Beginner’s Guide to the Paleo Diet

By Lauren Fischer

The Paleo diet is based on the diet of our hunter-gatherer ancestors from the Paleolithic era. Why mimic the diet of our ancestors? Hunter-gatherers had robust health and experienced few degenerative and chronic diseases. Also, our genetics are virtually identical to those of our hunter-gatherer ancestors, according to “The Paleo Solution.” Although it has been 120,000 years, modern-day humans are designed to thrive on a diet similar to that of our ancestors. Welcome to the beginner’s guide to the Paleo diet!

The Paleo diet focuses on whole, unprocessed, nutrient-dense foods such as meats, tubers, fruits and vegetables. It also eliminates modern foods that disrupt our hunter-gatherer physiology, like refined sugars and grains.

Proponents of the Paleo diet report numerous health benefits including stable blood sugar, improved digestion, weight loss, improved sleep, decreased inflammation, decreased risk of chronic diseases, clear skin and increased energy. Common criticisms of the Paleo diet include the increased cost of whole foods, time commitment required to cook and prepare whole foods, and possible nutrient deficiencies from the elimination of grains and dairy.

Everyone’s dietary needs are different, however diets like the Paleo diet can be useful templates to build a healthful diet that is right for you.

Paleo Diet Guidelines

Foods to Enjoy

  • Meat – Enjoy all meats. Choose organic, grass-fed or pasture-raised meat.
  • Seafood – Enjoy all seafood. Choose wild-caught and sustainably sourced seafood.
  • Eggs – Choose organic, free-range, or pastured.
  • Nuts & Seeds – Enjoy all nuts except peanuts. Choose organic.
  • Healthy fats and oils – Enjoy healthy fats like avocado and grass-fed butter as well as unrefined oils like coconut oil and cold-pressed olive oil.

Foods to Avoid

  • Grains – Avoid ALL grains. This includes refined grains like cereals and muffins as well as whole grains like rice, quinoa, corn and oats.
  • Legumes – Avoid ALL legumes. Avoid all beans as well as lentils and peanuts, which are part of the legume family.
  • Dairy – Avoid ALL dairy, including cow, goat and sheep’s milk products such as cheese yogurt and sour cream. Grass-fed butter and ghee are permitted.
  • Processed foods – Foods that have been processed by adding and/or subtracting substances to the original food and foods that are prepackaged should be avoided. This includes most foods found in the middle aisles of the grocery store.
  • Sugars – Refined sugars (like white sugar), artificial sugars (like sucralose) and high-fructose corn syrup should be avoided.
  • Unhealthy fats and refined seed oils – Trans-fats, hydrogenated and partially hydrogenated oils as well as refined seed oils, like canola oil, that are easily damaged by light and heat should be avoided.

 

Sample Paleo Menu

Breakfast

Scrambled eggs, mixed greens sauteed in butter and berries

Snack

Apple with almond butter

Lunch

Baked chicken thigh, baked sweet potato and zucchini noodles

Snack

Plantain chips with guacamole

Dinner

Pan-seared salmon, cauliflower mash and steamed asparagus

By Lauren Fischer

 

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Lauren has been a member of the Gainesville community since her freshman year at the University of Florida in 2001. She graduated with her master’s in nursing in 2008 and practiced as a pediatric nurse practitioner in Gainesville and Live Oak, Florida. Seeing patients, especially children, with compromised quality of life due to poor lifestyle choices sparked Lauren to seek additional education in holistic nutrition and wellness. She became certified as a Nutrition Therapy Consultant through the Nutrition Therapy Association in 2015. Lauren aims to provide accurate and actionable health and wellness information that will help people live happier and healthier lives.