Mind Pump: Raw Fitness Truth - 1777: Cooking Oils That Can Make You Sick With Max Lugavere
Episode Date: March 24, 2022In this episode Sal, Adam & Justin speak with Max Lugavere about the potential detrimental health effects of highly processed vegetable oils and his new cookbook, Genius Kitchen. Is canola oil really... that bad for your body? (2:51) How damaged fat damages you. (5:53) In a context of a calorie surplus, how much does this conversation change? (11:18) How the dose makes the poison. (15:45) What are the best oils to cook at high temperatures? (26:47) How our policies have made our diets worse. (28:41) Genius Kitchen: Fighting fire with fire. (31:28) The misconception that healthy food doesn’t taste good. (37:20) Why does Max choose to avoid artificial sweeteners? (41:00) Some of Max’s favorite recipes from the book. (45:03) Don’t let perfect be the enemy of good. (47:24) Selling the benefits and value of organ meats. (49:47) The importance of being evidence-based and not evidence-bound. (55:45) What does Max supplement with? (1:01:14) The health benefits of eating at home. (1:08:10) Connecting the signals how food makes you feel after you eat it. (1:11:59) More valuable gems from Max’s new book. (1:14:50) Related Links/Products Mentioned March Promotion: Limited Time Power Bundle! MAPS Strong and MAPS Powerlift for the low price of $79.99 Genius Kitchen: Over 100 Easy and Delicious Recipes to Make Your Brain Sharp, Body Strong, and Taste Buds Happy Visit NutriSense for the exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! **Promo code “MINDPUMP” at checkout** Where does Canola oil Come From? Changes in consumption of omega-3 and omega-6 fatty acids in the United States during the 20th century Olive oil and prevention of chronic diseases: Summary of an International conference Dr. Gabrielle Lyon and Dr. Donald Laymon Instagram Live Visit NED for an exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! Creatine — Health Benefits, Dosage, Side Effects Astaxanthin Supplement - Examine.com Prolonging healthy aging: Longevity vitamins and proteins Mouthwash use and risk of diabetes Visit Organifi for the exclusive offer for Mind Pump listeners! **Promo code “MINDPUMP” at checkout** Mind Pump Podcast – YouTube Mind Pump Free Resources Featured Guest/People Mentioned IG: @maxlugavere Website: Max Lugavere Podcast: Genius Life Layne Norton, Ph.D. (@biolayne) Instagram Mary Shenouda (@paleochef) Instagram Dr. Gabrielle Lyon (@drgabriellelyon) Instagram Dr. Donald Laymon
Transcript
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If you want to pump your body and expand your mind, there's only one place to go.
Mind, hop, mind, hop with your hosts.
Salda Stefano, Adam Schaefer, and Justin Andrews.
You just found the world's number one fitness health and entertainment podcast.
This is Mind Pump, right?
In today's episode, we had one of our favorite people in the podcast.
Max Lugavier, we've had him on a few times before. He's one of our favorite people in the podcast, Max Lugavier, we've had him on a few times before,
is one of our favorite guests.
Super smart guy, he's a great author.
In fact, he just wrote a book called Genius Kitchen,
which includes over 100 easy and delicious recipes
to make your brain sharp, body strong,
and your taste buds, super happy.
Now in this episode, we talked to Max about
inflammatory cooking oils, healthy cooking oils,
ways to make food taste good so that you can enjoy healthy foods and actually compete with
those heavily processed garbage foods that are out there that make us fat, unhealthy, and
unhappy. Great episode. Again, one of our favorite guests, I can't say enough about him.
Go check his book out, Genius Kitchen, and you can find them on social media at max
luga veer. By the way, this episode is brought to you by one of our new sponsors, Nutressense. So
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All right, Max, so canola oil.
Is it really that bad for your heart, your brain, and your body?
Well, canola oil is a grain and seed oil.
It originates from the rapeseed.
It was actually initially called the rapeseed oil,
until they found a way to minimize with genetic modification the constituent of canola oil.
Eurusic acid, which is actually toxic, and so now it's actually been called, it's been renamed
canola oil, which stands for Canadian low acid, sort of a hybrid of the two.
Oh, that's interesting.
I had no idea.
Yeah, yeah.
And so now it's...
I thought there was a canola plant.
There's no canola plant.
No, it's primarily sourced in Canada.
And of the grain and seed oils, it's actually not as terrible, I would say, as corn and soybean
oil because it has a higher proportion of oleic acid
or monoinsaturated fat, but it still has a relatively high proportion when compared to fruit oils
like olive oil and avocado oil of linoleic acid, which is an omega-6 fatty acid. It's a polyunsaturated
fat, therefore it's very prone to oxidation. And all grain and seed oils undergo intensive processing.
One of the steps that is part of that processing chain is called deodorization.
It's basically the food industry's equivalent of the witness protection program where they
take these fats from foods that at first glance wouldn't appear to be fatty foods, right?
Like an ear of corn is not something that anybody would describe as a fatty food.
Soybeans are not fatty, right?
But they use very intensive processing, sometimes using a neurotoxin called hexane, other
times not, to extract this oil, which typically comes with very bitter flavors and noxious volatile
organic compounds.
And they put these oils through the ringer, and one of the steps is called deodorization,
which makes these oils bland, gives them a very endousam with a very high smoke point,
and allows manufacturers to use them in innumerable ultra-processed foods.
It's the same reason it's why manufacturers use them to roast nuts in.
They squeeze them into commercial cereals.
You can use them in restaurants and salad dressings in spreads.
The issue is that that step creates a small but significant amount of trans fats.
We know that there's no safe level of trans fat consumption.
About 10 years ago, the FDA banned trans fats
in their most common appearance, partially hydrogenated vegetable oils,
but we can still find them in the food supply
in the form of these grain and seed oils.
And canola oil is an example of one of these types of fats
that because of the preponderance of polyensaturated fat
contains man-made trans fats, which we
know are poisonous to our cardiovascular system as well as our brain.
Wow.
Wow.
Okay, so this is, I have so many questions now.
Why are we using this such a heavy process to get these foods to be able to be consumed
in used in products?
The deodorization process sounds like we're trying to make it
so it doesn't taste like anything,
so we could throw it in foods and increase palatability or whatever.
Why do we use them so much?
Are they just super inexpensive?
Yeah, money, right.
Because of subsidized, they're subsidized.
Yeah, very, very high margin products.
These are typically, most of the grain and seed oils
that are on the market, it's because of the profit margins, right?
And many are, we're actually waste, they were the byproducts of other food making processes.
For example, grape seed oil is a byproduct of wine making.
They used to throw grape seeds away until one industrious wine manufacturer realized that
you could squeeze these seeds, extract this oil,
which again, very bitter, run the oil
through a number of different industrial processes
and wind up with this extremely cheap product,
which is now worth hundreds of millions of dollars annually,
the sale of grape seed oil.
And the same thing with canola oil.
Now, these oils are, they're also heavily marketed
and the woke nutritional orthodoxy loves them
because they do lower LDL cholesterol, right?
So that's actually why they continue to be promoted
as quote unquote, heart healthy fats.
Wait, so if you can assume, if you replace other fats
with these fats that we're talking about,
we will see a lowering of LDL.
Isn't that supposed to be a good thing?
Technically, yeah, it is supposed to be a good thing.
So when looking at cardiovascular risk factors, LDL,
and now in particular, APOB,
which is a protein that wraps itself around
the LDL lipoprotein and other lipoproteins in circulation is thought to be
an independent risk factor for cardiovascular disease.
But despite the fact that it lowers LDL when compared to saturated fats and certain saturated
fats to be specific because a fat isn't a fat, not all saturated fats are created equal.
Some saturated fats like steric acid are actually neutral from the standpoint of your LDL particles. Others can actually
cause an elevation like meristic acid, pomeitic acid. So in comparison to those fats, yes,
polyunsaturated fat dominant oils like canola oil, grape oil, will lower your LDL cholesterol, but at a cost.
These polyensaturated saturated fats,
as I mentioned, the oils that are rich in them
have trans fats, which we know are not friendly
to your cardiovascular system.
They're not friendly to your brain.
Higher consumption of trans fats is associated
with higher risk developing Alzheimer's disease
and worse memory function, even in the young and healthy.
They're also prone to oxidation, which is sort of like a chemical disfigurement.
Studies have shown that commercially available grain and seed oils already have a significant
degree.
They've already undergone a significant degree of oxidation, and it damaged fat damages you.
These fats also integrate themselves into your body.
You are what you eat, right?
And this is especially true for the kinds of fats
that we consume.
We know that adipose tissue, concentration,
so our fat cells, the concentration of linoleic acid,
which is the type of omega-6 fatty acid
found primarily in these grain-in-seed
oils in our fat tissue, has increased over twofold over the past 50 years alone.
So we're carrying these highly damaged prone fats around with us in our adipose tissue.
They get charted around our body by these LDL lipoproteins.
They're prone to oxidation.
They help convert our LDL lipoproteins to a more inflammatory phenotype.
They're more likely to get taken up by immune cells,
which can initiate atherosclerosis.
