself crazy. I know that even a piece of grain-fed or grain-finished beef, which is the most commonly available kind of beef in a restaurant, is going to be a pristine source of protein. And if you order something like a filet mignon, it's going to be pricey, but a filet mignon
Starting point is 00:37:55 is actually a lean piece of meat anyway. And so lean meat, lean beef, it doesn't really matter what the cow's fed, to be honest, from a nutrition standpoint, because it's lean. What the cow eats dictates the nutritional quality of its fat. So if you're eating a lean piece of meat, like a filet, it actually doesn't matter what the cow's eating from a nutritional standpoint.
Starting point is 00:38:13 So I'll try to get a piece of beef. If not that, I'll reach for some grilled salmon, which I know is probably gonna be farmed, but it's all good. It's still a great source of omega-3s. It's still a pristine source of protein. Chicken, chicken is great. White meat, dark meat, I mean it doesn't really matter. White meat is gonna be just leaner and so it's gonna contain less calories, more protein.
Starting point is 00:38:33 And then I try to get vegetables. So sauteed vegetables usually I steer away from because the veggies in restaurants when they're sauteed they tend to be sauteed in cheap oils, restaurant oil, like the vegetable oil or the canola oil or soybean or worse, or corn oil. So I'll try to get grilled veggies or steamed veggies, if that's an option in the restaurant. And then you could always sprinkle some salt or some lemon.
Starting point is 00:39:02 You can ask for extra virgin olive oil. I love going to restaurants and asking if they can bring out flake salt, which is way better than the table shaker salt. Yes. Um, I've done that too. Yeah. So, I mean, I think it's really easy to like, to, to manipulate those variables in the restaurant, focus on protein, order a piece of, of meat or fish or
Starting point is 00:39:22 chicken or what have you, and then veggies, a side of veggies, a salad. That's, I mean, those are the meals that I get generally and I find it pretty easy to do so. So hey guys, I just walked in the studio. We're gonna record an episode and guess what I just did before I walked in? Walked into my pantry, got my AG1s out, poured it in my glass, made myself a drink of AG1s.
Starting point is 00:39:41 I do it every single day. For me, I do it a couple times a day. Why do I use AG1? Number one, supports my energy. Number two, digestion. Number three, immunity support. And actually, I feel a different mood when it comes on. My body gets a little bit more calm, yet I've got more energy. I love AG1. One of my commitments is to take AG1 every day in 2025. It's literally on my goal list. So what are your health goals for the year? And I think whatever they are, AG1
Starting point is 00:40:03 can probably help support them. So this new year, try AG1 for yourself. It's the perfect time to start a new healthy habit. AG1 is offering new subscribers a free $76 gift when you sign up. You'll get a welcome kit, a bottle of D3K2, and five free travel packs in your first box. So make sure to check out drinkag1.com slash Ed Mylett to get this offer. That's drinkag1.com slash Ed Mylett to start your new year on a healthier note. So a few weeks ago I wore this cashmere sweater on the show. A lot of you said you loved it. And I got to be honest with you, when I used to try to elevate my style, you know,
Starting point is 00:40:40 the brand stuff I'd buy would break the bank with me. I hated spending money on stuff like that. But with Quince, I get high end versatile pieces at prices that you and I can actually afford. Now you can upgrade your lifestyle without spending all your money to do it and paying huge price tags. Quince has all the must haves like Mongolian cashmere crew neck sweaters from 50 bucks, iconic, 100% leather jacket and versatile flow
Starting point is 00:41:05 knit activewear. The best part of all, all Quince items are priced 50 to 80% less than similar brands. Indulge in affordable luxury. Go to quince.com slash ed for free shipping on your order and 365 day returns. That's q u i n c e dot com slash ed to get free shipping and 365 day returns quints dot com slash ed. This show is sponsored by better help. So what are some of your relationship green flags? Maybe it's when your partner thoughtfully listens to you or anticipates your needs. We often hear about the red flags that we should avoid. but what if we focused more on green flags in friends and partners?
Starting point is 00:41:48 If you're not sure what green flags look like, therapy can help you identify what they do look like and how you feel when you get them. And it's something you deserve more of in your life, whether you're dating, married, you're building a friendship, maybe you're just working on yourself. It's time to form relationships that love you back
Starting point is 00:42:04 and that feel good in your life. Therapy with BetterHelp can teach you positive coping skills and how to set boundaries in your relationships and in business and it empowers you to be the best version of yourself which is really what this show's about. They've got more than 30,000 credential therapists with a ride range of specialties. Discover your relationship green flags with BetterHelp. Visit BetterHelp.com slash ed show to get 10% off your first month. That's BetterHelp, H-E-L-P dot com slash ed show.
Starting point is 00:42:34 That was a great conversation. And if you wanna hear the full interview, be sure to follow the Ed Mylett show on Apple and Spotify. Links are in the show notes. You'll never miss an episode that way. So I'm gonna ask you heart and brain. I'm eating from my brain. Give me one or two foods, eat for your brain. Do this people. And then here's one or two foods to avoid for your brain. All right, love this. So I would say avocados are
Starting point is 00:42:58 an amazing brain food. They have the highest concentration of fat-protecting antioxidants of any fruit or vegetable. And this is of particular relevance to the brain because the brain is made of fat and not just any kind of fat, but like a really delicate, damaged prone category of fats called polyunsaturated fats. The brain is constructed of these fats. And so fat soluble antioxidants are crucial to, uh, aging well, cognitively speaking, avocado is great source of potassium, which we know helps balance out the effect of sodium on our blood pressure.
Starting point is 00:43:26 They're a rich source of carotenoids, which can boost visual processing speed, even in people who are young and healthy. Great source of fiber, very satiating. So avocados are an amazing brain food. I'd say the second food, we've already talked about beef a little bit. We haven't yet really talked about eggs.
Starting point is 00:43:43 I'm a huge fan of eggs. Good, I eat a lot of eggs. Yeah. I can't hear that. Eggs are great. Eggs, you know, when you consider the fact that an egg yolk is packaged with everything that nature has deemed important to grow a brain, it literally is the ultimate cognitive multi-vitam, an egg yolk. Okay.
