#27 Uric Acid Part 2: Drop Acid!

Uric acid (UA) is the new bad boy on the block… so move over, salt, sugar and cholesterol! High UA threatens the heart, the liver, the kidneys and the brain – not to mention my most favourite organ of all. So, what drives high uric acid, and what can we do to Drop Acid? 

As mentioned in my blogpost #26 Uric Acid Part 1: Gouty Tales (see here), my recent uric acid (UA) blood test came back an optimal 4.7 mg/dL. That bodes well for me living long and strong, but what about my darling husband?

Fortunately, I found out that  coffee lowers UA, and I told him so. It was the best news he’d had all year. Imagine, though, how miserably gouty he’d be if he wasn’t such a coffee-head.

Uric Acid is lowered by coffee
All sweetness and light, as long as he can have his coffee

My new UA Sure II uric acid monitor was delivered a couple of weeks ago, but at the time I started writing this blog I had not yet used it to test Roy. I was wondering how I would manage to pin him down and extract the necessary drop of blood from his craven finger.

Then came an unexpected stroke of luck! – he woke up a few mornings ago with a twinge of gout in one ankle, and immediately demanded that I test his uric acid levels. Right now! I hastened to comply: you don’t argue with a gouty husband.

# 26 Uric Acid Part 1: Gouty Tales


Optimal uric acid levels are important, as I’ve recently discovered. Roy says, somewhat sourly*, that I love buying gadgets and machines – and I do! But the gadgets I invest in are relatively small and inexpensive, especially considering their health benefits. 

My latest acquisition is a UA Sure uric acid monitor.

All this – monitor, finger-pricking device, lancets, test strips, log book and more – for well under A$160. A modest investment in our health, right?

And here is Roy’s latest project: the house we’re building in Iluka, WA:

I rest my case.

*The sourness could be explained by the fact that I have been going on a bit about the possible dangers of too much fructose (some fruits, honey, but especially the high fructose corn syrup in ultra-processed junk food); alcohol; and purines (found in all sorts of otherwise healthy foods). So it could just be that poor Roy is afraid of being denied everything that has, so far, made life worth living.

#25 Diet Wars

No, I don’t mean the fights that break out when one of you is hangry. (In our case, that would be me.) Nor – at the risk of sounding sexist – is it the argument over when he’s going to finally pull himself towards himself and lose that paunch.

I’m referring to the sometimes farcical war between proponents of various approaches to nutrition in general and weight-loss in particular.

With the world getting fatter by the day, there’s no lack of interest in the subject. There’s also no lack of cocksure experts clamouring to sell their uniquely correct message – and, coincidentally, their silver-bullet supplement – to the overweight and desperate.

Personally, I don’t believe there’s just one right way to lose fat and maintain a healthy weight. What worked for Roy when he embarked on my Low Carb, No Crap™ eating plan back in February 2020 and lost 35kg over 18 months may not work for the next man. In fact, what works for me is not exactly what works for Roy. (He can’t tolerate as many carbs as I can, for example.)

I tolerate more carbs than him: not that a custard tart is the ideal source of carbs for anyone

The Honey-guzzling Carnivore

Dr Paul Saladino, previously a vegan and now famous as the Carnivore MD, cured his own variously debilitating diseases by switching to eating only meat – nose-to-tail, importantly; not just ribeye steak. Oddly likeable and credible despite his extreme views and strong penchant for taking off his shirt, Paul is the author of The Carnivore Code, the host of the Fundamental Health Podcast and the founder of supplement company Heart & Soil.

Paul Saladino: famously carnivorous, with a penchant for removing his shirt

Avoiding plant-eating at all costs – remember, plants want to kill us! – worked so well for Paul that he went on a mission to share his discovery, and in doing so spearheaded a whole new eating craze: Carnivorism.

Discovering after some time that he needed some carbs, he added in a bit of fruit, but mostly honey, reasoning quite credibly that honey is in fact an animal product. (Vegans would agree: the staunchest of them won’t touch honey for that very reason.)

Importantly, Paul found that he felt a lot better on honey… and began eating quite a lot of it. While I respect him for publicly changing his mind, some of his followers did not. Instead, they were highly irate that he’d let the Carnivore side down.