So when you have an LDL particle that's chugging along,
tugging along these potentially prone inflammatory fats,
the immune system sees them as being toxic, right?
So there was a study,
I believe it was published in 1999
that found that compared to oleic acid,
which is the primary fat contained
in extra virgin olive oil and avocado oil,
it basically makes your LDL lipoprotein's toxic.
So you're gonna have lower LDL.
But worse LDL.
Yeah, yeah.
So you said earlier, there's a twofold increase
in these inflammatory fats in our own body fat.
Yeah.
So not only are we fatter, but the type of body fat
that we're storing now is changing.
Changing.
I had no idea.
Yeah.
Making it much more inflammatory.
And something just popped up for me,
as you're talking about this,
something that might make this even more dangerous
is that you may be blissfully, I don't know, either unaware or even kind of caudled a little bit
by your lipid number.
So your doctor does a blood test, it was, oh, your LDL won't net went down.
Like, oh, my health is much better.
Not knowing that although the number went down, the type of LDL you have now because of
these fats is more inflammatory and worse for you.
So it kind of gives you this like this double ed, this issue where you feel like you're doing
better, you don't change anything and you're going down the wrong path.
Now, how much does this conversation changes in the context of a calorie surplus versus
a calorie deficit?
Because I know right away that's the thing that there's,
there's the other side of the fitness space that will hear this,
and say, oh, Max is an alarmist and, you know,
oils aren't that bad for you.
And if you're in a calorie deficit, you're, you're,
you're fine.
So, you know, in the context of a calorie deficit
and a surplus, how much does this conversation change?
Well, I mean, it doesn't change the fact that you are the fats
that you eat. I mean, fats are not like glucose, I mean, it doesn't change the fact that you are the fats that you eat.
I mean, fats are not like glucose, dietary sugars, for example. Dietary sugars, actually,
you burn them off, you store them in your muscle tissue, in your livers. If you don't burn
the glucose that you're consuming or whatever the source of dietary sugars that you're consuming
right away, they get siloed for later, right?
But the fats you consume actually integrate themselves into, as I mentioned, your lipoproaching,
your adipose tissue, and also your brain.
Your brain requires polyunsaturated fats.
The omega-6 and omega-3 fatty acids are essential.
And so regardless of your calorie intake, the fats that you consume are still going to become a part of you.
And they influence characteristics of your brain like membrane fluidity, which is a really
important characteristic of your brain cell.
Membranes, it allows them to be sensitive to the messages contained by neurotransmitters,
for example.
Now, it is true that the consumption of these fats hasn't shown in the clinical
literature on acute inflammatory effect. So it's not like you consume these fats. And then
boom, yeah. And then you're going to see inflammation, right? And as I mentioned, the
amount of trans fats contained by these oils, it's a small, um, absolute percentage is
about 5%, um, trans fats. But at the quantity that your average American is now consuming
these oils, it actually, it all adds up at the end of the day. So while you're not, you might not see
like in a clinical trial in the literature, an acute inflammatory effect, you're still
fueling your body's inflammatory pathways. And the other thing is that the enzymes
that we have in our bodies that convert,
we know that people in the,
that consume the standard American diet
under consume omega-3 fats, right?
Like a co sapenta, you know, ag acid or EPA or de-cosa,
hexa-e-no-ag acid or DHA.
We know that people under consume those fats. Omega-3 fats and
omega-6 fats compete for the same enzymes in the body, right? They're called fatty acid
desaturase enzymes. So when you consume plant-based forms of omega-3s like alpha-linolac acid
of omega-3s like alpha-linolac acid and linoleic acid,
they compete for the same enzymes which convert them to the biologically active forms in the body.
By over-consuming linoleic acid,
you're basically disallowing your body to generate
any usable EPA and DHA fat from the from the plant based omega
threes that you're consuming. You're the first person to actually confirm that I brought it up on
our show a long time ago and you're probably way more red than I am. I was and I thought I read that
somewhere that if we even if we take an omega three pill, if you are over consuming the sixes and
nines, they outcompete the three. So you don't even really get the benefits of the threes because the American diet is so high in the six and nine.
And this has to do with the plant based omega threes or does this also have to do with the like, let's say if I take them maybe three from fish because those don't need to be converted like the plant ones.
Correct. Those don't need to be converted. Right. With the plant based form of omega-3s, alpha-lino-lannic acid, you require those enzymes.
I mean, this is another argument for omnivory, right?
Because when you consume pre-formed omega-3s from fish,
or grass would be, for example, they're already
in their plug and play format.
Got it.
But still, alpha-lino-lannic acid is still considered
an essential fat.
And we vary in our, people vary individually in their ability to convert them to the usable
form, but that ability gets even more constrained when we over-consume these omega-6 fats.
So that's just like adding fuel to the fire.
It's like one more, one more issue.
Now, to kind of, to talk a little bit about the over consumption versus right the calories
aspect. Now it is true that if you look at chronic disease like Alzheimer's dementia, heart
disease, diabetes, that obesity plays a large role, you know, I think the data will show
that a majority of people with any of those chronic issues also is obese.
However, here's something that a lot of people don't talk about or realize.
There's a significant minority percentage of people who are not obese who have those
issues.
So, you'll see like 15-20% of people who die of heart attack are not obese or 15-20% of
people that dementia Alzheimer's are not obese, or 15 to 20% of people that dementia or Alzheimer's are not obese.
So although the overconsumption of calories, I think makes everything worse, anything less
calories, makes everything better, I don't think it solves everything.
And I know with sugar, it makes a much bigger difference with fats, it seems to make less
of a difference.
For example, if you eat low calories, but you have a lot of trans fats in your diets, probably better than if you weight a lot of calories as trans fats,
but still not great. You're still going to see lots of these issues.
Yeah, I mean, being in a calorie deficit protects you in many ways. It's a sort of
whorimetic stress to your body that does make your body more resilient, but you're absolutely
right today about two-thirds of adults in the United States are either overweight or resilient, but you're absolutely right today about two thirds of adults in the United States
are either overweight or obese,
but nine and 10 adults have some component
of the metabolic syndrome.
So not obese people.
They're not obese.
Yeah, about 20% of normal weight people
are quote unquote metabolically obese.
Wow.
Wow.
And I wanna bring that up because,
and we talk about this on the show
that calories are very important,
and we do talk about this,
so that people understand kind of the hierarchy.
Yeah, the hierarchy of importance, I guess.
Only because it's trainers and coaches,
we found that when you present average people
with like tons of information,
they're like, I don't know what to do.
And so it's like, okay, do this first,
see if this, you know,
start with this and then we'll move to the next step and so on. But it is important to identify how some foods
regardless of color work and take are damaging. So you could, and this is important because,
like, I have a friend who lost his dad, who at like 50 something of heart attack, blood
lipids look okay, he was, you know, normal body weight. And so he was kind of
like blissfully unaware that he had any potential issues, died of a heart attack, right? His
dad is grandfather died of the same thing. So it's kind of like silent in that case, because
you don't, you don't appear to be unhealthy.
Well, couldn't, couldn't this be happening too? Like, let's say, you, I mean, I'm an example
of this, right? So I manage my body weight,
even if my body fat percentage goes up a little bit,
it always stays in a healthy range.
But I definitely have times where maybe a few weeks in a row
or I'm eating probably in a surplus,
is it more detrimental, even for someone like me
who considers himself, quote unquote, healthy,
that during those times of a surplus,
I'm eating oils like that versus if you know,
so and I think that's where some of this research comes from where you see these people that are like, oh, yeah
they're they're not obese or way over weight, but I'm assuming healthy right
I'm assuming that all it takes is to be in a surplus for that week and then also be consuming these oils that are not ideal for that
Could that be what why that is why those why that percentage is still affecting those people?
Yeah, I mean, I think it's like,
I think it's the dose makes the poison.
It's another case, and there are many cases
where the dose makes the poison,
and that's certainly true for these,
but it's also monoinsaturated fat,
lowers LDL just as much as polyunsaturated fat,
but there's no risk of the consumption of oxidized
fats.
Monoensaturated fats are just a little bit more saturated than polyunsaturated fats.
The other thing that's perplexing and honestly a bit hypocritical is that the Western medicine
literature seems to love the Mediterranean dietary pattern.
We're obsessed with the Mediterranean diet
and within the medical and nutritional orthodoxy.
And yet when you actually go to the Mediterranean,
reach out to the world.
Nobody's using canola oil.
Nobody's using the rapeseed oil, corn oil, or soybean oil.
They've oversimplified heaven day.
They say, oh, it's the monos, it's these types of fats
and it's like, they don't, I know,
my family's Mediterranean, we're facelessly.
There you go.
They don't use those fats you know what else is
really perplexing is that when you think about processed meats right mortadella
prosciutto yeah these were these originate in the Mediterranean region of the
world yeah and we love that we love to say how great the Mediterranean diet is
right with regard to cardiovascular risk with with regard to neurodegenerative risk, right?