Starting point is 00:43:57 Yeah. So I love egg yolks. And also, there was a study in older people that found that choline consumption was associated with slashed risk of developing dementia by 30%, which is, there's no drug on the market that we could say here, take this, slash the risk of dementia by 30%. But choline is a really important molecule. It serves as the backbone to acetylcholine, which is a neurotransmitter that's important for learning and memory. Eggs are the number one source of dietary choline. You get, I think, like 150 milligrams in just one single egg yolk, which is amazing. Okay, avoid food for the brain. Process food, anything beyond that? I would say definitely the grain and seed oils. Canola oil, corn oil, soybean
Starting point is 00:44:43 oil. We know that these fats integrate themselves into our adipose tissue. We've actually seen an increase by about 136% of the appearance of these fats, linoleic acid in particular, in adipose tissue over the past hundred years, which is just, which is owed to the fact that we're just, we're chronically consuming these cheap oils. Something like soybean oil by itself is our consumption of it has gone up 2000% just in the past hundred years alone. That's a big part of the book, by the way, is the preparation part and I want them to get the preparation part, but that's a big deal is if it's got corn oil preparation, that's just a big no-no. Yeah. You want to get rid of that stuff. I mean,
Starting point is 00:45:22 a little bit here and there certainly won't kill you, but the production of these oils creates trans fats. There's no safe level of trans fat consumption we know at this point. They're also full, especially when we cook with them under real world conditions, the appearance of oxidative byproducts, certain aldehydes and things like that, which we know are damaging to our mitochondria,
Starting point is 00:45:43 which is the organelles in our cells that create energy. And these oxidative products are found under, and they're found in oils that are available commercially and created under just everyday use. So. And what about heart? Anything you say this heart, eat this for your heart. From a cardiovascular standpoint?
Starting point is 00:46:02 Yeah, I mean, extra virgin olive oil, I think really important. Fish, wild fatty fish is. From a cardiovascular standpoint? Yeah, I mean extra virgin olive oil, I think really important. Fish, wild fatty fish is great from a cardiovascular standpoint. Exercise is important, it's not food, but you know, it's... And I think the fiber part is heart related too. If you are really truly, you know, if it does have some LDL reduction capacity in any way, any particles, then fiber is a big deal. Yeah, it does.
Starting point is 00:46:23 I mean, basically what happens is you release bile acids to help break down fats in the gut. And bile acids, we use LDL particles to make bile acids. And that LDL is basically taken back up in the ileum, which is the latter end of the digestive tract. But when you consume fiber with your food, and especially this gel-forming viscous fiber, psyllium husk, and other fibers naturally found in foods, it traps the LDL particles,
Starting point is 00:46:52 and so they're not able to be taken back up in the ileum in time. So you basically pass them. That's why fiber, I think, is so great from a heart. It yanks it, you pass it. You're brilliant, by the way. Dude, thank you. I feel by the way, dude. Thank you I feel the same way about you. Thank you
Starting point is 00:47:06 I told you this like five times last time that we talked but I just when I'm talking with you and thank you I appreciate that fruit. So here we go. Yeah, so you know I Get my info from different people and so I'm curious because I have some friends of mine that say listen Fruits like ingesting sugar in the body, the body doesn't know the difference. I'm going to ask you whether this is true or not. Body doesn't know the difference. So you're going to get some sort of insulin reaction to it.
Starting point is 00:47:31 Then you're going to get more inflammation. And so fruit equals yeast and equals inflammation. I have other friends who say, no, fruit's got all this nutritional benefit to it. It's also got some water benefit to it in many cases. And so I eat a ton of fruit. So where do you stand on those two ends of the spectrum? I think fruit is great, especially whole fruit. But I do think it's important to make, to
Starting point is 00:47:51 bring nuance to the table and to acknowledge that there are different kinds of fruits. You know, we have low sugar fruits like avocados, berries. All berries are great. Cucumbers, citrus, things like that. And then we have high sugar tropical fruits like, you know, bananas, for example, or pineapple, mangoes. If you are, if you have problems with your glucose tolerance and your sedentary all day, do I think gorging on grapes and bananas, for example, is a very smart idea? No, I mean, it's probably, it's better than gorging on junk food, but I think we could do even better than that. I think we can look to foods that have less, to have a lower glycemic load.
Starting point is 00:48:33 But at the end of the day, fruit is beneficial. And so I don't wanna scare anybody away from eating more whole fruit. I personally, my daily fruit consumption ranges from zero to two servings a day. Okay. And again, all fruits are different. So berries, you know, there's a lot of evidence now showing how berries, how supportive berries are to brain health. Right. You know, bananas are a great source of potassium, which can boost cardiovascular health, but are bananas the only source of potassium? No, actually an avocado has twice
Starting point is 00:49:02 the potassium of a banana. Okay. With, those other benefits to it that I mentioned. And as you mentioned, fruit, it's self-limiting. So again, this is why I don't really place a limit on fruit consumption. It is self-limiting because of the fiber, because of the water. And the fact that fruit comes with that, the fiber and the water, that is important from the standpoint of how the sugar in the fruit affects us physiologically. So there was actually a really interesting study where this wasn't a fruit per se, but they compared the same amount of carbohydrates from wheat. So they took 50 grams, we'll just say 50 grams of wheat, and they turned it into a porridge.
Starting point is 00:49:46 And one porridge, the wheat in one porridge, one version of the porridge, the wheat was coarsely ground. And in the other, it was much more finely ground. And the finely ground porridge, again, carbohydrates were controlled for, so the calories were controlled for, right? So same amount of carbohydrates in each bolus, the finely ground wheat porridge and the coarsely ground wheat porridge. in each bolus, the finely ground wheat porridge
Starting point is 00:50:05 and the coarsely ground wheat porridge. And what they found in the finely ground wheat porridge was that it sent blood sugar, the amount, the glycemic impact was way higher, which led to a way higher release of insulin. And afterwards, so it sent the blood sugar way higher in the subjects, but then what was really interesting was that it dropped it below baseline afterwards. Whereas, yeah, so it led to a blood sugar crash. That blood sugar crash that we all try to avoid, right? Because that can create feelings of anxiety and people prone to anxiety, fatigue, hunger, irritability, right? But the coarsely ground porridge is harder for our bodies to digest, right? And it digests more slowly. Return blood sugar right back to
Starting point is 00:50:51 baseline, right? So going back to the fruit conversation, this is why I think fruit is so great and not something that we ultimately need to worry about, right? Because it's not like we're just juicing the fruit and consuming that sugar. It has this whole food matrix of fiber and water and it leads to a very slow infusion of sugar. Whereas you can take the same amount of sugar found in an apple and drink it and you're not gonna have the same effect.
Starting point is 00:51:16 You're probably gonna see a blood sugar crash. That's one of my favorite things we've talked about so far right there. Because that's a definitive example of the difference of that and just ingesting typical sugar on its own. Yeah. Which is sort of one of the arguments against fruit. I'm not advocating fruit any more or less than you are. I wouldn't advocate anything because it's not my background but what
Starting point is 00:51:35 about just eating less? So I'm talking I want you to address a couple different things. By the way I really appreciate you going so deep because you know this is really valuable advice. I care about these folks that are my family listening to this and watching this and their wellbeing. I want them to live happier, stronger, more energized lives. And you really help people do that, bro. So what about less?