The silliness of the diet wars smacks of the nonsense of certain religious differences, especially when people get all worked up about fine nuances. Just for fun, I thought I’d draw a few parallels:

Level One: Vegans vs Carnivores

Diet War extremists brook no middle ground

To me, veganism vs carnivorism is comparable to Christianity vs Hinduism – sure, they’re poles apart! No argument. The same goes for Christianity vs Islam. Despite worshipping just one god instead of a colourful pantheon of multi-limbed divinities, there are clear differences between Christianity and Islam, like there are with the paleolithic diet (paleo) vs vegetarianism. (Though arguably not worth Crusading about the Middle East for a couple of centuries with the loss of an estimated 1.7 million lives.)

Photo credit: jooinn.com – Crusading around the Middle East

Vegans and Vegetarians

Veganism vs vegetarianism, now, is loosely comparable to Catholicism vs Protestantism. Both Catholics and Protestants are Bible-loving Christians, after all. Yet in France alone – never mind the rest of the so-called civilised world – the Eight Religious Wars (1562-98) saw off an estimated two to four million lives. And that’s just for starters.

It would have been satisfying to complete this analogy by saying that both vegans and vegetarians are plant-loving veg-eaters, but that would be untrue. All they have in common is that they don’t eat meat. In fact, plenty of animal-food shunners live on highly processed, food-like substances such as Rice Krispies, Coca Cola and Twinkies that are worlds removed from their “plant-based” origins.

And quite a few of them have misguidedly started to eat the abominable Beyond Burgers: fake meat that’s not merely junk food, but a true culinary perversion – made from chemicals in laboratories from hyper-processed, resource-gobbling, planet-unfriendly Frankengredients.* This calls for a blogpost or three on its own, but I needed an excuse to use this salutary illustration filched from the internet:

(*Go on, Verne, tell us how you really feel.)

HFLC vs Paleo vs Keto vs Mediterranean

Now, though – how about high-fat and low-carb (HFLC) vs paleo, or keto? (I like The Primal Blueprint by paleo enthusiast Mark Sisson, by the way, having just listened to the updated version on Audible. And here’s a useful blog from him on carnivorism for beginners.

Mark Sisson (69) doing a balancing act on melissaambrossini.com

Or the Mediterranean diet vs the pegan diet espoused by Dr Mark Hyman, or Dave Asprey’s Bulletproof diet? There are no doubt “important” differences – but how much do they really matter?

Getting increasingly granular, what about strict keto vs dirty keto, or even cycling in and out of keto? Or strict carnivore vs carnivore plus fruit and honey, á la Paul Saladino?

From what I see online and in the podcast space, people can get amazingly worked up about their chosen brand of dietary fanaticism – and incredibly aggressive against any heresy they perceive. To me, it’s a lot like the arguably minor differences between the many dozens of Protestant denominations.

An Olive Branch

Be it diet or religion, no doubt we’re all doing our best in the circumstances we find ourselves, subject to whatever influences we’ve received and in terms of the very different options open to us.

Fortunately, most of the best diet gurus out there support one principal commandment: eating whole, minimally processed food, in as close to its natural form as possible. (A lot like my own Low Carb, No Crap™ lifestyle, coincidentally.)

And there, at the risk of having offended absolutely everyone, I rest my admittedly meandering case.

Amen.

Low-carb champagne, of course!

 

#24 Hey, Honey – local is lekker!

As you can’t have helped noticing, says VERNE MAREE, Big, Bad Sugar is the new villain on the block, having taken the place of fat. Now fat is good, as long as it is good fat. That generally holds true wherever you’ve planted your flag in the diet wars. (Except for low-fat vegans, who are unlikely to make old bones… or be reading this blog.)

But there may be a special place reserved for honey. There’s most definitely a place for it in my Low Carb, No Crap™ diet and lifestyle plan.

Postcode honey – as local as it gets! Photo credit: Carrie Titchmarsh

That’s because I don’t believe carbs are the enemy, either… unless they’re carbage, like anything white and refined. Eating the Low Carb, No Crap™ way doesn’t mean villifying carbs. (It’s more about choosing your carbs selectively, and according to your unique needs and tolerance levels.)

#21 How is Your Light Diet? Part One: Vit D, Sunshine and More

Our light diet may be as important as sleep, nutrition and exercise, VERNE MAREE discovers.

I rejoice when I see Roy outside with his shirt off. Not only because he – like most of us – looks heaps better with a tan, but because I know it’s boosting his immune system and helping him to live long and strong.

In fact, he’s just had a load of blood tests – and his Vitamin D is way up where it belongs.

Light Diet
Roy on Yallingup Beach, WA, a couple of weeks ago.

(The above pic of Roy on Yallingup Beach was taken a couple of weeks ago; click here for that travel blog post, and if you like it, please sign up to Travels with Verne and Roy!)