Pretty easy. Meat, eggs, good fats.. some leafy greens like spinach in limited quantities. If it's a true CKD, then you have a supercompensation phase. It would do you good to look at Militant Underground Body Opus by Dan Duchaine if you want a good CKD plan.
Dan's book has some flaws Ultimate Diet 2.0 by Lyle McDonald addresses these.
I tried doing around 50% cals from fat and it was not good for me. I did not feel good eating all that fat, even with a large portion of it coming from nuts and olive oil. I recently started on a CKD type diet again and my daily fat is a lot lower. I still do 1gm/lb protein, but kinda just get whatever fat I happen to get in. I eat almonds and cottage cheese daily with some string cheese thrown in once in a while (foods I eat with the most fat). I feel way better doing this and it has been working well for me.I've got a CKD question. I read in an article Invalid Link Removed that you want 1.5 gm of fat to 1 gm of protein, and at least 1gm of protein per pound of lean body mass.
Holy cow, how do I get that much fat in a day? It would be 240g, so basically a full 8 oz. do I need to drink a cup of olive oil? I suppose that will help cut out the atkins constipation
Is that ratio off? cause with the 9 cal / g of fat, that would mean 2160 cals from fat, 680 from protein
If you find yourself failing when following the specifc rules of a diet DO NOT give up. Start tweaking instead. Everyone is different and once you find what works for you it becomes a lot easier.In reality you take what works from programs (if you understand the concepts) and make it work for you as an individual.
If you find yourself failing when following the specifc rules of a diet DO NOT give up. Start tweaking instead. Everyone is different and once you find what works for you it becomes a lot easier.
I supplemented flax, fish and coconut oil w/my diet (that I used to get the physique in my avvy) and it made it that much easier.
Lyle McDonald said:The second solution, and the one I suspect most readers are aware of is the cyclical ketogenic diet (CKD). A CKD refers to any diet which alternates periods of low-carbohydrate (or ketogenic eating) with periods of high-carbohydrate eating. Diets such as DiPasquale's "Anabolic" and "Metabolic" diets, Dan's Bodyopus, and Faigan's NHE are all examples of CKD's. At the end of this book, I even offer my own take on the CKD, a redevelopment of the original Ultimate Diet that Duchaine and Zumpano introduced over 20 years ago.
CKD's are another compromise diet approach: they switch between a ketogenic/low-carbohydrate phase (for anywhere from 5 or more days) and a high-carb phase (lasting from 12 to 48 hours or more) to restore muscle glycogen and hopefully generate an anabolic response. They are for those athletic individuals who, for one reason or another, needs to restrict carbohydrates severely, but sustain exercise performance.
Active individuals with severe (diagnosed) insulin resistance or even the beginning of Type II diabetes tend to fare poorly on CKDs; the extended carb-load period causes all of the problems that they are trying to avoid in the first place. The TKD is more appropriate for them.
shots of EVOO for the win!