Starting point is 00:51:55 When I say less is I mean less often, meaning how do you feel about feeding windows? My cardiologist doesn't like to call it intermittent fasting, she likes to call them feeding windows windows actually David Sinclair did as well And then just portion size in general is that something you're cognizant of like how much food you're putting in your body Actually, not just calories But just amount of food and portion size and how often you do or don't eat are those things that you think about or focus on? Yeah, I mean I try not to eat for two to three hours before I go to sleep every night.
Starting point is 00:52:28 Okay. That's my primary concern is not eating too close to bedtime. Sometimes when I wake up in the morning I like to eat, you know, an hour after I wake up. Sometimes I'm not hungry at all and I can go two, three hours after waking up before taking my first bite. But this all comes back to circadian biology. And we're seeing now that, especially with research on time restricted eating, a lot of this research is being done by
Starting point is 00:52:54 down over at the Salk Institute with Sachin Panda. He's done a lot of, published a lot of really interesting papers on time restricted eating. But that when we simply honor our body's natural inclination to eat during the day and not eat too much late at night we see cardiometabolic benefits to our blood pressure to our blood glucose control and this is
Starting point is 00:53:15 independent of weight so some will argue that time restricted eating merely just a way of controlling calories and it is that it can be a very effective way of controlling calories it And it is that, it can be a very effective way of controlling calories. It's not, you know, time restricted eating doesn't give you a free ride to eat whatever it is that you want. You can still gain weight while time restricted eating. You know, I think a lot of people make the mistake
Starting point is 00:53:36 of thinking that time restricted eating or intermittent fasting is this hall pass to eat whatever it is that you want and that somehow calories don't matter if you're time restricted eating. That's false, right? But independent of calories, it does seem to be the case that
Starting point is 00:53:50 there is a cardio metabolic benefit to not eating too late at night. And so that's what I try to do. We see that people who eat late at night, their hunger patterns are miswired the next day. And I've anecdotally experienced this myself when I eat really late at night, my digestion isnwired the next day. And I've seen, I've anecdotally experienced this myself when I eat really late at night, my digestion isn't all isn't great the next day and I tend to feel more hungry when I wake up the following day.
Starting point is 00:54:11 Mm-hmm. Well for me I sleep a lot better. Yeah. Because digest, my body's working to digest food that I ate later at night. And so when I'm not necessarily in full digestion mode so to speak, I just sleep deeper. But the reason I ask you about portion size, I want to talk about this maybe one one of the last two things here is that as you talked earlier about how big these sodas are now, so are portions. Like you go to, when you do eat out, the portions seem to be getting bigger and bigger and bigger. You go to an average restaurant now, you're like, my gosh, the amount of food
Starting point is 00:54:38 in some places that they're bringing me. And there's been this thing, like I grew up with this, like clean your plate. Yeah. It was a big thing. I, I'm here. I am 50 years old, but I would sit at a this thing, like I grew up with this, like clean your plate. Yeah. It was a big thing. I'm here, I'm 50 years old, but I would sit at a, a lot of us grew up like this. I wasn't even allowed to leave the table if I didn't eat all the food. Mom, I know you're listening to this. I love you.
Starting point is 00:54:56 But like, but like there is a portion issue in our culture. And I do think people think, well, I haven't eaten in eight hours. So I'm going to eat three sizes, fistfuls of of steak because I haven't eaten any in ten hours. So what about portion size? Do you focus on that? Yeah, I mean, I personally am a volume eater. I like to eat a lot. You told me that last time. Yeah, I like to eat a lot and I think that the way that that has become something sustainable for me and you know, and I'm able to do that without having to think
Starting point is 00:55:27 about calories and to portion control all that much is to focus really on the foods that I know are gonna be satiating so that I can feel full, but still not have over consumed my daily calorie needs. And the way to do that is to focus really on whole minimally processed foods.
Starting point is 00:55:46 So you can eat a lot, you can eat a huge volume of food and not consume at the end of the day all that many calories in doing so. I mean, that's the problem with ultra processed foods is that by the time you've eaten those kinds of foods to satiety, you've already over consumed them. Yes. These are the foods like pastas and rolls and breads
Starting point is 00:56:04 and cakes and fried foods and chicken dishes like lasagnas and things like that. But it's the minimally processed foods that allow you to feel like you're eating a lot when in reality you're actually not eating that much because they're just that satiating. And so, yeah, I mean, I've done on my Instagram too, side-by-side depictions where, you know, if you look at the calorie density of your average fast food meal. This is really good right here, you guys.
Starting point is 00:56:30 I've seen you do this, go ahead. Yeah, like the French fries and the soda and the Big Mac. It fits within, like, I mean, you can basically, in two handfuls, hold all of that food in two hands. And that's, for the most part, it's like 1,500 calories worth of food right there. And just you're holding food in two hands. And that's for the most part, it's like a 1500 calories worth of food right there. And it's just, you're holding it in two hands, right? But if you look at foods like, you know, wild salmon,
Starting point is 00:56:53 fresh vegetables, dark leafy greens, whole fruits, eggs and stuff like that, the calorie density is way lower for those foods. Calorie density, there you go. Yeah, the calorie density is lower, but the volume is way lower for those foods. Calorie density, there you go. Yeah, the calorie density is lower, but the volume is way higher. And so volume is one of those things that like, you know, it's really hard from the standpoint,
Starting point is 00:57:14 like look at like any animal, like when left to their own devices, when allowed to eat ad libitum, which is a scientific way of saying, to allow an animal to eat all the, you know, everything that they want, they don't stop. They don't pump the brakes. They have no self, they have no, uh, reason to self-regulate the way that we do.
Starting point is 00:57:31 Right. But when an animal is eating its biologically appropriate diet, it knows when to stop naturally, right. And animals, an animal's M O isn't to eat itself to a state of type two diabetes and obesity, right. So I think that the reason why so many of us struggle with overeating is because of the, it's the food environment.
