Besides my regular workout routine every day, I am trying to
continue to improve my diet. I cut out
added sugar years ago (e.g. no more soft drinks or sports drinks and added more
fruits, veggies and legumes). Now I am working
at reducing fat. I avoid processed
food. I cut meat and dairy way back,
reduced oil in cooking, eliminated salad dressing and no fried foods including French
fries. I now consume a mostly a plant
based diet: fruits, vegetables, legumes, grains and nuts. I eat small amounts of meat and cheese four
or five times a week. I now must work to
reduce my favorite fat sources: dark chocolate (75% fat), avocados / guacamole
(67% fat) and nuts (67% fat). Getting
the fat out is hard.
I have been working hard to reduce fat from my diet. It is
not easy. Fat seems to be everywhere. No wonder we have cardio-vascular disease
and cognitive decline as we get older. However, I am having success if the
reduction if my recent cholesterol numbers is an indication (down 24 points
from my last check and way south of 200; I have never been over 200.).
The big things are greatly reducing meat and dairy
consumption plus eliminating all fried foods. Salad dressings are a no-no since
they are mostly fat. One must also avoid added cooking oils. Of course,
processed foods and junk foods are also a big source of too much fat. This
leaves mostly a plant based diet. However, some plants based foods contain high
levels of fat so ones needs to be careful not to eat too much of them. These
high-fat plant based foods include dark chocolate (my favorite), avocados
(guacamole), olives, nuts and seeds (even flax seed is over 60% fat).
We need some fat in our diets. The “Forks Over Knives” doctors, T. Colin
Campbell, Caldwell B. Esselstyn, recommend a diet with only 10% fat. Their diet is a 100% plant based diet. A 10% target may be appropriate if you have a
cardio-vascular disease. I think a
reasonably target is 20% for healthy people.
This allows me to enjoy some dark chocolate, avocados and meat occasionally. The “Vegan Before 6” approach Mark Bittman
wrote about in a new book might be another way to reduce fat in a diet. What I
am sure about is the 30% to 40% fat in the typical American diet is way too
much and is due mostly to the big meat portions, processed foods and not enough
fruits, vegetables and legumes.
Good luck getting the fat out.