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A High-Fat Breakfast of Bacon and Eggs May Be The Healthiest Start To The Day, Report Shows
Telegraph(UK) ^ | March 31, 2010

Posted on 03/31/2010 6:52:50 PM PDT by Steelfish

A High-Fat Breakfast of Bacon and Eggs May Be The Healthiest Start To The Day, Report Shows

A high-fat breakfast of bacon and eggs may be the healthiest start to the day, a new university report showed.

31 Mar 2010

For the first meal eaten after a night's sleep appears to programme the metabolism for the rest of the day, the researchers found. And the age-old maxim "Eat breakfast like a king, lunch like a prince and dinner like a pauper" may in fact be the best advice to follow to prevent metabolic syndrome, according to a new University of Alabama at Birmingham study.

Metabolic syndrome is characterized by abdominal obesity, high triglycerides, insulin resistance and other cardiovascular disease-risk factors. The study, published online March 30 in the International Journal of Obesity, examined the influence exerted by the type of foods and specific timing of intake on the development of metabolic syndrome characteristics in mice. The UAB research revealed that mice fed a meal higher in fat after waking had normal metabolic profiles.

In contrast, mice that ate a more carbohydrate-rich diet in the morning and consumed a high-fat meal at the end of the day saw increased weight gain, adiposity, glucose intolerance and other markers of the metabolic syndrome. "Studies have looked at the type and quantity of food intake, but nobody has undertaken the question of whether the timing of what you eat and when you eat it influences body weight, even though we know sleep and altered circadian rhythms influence body weight," said the study's lead author Molly Bray, Ph.D., professor of epidemiology in the UAB School of Public Health.

(Excerpt) Read more at telegraph.co.uk ...


TOPICS: Food; Health/Medicine
KEYWORDS: cholesterol; diabetes; food; health; medicine; metabolicsyndrome; metabolim; obesity; research
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To: All

My neighbor has diabetes and eats a high carb diet with cereal for breakfast every morning (cheerios) and potatoes at night for supper, which he does not want to give up. His sugar is going through the roof. I told him to eat eggs and cheese in the morning with butter. He is afraid his cholesterol is going to be high if he does. I told him I heard that has been debunked. (Dr. Oz. and others). As for me, if I eat high carb meals I get acid reflux at night. If I eat low carb meals it disappears asap! I have also read that eating butter with a potato buffers the carbs being processed too fast and your insulin rises more slowly.


41 posted on 03/31/2010 7:37:40 PM PDT by sheikdetailfeather (Patriots Are On The Move)
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To: Mister Muggles

I don’t view it as a bad experience. It forced me to discover what the Japanese eat for breakfast. I’ve had lots of Japanese bento box lunches, lots of Japanese dinner cuisine, but never breakfast. That day, I learned a whole bunch of things.

So in the end, it worked out just fine, IMO.

I did gently try to explain to the hostess that Americans don’t like rubbery, pale bacon that looked as tho it had been steamed (or something other than fried). It was then that I learned that the hotel, in fact, had no griddle or fry-top, so they were trying to do the best they could with what they had.

The looks I got trying to answer questions about grits, biscuits and gravy, tho, were priceless.


42 posted on 03/31/2010 7:39:23 PM PDT by NVDave
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To: Steelfish
My grandmother lived to be 98. She ate eggs, bacon, sausage biscuits & gravy every day for breakfast. Lunch was usually cornbread and iced tea. For dinner, it was always fried...fried catfish, fried okra, fried chicken, fried potatoes, etc./ with lots of cornbread. (Yeah, she was from the South.) On top of that was about a pint of corn whiskey daily (usually homemade) and snuff. In fact iced tea and whiskey was the only things she drank for about 80 years. I don't think she ever took a glass of plain water her entire life.

Not necessarily recommending this diet but hey, she lived to be 98.

43 posted on 03/31/2010 7:42:23 PM PDT by SamAdams76 (I am 18 days away from outliving Jack Kerouac)
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To: AmericanInTokyo

I understand what you are saying but I also know that for a lot of people the low fat diet was very detrimental to their health.


44 posted on 03/31/2010 7:43:57 PM PDT by CajunConservative (Shut Up Mary!)
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To: Steelfish
Get it right: A High-Fat Low-Carb Breakfast of Bacon and Eggs May Be The Healthiest Start To The Day, Report Shows
45 posted on 03/31/2010 7:44:17 PM PDT by Mr. Jeeves ( "The right to offend is far more important than any right not to be offended." - Rowan Atkinson)
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To: AmericanInTokyo

Notice the article didn’t mention amounts? And absolutely NO hash browned potatos OR grits.


46 posted on 03/31/2010 7:57:55 PM PDT by SatinDoll (NO Foreign Nationals as our President!!)
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To: sheikdetailfeather

What you *eat* contributes at most a mere 15-20% of the cholesterol in your system.

Your liver will cheerfully crank more out to make up for the ‘deficit”.
[that is how statins work....but “turning off” your liver’s natural functions, to some extent]

Homocysteine levels, C-reactive protein, LDL and LP(a) levels are much more important yet most cardio docs will sniff at you if you ask to have those levels measured.