Starting point is 00:57:52 It's not that there's anything wrong with us. I think a lot of people feel like there's like a moral failure, right? When they can't regulate their appetite, when they just find themselves eating too much chronically. But it's the foods, it's the ultra processed junk foods. And it's not even junk foods. It's the, it's fast food, it's sugar sweetened beverages. And it's not even just food, to be
Starting point is 00:58:11 honest, it's our lifestyles. You know, when you are under slept the next day, you're inclined to eat 400 more calories than if you were well slept. So it's all these factors. Yeah, all these factors come into play. And so yeah, I think that like moderating and trying to like shrink your portion size is one of the reasons why diets fail again and again because you can't just shrink your portion size and expect that to be a sustainable thing for you. People want to be able to eat and feel full. By the way, that's what you just said, but for those of you that have some guilt about
Starting point is 00:58:38 not eating healthy, ask yourself about your satiation level when you're eating, right? I'm just going through things you've said today. The amount of fiber intakes that you're feeling more full also, your water intakes so that you're feeling more full. And just give yourself some break about that. Maybe it's not the amount of food you're eating, but the types of foods you're eating so that you feel fuller sooner.
Starting point is 00:58:57 The other little thing I thought about, I'd eat fast. I eat too fast. You said this earlier. It's one of my takeaways for our conversation today. So one, I'm losing the benefit of some of that combination of circumstances that causes these healthy toxins in my body when I'm eating, but also the fact that it's not even giving myself time
Starting point is 00:59:13 to signal the fact that I'm full oftentimes. I'm just, I do everything fast. I talk fast, I drive fast, I walk fast. And I think sometimes our personality dictates even the way we eat. And I think it's smart to step back and go, let me enjoy the flavor of the food. Let me enjoy the meal to some extent. Let me enjoy the conversation. It's not a, I think sometimes I'm always in the contest to be first.
Starting point is 00:59:34 I don't know if anybody can relate to that. I gotta be the first one finished, first one to order, first one finished, which is not just insanely stupid thing. But yet I do it when I eat. And I think when I overeat or when I have digestion issues or fatigue after a meal, oftentimes it's not the food I ate. Sometimes for me, it's just how fast I ate it in some cases. And so I really appreciate you saying, okay, last question. Oh man.
Starting point is 00:59:58 Well, there's so many more. I've got 3000 more questions I wanted to get to, but you know, the depth of your answers are so awesome, bro. I love talking to you. I love talking to you and I'm going to keep doing it. By the way, guys, I just say this about Max. There's not someone else like him. So follow his stuff. Check out his YouTube, listen to his podcast, get genius food, get the book, you know, get it. So just an in general question,
Starting point is 01:00:18 we've covered a whole bunch of stuff today. I just want to, we missed something. We missed a lot of things. But if someone's listening, they go, you know what, man, I'm gonna start to pay more attention to how I'm eating. What I'm eating, how I'm eating. Other than what we've covered here today, what would be one more layered thing you'd say, and by the way, don't forget this, either in preparation or the type of food
Starting point is 01:00:37 or anything like that that you would throw in that I didn't ask you that they should just know before I let you go. Oh man, well, I, a topic that I'm't ask you that they should just know before I let you go. Oh man. Well, a topic that I'm really passionate about is our almost constant exposure to environmental toxins. So industrially created compounds that have saturated the food supply that we are unwittingly ingesting on a day-to-day basis that's compromising our health. So compounds like bisphenol A or BPA, endocrine disruptors, like phthalates in our food supply or PFAS chemicals.
Starting point is 01:01:09 I would say that getting your food right is super important and probably gonna be the lowest hanging fruit for most people, but I also think that people should start to at least gain a sense of awareness about where their food is coming from and to reduce their reliance on foods that come in plastic packages and to minimize their storing of food in plastic packages and certainly the reheating of food in plastic packages. So this is a big
Starting point is 01:01:34 problem like the microwaving of food in plastics, purchasing of sandwiches and other food products in oil-proof paper wrapped in oil-proof paper. All of these situations increase our exposure to compounds that mess with our hormones, the system of chemicals in our body that guide everything from neurodevelopment to sexual function to where we store our body fat. So becoming aware of where your food is coming from.
Starting point is 01:02:03 I mean, there's a study that came out just, I think it was late 2021 that found that fast food was just rife with phthalates. Phthalates are known endocrine disruptors. And so if you're eating a food product that just try to visualize where, you know, how it arrived in your hands. If it had to flow through a Byzantine network of plastic tubing, right, to make it into your food supply, to make it onto your plate, then it's probably something that you should minimize your consumption of. If it's a piece of, you know, and just
Starting point is 01:02:36 compare it to a sliced piece of fresh meat or a whole chicken that you roast yourself, for example, it's a lot different, or, you know, produce that you grab from the supermarket and put in a bag yourself. I mean, that's completely different. But, you know, so many of us today were consuming foods in packaging and we think that the packaging is inert, but it's actually not.
Starting point is 01:02:56 Under certain circumstances, the chemical constituents of the packaging are able to leach into the food that we're eating. And it screws with us. It affects everything from insulin Sensitivity to our predilection for weight gain So I think yeah, and I and I offer some tips in genius kitchen to help minimize One's exposure to these kinds of toxic chemicals, which I think is is a really important layer that we need to be talking about more
Starting point is 01:03:22 This is a message from sponsor Intuit TurboTax. Here's the thing, you gotta handle your taxes and waiting around and worrying if you're gonna get money back or what you owe and then waiting and wondering some more. You don't have to do that anymore. Right now you can get a TurboTax expert who can do your taxes as soon as today. An expert who gives your taxes their individual undivided attention as they work on your return while you get real-time updates on their progress so you can focus on your day. Isn't that what you want to be able to do? Have an expert get your taxes done. Figure out whether you're getting any money back and when you're gonna get it back and doing it the sooner the
Starting point is 01:03:53 better for everybody. An expert who will find you every possible deduction and file every form, every investment, everything with 100% accuracy so you don't need to worry about it. All so you can get the most money back guaranteed. No waiting, no wondering, no worries. Now this is taxes. Get an expert now on TurboTax.com. Only available with TurboTax live full service. Real-time updates only in iOS mobile app. See guarantee details at TurboTax.com slash guarantees. Are you crushing your bills?
Starting point is 01:04:26 Defeating your monthly payments. Sounds like you're at the top of your financial game. Rise to it with the BMO Eclipse Rise Visa Card. The credit card that rewards your good financial habits. Earn points for paying your credit card bill in full and on time every month. Level up from bill payer to reward slayer. Terms and conditions apply. Very short intermission here folks. I'm glad you're enjoying the show so far. Don't forget to follow the show on Apple and Spotify.
