Drink THIS For Massive Fasting Benefits - 15 Intermittent Fasting Drinks
Hello Health Champions.
The number one question I get about fasting is which drinks are okay
to have during intermittent fasting?
Which ones are acceptable for you to drink and which
ones will sabotage your progress?
Coming right up.
Hey I'm Doctor Ekberg I'm a holistic doctor
and a former Olympic decathlete and if you want to truly Master Health by understanding
how the body really works make sure you subscribe and hit the notification bell so you don't
miss anything.
So I want to go over 15 different drinks, and I want to also talk about how
they
affect you depending on what your goal is.
And if you stick with me all the way to the
end I'm going to have a little bonus for you something that a lot of people wonder about
that I think that you will really enjoy.
So there are four primary goals that people have
when they doing intermittent fasting.
One would be weight loss, one would be insulin resistance
and type 2 diabetes even though weight typically comes along with some insulin resistance there
are some people have insulin resistance and type 2 diabetes who are not overweight so
that can
shift things a little bit.
There are some people who want to be in ketosis because ketones
have certain benefits and there's a lot of people who don't feel like they have much
of a health issue but they want to optimize things with autophagy.
The first drink we're
going to talk about is water.
And it's the obvious choice because water is what the body
is made of.
It's the neutral fluid medium of the body and because it's neutral it is perfectly
okay no matter what your goal is.
The only thing you want to be sure of is that it's
clean.
You don't want to drink tap water.
You don't want to drink things with artificial
additives.
So want to get a good home filter or you want to get a good quality bottled
water.
A lot of the bottled water is reverse osmosis and that's okay for temporary things
for temporary use, but in the long run it's a little too clean.
It has a tendency to rob
your body of mineral.
So if you use reverse osmosis water like a lot of the most popular a bottled
waters are then you want to add a little bit of minerals or a salt sprinkle to it when
you drink it.
Drink number two is herb tea also totally okay just make sure that you
get something that doesn't have anything artificial.
Now the vast majority of herbal teas are going
to be totally fine but just make sure that they don't put anything funky in there.
The
third drink is apple cider vinegar and this one also is totally okay.
It has no nutrients
it has no stimulatory effect no energy value so therefore it doesn't affect your body it's
neutral.
Alright to all these three totally okay.
Next let's talk about tea and coffee so green
tea is the one that has the least caffeine, but it does have some.
It has about 25 mg per
8 oz, so it's not a whole lot but if you had 10
or 15 or 20 cups throughout the day that's
still a lot of caffeine.
So I would give it a green check mark, but for some people it
may make a difference and because caffeine is a stimulant it can stimulate your adrenals
you can stimulate your adrenals to make adrenalin and cortisol it could affect blood sugar and
Insulin in some people.
And for the most part you don't have to worry about this, but if
you feel like your body is super sensitive or you have some adrenal fatigue or if you're
just really really stubborn weight then this might be something that you want to watch
for.
So if you're drinking green tea and you're drinking
less than six to eight cups I'd say you're
totally fine.
Black tea same story but black tea might have about twice as much caffeine
on average there's a bigger range on that so you want to have maybe half as much.
Don't
drink 6 to 8 cups may be limited to three or four.
And with coffee again we're getting
and basically a doubling of the caffeine on average there's a huge variety, so I would
say one or two cups is probably okay but don't be drinking coffee throughout the day if you're
sensitive.
Alright there are some people that it will make absolutely no difference
for these goals, but it's something to be aware
of.
Next up is everyone's favorite bulletproof
coffee.
What would fasting be without bulletproof coffee right?
Well this is also something that
we give a green check mark, but we have a little question mark next to
it.
Because even though it has virtually no
impact on insulin and there is no protein or
sugar, if you do it right, so it's also safe
for autophagy in moderation.
We want to understand that bulletproof coffee can still provide
a lot of energy.
It fill / fuels the body to some degree so you can put two tablespoons
of fat in there and you make about 300 calories or if you put 3 or 4 tablespoons of fat in
there now you're talkin five or 600 calories and if you had one of those that's probably
okay but if you're one of those people have two or maybe three now you could get almost
a full caloric intake for a day just from having a few bulletproof coffee so just understand
that it's alright from an insulin perspective but you don't want to turn it into a meal.
Because if you put that much fuel into the body
the body has no reason to burn the fat
on your body.
Then what about cream?
Is cream okay?
