- electric field perception by humans
- Umami plate
- Jana Beck confirms that a low-carb diet improves her blood sugar levels
- “Goldman Sachs got the FBI to do its bidding” (Felix Salmon)
- Whey protein reduces after-meal blood sugar rise. Whey protein is in cheese, for example.
- Several unpleasant aspects of surgery prep unhelpful
Thanks to Alex Chernavsky.
Seth,
What are you thoughts on fermented meats? If we eat fermented vegetables and dairy, shouldn’t we be letting our meats ferment?
Seth: I try to eat fermented meats. For example, prosciutto, aged salami. Cremenelli salami is especially good.
“doses of whey protein significantly reduced post-prandial blood sugar levels”: I hate the dishonesty of that sort of statement.
Seth: What is the dishonesty?
Whey protein in cheese?
From my understanding, most of the whey is removed from cheese. Except for a few cheeses (like Ricotta), shouldn’t cheese be especially low in whey protein?
Seth: What is the dishonesty?
The use of “significantly” – which the layman will interpret as ‘substantially’ – when the original result is “statistically significant”, a quite different concept. (To be fair, I don’t know whether this article is guilty of that crime, but if it isn’t it’s damn near unique.)
Seth: The reduction is large, see https://www.nutritionj.com/content/11/1/83/figure/F1. Certainly “significant” in the sense of important. The authors are guilty of not making that clear.
I don’t see how using whey protein to raise your insulin level is beneficial long term. I believe, reducing your carbohydrate load would be much more beneficial; short term and long term.
Seth: The whey protein lowered insulin level, see https://www.nutritionj.com/content/11/1/83/figure/F1.
Seth,
I believe you misread figure F1 with respect to insulin levels.
Figure 1B shows insulin levels as a function of time for the different meals,
and the whey protein level is higher than all the others for most of the post-prandial period.
Figure 1C shows the insulin index of the meals (in light bars.) Again, the whey protein meal shows the highest level.
Finally, quoting from the paper itself:
The insulin iAUC following human milk, bovine milk and casein was similar to that seen with WWB. In contrast, the whey meal exhibited higher insulin iAUC 0ā120 min, than the WWB (pā<ā0.05). Additionally, the whey meal resulted in an elevated insulin response (iAUC 0ā120 min) also when compared with data for casein and human milk.
Seth: Thanks for the correction. Yes, I said lowered insulin when I meant lowered blood sugar.
Great talk from Jana Beck. Here are higher-resolution graphs — https://janabeck.com/blog/2012/10/12/lessons-learned-from-100/
Her blog posts about beeminder are also very good. Talk about closing the goals-data-behavior loop!