Starting point is 01:04:56 Links are in the show notes. Now on to our next guest. I got her right next to me everybody. This is Paige Hathaway. First things first, Mike and Nico, I don't wanna know this, they wanna know what is the best exercise to build your butt? So what like, and I know a lot of the ladies are like, watching this too, like give me one exercise, one tip from watching this that builds your booty the best. What would it, if you had to give me one,
Starting point is 01:05:21 what would it be? One, only one. Okay, you can give me three if you want, but just throw me some thoughts. I mean if I had to do one, what would it be one only one? Okay, you can give me three if you want but just throw me some You want it probably something that targets the glutes more like a hip thrust or anything like that? Okay, what about squats are they good for that or do you not do sports? I do do squats you do I do do squats. Um, yes, I do squats, but uh, yeah I mean, it's not the best to target your glutes, but it's it's a great lower body exercise
Starting point is 01:05:43 I mean actually all over but. So give me one more. What's one more great booty building exercise? I mean I don't want to say like stuff that's gonna like for guys because like. I was kidding for that. It's really a question for the ladies. They look like they have good glutes. I'm not going there and I totally disagree. Probably something like the Bulgarian split squat would be a really good one. So if you're gonna want to build your glutes, the hip thrusters and the Bulgarian split squat too. And they can Google what that is if they don't know what that is right now. Yeah, or you can show them after this. We'll show them. I'll do some
Starting point is 01:06:15 Bulgarian split squats. Those are a major part of my routine, as you can all tell from looking at me. So okay, so in all seriousness though, about your fitness routine, you can look like this and not be a complete crazy person about your diet. So I was watching something where you were talking about, there was a stage of your life where like your diet and your cardio was just cray cray, right? So talk about what that was like, because if you're really gonna compete in a show,
Starting point is 01:06:40 there is this level, people ask me like at my age, like why don't you try to go, you know, I don't want a diet like that. I just don't. Like I like wine and things other than chicken, you know, like sometimes. So like you recommend what diet-wise for people, and even in your own case, you're shredded, you're very, I mean obviously crazy fit, but you also kind of, you don't do cardio nine days a week and for three hours, and so take them a little bit through what you do and what you would recommend or you think is at least passable.
Starting point is 01:07:06 Of course. So I used to be super 100, like I said, I'm a 100% in and 100% out type of person. So I used to not, like I used to eat like 10 foods. I used to cardio every single day, workout every single day for at least like two hours. Like I was just, I mean when you get competing, I feel like you get in this competing mode
Starting point is 01:07:27 where you just like, I don't know, it's something that now that I look back and I'm like how did I do that? But now I mean I believe in more of like an 80-20. So 80% clean, 20% live your life. Like when I was competing and 100% in like that type of mentality, I didn't go to family functions, I didn't go to birthdays,
Starting point is 01:07:48 I didn't like, I secluded myself, so it wasn't even good for me like mentally because I wasn't around people, I was like, oh I can't go to that because I might cheat, or I might, then I'm gonna feel bad, and then I'm gonna have to do cardio, it's just like a downward spiral, and you can't live your life like that.
Starting point is 01:08:02 So I mean, I just, I eat clean 80% of the time, 20%. If I'm going somewhere, if I want something, I'm gonna have it. I'm just not gonna like overly indulge in it. You know, moderation is key. Don't beat yourself up about it. Don't go in the StairMaster for an extra hour. Right.
Starting point is 01:08:21 But now, I'm actually a pescatarian. I don't know if you know that, but I get my protein from fish and plant-based stuff and I just do that for my own health reasons that I've had and it's worked for me. But. Can I ask you, do you mean by your own health reasons meaning your body didn't respond well to eating other meats?
Starting point is 01:08:39 Is that what you mean? Yeah, yeah. So for as long as I can remember I just had a digestion issue and so I was just researching how to naturally help this and a lot of it came back to red meat. For you. So for me, yeah, for me. So, you know, I was like,
Starting point is 01:08:52 I'm just gonna try cutting meat out altogether and see if I can do that. I can't be vegan, I've learned this. I just can't do it. So I did that for a month and I was like, okay, this isn't working for me. So then I went pescatarian and it works well for me and all my digestion issues that I was having't do it. So I did that for a month and I was like, okay, this isn't working for me. So then I went pescatarian and it works well for me and all my digestion issues that I was having
Starting point is 01:09:08 completely went away. That's wonderful. Yeah, so you know what? I feel like, you know, I'm not one to preach about one diet works better than the other. There's so many diets out there and so many of them work wonderfully. I just think that you need to find something
Starting point is 01:09:21 that works best for you. And that you can sustain, right? That you can sustain. Because, yeah, because one thing it is, it's for you and that you can sustain that you can sustain Yes Yeah, because one thing it is it's a lifestyle and if you want to be fit you want to be healthy for us Because so many people yo-yo, right? They gain weight they lose weight they gain weight they lose it because they want to lose weight They're not doing something that's sustainable. Yeah, so you just got to find something that you can do long-term Yeah, that works for you. I'm huge on that too, Paige. Like I love meeting super fit people who go,
Starting point is 01:09:46 hey, I'm also like not a robot. Yes. You know, like I eat a cake once a year. You know, I do something. I eat a little spaghetti, right? Now, definitely. Cause I want people that, you know, some of you listen to this are competing
Starting point is 01:09:57 and want to compete and that's different. Now you're asparagus chicken and some tilapia and like that's it, right? That's going to be your deal. That's great. You know, I was telling him when we were off-camera that like it's competing is one of the I'm so glad I did that you know what I mean really it's it's you know I everyone should do a show you know you just kind of like
Starting point is 01:10:15 test your like inner you know what I mean like strength that you have so I'm not saying anything bad about competing because I competed and I Like I mean you guys are amazing Yeah for me it's just it's not a sustainable lifestyle for me Isn't it cool though for people watching this that one of the fittest woman that is on the circling planet right now is telling you Hey, I have some fun with my food too Like what a great thing to know now for an average person watching this, what would you tell them about doing their cardio? You know, I like HIIT cardio best if you're trying to really tone up. What does that mean? Just high intense interval training, but so you're not doing this like rigorous one hour of cardio, you're
Starting point is 01:11:01 doing you know 20 to 30 minutes hit cardio. Yep, me too. By the way, so if you don't know that, you can Google interval training because for me, cardio is something I want to get over with, unfortunately. That's just me, it's not for all of you. So if I can get the best bang for my buck, so to speak, it's interval training. So I'm exactly the same way. And for me, I heard you talk about one time before this change, you had moved from doing
Starting point is 01:11:22 cardio like two hours, six days a week to like a couple days a week is what you were basically doing, right? Yeah, and I was doing that. And you know what, if I need to like dial in for something like a shoot or something, I'll hop on there and do some HIIT training. Or on my leg days, even some upper body days, I'll put in those like plyos to make my rest more minimal
Starting point is 01:11:44 to you know, up that high intense training in between my lifts. So I'll do stuff like that. One of the things I like that you do on your website too, I want to talk about this for a minute too, is that there's different ways to do your contest or your training for a show. Meaning there's all kinds of, and you do this on your site, but you could just do your own contest with you in a transformation for 90 days or 30 days too, right?