How bad processed meats are, but these processed meats originate in the Mediterranean region of the
world. Yeah. And so, how do we reconcile that? Yeah, you know why? Because I'll tell you what,
you go to a butcher in Sicily who makes these processed meats traditionally. It is not made
like the ones you find here at the grocery store.
And with this tends to point to you, now this is going to be a bit oversimplification. I think it's more complicated than this, but
the further away we get from nature, okay, and I know some people are cringing right now, but you know, hear me out.
The more that is required to make something edible through modern science and processing,
generally speaking tends to make it not so healthy.
Like you said, you get a stock of corn, where's the fat?
Where's the fat?
I can't squeeze a stock of corn and have oil come out of it.
It doesn't work, I'll get water to come out.
Now I can go grab an olive and I can squeeze it
and oil comes out, I can grab an avocado
and that thing is oily as hell.
There's the fat right there.
So it's, you know, all these fats that you're talking about,
Max, it's like if modern science didn't exist,
we wouldn't be consuming them.
And they're so far away from the foods that we've all
eating, it just like where would you find rapeseed oil,
you know, a thousand years ago, you wouldn't.
You wouldn't be able to consume enough rapeseeds
to get the amount of oil that we get.
And then the other thing is that, if you look,
and again, this points to our consumption of processed foods,
heavily processed foods, the ones that you find in boxes
and wrappers and the foods that have long shelf lives,
look at the fats that are used in those.
They're almost all using these types of fats.
And I think it has to do with the margins
that you talked about. It would be expensive because one of the poles of processed food is how inexpensive they are.
If you made processed foods with olive oil and avocado oil and natural oils,
they would be much more expensive. And I don't think you would have nearly as big of a market.
And I think that's probably, is that where we get most of this consumption from processed foods?
Yeah, yeah. And so it's true that when you become more cognizant of where these oils are and where they
exist in your diet and then you cut those foods out, there is sort of a healthy user bias.
You will start consuming less ultra-process foods because that is where they tend to hide,
right?
And so people will see their health improve because they're just cutting out, or they're
at least minimizing their consumption of these ultra-process foods, which we know are at
the foundation of the obesity epidemic.
But there's no good reason to consume grain and seed oils like canola oil, corn oil, and
soybean oil, especially when compared to extra virgin olive oil, which is the staple oil
in the Mediterranean dietary pattern, adherence to which is associated with robust risk reduction
for cardiovascular disease, Alzheimer's disease.
And we see, I mean, in the hierarchy of evidence, there are so many different, there's so many
different types of studies showing us that extra virgin olive oil is the most valuable
fat that we can consume.
It's almost like medicine for the body and brain.
It's loaded with healthy fats.
It's predominantly mono and saturated fat, which is very chemically stable.
And then about 15% of extra virgin olive oil saturated fat, which is the most chemically stable
form of dietary fat. It's got polyphenols in it like oleocanthol, which has been shown to be
as anti-inflammatory as low dose ibuprofen, which is a non-steroidal anti-inflammatory drug,
but it doesn't possess any of the risk for side effects. We see there was a seminal study in the field of nutrition.
Nutrition doesn't have a lot of large population,
long-term randomized control trials, right?
But the predium ed study was an example
of one of these studies, it was a multi-center trial
where they gave families a liter of extra virgin olive oil
to consume a week, right?
So a liter of extra virgin olive oil to consume every week,
they found robust improvements in their cardio metabolic risk
factors, their cognitive function, their waste size,
a high fat Mediterranean diet with supplemental extra virgin
olive oil.
Yeah, can I just say so about this?
So again, my family's from the Mediterranean.
And I remember when I went there as a kid,
the percentage of people that smoked was insane. People smoke like crazy in these European countries and yet they live
longer than us just goes to show you how much of an impact eating this way has on your
health because it counters. If you look at the percentage of people that smoke in Sicily
versus or Greece versus, you know, in the US, you'll see it's a higher percentage.
And yet they live longer than we do.
And I'm not saying smoking is a good thing.
I'm saying just how powerful these dietary interventions are, that they can counter something
as toxic for you as smoking to the extent where they live longer than we do.
And they do use a ton of olive oil.
You said a liter, and I know you kind of laughed a little bit.
I tell you what, man, you go to my mom's house or my grandma's house,
and it's like a jug of water.
Like the amount of olive oil that the olive oil is used for everything,
everything, and if they use anything else, it's larger butter,
but it's almost always olive oil for everything.
There is a single dish that we make,
or if we add any type of fat, it's always olive oil.
And they use almost none of those other processed oil.
Now besides the price, what else is it
that drives the consumer that direction?
Isn't it also like the temperature
that you can cook like canola oil and the types of foods
that they're making because you obviously,
that you wouldn't fry in olive oil,
you would fry in canola oil.
Olive oil might even be more stable
than some of those other oils, if I'm not mistaken.
It is, yeah, I mean oils vary in terms of their smoke point, but smoke point and the temperature at
which point an oil becomes potentially rancid and carcinogenic are unrelated.
So a smoke point of an oil is essentially determined by the solids that remain in the
oil.
For example, butter is very chemically
stable because it's predominantly saturated fat. So it would have a high smoke point. And
it's got a very high temperature. You can withstand very high heat. However, it's got
a low smoke point because butter has tracetase and lactose in it.
Guy, on the other hand, is clarified butter, so it's had those milk solids skimmed off, and therefore, the smoke point of ghi is actually quite high.
But that temperature is more of a,
like, smoke point is more of a culinary concern.
It can affect the taste,
but it has nothing, it has little to no bearing
on the health quality,
that the healthiness of that oil.
Neither did I.
I thought it did.
Interesting.
So what are the best or I guess worst oils
to cook at high temperatures with
than besides the smoke point, right?
Yeah, well, you definitely don't want to use
the green and seed oils.
They do boast very high smoke points
because they've been so highly processed.
So you can fry in them.
They're not going to smoke.
They're not going to change the flavor.
Right.
But you're creating some pretty unhealthy facts.
In fact, I think that the primary place to really try to, when you eat out in a restaurant,
there's going to be some degree of grain and seed oil consumption that's just inevitable.
And I wouldn't worry about that, right?
I partake in the modern world.
I eat in restaurants.
There's no doubt that I'm consuming some quantity of these green and seed oils. But I try my best to avoid fried foods,
because these oils are used in restaurant friars, and they're not changed between dishes.
The oils, right? They're changed sometimes, like a handful of times on a weekly basis.
So you get worse and worse and worse.
Worse and worse and worse and worse. So aside from the oxidation, oxidative
byproducts are created, like certain aldeehydes which are poisonous to your mitochondria which are the energy generating
organelles of your cells. They are potentially mutagenic, they become carcinogenic to some degree.
So I would absolutely avoid fried foods, but that's just a testament to yeah, they're not smoking,
but these oils are still generating invisible compounds that are not good for your health.
Holy cow, I had no idea.
I thought the smoke point was the same thing.
Yeah, so extra virgin olive oil, for example, it might have a lower smoke point, but it's
very chemically stable.
It's chemically stable because of the preponderance of monoinsaturated fat, which is, again,
very chemically stable, and then about 15% of it is saturated fat.
And on top of that, it's so rich in antioxidants,
plant-based compounds that literally protect the oil,
that you could heat it to a very high temperature.
It's just that it'll change the flavor profile of it,
and it's got a lower smoke point than say avocado oil,
which is just a bit more pure.
And I do want to comment on the,
back to the margins of some of these oils.
You know, we decided a long time ago as a country that corn was a staple crop.
And we subsidized the hell out of it.
And just an example, we destroyed the sugar market in Hawaii.
So Hawaii grew sugar cane and provided much of the US with sugar.
And because we subsidized corn, so that means that our tax dollars go to making corn cheaper
to keep the price down, because we somehow established this as a staple crop, that high
fructose corn syrup became much cheaper than sugar and destroyed the sugar market in Hawaii.
And if you get now, if you get sodas or candies or whatever,
if you read the back, the sugar they use,
high fructose corn syrup because corn is so cheap,
corn oil is cheap because of this subsidization,
which makes the profit margins much higher, right?
We make fuel out of corn, which is weird.
We take a food and turn it into gasoline.
How could this possibly be profitable?
Why would this even make sense? We're growing, we're using up space to grow food and then going
through a process journey. It's all because it's subsidized. So a lot of our policies have actually
made our diets worse because we've made these foods artificially less expensive. And so food
manifest. And us as consumers can't taste the difference. Although I'll say I could taste the difference between sugar
and high-fructose corn syrup and soda,
but a lot of people can't and don't really care.
And so we get it, we consume them,
and that's part of the problem.
So I think a lot of it has to do with that.
Because if we didn't subsidize corn,
I wonder if we would go back to some of these other types of foods
because then the margins wouldn't be so incredible.
Yeah, I mean, the margins are massive.
And high fructose corn syrup is just like in everything.
High fructose corn syrup, it's not too dissimilar
from just regular old table sugar.
It's about 55% fructose, 45% glucose.
I think there's a lot of fear surrounding
high fructose corn syrup, like it's the devil.
It really is, I mean, biochemically,
it's not all that different from just sucrose,
regular old table sugar.
