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Haha, no, but only because it's deep fried!Last night I had asparagus wrapped in bacon - 1 asparagus per 1 slice of bacon - the bacon was crispy and the asparagus was tender - awesome!!!!
To follow up on my previous LDL post on page 1 of this thread, it turns out that LDL crosses the blood-brain barrier, and the payload that it delivers? Cholesterol - which our brains desperately needs. Which again goes toward the fact that normal LDL function is not disease causative, it's when the LDL becomes dysfunctional and ends up as smLDL, oxLDL, or glycated LDL that problems follow. The paper below does not touch on these dysfunctional types of LDL, but rather what is the function of LDL when healthy, and why do we have LDL receptors in our brains:http://www.ncbi.nlm.nih.gov/pmc/articles/PMC2138047/pdf/10768.pdf
Thanks for posting, Tyson! I highly recommend "Good Calories, Bad Calories" by Gary Taubes to anyone interested in diet who hasn't read it. It's quite a tome, being targeted to doctors and health professionals. He has a newer one called Why We Get Fat that's more consumer oriented (which I haven't read but intend to).The documentaries y'all mentioned, King Corn and Food, Inc., both do a good job showing how government subsidies only drive us to eat foods that are bad for us (refined wheat, corn, soybeans, vegetable oils, sugars, Soylent Green...). I enjoyed the humorous documentary Fat Head as a response to Spurlock's anti-business Supersize Me.
Just read this book and the author goes to great lengths to debunk the current low-fat, low-cholesterol, high-carb guidelines. It really is all about the refined carbs and sugar. It is not a diet book, it is an extremely thorough examination of scientific evidence - or lack thereof - as used and abused in the realm of public health policy through 20th century, written by an established journalist. Very dry at times but a must read. His findings back up the Tyson's opening graph all the way.
I read Why We Get Fat and found Taubes discussion of insulin resistance to be quite fascinating. My wife and I have been trying an Adkins style diet for a few weeks and having good results. If everyone ate a low carb diet, the average grocery store would be the size of a Seven-11.