Once again, I have engaged in some nutritional experimentation and wanted to share my approach and outcomes with you.
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| Maybe one of these days I'll copy his idea with the worms instead and REALLY get jacked |
BACKGROUND INFO
On 6 Jan
2026, I returned from a New Year’s Disney Cruise vacation. Leading up to this vacation, I was in a
gaining phase of training (my birthday is late October, and with Thanksgiving
and Christmas soon after that, I leverage that timeframe for gaining/feasting),
and the morning after my travels home I weighed in at 89.1kg: a gain of 6kg in
15 weeks. Now it was January, which is
an excellent time to lose weight, because the WHOLE WORLD is doing it, so no
one is going to question/judge you for doing so. But along with that, I had a strongman
competition on 21 Feb to prep for, and the kind of training I do for that is
the kind of training that DOESN’T require the excess food that gaining training
requires, so I knew I was going to reduce my food intake.
It's 29 Jan
as I write this, and I weighed in this morning at 81.4kg. Now, already I’ll cop to the huckstering
going on here: the 89.1kg weigh in is a post travel weigh in, and we all know
that traveling bloats us and this morning’s weigh in was after a 90 minute
ruck, so there’s a sweat element involved.
HOWEVER, if my goal was to make weight for a weight class, none of that
would matter, as all that counts is what the scale shows. But, along with that, my performance in
training hasn’t suffered (and, in fact, I’ve continued to make steady progress)
and I’ve achieved “non-scale victories” as well, primarily that latching the
lever on my lifting belt is no longer a workout in and of itself and my clothes
are fitting better. So with that, allow
me to document the approach I employed, which I am referring to as “Red Meat
and Black Coffee”…primarily because I love how well that syncs up.
PRINCIPLES
· Don’t get hungry. This isn’t white knuckling.
· When you eat, eat
carnivore/animal. You’re going to need
to maximize opportunities to get in protein, and being ketogenic/fat adapted
will limit hunger.
· When you DON’T eat, allow yourself
black coffee. Don’t add
sweeteners/cream/butter/etc. This is
fasting with an aid.
· Eat after lifting weights. Don’t eat after conditioning.
· 2 meals a day on non-fasting days, 1
meal a day on fasting days.
THE METHOD
He probably could have stood to have a little less coffee
Put very
simple: twice per week, instead of breakfast, I have black coffee. And all my meals are carnivore.
But now
let’s expand.
Prior to
this, I’d settled into a pattern of eating 2 meals per day: a breakfast and a
dinner. I still like that approach, so
it’s the framework I operate within.
Understanding that, it seemed logical that, if I did NOT eat one of
those 2 meals, I’d be taking in less food, and the outcome would be weight
loss.
Shocking, I
know, but I’ll continue.
One of the
things I like about a carnivore approach to nutrition is how satiating it
is. When you eat ONLY animal products,
you have limited opportunities to spike your blood sugar. This means you don’t experience the
compensatory crash that coincides with the spike, which means you never get
“hangry”. Hunger does eventually show
up, but it’s a slow burn, in the background, easy to ignore unless it becomes
dire. It sounds like how people describe
GLP-1 agonists shutting off “food noise”.
It makes any manner of fasting pretty easy, which is something I noticed
on my travels during long flights.
Along with
that, there is something of an “opening the floodgates” when it comes to
eating. Once we START eating, we get a
taste for it (pun unintended but whatever) and want to KEEP doing it. If we never really start the process, we just
remain at baseline.
And then,
along with all that, black coffee is a known appetite suppressant. Part of that is the caffeine content, but
even decaf can have the effect. And
since it’s winter, a warm beverage is honestly a treat, and can go very far to
satisfy cravings for comfort that can be misinterpreted for needs for food. And much like pain medication, I don’t drink
coffee when I feel hungry: I drink coffee before I feel hunger.
All this
having been said, I want to make it ABSOLUTELY clear that at no point am I
actually HUNGRY during this process.
This is NOT about white knuckling my way through hunger to achieve a
fast. I feel like that’s an
unsustainable AND problematic approach to fat loss. This “works” because I’m able to reduce food
intake WITHOUT actually ever being hungry.
That’s the ideal fat loss solution.
THE HOW AND WHY

Sometimes it really is all that simple
I’ve paired
this nutritional approach with the Tactical Barbell Operator program, which,
without going into too much detail, is 3 days per week of lifting. I train first thing in the morning, fasted. After the lifting workouts, I’ll have a post
training breakfast, and then, about 10-12 hours after that, I’ll have a
dinner. I’ll also have some protein
before bed (more on that later).