Starting point is 01:12:04 It doesn't have to be some bik 90 days or 30 days too, right? It doesn't have to be some bikini show or bodybuilding show, but you could say, look, I'm starting a train right now, I'm six feet tall, 240, and I want to transform my body over the next 90 days. You do some stuff through your site, I noticed, like that too, where you kind of mentor people, they can send you. We'll talk about that a little bit for the average person listening to this too. They could do their own contest, right?
Starting point is 01:12:22 Yeah, yeah, yeah. So I do that online. It's just that I know that a lot of people, going to a trainer can be expensive. You're paying 40, 50, 60, 80, $100 a session, and that can be expensive. So I just do something where it holds more accountability online where you can check in,
Starting point is 01:12:42 and I even give out prize money just because yeah because ten thousand bucks because you know online training can be super it's hard to stay accountable you know it's so hard you don't go into a trainer you don't check in you're not like here see me so I wanted to keep people accountable and that's they could do that literally through you if they chose to yeah you also talked about on your site real quick different body types too, like not everybody trains the same way.
Starting point is 01:13:07 So can they get some access to help from you on that through your site? Yeah, my site's just paytathwaite.com and you can email me there. You respond to everybody, right? Yeah. That just blows my mind. So they can do that through your site, right? They can go to your site and get that kind of information too. Yeah, they can email me directly.
Starting point is 01:13:24 Okay, and you told me you respond to a lot of the stuff yourself too right? Yes even with Instagram you know a lot of people are like do you comment back to people yourself I'm like yes I comment back to people I reply to people's DMs I try to. Unbelievable that you do that. Okay so a few more things we don't have too much time left so overall if someone was to ask you for just in general I want to get more fit what would you say to somebody somebody, like, here's where I'd start, this is my general advice to you about getting fit, what would you tell them? You know, if someone's not, like, they don't have a healthy lifestyle or they, you know,
Starting point is 01:13:57 they're trying their best to get into it, I would just ease into it, you know. I'm a 100% and 100% out kind of person, but a lot of people don't have that mentality. So my best piece of advice is, is take a day at a time, I would, honestly, I would just take, you know, half the week, eat healthy, then and then half the week, live your what you're doing and just every day, take a day out and start implementing that healthy lifestyle. I would just do it like a day at a time. because a lot of people it is really hard for them. So you want to make it a routine right? Because a routine is what's gonna help you stay on
Starting point is 01:14:33 track and a lot of people can't do the cold turkey you know type of things so I would just take it a day at a time start with one day start with two days start with three days and then make it a lifestyle. Well, I agree a million percent I'm not as fit as you, but like, I, no, I mean like a hundred percent agree that it has to be something you're gonna maintain. It's so sad for me when I'm in the gym in January and it's packed with all these people with their hopes
Starting point is 01:14:58 and ambitions and New Year's resolutions, and then by like February 1st, it's back to the same people again. Where is everyone? Everyone's gone because what they started to do wasn't sustainable yeah so I a hundred thousand percent agree. I have a very special man with me here today Max Lugavere welcome to the Max Out Show with Ed Mylatt great to have you. Great to be here and what an appropriate name I mean I'm I feel like we're really gonna max out today. We are, we're going to max. My family's prone to both.
Starting point is 01:15:25 So there's dementia in my family and there's heart disease in my family. And so, um, you know, these things matter to me, but when it comes to the, I cut you off there, I apologize. I didn't know you're going to keep going, but I, I, is that also true in the brain where the plaques accumulate in the brain as well in the vascular areas of the brain or, or is that the neck or how do we, how does it impact the brain as well in the vascular areas of the brain or or is that the neck or how do we how's it impact the brain? Well, so the same kinds of vascular problems that you can have anywhere in the body you can have in the microvasculature that feeds blood and nutrients to the brain
Starting point is 01:15:57 So that's where you can start to have a problem from the from a vascular standpoint The amyloid plaques and tau tangles that you're referring to, it's sort of a different machinery there, a different mechanism. But nonetheless, the same problems that are gonna cause this backup of LDL particles in the blood that's gonna cause inflammation in your blood vessels, chronically elevated blood sugar,
Starting point is 01:16:20 all incredibly damaging to the brain. There's no question about it. It can create inflammation in the brain, can damage the blood vessels incredibly damaging to the brain. There's no question about it. It can create inflammation in the brain, can damage the blood vessels going up to the brain. And inflammation in the brain is really what is responsible, I think, for this increase in amyloid beta and the tau tangles that we see. So when we talk about amyloid beta and tau,
Starting point is 01:16:38 these are the sort of hallmark proteins that are associated with Alzheimer's disease. There are other forms of dementia. You have vascular dementia, as I mentioned, you have Parkinson's disease dementia. You have Lewy body dementia. So dementia is an umbrella category and Alzheimer's disease is simply the most common form of dementia. And so because it's the most common form of dementia, that's why there's all
Starting point is 01:16:55 this research money that goes into it. And, um, and so amyloid is most closely associated with Alzheimer's disease, but we all generate amyloid in our brains. It all, it tends to increase as we get older. Um, and for a long time, we've been able to get rid of it. And so amyloid is most closely associated with Alzheimer's disease, but we all generate amyloid in our brains. It tends to increase as we get older. And for a long time amyloid was thought of as sort of the, you know, the analogy that, you know, what cholesterol is to heart disease, amyloid was to Alzheimer's disease. So that analogy works really well.
Starting point is 01:17:23 But the same way that we now know that cholesterol is not necessarily the villain in cardiovascular disease. It's sort of like, you know, it's this molecule that's there at the scene of the crime, certainly, but it's not necessarily the causal player. Um, at least in the, in the early stages, the same thing we're now seeing with amyloid. So amyloid for the longest time, because you could easily open up the brain of a deceased person who had died from Alzheimer's disease. And you see these plaques and tangles in the brain.