Yes, because the vast majority of calories
in cream come from fat it's over 90% of calories from fat.
So it has a very very slight insulin
response and as long as you keep it to maybe a couple of tablespoons then it is not going
to mess up your goals.
So cream is okay.
What does that say about other forms of a dairy
like skim milk?
Well there's a big big difference because whereas cream has virtually all the
calories from fat.
Skim milk has virtually all the calories from sugar and protein both
of which are going to stimulate insulin significantly.
Cream is so rich that just a little bit is
going to turn your coffee white where skim is so lean, it is so low in fat, that you
have
to put a lot in there before it looks like you added anything.
So if you use it as a creamer
the tendency will be to use a whole lot more of the skim milk and because it triggers insulin
it is a really bad idea.
It has about three and a half percent protein and a little over
5% sugar and almost zero fats, so almost all the
calories come from protein and sugar and it's
going to stimulate insulin.
Next people wonder about the milk alternatives: the cashew milk,
the oat milk, the almond milk, the rice milk, et cetera.
And here's the rule, they are okay
as long as they don't have sugar added.
So the two best ones that I've seen are almond
milk and cashew milk because a whole cup of that stuff has 22 to 25 to 30 calories and
it
has virtually zero protein and zero carbohydrate.
So most of those calories are coming from
fat and you have to drink a whole cup to get like 20-30 calories worth.
That means if you
put in 3-4 tablespoons into your coffee it's going to have basically a zero affect.
The
thing to make sure though is don't get the stuff with sugar or anything artificial added.
I would also keep it to less than two cups a day, but don't drink it all at once because
now you're kind of giving the body a sense that you're getting a meal.
I'd probably keep
it under a cup.
So if you having three cups of coffee or three cups of tea and you put
like a quarter cup or 1/3 of a cup in each then I think you're still okay.
Two cups would
be really on the high-end and definitely don't have them all at once.
So what about bone broth?
That's almost synonymous with fasting.
And bone broth is fantastic it is virtually zero
sugar, zero carbohydrate, it has a lot of fat
also, it has mostly protein, has some fat and
virtually zero carbohydrate.
It's also full of healing nutrients like collagen in a lot
of gut healing nutrients, and it has a ton of good minerals.
So it's a fantastic food and
I would say that it's okay if you're looking primarily to reduce insulin then it's going
to have a very slight insulin response.
However this is the one that's going to be a little
different for autophagy because autophagy is mostly
sensitive to protein.
It's the lack of protein
and calories that drive autophagy.
And autophagy is of your courses when your body is / has
few nutrients and it up regulates its cleaning, its immune system, its recycling.
It recycles viruses and bacteria in dead cells and garbage and
debris in the body.
And if you add a bunch of proteins then it's not so eager to recycle
anymore.
So you want to keep your proteins below 20 or 18g in order to be in autophagy.
That's the protocol recommended by the fasting mimicking diet.
And bone broth has as much
as 10 grams of protein per cup.
So if you had two cups then that bone broth alone would
probably push you over the edge where you start affecting autophagy.
As far as the others
go insulin resistance I think you're still okay.
If you're looking for autophagy then limit
the bone broth you probably okay up to maybe a cup.
Alright drinks number 12 alcohol is
that a good idea?
Well I'm going to say no even if it doesn't stimulate insulin a whole
lot and even if it doesn't necessarily kick you out of ketosis it is just not good for
your liver.
And all of these goals depend on your liver there is non-alcoholic fatty liver
disease and there is alcoholic fatty liver disease, so if you have insulin resistance
then the liver is struggling as it is and if you trying to engage autophagy, which is
a cleanup process, it's the liver that does most of that cleaning.
So whether you have
one or more of these goals it's you're trying to take care of your liver and alcohol is
not the friend of a liver.
So if you trying to get through weight loss, insulin resistance,
keto, autophagy I would say to stay away from alcohol.
Number 13 green juice.
Juice in general
is not great, but green juice now that's something squeeze yourself from fresh greens fresh leafy
greens and it can have a lot of good health benefits.
But we're going to put a question mark on that
because it's going to depend on your goal it's going to stimulate insulin so it's going
to depend on how much you have and when you have it is also going to be important.
So if you
have an intermittent fasting pattern let's say you're doing 18:6 or 16:8 or something
like that if you have green juice during your fasting period it will break your fast because
it's
going to create a bit of a sugar spike.