But the problem with, I think, sugar in the standard American diet,
added sugar in particular is that it's just everywhere.
It has this insidious effect, right?
Yes.
It's in our sauces, it's in commercial bread products.
To make bread, all you need are four ingredients.
Water, flour, yeast, maybe some salt, right?
But today, you can look at any commercial bread product in the aisles of your, in the
bread aisle of your local supermarket.
They'll have added grain and seed oils, they'll have added hyphructose corn syrup, various
preservatives.
So the food supplies just mutated and I really think that like we've lost a sense of awareness
about what it is that we're
we have and that's going to take me to this book that you wrote a genius kitchen and I want
to first off I appreciate everything you write you the stuff that you write is always
phenomenal I recommend heavily to our audience I think you're one of the best people in the
space that talks in a way that is easy to understand and apply for the average person with
big you know dividends like in other words if you follow Max's advice you're going to in a way that is easy to understand and apply for the average person with big dividends.
In other words, if you follow Max's advice,
you're gonna see big dividends in improvements in your health.
But here's why I'm excited about this particular book.
Our markets are driven by consumers, okay?
And the reason why we have added sugars
and a lot of these fats and salts.
And by the way, sugars, fats fats and salts aren't necessarily bad,
but you combine them in particular ways.
And what they do is they make foods very palatable.
And palatability right, the enjoyment,
how enjoyable food is to eat, is what drives the market.
If you look at any food category,
especially processed food category,
you'll find the number, the top 10 sellers are the ones that
taste the best. And it's this combination of fats, sugar, salts, chemicals, colors, and there's a lot
of stuff that goes into palatability. But these engineered combinations make food hyper-palatable.
And so it's really hard to compete with when you're talking about eating natural whole foods,
for example. So here's why I'm excited about this book, because what you did is you put,
and I look through this and the recipes look phenomenal.
And I've visited you many times down in your home in LA,
and you know, we've eaten together in Max's an incredible cook.
What you're doing is you're fighting fire with fire.
What you're doing with this book is you're taking healthy ingredients and saying,
look, here's some easy recipes.
And here's some food that is healthy, but also is going to taste good.
So we can outcompete those crappy foods because the, here's the losing strategy that we keep
doing in the health of fitness space.
As we say, eat healthy, eat healthy, healthy, but people, and this is just human behavior,
have to trade enjoyment for health.
And I can make the case all day long
and I have on my podcast over and over again,
but at the end of the day, if I want to win the battle,
I got to figure out a way to make food enjoyable.
That's healthy, too.
And that's kind of what you did in this book.
Was that one of the main motivations?
Yeah, I wanted to make food delicious, hyper-palatable,
because yeah, you are competing.
You're playing, you've got to play on the same playing field as these hyper-palatable,
ultra-processed foods that are just so eye-catching and difficult to avoid in the modern food
environment, right?
So you want to be able to play on the same playing field, but unlike hyper-palatableatable ultra-processed foods, you want the food that you're eating to be satiating.
And when you're nourishing your body with quality ingredients, we know that it satiates
your body in a way that ultra-processed packaged foods simply can't.
In other words, you get full, faster. So you don't overeat as much.
Yeah, the problem with ultra-processed foods is that by the time you fill yourself up with them, you've already over consumed them. That's not the case with minimally
processed foods. Now, you're processing food when you cook food, right? When you cook a steak,
you're processing that meat to some degree. So it's not like we want to eat unprocessed foods
the time. Yeah, I'm not buying a cow at the grocery store. Yeah, but we're talking about minimally
processed foods, foods that you take single ingredient
items from the perimeter of your supermarket.
All supermarkets are designed in the same way.
It's the perimeter of the supermarket where you find all of the perishable fresh foods.
You take these single ingredient foods and then you cook them yourself.
Whether it's the protein contained by the food, which we know is the most satiating macronutrient,
much more so than carbs and fat, the fiber content of the food, which we know is the most satiating macronutrient, much more so than carbs and fat.
The fiber content of the foods, which mechanically,
we know stretches out the stomach, absorbs water,
turns off the hunger hormone,
grueling, really important, or the water content.
We know that food is a significant source of water.
Shelf-stable package process foods are not,
they're dehydrated because water
degrades the shelf stability of a food, right?
It attracts mold and the like.
We know that minimally processed foods fill you up to the point, to the degree that when
you've eaten them to the point of fullness, right?
Add a little bit of feeding experiments, which you talk about all the time, Sal.
Show us that you actually eat, you can eat to the same degree of fullness, but you come
in at a calorie deficit naturally.
Yes.
It's an 800 calorie swing.
That's huge.
Determined purely by the quality of the food that you eat.
That's like two and a half hours of exercise.
People that need 800 calories.
You'd have to get under treadmill and kick your ass
for two and a half hours to come out
with an 800 calorie burn.
Just give you an example.
100%.
If you're trying to moderate the amount of food
that you're eating, right, like if you are completely
ignorant to nutrition science and you go to,
let's just say a really orthodox dietician
or even a medical doctor and you say,
Doc, how do I lose weight?
And they say the oft repeated advice,
eat less, move more.
And G-Doc, thanks.
Yeah. You interpret that as, okay, I'm going to take what it is that I'm currently eating,
right? The Obesogenic food that I'm currently eating, which got me into this obese state
to begin with. And I'm just going to try to eat less of it. You're setting yourself
up for failure, right? You're putting your cart before the horse. You're trying to moderate
how much you're eating. But the advice that I think needs to be given and is totally not given, especially in the context of the woke fitness community, right? The advice needs to be
look at the quality of the food that you're eating, right? Quality dictates quantity, especially
today in the standard American ad-loathe tournament. Powerful statement. Food environment, right? Yeah, so it's like, imagine trying to eat less,
but being hungry and then eating to your satisfied,
but you end up eating lower calorie.
Like, which one is a long term?
Which strategy is gonna give you better success long term?
I wanna talk a little bit about a palette
because I think this is where people struggle
as the transition into eating these whole natural foods.
Like if you take somebody who eats a standard American diet
consistently, everything, fast food,
just they'd never eat like whole natural foods
and you take a dish.
For example, last night, Katrina and I
made this gluten-free pasta,
like a lasagna that we've put together that we make
that's got grass-fed beef and
hair-titch pork in it and then we use a little bit of mozzarella cheese on there
and then this gluten-free pasta and I think it's amazing but if you took that and
you had somebody who eats lasagna every week that their mom makes or what
like that and you have them the way that they eat that they're gonna go oh my
god it doesn't taste anywhere near that but something that I have found that I
was so fascinated
in this when I went through the process of competing
where I was eating so consistent and eating so clean
for so long is that I actually prefer that food now.
Like I all taste your cravings change.
Yeah, so I think that's the thing that I want
to communicate to the audience because if you tell somebody like,
oh, these recipes are better than this,
and they're used to eating such bad foods
for such a consistent period of time in their life,
and they switch over to, oh, no, that tastes nothing
like my mom's barbecue chicken or whatever
that's full of all this other bullshit.
So have you ever read like how long it takes
somebody to change their palate like that or
like how long that process is or how clean does someone need to eat for a while before
they're craving start to change?
Have you ever dug into that at all?
Well, I think that there's a misconception that healthy food doesn't taste good.
And I think that that is a misconception.
I think you can make totally healthy foods
taste incredibly palatable and indulgent. And I tried to actually in the in the new book,
Genius Kitchen, I tried to create a number of comfort foods
that on first glance, people wouldn't assume
to be really, really healthy and nourishing to your body.
But in fact, are for example, I've got a recipe for gluten-free, super crispy buffalo
chicken wings.
How was going to ask you about that?
Yeah.
They look ridiculous.
Dude, first of all, chicken wings are a wonderful source of collagen.
So any load-bearing part of an animal, especially joints like chicken drumsticks, chicken wings,
four times the collagen as compared to breast meat.
So collagen is actually a great source of the amino acids
that your body will then use to create collagen.
So collagen proteins get broken down, right?
Glycine, proline, hydroxyproline.
The collagen that you eat doesn't necessarily become the collagen
in your body, but still glycine is an important
conditionally essential amino acid that researchers don't believe
that we actually consume enough of as part of the standard American diet.
So dark meat chicken is actually a great source of collagen.
Also you get essential amino acids in chicken wings.
And they're super tasty in indulgent.
Like mine tastes just as good as the crappy fried ones, but typically when you get fried
or any type of, you know, like standard buffaloings
in a restaurant, they're gonna be fried in those oils
which we know are so unhealthy, especially in the restaurant
and the context of the restaurant fryer, right?
They're gonna have this sauce, which God knows what,
you know, what kind of fats they're using
in those sauces.
Oftentimes there's breading and all kinds of other junk on it.
So there's a number of recipes like that in the book
that prove, I wanted to prove to people
that eating quote unquote,
healthily doesn't have to be the end of.
That's what I really like about the book.
So what you were saying, Adam,
about the palate changing,
I have experienced that and here's something weird Max,
and I'd love your comment or opinion on this.
