Breakfast of Champions!

Normally I don’t bother with breakfast, preferring instead to prolong my overnight fast until after my first workout which is usually at around mid-day. As I am now almost permanently in fat burning mode, I don’t get hungry and so not eating breakfast isn’t an issue for me. Today, however, I decided to have some breakfast as I wont be working out. I had some bacon in the fridge but I am still staying away from eggs at the moment so the classic primal “bacon and eggs” wasn’t an option. So here is my alternative; bacon, almond butter and creme fraiche. Delicious!!

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In my view…

Decent sized rump steaks cook better, are better eating and simply taste better than smaller rump steaks. They retain more juice, you can rest them for longer without them getting cold and they are no more expensive as you buy them £/lb. The leftovers make perfect breakfast or lunch.

This one weighed just over a kilo…

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On the plate with mushrooms and avocado.

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A Friday night favourite… Lamb koftas

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Lamb, corriander, ras el hanout and crushed pine nuts to bind the koftas. Pine nuts are high in omega-6 fatty acid and so I use them sparingly.

On the plate with feta cheese, olives and a cucumber and yoghurt dressing. I have completed my Whole 30 regime so I am bringing some diary back in to my diet.

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A Winter’s Tail

A last blast of an English winter interspersed with a warm sun and promises of spring just around the corner. A last chance for a winter stew… oxtail!

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Here it is ready to go in for its long cooking time of +3hours – the tail has already been roasting hot for 30 minutes. The liquid was bone broth made from the remnants of last week’s rib.

And here it is fresh from the oven, delicious, soft, fresh warming and good for you.

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Now, let’s get spring underway and start cooking outside!

Ultra-low Temperature Roasting – Beef

Ultra-low temperature roasting gently raises the temperature of the meat over several hours to the minimum level that will cook the meat and kill any bacteria – 60 C – but makes maximum use of the meat’s own enzymes to tenderise the protein and retain flavour. I used a Ginger Pig fore-rib of beef and, as this was from Ginger Pig, the animal was large and so a 2-bone rib was way more than enough for 4. Here is the joint…

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about 3.5kg with an initial cooking time of 6 hours at 65C.

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I used a meat thermometer to make sure that the temperature was reached in the middle of the joint. This picture was 2.5 hours in and the meat temperature was 60C. Then after 6 hours cooking, remove from the oven and rest for 1 hour – keep warm with foil. After an hour, turn the oven up to HOT!! Finish the joint at “HOT” for half an hour. This is what it should look like…

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Be warned, if you are looking for juice to make gravy you will be disappointed, the meat juice (and the flavour) is all held in the the meat! So just take it to the table with a suitable fanfare and carve.

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Its going to be rare, of course, so warn the squeamish, but a pure delight to eat. You can cut the beef with the back of your knife. Ultra-low temperature roast beef. Rib of beef at its very best. LivPrimal!

Carrots as they used to be.

Them as knows say that until the 17th century, all carrots were purple. Its only selective breeding since then that has turned them orange. Here is a picture of the purple carrot I bought from Greensmiths in Waterloo, London today. They call it a “heritage variety”.

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It went in the stir fry and cooked beautifully.

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It looks pretty too. Greensmiths also has a Ginger Pig butcher in it. Standby for a report on ultra-low temperature roasting of a Ginger Pig 50-day matured rib of beef!!
carrot museum!!

Duck magic…

How to lose almost 1lb in 12 hours. Simply burn duck fat overnight as you sleep.

Fry off and then gently oven roast duck breasts and use the fat that comes off to stir fry vegetables. I had 2 breasts and kale with pancetta. Enjoy for dinner then burn it, and some extra fat off while you sleep!

18.30 prior to duck: 12 st 8.3 lbs.

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6.30am the following morning: 12st 7.6lbs.

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No exercise required!

Save the lard from your weekend roast pork…

… and use it in a seasonal stir fry. No nightshades in this one and today, no beansprouts either. Beansprouts or not, is up to you. Sprouting legumes have fewer anti-nutrients than the beans themselves but I tend to steer clear of them most of the time. This stir fry has sprout tops in, instead of the usual pak choi and was delicious. Fried in at least 150g of home recycled lard.

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And then livened-up with a dash of coconut palm vinegar!

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The Primal Blueprint food pyramid, fat burning and “Why are my ketostix still beige?”

Just a “back to basics” reminder in a handy Primal Blueprint graphic. If you are struggling to burn fat and your ketostix refuse to turn pink, then maybe your overall calorie intake has fallen too low and you need to increase it a bit to avoid your body thinking you are starving and holding on to everything it possibly can! You can add in some calories from non-insulin raising fat from macadamia nuts or maybe some almond butter (don’t go crazy, it’s addictive!), avocados or coconut oil. Extra virgin olive goes great on salad leaves and cavolo nero sauteed in goose fat or lard is a personal favourite of mine. Get creative with your good fats and get fat burning!

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So you think you are good at multi-tasking and it saves you time?

In reality, however fast you are doing it, you are just switching from one thing to another. That doesn’t sound efficient to me. It sounds disorganised and distracting. So why do we do it? Maybe we do it simply because it makes us feel good!

The irony is, as soon as I saw this, I stooped what I was doing to post it immediately… and what was I doing when I saw it? Switching from one thing to another of course 🙂 On average we open a new window on our computer 37 times an hour.

Happy reading, see if you can stick with it all the way to the end without looking at something else part way through.

http://www.theguardian.com/science/2015/jan/18/modern-world-bad-for-brain-daniel-j-levitin-organized-mind-information-overload