But if you have if you're in ketosis for low-carb
and you have a carb budget so to speak of maybe 30 grams and you have that green
juice close to a meal like say let's say you have a 20 minutes before a meal if you have
it somewhere between your two meals now it's not going to create a tremendous amount of
damage right is going to create a little bit of an insulin spike right before your meal
when you would have an insulin spike anyway.
So I would encourage great quantities but
if you're looking to supercharge your body with some nutrients and you feel like green
juices is really beneficial for your body if he does well then I would say have a little
bit but count the carbs make sure you know how much sugar is in there and I wouldn't
go over maybe 5 grams of sugar in that juice and then have it close to a meal so that you
don't create additional insulin spikes in addition to your regular meals.
And as far
as autophagy goes, autophagy is super sensitive to
both sugar and protein so I'm pretty sure
that it would break whatever trend of autophagy you have going on if you have any kind of
concentrated sugar like juice.
So when we're fasting we're doing coconut oil, we can do
coconut cream, we can do coconut milk to some degree, what about coconut water?
Isn't it still
sort of the same thing and it's full of all these good minerals.
Well not really because the
coconut water portion has no fat and no protein, but it has a lot of sugar.
And it's very very
easy to drink a lot of that stuff so it's basically sort of like the green juice but
it doesn't necessarily have all that much benefit so yeah.
It's sort of those like the
green juice if you had just a little bit like a cup or half a cup close to a meal because
you
just love it and you feel those minerals would do some good then maybe.
But other than that
I would really stay away from coconut water.
It has a lot of sugar.
It's 2.6% sugar and most of the time people are probably going to drink at
least a pint or half a liter so now you're talkin 12 to 15 grams of sugar.
Number 15 store-bought
juice so one we can make an argument for some benefits of fresh-squeezed homemade juice
from fruit or vegetables I don't see any reason to ever buy store-bought juice because it
has to be pasteurized in order to be sold in a store and now you're destroying most
of the benefits.
Most of the enzymes and the alive factors and the phyto factors
polyphenols and whatever else might be in that juice you're destroying it with that
pasteurization so when you put a big red X on that because all you're really getting
now is sugar water.
Yeah it's a little bit better than Coca-Cola, but not a whole lot.
Orange juice is about 8% sugar.
Apple juices about 10% sugar.
So if you have a cup you're
already getting about 25 grams of sugar in there.
Absolutely not a good idea for any of
these protocols no matter what your goal is for weight loss or reducing insulin resistance
stay away from store-bought juice.
Thanks for sticking with me through this and now that
you understand some of these principles let's talk about soda.
Because a lot of people love soda.
that we're not we're going to just dismiss very quickly the regular soda that has the
sugar and the high fructose corn syrup because that's a no-brainer that's for the most part
that's the reason most people got in trouble in the first place but then there is this
diet soda so now we want to start understanding a little bit because most people think will
that should be totally fine because it has no calories it has no sugar and if I do caffeine
free version now it has no stimulants so it's sort of like an herb tea right no because
the sweet taste can trigger something called the cephalic affect the cephalic response
and what does that mean it means that any time that you put something in your mouth
and you taste it your body the intelligence of your body start preparing your digestion
for the food that is about to come and if you taste something sweet then your body think
it's about to receive nutrients and it may in some cases start producing and releasing
some insulin they've done some studies on this and they haven't been totally conclusive
some study say that certain artificial sweeteners will trigger it but the stevia won't and I
wouldn't put too much faith necessarily those studies the fact is if you taste something
sweet there is a possibility that your body start anticipating and start preparing a digestive
response and releasing some insulin.
So how do you know if this is going to affect you?
Well here's how you check it and this is opposite to what most people think they think
that they drink something sweet the blood sugar should go up but it's the other way
around if you drink something sweet but there is no sugar there's no actual nutrients and
your body produces insulin your blood sugar will go down.
So you check your blood sugar
before, you have a drink, you check your blood sugar after, if it drops a point or two I
wouldn't
worry about it but if you see that you're dropping 5 or 10 points now you know that
your body is responding to this it is producing more insulin and that is driving your insulin
resistance.
So we put a question mark on this because it's
going to be okay for most people I would again
not recommend the artificial sweeteners but I have checked this on myself on Stevia drinks
and it has no impact for me so most people are going to be totally fine but again everyone
is different so you want to figure out you want to understand the principal and the mechanism
and then figure out and test how it works for you.
If you found this helpful make sure
you also check out that video thank you so much for watching I'll see you next time