ALL cardiac problems are but a symptom of a larger, holistic problem...usually systemic inflammation.

The problem is tracking down *what* is causing that inflammation.

The “cause” can be as simple and “harmless” a thing as dental infections or gingivitis.

In one study, 80+% of heart attack/CABG patients were found to have chlamydiae pneumonia antibodies present.

One little germ that never “made them sick” set up a silent whole-body inflammation...and wrecked their hearts.

Seriously.

IMO, if you eat food as God created it, you’ll do well.

Look at any box or can on the shelf.
The ingredients lists are a mile long.

I think a can of kidney beans should say “Ingredients: Kidney beans. Water”....but it sure doesn’t.
There’s a *list* on that can.

Your neighbor is digging his grave with his own spoon.

I hope he wises up soon.


47 posted on 03/31/2010 7:59:57 PM PDT by Salamander (....and I'm sure I need some rest but sileepin' don't come very easy in a straight white vest.......)
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To: mamelukesabre

It was the cigarettes, mamelukesabre.


48 posted on 03/31/2010 8:02:15 PM PDT by SatinDoll (NO Foreign Nationals as our President!!)
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To: Salamander; Slings and Arrows; Markos33

One third pound of bacon.

Three eggs, basted in the bacon grease.

Two or three pieces of toast, slathered in real butter.

One pot of coffee.

The above breakfast was standard for my grandmother, till her death at 93 (everything else failed, her heart just kept on beating.) and it is a standard for my 80-year-old brother, who has absolutely no signs of coronary disease.

I’m worried about myself, though, because I sometimes just have fresh fruit and tea.


49 posted on 03/31/2010 8:08:26 PM PDT by shibumi ("..... then we will fight in the shade.")
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To: SatinDoll

Whatever.

My paternal grandfather had the same diet and died of a stroke at age 88. Well, except he only ate beef and occasional chicken. No ham or fish. But lots of bacon.


50 posted on 03/31/2010 8:15:59 PM PDT by mamelukesabre (Si Vis Pacem Para Bellum (If you want peace prepare for war))
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To: shibumi

Get a pig and eat it.
Save yourself!


51 posted on 03/31/2010 8:20:11 PM PDT by Salamander (....and I'm sure I need some rest but sileepin' don't come very easy in a straight white vest.......)
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To: Salamander
"Get a pig and eat it."

I did that once




.....she followed me around for months.
52 posted on 03/31/2010 8:24:38 PM PDT by shibumi ("..... then we will fight in the shade.")
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To: esquirette

Semper vigilans...:-)

53 posted on 03/31/2010 8:24:48 PM PDT by Joe 6-pack (Que me amat, amet et canem meum)
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To: Freedom4US

This place has home made bacon that rocks!

http://www.tripadvisor.com/Restaurant_Review-g60259-d555234-Reviews-Rivers_Edge-Saukville_Wisconsin.html


54 posted on 03/31/2010 8:36:38 PM PDT by mylife (Opinions...$1 Halfbaked...50c)
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To: CougarGA7

Good grief, I looked at your profile and you appear young and thin. What the heck? A heart attack?


55 posted on 03/31/2010 8:37:02 PM PDT by oldvike (I'm too drunk to taste THIS chicken)
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To: Mister Muggles

At a client’s request, we stayed at the (very expensive) Cerulean Hotel in Tokyo. The breakfast buffet was amazing....more bacon than you could eat, smoked salmon, and fresh squeezed OJ.

I have also been in gritty industrial towns in Korea where your choices for breakfast are Kimchi and don’t ask what it is. Those times I had Kimchi and coffee for breakfast and enjoyed that too!


56 posted on 03/31/2010 9:18:43 PM PDT by bradthebuilder (War is peace; Ignorance is strength; Freedom is slavery)
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To: oldvike

Yep. A year ago this May. It was a near thing but being 38 at the time put some of the odds in my favor. Look, I still eat an some fatty foods and such, but what I really pay attention to is exercising, minimizing heavy fats (fats that coagulate at room temperature) and keeping my stress level low. Had I done those things back then I may not have had the attack at all.

The most important thing I learned though was to make sure that you are enjoying yourself. Had I died that day I would have done it pissed off, stress out, and unhappy. Screw that. At least do what you enjoy.


57 posted on 03/31/2010 10:26:15 PM PDT by CougarGA7 (In order to dream of the future, we need to remember the past. - Bartov)
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To: Steelfish

ping


58 posted on 03/31/2010 10:33:55 PM PDT by rogue yam
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To: pepperdog

ping


59 posted on 04/01/2010 5:47:49 AM PDT by Coldwater Creek ("We must have pie. Stress cannot exist in the presence of pie." David Mamet)
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To: CougarGA7

You make a lot of sense. Stress is a horrible thing and I’m definitely one of those folks that lets it get to me. Glad you’re doing okay.


60 posted on 04/01/2010 7:42:53 AM PDT by oldvike (I'm too drunk to taste THIS chicken)
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