I had clients that actually preferred
the flavor of diet coke to regular coke,
or diet soda's or candies to regular sugar flavored candies.
And I feel like the chemicals that they add to some of these products
into replace more natural ingredients like sugar,
they hit our brains and our receptors in ways that
almost like have an addictive property where then sugar tastes bland
in comparison to let's say like aspartame or something like that.
Are you, do you know anything about this
or have you ever experienced this yourself?
Yeah, I mean, I typically avoid artificial sweeteners.
Yeah.
I feel like whenever you mention artificial sweeteners,
like Lane Norton is the guy that can rise out
of the shadows somewhere.
So you gotta watch what you say.
No, I personally choose to avoid artificial sweeteners and I know that the research on them
with regard to their health effects is equivocal.
But I personally liked to err on the side of caution.
I take the precautionary principle and I use non-nutritive sweeteners like stevia, monk fruit, or
rithritol, alulose, things like that personally.
Yeah, I don't like artificial sweeteners for two different reasons.
One, because I feel like they have interesting addictive properties.
This is my own experience with clients, that people tend to consume them and then consume
more and more and more and more of them.
And I think that A has to do with the way that they hit or I guess are the receptors that
perceive the sweetness and then the psychological part.
There's a psychological part too.
There's no barrier or no perceived barrier with artificial sweetens because there's no
calories.
So whereas a, you know, somebody who's kind of health conscious might be like, I'll have
one soda.
So I'll have 30 grams of sugar.
But I'm gonna stop right there.
I'm like, oh, there's no calories in this whatsoever.
I'm just gonna consume a ton of this.
And then that has been connected to,
at least in some of the studies I've seen
to over-consumption of other calories.
So like artificial sweeteners don't,
unless everything's controlled,
so they do studies where they control every calorie,
and then they replace sugar with artificial sweeteners, you see weight loss. But otherwise, you don't see unless everything's controlled, so they do studies where they control every calorie, and then they replace sugar with artificial,
usually you see weight loss.
But otherwise you don't see weight loss.
Why is it that when people themselves cut out sugar
and replace it with artificial sweeteners,
which theoretically should lower the calories?
Why don't they lose weight?
Because they eat more calories in other places,
either because they don't perceive the same dangers,
there's not the same barrier in terms of weight gain,
or it's doing something funky to us
that makes us want to eat more.
So that's just my own personal observation.
And I have yet to, the only people
have ever successfully worked with artificial sweeteners
are competitors, and that's because they're so neurotic
with their tracking that we can control everything.
But I've never had an average person,
oh yeah, let's just have you replace your sugar
with artificial sweeteners.
It doesn't work.
It's never really resulted in any progress or success.
That's interesting.
Yeah, I mean, I feel like for people who consider
the occasional diet coke as their vice,
it can be used as a tool for adherence.
I think as a best case scenario use for them,
I don't drink artificially sweetened diet sodas.
There is a brand of soda on the market.
Oh, you're drinking one.
That's sweetened with stevia.
And sometimes I drink those as a treat.
My primary concern actually are the can linings. Exposure to compounds
like BPA. Because you don't know how the cans are stored prior to them making their way to your
refrigerator. And so I'm actually more concerned with the presence, the contamination of known
endocrine disruptors in those. That was in your previous book. Yeah, I'm talking a lot about those.
Now I feel like you also wrote this book
because I saw some of the recipes,
actually had Doug write some down.
So I did write down your Buffalo wings one
because that one looked incredible.
The olive oil lamb chops with olives and artichoke hearts
looked amazing.
So that's what I want to try.
The no cheese cheesy egg dish, okay,
explain that to me.
Yeah, it looks incredible.
It looks really good. It's so bomb and it, explain that to me. Yeah, it looks incredible. It looks really good.
It's so bomb and it's so easy to make. So the entire book, it's about 99% dairy free. So it's a
quote-unquote cheesy broccoli dish. The broccoli we make with a little bit of nutritional yeast,
some coconut cream, sauteed broccoli in avocado oil, and you saute that up.
You throw it in one of these little oven-safe dishes,
preheat the oven to about 375 degrees,
and then you crack a raw egg on top,
and then you bake it for 10 minutes,
and you get this amazingly savory,
super-satiating, delicious egg dish,
which takes about 20 minutes, I would say, all in to make.
It's one of my favorite recipes in the book.
It's super easy to make quick.
Did you make all these recipes,
or did you work with somebody?
I know you cook a lot.
I watch your stories on Instagram,
and you're always making something.
So is this all you, or did you work with someone too?
Yeah, I made the vast majority of them,
and then just to fill up the rest of the number,
I worked very closely with a recipe developer
and I gave them my sort of dietary philosophy
and using the ingredients that I like to prioritize
my food, the foods that I consider
to be, quote unquote, genius foods.
They sort of filled in the gaps and picked up the rest.
But they're all super palatable, super tasty recipes
that if you have kids, the kids love them.
It's a mix of starter dishes, of main courses.
We even have some sweets, some desserts.
We use extra virgin olive oil in really unique ways,
which I'm very excited about.
We have an extra virgin olive oil sugar-free ice cream.
What?
Which is awesome.
You've never had extra virgin olive oil ice cream.
I mean, just picture, sort of like a vanilla-esque ice cream,
but with a hint of extra virgin olive oil,
it's super tasty and it provides a new way.
So you guys don't milk in that?
There's no dairy, no.
Oh, what?
Okay, you got my attention.
I can't have dairy so long.
So the whole book is, it's 99% dairy free,
and the dairy that we do use is ghee,
which is very well tolerated,
even for people who have dairy sensitivity.
Yeah, now, did you write this book for guys?
Because I'm gonna say, because here's a deal.
I know dudes were terrible about cooking for ourselves.
We tend to want everything to be as simple as hell.
Anybody who's ever been to a bachelor's place
and eaten with them knows that.
It's like, I mean, like for me,
I got married real young, but I remember,
there's a period where I was alone
and it was like,
what are you having for dinner?
Two cans of tuna fish and a bowl of strawberries.
I was like super basic or whatever.
But the recipes in here seem to be very simple.
It's not like 50 million ingredients.
It's not two hours to make a dish.
Was that one of the considerations?
Yeah, absolutely.
I mean, the dishes range in terms of their complexity, but I would say that most of them are very easy to create.
And I definitely wanted to ensure that the recipes, require ingredients that are not difficult to find.
They're low cost, highly accessible.
Because the point is, I want my, I mean, all of the nutritional recommendations that I've made over the years.
The whole point was for one of the major, for me, my mission is to make the recommendations
achievable.
So there's no dogma in the book.
That's why I have this sort of paradigm in the book where I talk about foods to avoid,
but the list of foods to avoid is actually really small.
And then I break down what to include in your diet into good, better, and best.
Because I find that in the wellness world, we often let perfect be the enemy of the good.
Right.
So when I talk about high quality foods,
I'm not talking about making sure
that your beef is pristine and grass finish all the time.
That's not to me,
the sole type of food,
because that would be super inaccessible
for a significant portion of the population
who reads my work, right? Like if you live in the middle of the country, for example, sometimes
or even in a food desert, you might not be able to access the most pristine beef. But still,
I want people to know that even grain-finished beef, like factory farm beef, and I hate promoting
food from the factory farm system, is still a highly nutrient dense food and a much better
option to eat for dinner than, for example, boxed mac and cheese.
So all the recipes feature very accessible ingredients, minimal steps, I really tried to
minimize the amount of steps.
And so yeah, whether you're a novice in the kitchen or a seasoned pro, you're gonna learn
how to cook in the book.
It's gonna be really great.
Now, I wanna talk to you about the organ meat dishes
that you have in there.
So organ meats, I talk about their value on the show.
Probably the most nutrient dense foods
you'll find on the planet or organ meats.
I mean, you can't like, like liver, for example.
Like you can't find a single food that's more concentrated
in essential nutrients than liver, for example. But I always't find a single food that's more concentrated in essential nutrients than liver, for example.
But I always hear this from people, it's gross.
I know you said organ meats are great, but I don't want to eat liver, I don't want to eat
heart, I don't want to eat kidneys, it tastes like crap.
So what about the recipes on that and are they like, be honest with me?
Are they good?
Yeah.
Okay.
Are you just, they're pretty good.
I will say that there's only, there's a small handful of recipes in the book.
So don't worry if you're organ meat averse.
I think I only have two or three recipes in the book that include organ meats, but one
of the recipes I got from my friend Mary Shannuda, it's a recipe called Bang and Liver.
And it is the recipe, single that single-handedly
converted me to a liver lover. It involves chicken liver, which is actually, I find to be
much more delicious than beef liver.
Yeah, it's more palatable for sure.
It's way more palatable and the spices and the fats that are used in the recipe. It's
actually one of the few recipes in the book that that includes ghee. I think ghee is a great
fat, very complimentary in terms of the flavor, flavor profile to few recipes in the book that includes Ghee, I think Ghee is a great fat, very complimentary
in terms of the flavor profile to cook liver in,
whether it's beef or chicken liver,
but this recipe in particular is a 10 out of 10 recipe.
