Gijs Heerkens

You are what you eat 🐮

When you eat mainly energy, you are mainly energy. When you eat mainly protein, you are mainly protein. This is the basic principle of Ted Naiman’s book The P:E diet and it’s as dead simple as it seems.

The ratio of energy to protein on your plate and on your body are related. There’s exceptions to this, but this is generally how the food you eat shapes your body. Especially when the energy, the fats and carbs, is processed.

All foods consist of carbohydrates, fats and protein, the three macronutrients. Carbs and fats are dietary energy, your body burns them for fuel and stores the rest of it as body fat. Protein is the building block of your body.

If your meals have a high ratio of dietary energy compared to protein, your body will have a high ratio of dietary energy in the form of body fat. If your meals have a high ratio of dietary protein compared to energy, your body will have a high ratio of dietary protein in the form of muscle mass and other lean tissue.

We are wired to eat enough protein, because it’s essential for survival and regulates satiety. All your cells are made of it. The point is the amount of energy that comes with the protein you’re eating, as this determines the amount of body fat you have.

Naiman calls this the protein to energy ratio, or P:E ratio, which should optimally be around 1.0.

The formula of the P:E ratio is as follows:

Protein (grams) / Fat (grams) + Carbs (grams, excluding fiber)

Some examples of common foods’ P:E ratios  are:

You may notice that animal foods tend to have great P:E ratios, while plant foods tend to have poor ones. I wish you luck eating enough protein without getting fat when you’re vegan (or being malnourished). Vegetarians don’t have this problem as they tend to eat eggs, fish and dairy.

Fats vs. carbs

So half of the grams of food you’re eating should be protein. The other half can be energy (carbs or fats), as you already carry enough energy on your body in the form of body fat. You should eat for nutrition in the first place, not for energy.

Most people’s body fat percentage is too high, carrying so many calories on their bodies that it would take a couple of months until they’re out of energy.

The energy grams can be high fat/low carb or high carb/low fat, both might work.

It’s only when a food is both high fat and high carb when it’s very hard to not overeat, because this combination doesn’t exist in nature. Imagine eating a potato or drinking a cup of olive oil, you’ll get enough of it pretty soon. Now eat a bag of potato chips, a combination of both, and you can’t stop eating until it’s empty.

I personally have a strong preference for high fat/low carb for several reasons:

Macros

How does that work in practice?

Take your desired body weight (in pounds) and keep your energy intake under this target, and your protein intake over this target.

If you for example want to weigh 80 kilos, that’s 176 pounds. Then you should eat more than 176 grams of protein a day and less than 176 grams of energy.

A high fat/low carb diet with this principle will come down to a macronutrient ratio of about 30% protein, 60% fats and 10% carbs.

A high carb/low fat diet with this principle will come down to a macronutrient ratio of about 45% protein, 15% fats and 40% carbs.

This will greatly improve your body composition, which is not just a vanity metric. A lower body fat percentage improves your insulin sensitivity, which is the most important factor for a great series of chronic diseases. You can achieve this by having less body fat or more muscle mass (or both, ideally), so weight training will help, too.

Of course, when you do a lot of high intensity exercise, you can add energy to taste.

If you want to see if the P:E diet really works you can follow Ted Naiman on Twitter.

I see you thinking; but isn’t eating animal products bad for the planet? No, but the overfat pandemic and all the medicines needed to cure the consequences are.

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