Starting point is 01:17:53 It was thought that amyloid beta was the cause of Alzheimer's disease. So what do we have to do to get this amyloid out of the brain? But many, many drug trials later, what we've seen is that drugs that are actually effective at reducing amyloid burden in the brain don't cure the disease. So the question has then become, what is the, what are the earliest things that,
Starting point is 01:18:12 what are the earliest problems, you know, or the earliest biomarkers that are associated with Alzheimer's disease that we can intervene on earlier to prevent this amyloid buildup in the first place. And we know that, you know, inflammation in the brain, because the brain doesn't really have an immune system the way that the body does, amyloid seems to be responding to neuro inflammation. We also see that sleep is incredibly important when it comes to keeping the brain clean of these plaques.
Starting point is 01:18:44 We know over this, just as of a couple of years ago, there's a newly discovered system in the brain called the glymphatic system, which I think many people are starting to become familiar with that when you sleep, your brain actually flushes cerebrospinal fluid throughout your brain and cleanses it of these proteins that build up over the course of the day. And the thinking is the more of the protein that there is lingering in your brain, the higher the odds that it can basically clump and form the plaques and tangles that we associated with that we associate with Alzheimer's disease. So that's why that's where sleep really comes into play as well.
Starting point is 01:19:17 Okay, I'm glad you went there. So now we're going to shift into some, thank you by the way, I'm glad we're going to shift into some practical stuff. So practical thing number one, you need to sleep a bunch. It's healthy for your brain. You don't need to understand why. It just is. That's number one. Number two, I want to talk at length, well in some detail, about you went there earlier and I'm glad we're gonna go there. We're gonna talk about what we put in our mouths now. And you said processed foods versus you know really healthy raw real foods, real meats, real greens, what have you. I eat, like a lot of people I bet that listen to the show,
Starting point is 01:19:48 if I started to add up how much processed food that I eat in a given day or week, it's pretty scary. I'm talking about protein bars, protein chips, things that I, at least in my mind, I think are healthy because they're getting me protein, low calorie, really quick, tastes pretty good, it's a snack. But I mean, I eat a ton of processed food. Why is that bad compared to eating what you, I don't know what you would call it, real food, every single day? Yeah, yeah, so I mean, I think it's important
Starting point is 01:20:16 to make the distinction, right? Like processed food sort of has this really negative connotation associated with it, especially these days, but when you cook your food, you're processing it. So it's not it's not necessarily that processing is like this, this evil, this evil thing. It's, it's the ultra product. It's when food has just become so pulverized and removed from its natural form that it's hardly recognizable from its original
Starting point is 01:20:40 form. You know, when you take a steak or something or a piece of like raw meat and you cook it in your pan, you're processing it. When you put, you know, whole foods in a blender, you're processing that food. The problem with ultra processing, which is what, you know, the food industry does, is it creates foods that are what are called,
Starting point is 01:20:56 what food scientists refer to as hyper palatable. It becomes really difficult to moderate your consumption of those foods. These foods are designed to be over consumed. And by the time you've reached satiety when eating these foods, you've already over consumed them. You've already, yeah, they've shown this actually recently, there was a national institutes of health study, uh,
Starting point is 01:21:17 led by an obesity obesity researcher named Kevin Hall. You can look up the study that found that when people were given an ultra process diet, um, to consume ad libitum, meaning like you were able to eat whatever you wanted until you reached a point of satiety, they ended up eating a 500 calorie surplus every single day. Wow. When, you know, when just eating to feel full, which is something that every human being wants to feel right when,
Starting point is 01:21:41 when eating food, I mean, it's like, uh, it's a privilege and great thing to be able to feel full and something that we all want. Um, when we're, when we're eating, they, in the crossover trial, what they then did was that they gave the same subjects access to a minimally processed diet and to the same degree of satiety. So, so eating also until they were full and satiated, they ended up eating at a calorie deficit of 300, you know, 300 something calories. Yeah.
Starting point is 01:22:07 So I mean, that ultra processed food diet, which by the way, today is how most people are eating most of the time, 60% of the calories that we consume today come from ultra processed foods that right there explains the obesity epidemic, you know, because, because we're just constantly in proximity to these ultra processed foods where it's really difficult to pump the brakes on them. We end up over consuming them. And, and the other problem with these foods is that they're minimally nutritious. So not only are we walking around, you know, with ever expanding waistlines, one in two people by the year 2030 are going to be not just overweight,
Starting point is 01:22:41 but obese. And half of us are either type two diabetic or pre-diabetic. 90% of us are deficient in at least one essential nutrient. So we're overfed and we're undernourished. And when you put those two features together, that's why you're seeing accelerated aging. You're seeing, you know, I think, uh, you know, just, just, you know, just unprecedented rates of cardiovascular disease of, you know, just unprecedented rates of cardiovascular disease, of, you know, certain cancers and of dementia. I mean, because the brain partakes in, you know, whatever's going
Starting point is 01:23:10 awry in the body, the brain suffers the consequences of that as well. And these ultra processed foods, is there an ingredient or two that must be avoided? Like, hey, this is really toxic and bad for your body. When we're looking at the, the list of ingredients in something, chemicals in there, is there a one or two that are just no-nos? Well, I love that you asked that question, really getting practical.
Starting point is 01:23:33 I think that the kinds of ingredients you really wanna watch out for are refined grains, so that's one, and refined grain and seed oils. So refined grains, you know, the wheat flour, the rice flour, the corn flour. I mean, I'm not dogmatic in my approach. Eating a piece of whole corn on the cob is one of my favorite things to eat in the summer.
Starting point is 01:23:58 You know, I eat white rice on my sushi. Like I'm not dogmatic about like, you know, grains are the devil or anything like that. But in these ultra processed foods, I think refined grains really are problematic. Um, I'll give you another reason why actually just, uh, because it's, because it's interesting when you eat, uh, say you eat a handful of whole nuts, right? And you look at the calories in,
Starting point is 01:24:20 you know, on the back of the nut package or whatever, and you see whatever, how we'll just say it's 500 calories of worth of nuts, whole nuts. You're actually only absorbing about 70% of those calories because, you know, when you chew whole nuts, the particles are too big to be fully digested. It's a whole food. You actually end up pooping out a significant amount of those calories. Wow. When you eat, yeah, when you eat pulverized wheat, corn, rice flour in these ultra processed foods,
Starting point is 01:24:49 you're absorbing 100% of those calories. Not only that, not only that, so I mean, a calorie is not really a calorie when it comes to nutrition facts labels. Not only that, but those calories get absorbed really rapidly and really high up in the small intestine. So it basically sends your blood sugar through the roof before your body really even has an ability to, you know, you're still eating while your body is like,
Starting point is 01:25:11 you know, what do we do with this sudden influx of, of, of sugar essentially. So I think it's, it's important to avoid foods that are based predominantly on those, on those kinds of grains. Very, very interesting. So a couple things on going in our mouths again. I've heard you talk about baby broccoli or broccoli sprouts and this is like some people think this is splitting hairs but it's not. I don't understand like is it like sulfatine or the nrf2 pathways whatever the heck it is but I know a little bit right. Why is
Starting point is 01:25:42 two pathways, whatever the heck it is, but I know a little bit, right? Why is baby broccoli or broccoli sprouts way better than like broccoli in particular? Why eat that? That's a good question. So when you chew broccoli sprouts or any cruciferous vegetable, you basically break apart the cell walls
Starting point is 01:26:00 where two chemicals that are kept in isolation in the plants unite in your mouth to create a new compound. And that compound in the case of cruciferous vegetables, uh, is called sulforaphane and so forth. Yeah. It's considered an insect, uh, like an insecticide, a natural insecticide that plants create, right? Because plants can't tooth and nail their way out of being eaten, right? So what they do is they practice chemical warfare.