So even if you're the most liver averse person,
I highly recommend people check out this recipe.
It's so freaking good.
And it's one of the most nutrient dense recipes
in the book.
Here's how I sell liver. So I read this a long time ago as a kid. There was a bodybuilder,
Vince Garanda, who he was back in the day who was considered like the scientist of bodybuilding.
I mean, it was back in the 50s and 60s and he would always recommend that his clients or trainees
eat a lot of eggs and a lot of organ meats and they would get
these phenomenal results and he would attribute it to the cholesterol that was
in these foods, dietary cholesterol. I started then reading studies as a kid
about dietary cholesterol and I found a couple that said that yes increasing
dietary cholesterol makes you stronger. As an adult I found more studies that show that dietary cholesterol makes you build muscle and makes you stronger. As an adult, I found more studies that show that dietary cholesterol makes you build muscle
and makes you stronger.
So I experimented with this myself.
I've talked about this many times in the show where I'll go through a like six to eight
week period where I'm eating a tremendous amount of dietary cholesterol.
And by the way, for most people, dietary cholesterol doesn't impact your lipids in a negative
way.
There are definitely a subset of people where this may happen, but for the vast majority
of us, there's really no negative effects or whatever.
But you get this huge strength boost.
It's very, very interesting.
It's very strange, but I build more muscle.
One of the best sources of dietary cholesterol that I found besides egg yolks is chicken liver.
You eat two or three chicken livers and you get this boost of cholesterol, dietary cholesterol that I found besides egg yolks, chicken liver. So you eat like two or three chicken livers and you get this boost of cholesterol, dietary cholesterol.
And dietary cholesterol, it's like,
I feel like my CNS fire is stronger.
I recover much faster in my workouts.
So that's how I like to sell it.
And I do this and the guys know, I'll go through,
like I said, like a six to eight week period
where I'll, you know, eating 12 egg yolks a day
and throwing in, you know, two or three chicken livers. And my lifts will go up, you know, eating 12 egg yolks a day and throwing in two or three chicken livers.
And my lifts will go up, you know, 10, 15%,
which for me is huge.
I've been working out for a long time.
So really interesting.
I don't know, have you ever tried that before?
Yeah, dietary cholesterol is interesting in the sense
that over the long term, it's been shown
to have no bearing on your, on serum levels of cholesterol.
How it relates to my own gym performance,
I haven't really, I haven't really looked at that, but I generally
eat a high dietary cholesterol.
My diet is pretty high in cholesterol and exogenous cholesterol, but there was a great video
put out by my friend Gabrielle Lyon, who's a DO, and it was an Instagram live video that
she did with Donald Layman, who's a nutrition PhD expert, expert nutrition researcher, really prominent in the field.
And they were talking about how in the short term, the abstention or an increase in dietary
cholesterol consumption will affect blood levels of it.
But in the long term, it evens out because you're liver, you're liver, you're liver.
You're liver regulates it, right?
But there's a lag time.
Like there's a, it doesn't, it doesn't regulate it
instantaneously, right?
I think that's where I see the strain gain,
isn't that lag time?
Yeah, interesting.
Yeah, because cholesterol's building block of
all steroid, all steroids, it is a steroid molecule, right?
So testosterone, it's also what you'll notice after
working out is a drop in blood cholesterol
because your body uses it for repair recovery and it's good for
Cell cellular integrity and you know viscosity and so
That's exactly that's why I go six to eight weeks six to eight weeks. I see this huge boost in
Strength and muscle gain. So it's a nice little hack
So if anybody's ever you're gonna get you to compete in something gonna go to the beach, you know, or some event in eight weeks
Like give it a shot if you're healthy
Like radically increase your cholesterol intake, force manage your calories and everything else and then watch what happens
I've had people write me in who've tried this and like, bro
This is the craziest thing ever. I think this is well for someone listening
What is that? What does that look like as far as numbers for you?
First of all, I think you should probably track first to kind of see where you're what normal is for you
And then do you double do do you triple, like what is that?
Oh, I'll go. So I'll go as high as 10 to 12 A goks, for example. So you're looking at, you know,
2000, you know, a milligram or something like that, a cholesterol, is you bumping. So you're
normally at like a thousand million. No, not even. I'm, I'll be lower than that, right?
Okay. Much lower, a couple hundred. And so it's like 10 times as much. And I'll just see this huge.
It's really strength.
The first time I did it, I think I came in here.
Yeah.
And I was raving about it to the guys.
And then I found more studies showing that it improved strength in older adults and all
this other stuff.
So, little cool hack.
Try it yourself.
It's a lot of fun.
I would love for you to try.
I know you work out pretty regularly, so I'd love to hear your results.
Yeah, and I love my egg yolks.
I mean, I actually, I call egg yolks a cognitive multivitamin.
So it's not just that they're rich in cholesterol,
they're rich in a number of other micronutrients
that may support an anabolic synergistic
anabolism effect, right?
But also really good for the brain.
Well, the colon, right?
And now, there's a debate as to whether or not
colon should be considered essential. Yeah. Is that true?
Yeah. Colon is considered currently. It's considered a conditionally essential nutrient. It used to be considered
essential. It's actually a type of B vitamin. But we know that about 90% of adults in the US don't
consume the adequate intake for colon and it provides a really important precursor backbone
molecule for our brain cell membranes.
And it also colon provides the precursor to acetyl colon, which is a really important neurotransmitter
involved in learning and memory.
So colon is crucial important and the top source in the diet are egg yolks.
Egg yolks are an amazing source of colon.
It's actually, I mean, the fact that we've demonized for so many years, one of the healthiest foods of all time.
One of the healthiest foods of all time.
I love to remind people that when an embryo is developing
the first structure to assemble is the nervous system,
which includes the brain.
Yes.
So an egg yolk literally contains everything that nature
has determined to be important to grow
and sustain a healthy brain.
It's no wonder that egg yolks are high in cholesterol
because the brain is really high in cholesterol.
That's true. Now, you don't need to consume any cholesterol for good brain health because the brain produces
all the cholesterol that it needs.
It's called denovo cholesterol synthesis.
However, an egg yolk contains a little bit of everything required basically to grow
a healthy brain.
It's a wonderful source of DHA fat, especially eggs that come from chickens that have had their diets
supplemented with flax seeds.
So it's like omega-3 rich at yolks, carotenoids, vitamin E, colon, as you mentioned, vitamin B-12.
Yeah, in lots of cultures, you know, old cultures.
And I like to look at what people have done for hundreds of years, because
although scientific study, we consider the double-blind placebo-control study to be the
gold standard of what are the effects of particular nutrients and foods on the body. And I
agree that those are very valuable. But I don't think that we should discredit hundreds
or thousands of years of culture because over
long, long periods of time, humans do a pretty damn good job of identifying what works and
what doesn't work.
If you look like Chinese medicine, aerovetic medicine, you look at herbs that have been used.
For example, Ashwagandha today has got lots of studies that support it, right?
But Ashwagandha has been used for hundreds of years for all the stuff that we now have
studies to support.
And so through time, you see lots of benefit.
And egg yolks are a staple food for children,
staple and staple food for pregnant women.
And now we have the studies to show this.
I mean, my wife was pregnant with my son.
We were, I was making sure she was having egg yolks
and eggs all the time.
And I feed my sudden egg yolks all the time because I know, I know what the studies show,
but I also know that this is a food that has been valued
by cultures, by almost every culture
for a long, long time for children.
Yeah, I mean, the problem with nutrition science,
studying nutrition is much harder to do than studying drugs,
and yet it's much less well-funded.
So that's why there are still so many question marks
with regard to nutrition, and it's both a good thing and a bad thing. But I think at the end of the
day, that is precisely why we have to make choices through the lens. It's important to have
our choices be informed by an evolutionary perspective, a common sense perspective.
The longer a food or ingredient has been
in the human food supply, I think the more
the more weight we should give it
in terms of its inclusion in the diet.
So people that are like, oh, you should cut out
animal products or oh, we should start consuming
this new, you know, sweetener that's on the market.
Artificial sweetener, for example, I think.
I think we have to just consider the fact that we've co-evolved with our food, right?
Like, we've co-evolved with food, and so I think that we have to look at dietary
recommendations, especially when those recommendations are mired in corporate interest
and corporate profit with much greater scrutiny.
Yeah, 100%.
I know, and what's funny is that we learn all the time,
new stuff about human metabolism,
about food and new compounds and foods
that have new benefits or potential detriment.
So when people pretend to know and they'll say like,
like in our space, this is quite common.
This new meal replacement powder.
You never have to eat food again,
so you can stay at your desk and work all day long
and drink this powder and it's perfect.
We put everything in there that's perfect
that your body needs.
It's like, we don't 100% know yet everything that we need
and how everything works.
So it's super arrogant of us to even assume those types of things.
So I think nature gives us a lot of those answers.
Yeah, I think it's important to be evidence-based,
but not evidence-bound.
And I think you see too many people in the nutrition space,
especially the quote-unquote evidence-based nutrition space,
being not just evidence-based, but evidence-bound.
I think it's hubris, really.