During a
standard workweek, this means I have 2 days where I DON’T lift weights first
thing in the morning. On those days, I
do conditioning workouts (a 90 minute ruck on Thursdays, and a fast/short high
intensity conditioning workouts [HIC] on Tuesdays). On these days, I don’t have breakfast: I just
have a black coffee (usually mixed with unflavored electrolytes).
From there,
I try to limit myself to only 2 cups of coffee on lifting days and 3 cups on
non-lifting days, primarily because I have an addictive personality and things
can quickly get out of hand, but I honestly see no issue with drinking however
much black coffee one wants so long as it’s not having consequences (primarily
sleep impacts, but also digestive any otherwise).
Weekends, I
allot for having a breakfast and a dinner (primarily because my wife is an
absolute saint and will make breakfast for the whole family on both days), but
if an opportunity presents where I can fast through one of those breakfasts (we
all slept in and the day is getting away from us), I’ll just go with the black
coffee. As far as training goes, for
this particular experiment, I was doing the Crossfit WOD “Grace” on Saturdays,
while Sunday was a down day (at most, getting in a long walk).
So we end up
with effectively a 2-3 meal deficit over the course of the week. COULD that same end result be achieved by
keeping the meals the same and simply eating less at them? Yes, of course…but I find that this requires
willpower to be able to accomplish. One has to actually STOP eating, even
though they are STILL hungry for more food.
And, ultimately, I believe that a nutritional protocol that is reliant
upon willpower is one that will ultimately fail, as willpower is a finite
resource. And then, along with that,
ONCE willpower fails, there is a compensatory counter-binge that occurs as a
means for the body to “correct” what has been done to it through
willpower. This is how/why people end up
going on junkfood benders after sustained periods of intense dieting.
Instead, I
am able to eat to satiety at all meals: I simply have fewer meals. Mark Bell has a good quote that “after you
fast, you have to pretend like it never happened”, which is a cautionary tale
to avoid gorging after fasting under the premise that you get to “eat back” all
those calories you didn’t eat. This IS
good advice, because it’s very easy to undo the caloric deficit of one skipped
meal with a binge, BUT, this is where the “red meat” portion of the approach is
helpful.
As
previously stated: animal foods tend to be more satiating than others. Dr. Ted Naiman has discussed the notion of a
protein threshold that compels us to hunger and that, upon reaching it, hunger
fades. Yet we ALSO are all familiar with
the concept of a “dessert stomach”, wherein, no matter HOW satiated we are, we
tend to find room for desserts at the end of the meal. So by eliminating sweet/carby sources of
nutrition and focusing purely on animal foods, we put ourselves in a position
wherein, even eating just ONE meal a day, we can reach satiety BEFORE we put
ourselves at risk of overconsuming. But
let’s dig even deeper.
One of the
concerns regarding eating only one meal per day, for someone interested in
physical pursuits, is not getting in adequate amounts of protein. Well here’s another 1-2 punch: by ONLY eating
animal foods at our one meal, we allow for the possibility of taking in a
significant enough amount of protein to have a sufficient amount to ward off
muscle sparing AND there is evidence that ketones THEMSELVES are muscle
sparing. And given the nature of this
diet (fasting mimicking AND fasting legitimately), there is a fair chance we
will BE in a state of ketosis. Plus,
those 2 meal days give us ample opportunity to REALLY overload on protein,
which can carry the water on those days where we’re only having one meal. And on top of all this, one those 1 meal
days, we can find ourselves a little hungrier come dinner time compared to the
2 meal days, so we may end up taking in even MORE protein than usual. Yes: this means we’re not achieving a FULL
“2-3 meal deficit” if we’re eating like a 1.5 meal at the end of those 1 meal
days…but we’re STILL achieving a deficit, because it’s quite challenging to eat
2 meals worth of food in the span of 1 meal.
Yes: I’ve done it before…but it’s not something I can do EVERY day.
But, aside
from that, I DO have a protein feeding before sleep as well. Some could classify that as a meal, and feel
free to do so if that helps you understand the system, but this was initially a
scoop of Metabolic Drive protein powder mixed in water, and has now become the
same scoop of powder but mixed with 170g of full fat Greek yogurt/skyr. Stan Efferding’s “Vertical Diet 3.0” book
(recently reviewed) convinced me on the value of bringing this back into my
nutrition. This gets in a little extra
protein AND gives the body something slow absorbing to work on while we sleep.
QUICK SUMMARY
Monday/Wednesday/Friday:
Lift weights and eat 2 carnivore meals per day (post training and one other)
along with one pre-bed protein feeding.
Tuesday/Thursday:
Train conditioning and eat 1 carnivore meal per day along with one pre-bed
protein feeding.
Saturday/Sunday:
Short high intensity workout on Saturday, allow up to 2 meals on each day, but
free to skip 1 meal on one day, still include pre-bed protein feeding.
On all days:
allow for black coffee as a beverage.


