Not only does fiber reduce cardiovascular mortality by 26% (by cutting cholesterol), surprisingly enough, fiber even reduces your risk of cancer by 22%: https://www.empirical.health/blog/dietary-fiber-reduces-all-...
(Oatmeal is high in fiber, among other things, which I think is part of what's going on here.)
The article is a little densely worded.
this result in the paper is very interesting in the conjecture is that the gut microbiome is altered in a beneficial way, and that the effect (with the resulting lowering of cholesterol) persists for weeks after even 2 days of oats.
I hear about fiber constantly all of the sudden. You might be right about it, but how do we know it’s different than. All the past nutrition tends?
I think the trends are a reflection of poor education. Fiber/protein/whatever being important components of a diet isn't new information. But the information is new to folks that never had nutrition explained to them.
"Eat a varied diet" seems boring but maybe those influencers selling pills made from 500 vegetables were ahead of the curve all along.
Four out of ten US adults are insulin resistant.
I have no idea how to balance the blood sugar damage with the cholesterol damage.
My approach is to have a modest amount and increase the nuts and chia mixed with it, alongside berries and yogurt.
Not terribly difficult, you never feel hungry. The worst part was how sore my jaw felt from the excessive chewing of the bulk mass. Which is funny for something so mushy, but my instinct was to chew it a good amount. Also, it is a lot of fiber. Feel like the effect might just have to do with cleaning out every surface of my digestive tract.
It's not the laziest method but I like soaking them overnight. Without being too fussed about phytic acid in a balanced diet, soaking still improves digestibility and nutrient absorption.
Oatmeal is great, but a calorie restricted diet made practically entirely of oatmeal isn't exactly a useful determinant.
tim-tday•2h ago
WarOnPrivacy•1h ago
soopypoos•1h ago
derwiki•1h ago
Noumenon72•1h ago
Lord_Zero•1h ago
KittenInABox•30m ago
benatkin•1h ago
Bad: Oatly
nomel•1h ago
Steel cut is just a different thing altogether. I like mine a bit on the firm side, with butter, brown sugar. On top, some plain yogurt pair nicely. Cranberries and walnuts are pretty great too.
I think one-minute/instant oatmeal is terrible, no matter how it's prepared, which is unfortunately most people's first experience with oatmeal.
OutOfHere•3m ago
lanfeust6•45m ago
Years ago I'd sometimes go over-the-top with homemade kefir, cocoa nibs, lemon zest. I stopped the kefir habit not so much because of the hassle but because I didn't want to consume that much volume of dairy every day. I get enough lactic acid from kimchi, and protein from other sources.
fibonachos•10m ago
75g 0% Greek Yogurt, 75g Almond Milk, 10g Maple Syrup, 8g ISOpure unflavored protein powder, 8g PBfit powdered peanut butter, Salt to taste. Whisk everything else together in one bowl. Pour over 85g of old fashioned oats and stir.
511 calories, 79g carbs, 30g protein, 9g fat. Easy to tune the recipe to macro targets.
Cholesterol numbers are great.
kulahan•41m ago
tim-tday•39m ago
nlawalker•36m ago
ThrowawayP•27m ago
OutOfHere•5m ago
brianwawok•1h ago
ridiculous_leke•1h ago
tim-tday•40m ago
rmast•6m ago
davidmurdoch•1h ago
Loughla•1h ago
My body hates me.
netcraft•1h ago
I believe for some of us its purely genetic.
lowercased•33m ago
Changed to a stronger one what?
mh-•5m ago
dralley•57m ago
I'm still young so my doctor isn't terribly concerned, but in 10 years I'll probably have to be on statins.
rmast•35m ago
Egg whites, lean meats, etc? Strict whole food plant based?