I think that that's where a lot of mistakes get made.
Yeah, totally.
Now, Max, you eat a consistent, really good diet.
Are there any things that you are supplementing?
Do you find that when you look at your diet that you have to take any other supplements or you try and target all of your main nutrients from whole foods or how often do you
have to go outside of that? That's a good question. I definitely supplement with magnesium glycinate.
I actually found out recently that I get migraines occasionally. I know that my diet, there are
studies that actually show
that eating a diet that is lower in omega-6 fatty acids,
higher in omega-3 fatty acids
are actually help lower migraine frequency and symptomology
in general, but magnesium along with riboflavin
are both very helpful in terms of...
So you've been supplementing? I've been supplementing with those, yeah.
Is it help?
I occasionally get these weird headaches.
I've gotten them about once to twice a month,
probably for as long as I can remember,
but I thought that that was just like a normal thing.
Did it make a difference?
I think it helps.
I think it helps a lot.
I mean, there is robust evidence
with regard to
magnesium and riboflavin. Yeah, we so we work with a company that Ned, you know, Ned, they make mellow and it's got some forms of magnesium. There's one form of magnesium and that
was actually developed and it's shown across the blood brain barrier and I have never taken a form
of magnesium that I feel
like that.
It's been life changing for me.
I had no idea.
I had no idea.
I take it every single night now.
I started taking it and I fall asleep so easy
and sleep so hard now.
And so obviously I was deficient, right?
I mean, if that affected me that much,
because I doubt everybody gets that same effect as I have
where it's like, oh man, I won't even travel without it.
So how impactful it was.
And I didn't believe it when I first took it.
I was like, oh, maybe just something lined up that day
that I slept so well.
And I've tested it multiple times or,
oh, let me not take it for a while.
Let me see what I feel like.
It's magnesium three and eight, which has been shown
to easily cross the blood brain barrier.
50% of people don't consume adequate magnesium.
And there is no reliable blood test to see whether or not you are replete in terms of your
magnesium status because magnesium doesn't really circulate in the blood it's stored
intracellularly and in your bones. So it's, I think it's very smart to supplement with
with magnesium. Now is that because we've depleted the soil through our modern agriculture?
Is that one of the reasons why?
Well, that is indeed part of it,
but it's also magnesium is found predominantly,
you don't get a lot of magnesium in ultra processed foods,
and today 60% of the calories that Americans are eating
come from ultra processed foods.
Magnesium is found in dark leafy greens, right?
Magnesium is the molecule at the center of the chlorophyll molecule.
It's actually quite interesting.
Chlorophyll and hemoglobin are almost identical.
Oh, I know, it's weird.
I've read that with the, you can go to Google Images and look for the two molecules, but
the primary difference is that in plants at the center, you see magnesium and in us, you
see iron.
So anything green, right, because chlorophyll is green, in the produce section of your supermarket,
is going to be a decent magnesium source.
Omens are also a wonderful source,
and just a handful of omens.
You get about 25% of your daily requirements for,
your daily requirement for magnesium.
Dark chocolate is another great source,
but again, half the population doesn't consume adequate magnesium.
And magnesium is involved in hundreds of different processes in the body that range in terms of
their importance from the creation of ATP, which is energy, to DNA repair.
So it's actually a really powerful anti-aging molecule right in front of our eyes pretty
much, like in the produce section of the supermarket.
Most of us under consume that
and we spend lots and lots of money
on other anti-aging quack products.
You know, both talks.
Yeah, both talks.
For example, so magnesium, magnesium is super important
and do you supplement with Crate Team?
Now, I know you're, you are a bit of a supplement nerd
like I am and I know this, I've been to your house.
And you have stuff all over the place.
Now, I know you don't take things,
everything consistently, but you like to experiment,
like I do, I have a lot of fun with certain things.
Do you take creatine on a regular basis?
Is that a supplement you like to take or not?
I like to cycle it, right now I'm not taking it,
but I do like creatine, I'm very impressed by the,
it's efficacy record, it's performance, efficacy record,
it's safety record.
The health effects of it are pretty remarkable.
Have you been seeing some of the stuff
that's coming out with regard to the brain?
The brain arthritis, the heart, it's pretty crazy.
Yeah, and I do like that it increases
like work output in a gym.
Yeah.
I've been, you know what it is?
I've been so busy lately that I haven't really been on my, like, an optimized workout
regimen.
So I feel like now is not the right time for me to be on it because I know you have to take
it every day, right?
So I haven't been taking it lately, but I do, it is one of those that I kind of cycle in
and out of.
In general, I'm a big fan of creatine monohydrate.
Like I do take it in and out of. In general, I'm a big fan of creatine monohydrate. Like I do take it.
That's awesome.
I take fish oil pretty regularly.
I take astasanthin, which is a carotenoid that I'm a big fan of.
I've been a big fan of for about 15 years.
What's why?
It's really good for your skin, for your eyes, and for your brain.
It's a carotenoid that's found exclusively in marine products.
It's generated by algae.
So algae that's at the surface of the water,
algae are exposed to the rays of the sun relentlessly, right?
So it's a huge source of oxidative stress.
So to combat that,
algae generate this incredibly potent dandy oxidant
called astazanthin.
And then salmon, among other animals, end up eating the algae, and they
accumulate this red pigment. So it's literally what makes salmon flesh. It's what gives salmon
flesh that characteristic deep, deep red color. Yeah. With farm salmon, it's actually put
in the feed. So they supplement it. They give it supplementally to farm salmon. But wild
salmon naturally accumulate this red pigment.
It's one of the reasons why we know fish consumption is really beneficial to brain health, but
studies have shown that astazanthin isn't just good for our brains, it's great for our
eyes, and it actually provides a photo protective effect to our skin.
So, it's actually really good for skin quality appearance and everything like that.
It's just an incredibly potent dantioxidant.
Oh, interesting.
Bruce Ames, who's a noted longevity researcher,
he's about nine years old, he's been in the field
for a very, very long time.
He published a paper a couple of years ago.
He actually singled out astasanthin
as a putative longevity agent.
So I'm a big fan of that.
I'll throw that on the mix.
I walk around with a supplement bag, so. See you. Oh yeah, have a D agent. So I'm a big fan of that. I'll throw that on the mix. I walk around with
a supplement bag. So, do you? Oh yeah, have a good time. That's awesome. So, did you,
you and your brothers that did a lot of the taste testing of this? I know you guys hang
out a lot and you guys like to cook and we do. Who are the people that were, who did you
test, test all these recipes on? Yeah, I don't have a girlfriend. So, I mean, my brothers,
it's my, it's my brothers who get to be the guinea pigs.
But yeah, I love cooking with the family.
Above and beyond this conversation about nutritionism
and the nutrients that foods contain,
food, it's such an important,
we've talked about this part of cell.
It's such an important way to celebrate life, right?
Like the joy of eating.
It's the way that sharing a meal is how we bond,
how we communicate, how we express love.
Totally.
I love cooking for my brothers.
And also, eating at home is such a powerful leverage point
for better health.
Again, like beyond this conversation
about macronutrients and the like, right? You can eat the same meal at home that you get in a restaurant.
It's in all likelihood going to have fewer calories, fewer fat calories, less sodium.
Studies show that people who eat home more as opposed to out have a healthier BMI, so lower risk of obesity, healthier body fat percentage, better cardiometabolic risk factors,
right?
So eating at home, it's just, it's so crucially important.
It's psychologically too.
There's tremendous benefits because the time that you spend making it, even if it's
15 minutes, you value the food differently.
I waste less.
I value the food differently. I waste less. I value the food more. Cooking with my kids is such
an incredible, bonding experience. Cooking with my wife. It's one of my favorite dates.
Like if we're going to hang out together, just her and I, if we cook together, it's
one of my favorite ways to hang out with her. Or also with friends. It also promotes
just movement in general. One of the things that I know that I'm guilty of using door dash all the time, especially
during the pandemic, you know, just have something brought to my house.
And one of the habits that I catch myself doing is I come home from a long day of work,
I get home, I door dash something, and it's real easy for me to be sedentary the whole
rest of the day.
Doing something like cooking or cleaning in the house, like just that light movement like that
promotes me moving throughout the rest of the night
and that stuff all adds up.
And if you get in the habit of always having your food
delivered to you all the time,
which more and more Americans are doing now,
I think that stuff starts to add up
and you just don't realize that.
And one more thing too, if you look up,
if you read studies on what is one of the most attractive things
that someone can do for you, male or female, prepare a meal.
So if you're a guy watching this and you have a date
and you wanna impress your date, ask women this,
they'll tell you this, cook her a good meal,
and you've already scored like 10 points.
And of course, we all know that a, what's that that saying the way to a man's heart is through a stomach
That we've known that for a long time right when a woman cooks for you and you know and she takes the time in effort to do that it's like so
So incredible. So I mean I love that you brought up all the other values of food and and and cooking and doing that together
We totally have missed that aside
from the mechanistic actions of the calories
and the fats and all that stuff.
We can't dismiss the psychological, spiritual,
other stuff that we connect to food.