Starting point is 01:26:32 And so they create these compounds that if you were a smaller critter, maybe an insect, a mouse, a mold, the compound would make you sick. And so when a mouse gnaws on these plants, it creates these compounds. You know, sulforaphane is just one of them, but there's, you know, I mean, the plant kingdom
Starting point is 01:26:51 is just full of these like natural defense chemicals. What we see is that sulforaphane in somebody like you or me, you know, a big robust organism, actually has a number of beneficial and protective effects via a mechanism called hormesis. So hormesis is when you consume a plant compound and you know, if you were to consume a lot of it, it would be toxic, but in small doses, it actually has a beneficial effect. So like a counterintuitive beneficial effect, because here we have this toxic chemical, but in small doses, it's actually good for you. The same thing actually applies to exercise. You know, you could exercise enough where it would kill you, right? It's a stressor on the body, but in small doses, exercise actually makes
Starting point is 01:27:26 you more robust, more resilient. We can sing the praises about exercise, you know, for hours. But sulforaphane is great because it's been shown to increase levels of a compound in the body called glutathione, which is the, yeah, it's the body's master detoxifier, but it's also shown to increase levels of a compound in the body called glutathione, which is the, yeah, it's the body's master detoxifier master antioxidant. Um, it's a being studied now as a means of, um, you know, it's, it's cancer protective effects. It's also been, um,
Starting point is 01:28:02 suggested in a small clinical trial, I believe to reduce symptoms of autism. So for anybody that has that in the family, I think it's worth looking into, you know, and it's just one of the many benefits of eating a varied diet that includes cruciferous vegetables. Okay, glutathione. I love glutathione.
Starting point is 01:28:19 So I can't explain this. I'd like you to explain it to me. So I do some, I haven't done it in a while just because of COVID, but with all my traveling and I get depleted, I do IV therapy, even just sometime to get hydrated. I'll take IV hydration. One, I'd like your opinion on that.
Starting point is 01:28:34 Actually two, what's your opinion on that? Am I just peeing it all out or does it help? But here's what I know. When they put glutathione in my IV, something amazing happens to my body. There's a calming effect. I can feel that. I feel B12 when they put it in, you know, you get all wired. The other stuff I don't really feel. For some reason, glutathione, I can feel better actually when it's in my
Starting point is 01:28:59 body. So do you recommend someone supplements with it? Why is that happening? Or am I crazy? And what do you feel about IV therapy? Yeah, I don't really recommend, I don't make the recommendation that people supplement with glutathione. I mean, I have, I take sometimes liposomal glutathione supplements, but I, you know, I'm not, I really am pretty convinced that, you know, supplements should be used very diligently and deliberately, based on your diet and your specific deficiencies and, you know, even in some cases, genes. But no, I don't, I generally don't recommend that people supplement with it.
Starting point is 01:29:38 I just don't think that you need to, if you're eating a diet that is, is supplying the raw materials for your own, your body's own glutathione synthesis. So sulfur containing amino acids, very important grass fed beef, eggs, things like that. You know, anything with sulfur in it is actually going to be going to be really good for you. Sulfur is a rate limiting, um, uh, you know, element in the synthesis of, of glutathione. And so when you consume, for example, uh, cysteine rich, you know, foods, you're going to basically be
Starting point is 01:30:07 supplying that. Also glycine, glycine is really important. So it's one of the reasons why I think collagen is worth consuming. And collagen is actually a supplement that I think is worth looking into, because we don't tend to eat a lot of collagenous tissues at this point, you know, can you stay on that? You don't you don't think that you break down those supplements in your stomach and you're never getting any benefit to taking something like I've had other people tell
Starting point is 01:30:29 me, Hey, you're taking a collagen supplement, you're not getting it if it's destroyed before it gets to you. Yeah, you do break it down. So it's not a one to one. You know, it's not like you consume collagen and it becomes collagen in your joints. Yeah, but you are increasing your supply of glycine, which we don't consume enough of. Your average person consumes about two grams of glycine every single day. And you create in your body another two grams of glycine.
Starting point is 01:30:55 And that is why glycine is actually not considered an essential amino acid because we create it to some degree. But I don't think that we create enough for optimal health, especially today when we consume lots of muscle meat. And the reason for that is, so there have been research calculations that speculate that we need about 15 grams of, it depends on your weight and what you're eating,
Starting point is 01:31:23 about 15 grams of glycine a day. And that our needs for glycine increase with higher consumption of another amino acid, methionine, which is more present in muscle meat. And we use glycine to create collagen. So by not consuming adequate glycine, again, we only ingest about, uh, two grams of every single day. Um, you might be actually limiting your body's ability to create, to create collagen. And collagen is super important. I mean, it's important for, um, I mean,
Starting point is 01:31:57 it's the, it's like the most abundant protein in the body and it, and production of it declines as we get older, it's important for the health of your, you know, your veins, it's important for the health of your, you know, your veins, your arteries. So, so yeah, it's one of those things that I think if you're not eating collagenous tissue in animal products, I think it's worth supplementing with. Okay. By the way, thank you. I told everybody in the beginning to be like feverishly writing notes. The cool thing about this show is they listen to it in their car like, all right,
Starting point is 01:32:22 well, I'm going to listen to it. I got to go all the way back and get a notepad out and start writing all this stuff down so I really appreciate it and for me you know I'm a I'd say I'm borderline obsessed with my own health just because there is dementia in my family. I don't know that frankly it's so long back I don't know if it was dementia you know a particular form of dementia, Alzheimer's specifically but it's there and certainly heart disease as well and I like that you're telling us some of these markers that we can test for. This is the Ed Mylan Show.

There aren't comments yet for this episode. Click on any sentence in the transcript to leave a comment.