You can't dismiss that because in my personal opinion,
it's as important as what's in the food is
how you prepare it and what we do with it and how we celebrate it with it and the culture around it.
I mean, obviously look around, you know, every culture has their own food and we have our foods that we eat in the breakfast, you know, for breakfast lunch and dinner and foods we movies and.
It's not just that either, we also, and we didn't touch on this really, but I think it's so important when you are trying to make better choices and you start eating healthier foods is not just measuring that based off of, you know,
how palatable it is, but also how you feel from it.
Like that's part of what makes me choose the, you know, healthy version of lasagna that
Katrina makes for me versus what my mom used to make as a kid is because I've now connected
how each of them make me feel afterwards. And you desire it more. That's what I'm used to make as a kid, is because I've now connected how each of them make me feel afterwards.
And you desire it more.
That's what I'm saying.
It's not that my mom's lasagna is still not amazing.
It still is like going down, but it also be in the bathroom
like an hour later, or I won't sleep as well,
or I'll feel bloated afterwards.
And so, and I think we've learned to ignore
a lot of those signals.
And so, if you're somebody listening
and you're trying to make that transition away
from the standard American diet
and you wanna start trying to eat more whole foods,
you wanna start trying to cook in the kitchen,
like don't just measure, like compare,
was that as good as my chicken that I only make?
Also trying to connect the dots to how those foods
each make you feel, it makes it much easier.
You're so right.
And this is a very important point to make
because what gets us to crave foods
isn't just the flavor of the food.
It's also, and food companies know this.
Watch a food commercial.
It'll connect it to something.
Watch a beer commercial.
There's chips in the background
and you're having a good time.
But think of like a corona.
What do you think of the beach?
Oh yeah, I have a bee. And there's girls in bikinis at party time having a good time. But think like a corona, what do you think of the beach?
Oh yeah, I have a bee and there's girls in bikinis
in the party time, right?
Or bud, light, or whatever.
This is very important to psychologically
the kinds of foods that you crave and you want.
And I've seen this with clients,
where I'll take a client and I'll have them introduce,
you know, let's say I have someone eat more vegetables.
Let's say they eat no vegetables.
I'll have them introduce vegetables.
I'll have them pay attention to how they feel before, during I have someone eat more vegetables. Let's say you know vegetables. I haven't introduced vegetables. I'll have them pay attention to how they feel
before, during and after the eat the vegetables.
And as they become aware, like you said, Adam,
with they're connecting the dots to not just the taste,
but also how it's making them feel,
they start to slowly want to eat the vegetables
without realizing, like, crave a bowl of bright.
I have clients tell me this, man,
I was on a business trip for a week. First thing I ate when I got home was a big bowl of bright. I have clients tell me this man, I was on a business trip for a week.
First thing I ate when I got home
was a big bowl of vegetables
because it makes me feel so good.
I actually wanted it.
So it's not just, yeah.
Yeah, that's right.
So it's not just, you know,
the all of this is part of it.
So I'm glad you brought that up
because that, if you're trying to get yourself to,
because here's the struggle,
the struggle is people know what they need to do,
but they, it's so hard and they don't want to.
No, there's an answer.
If you do this the right way,
you will find yourself move more and more towards wanting
to do the stuff that you know is good for you.
And how easy is it to stay in shape and be lean
and be fit and be healthy when you want to do those things
versus pushing yourself and, you know,
white knuckleling at the whole time, right?
That's the long-term successful approach.
Yeah, in the book, I provide ways to,
I mean, that's why I,
the first half of the book is actually a kitchen
and wellness guide and one section I dedicate
to optimizing digestion because I think
digesting your food well is an important part
of the conversation that we,
if we're not digesting our food well,
it's gonna obviously make the eating process unpleasant,
like if we walk away from a meal,
feeling bloated and gassy,
that's not how our food should make us feel, right?
But you're also, you're not getting the most bang
for your buck with regard to your food,
so you can be spending all the money in the world
on high quality foods, but if you're not,
if you're not extracting the nutrition from that food,
then you're basically just throwing money away, right?
But also food and even hyper-palatable foods,
like the kinds of recipes that I provide in genius kitchen,
can have a functional effect.
I mean, I actually talk about the fact
because you're right, like food at date night
is such a powerful, I mean, it can be an aphrodisiac, right?
And certain foods like foods that are high
and dietary nitrates can actually support sexual function,
right?
Well, nitrates, you get better vasodilation.
There you go.
Yeah, and what does that make you give you better boners?
Better boners.
Yeah, but it's also important for women, right?
Blood flow, including blood flow.
Like, we have analogues.
Women get boners too.
She's right.
You write that title down, Doug, for this episode?
Yes.
Yes.
No, it's important.
It's actually really cool how it works.
So foods that are high in nitrates, like beats in arugula, humans don't have the enzymes
to reduce nitrates to nitrates, which is nitrites are actually what enter the nitric
oxide pathway,
but it's the bacteria in our mouths that are involved in that process.
Break, reduce what's called reducing dietary nitrate to nitrites.
You really want to make sure that you're chewing your food slowly to give your oral bacteria
time to do that.
Digestion begins in the mouth, and that's absolutely true with regard to nitric oxide
boosting foods like arugula and beet.
So those are the two primary,
those are the most concentrated sources.
But this is also really important.
You want to avoid to the best of your ability,
frequent use of antiseptic mouthwash,
because with mouthwash, you're nuking the bacteria that are responsible
for that conversion.
Interesting.
So if you're a frequent user of mouthwash, you're basically short-changing the ability of
your food to have a nitric oxide boosting effect.
I did not know that.
Yeah, and studies disrupt your new strategy.
Yeah, I know.
Interesting.
Yeah, I mean, you'll have minty fresh breath, right?
But you're not going to be getting the sexual performance boosting effect of your nitrate
rich dishes.
And actually, studies show that frequent users of antiseptic mouthwash have a 50% increased
risk of developing type 2 diabetes.
Interesting.
Yeah, because nitric oxide is also really important for insulin signaling.
Yeah.
It's super important. And they also found that frequent users, two or more times a day, right?
So this is like two or more times a day is that is that sort of like threshold effect
where this this impairment seems to seem to emerge, twice the risk for developing hypertension.
And also antiseptic mouthwash post workout negates the anti-hypertensive effects of exercise.
So if you want a healthier blood pressure and to be able to extract a more cardio protective
effect from your fruits and vegetables, ditch the antiseptic mouthwash.
I was using antiseptic mouthwash because I read studies on how it can help prevent respiratory
diseases like COVID.
So I'm like, oh cool, I'm gonna gargle with,
Listerine to prevent the buildup of,
but now I just learned this.
Just walk around, go on all day.
You just screw me up.
No, you wanna get rid of it.
You wanna get rid of it.
My water pick is okay though, right?
That's good, what do you say?
My water pick, that's cool.
Absolutely.
Yeah, and mouth washes that are not antiseptic.
That really is the key.
And also, I mean, if you use it,
certainly if you use it medically, that's fine. If you use it on occasion, that's totally fine. I mean, your oral microbiome will repopulate
itself. It's really the frequent use. I mean, still 40 million people, I believe, in the
United States do use it every day. Wow. I had no idea. So I was like gargling at three
times a day. I was walking around with it. Like, flush it as well. It was once a day.
You know what though, with the beats
and increasing nitric oxide,
there's a lot of supplements in the fitness space
to boost nitric oxide for the pump, right?
If you look at the studies on consuming beats
versus like citrally or argonine
or these other compounds of people
who use a boost nitric oxide,
beats kick the crap out of those other ones.
And the performance benefits.
You know why my hypothesis would be
that when you consume beetroot powder,
you're consuming it too quickly,
because you're drinking it, right?
And your oral bacteria play a crucial role
in again, the conversion of those nitrates,
which are present in beetroot powder to nitrites.
So what I would do, and I don't use this supplement,
I would instead of just gulping it down,
rinse it in your mouth, I would swish with it
to give your oral bacteria a chance to do this job.
And I would bet that you would see a difference.
Bro, I'm doing that in my workout tomorrow.
Try it, let me know.
That's my garb of the red juice.
Yeah, that's my on the spot hypothesis.
Well, it makes sense, based on what you said.
Yeah, but I would bet that that's why you see that difference.
Well, I always learn something from you.
Always do.
All right, so obviously they can buy your book
anywhere books are sold.
Yeah, if you go to geniuskitchenbook.com,
we also have some bonuses.
If you pre-order it, I've got a free ebook that I wrote
called 15 Daily Steps to Lose Weight and Prevent Disease.
So if you pre-order the book, you can fill out the form, get that ebook free.
But if the book is already out, you can order it.
Anywhere books are sold.
Amazon, your local bookstore.
I love to support local bookstores.
Yeah, so check it out.
Good deal.
Genius kitchen.
Thank you so much.
Thanks always, man.
Thanks for coming on the show.
Thanks for writing great stuff.
Love you guys.
Appreciate it.
Thank you for listening. Thanks always man, thanks for coming on the show and thanks for writing great stuff. Love you guys, appreciate it. Thank you for listening to Mind Pump.
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