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I am just a little confused about what "paleo" means, I guess. How is it any different than the Atkins diet if people use condiments and dairy products? As far as I know, paleo doesn't necessarily imply low carb. Personally, I don't fathom that I would hunt, dig, or forage for butter, cream, or cheese, so I don't consider dairy products paleo. What am I missing?

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Non-paleo foods acceptable on Atkins: diet soda, anything with artificial sweeteners, low-carb refined grain flours like Carbalose, industrial seed oils and foods made from them like store-bought. Also legumes (non-paleo by most definitions). Basically, Atkins only cares if a food is low-carb, not how it got that way. It's true that many low-carbers also care about food quality and other aspects of it, so they lean Atkins in a paleo direction, and Atkins himself said that AS, nuts, and cheese could be a problem for some; but the essential definition is "low-carb, period." – Aaron B. Apr 8 2012 at 11:58
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On the other hand, paleo tends to be low-carb, because it removes many of the high-carb foods such as grains that have been added since paleo times. If you remove grains and processed carbs and don't make a concerted effort to replace them with a natural starch like potatoes, you're going to be eating lower-carb than your neighbors. So paleo doesn't have to be low-carb, but it generally is, by the USDA's standards. – Aaron B. Apr 8 2012 at 12:00
Ack, my first comment was supposed to say "store-bought mayo." – Aaron B. Apr 8 2012 at 12:03
i seriously wonder this all the time!! a lot of paleo i find is more idealism but we'll add neolithic when we want for our convenience and bend the rules as required – mzrdnan Apr 19 2012 at 23:25
i have similar views on supplementing with produced vitamins actually – mzrdnan Apr 19 2012 at 23:25

15 Answers

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They aren't....But they are considered "primal", which is paleo plus dairy.

Turns out there has been sufficient selective pressure for certain populations/individuals to digest dairy without any problems, and they didn't want to:

a) be left out if they were otherwise paleo

b) miss out on a yummy and cost effective fat in their diet if they tolerate it

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Thank you! :) – foreveryoung Apr 7 2012 at 3:48
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I also like the name "swiss paleo" for folks who eat dairy ;). – Beth-WeightMaven Apr 7 2012 at 12:19
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Well, dairy products aren't technically Paleo. A lot of us are just choosing to eat them, but you'll also find plenty of people who don't. I don't touch cheese for instance, and I use butter and heavy whipping cream mainly during bulking diets. There is a general trend in the Paleo community right now that is moving away from evolutionary foods ordained by the gods, towards an "eat real whole foods" methodology. Grass-fed butter, raw milk, etc. can all be hugely nutritious, so why not go for them? The main caveat about neolithic foods is to test tolerance. The way to test tolerance is to eliminate for 3-4 weeks, and then reintroduce one food group at a time to observe symptoms.

My opinion is that diet should not be a doctrine, and I think Paleo is largely trying to not let itself become one.

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Again, we're confusing the entire premise of "eating paleo". We are not trying to literally eat the exact same foods as our ancestors, as this would be impossible. None of the animals, fruits, or vegetables that they consumed are around anymore. The point, and I cannot stress this enough, is to use their health and diet as a baseline to generate hypotheses to see what foods really are good for us nowadays. Olive oil is a neolithic food, but we still tolerate it just fine. Like others here have said, some do well on dairy, some do not. I use heavy cream in my coffee everyday and I eat some cheese when I'm at work (I'm a bartender) because it can be really hard to get any decent calories in me when I'm working behind a bar for 10 hours. Cheese is a bunch of good fats, and I can deal with the rest of it.

So don't get caught up in the whole "they didn't eat it, so I shouldn't". That's really not the point here.

Read: http://coachcanadan.wordpress.com/2012/02/12/allow-me-to-clarify/

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They are paleo because we like them. That's also why we are supposed to eat like our ancestors, but its OK to have whey protein and test ourselves all day.

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Like really loon. – thhq Apr 7 2012 at 20:42
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I never really "got" this either. It appears that human-raised livestock, i.e. grass-fed beef, which would not have been around in the paleolithic, is embraced wholeheartedly, but dairy, which comes from the same beastie, is not. The argumentation from the "dairy is neolithic" position thus doesn't seem logical to me, because beef is too. I think the real reason for the dairy no-no more likely comes from the issue with milk sugars, which some people have a hard time digesting. IMHO fermenting the milk into kefir, yogurt and cheese takes care of most of the sugar for most people, and butter and cream have enough fat to offset their effect on blood sugar for those with blood sugar issues. I am happily "primal" because I have no lactose issues, and as another person said, it's a good source of healthy fats not to mention B-vitamins, calcium and K2.

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"Paleo" is just a name for a diet. It is not re-enactment. Beef is fairly close to some of the kinds of meats people were eating back then so beef is included in what is known as a "paleo diet". Dairy was unlikely to be consumed by all back then and even now it is not consumed in many parts of the world, so that is excluded from the diet. Its no big deal. – Warren D Apr 7 2012 at 13:59
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I still think there's no real way of knowing what people did or didn't do, because the world's a really big place with lots of different climates and ecosystems and people who adapted to them. Like you said, it's not re-enactment. In my book, if your system tolerates dairy, there's no reason not to do it. I haven't heard an argument yet that can convince me otherwise. – gydle Apr 7 2012 at 16:46
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Because anyone who's smart about paleo isn't doing it in some obsessive spirit of reenactment. If cheese, cream, and butter are not harmful to an individual -- as for many people they seem not to be -- there is no problem. They clearly provide a healthy source of saturated fat.

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Oh, I didn't know I wasn't being smart about how I go about my nutrition plan. I eat meat/fish, roots, green leaf vegetables, fruit, nuts, and seeds. – foreveryoung Apr 7 2012 at 21:26
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@foreveryoung - are you doing it as an obsessive spirit of reenactment? Then don't worry about it. I get what PrairieProf is saying. Doesn't mean that your diet isn't "smart". – KellyBoBelly Apr 25 2012 at 20:06
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It depends on what you mean by paleo. If you mean trying to imitate the lifestyle of paleolithic man as closely as possible -- what people sometimes call reenactment -- then dairy certainly isn't paleo. Neither is your bed, your car, your computer, your treated water, or the grocery store.

But if you mean using our knowledge of the way most of our ancestors ate and lived to make smart choices about how we eat and live today, then some dairy may very well be paleo. If ancestral humans ate foods that had similar macro and micro nutrient profiles as butter and cream, then we may be well adapted to those foods.

To put it another way: just because something wasn't available in paleo times doesn't mean that if it had existed, paleo man couldn't have thrived on it. It's not like everything that paleo man didn't eat is automatically poison to us.

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By "paleo" they mean the diet. We all know the subject is diet so why do people pretend they are not sure and then go off on these rambles? – Warren D Apr 8 2012 at 6:27
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And I was talking about the diet, except for one offhand remark about other parts of the lifestyle. By paleo diet, some people mean "eating only what paleo man ate and nothing else." Others (call it the Kurt Harris camp) look at the types of food eaten in paleo times and what those foods were made of, and use that as a guideline for choosing foods today. In some cases (fruit, for instance) the foods have changed so much that you might actually be more paleo (by the second way of thinking) by eating something paleo man didn't have than by trying to reenact his diet directly. – Aaron B. Apr 8 2012 at 11:50
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Also, the original poster suggested that dairy foods aren't paleo because you don't have to "hunt, dig, or forage" for them. So lifestyle is part of the equation, at least in his thinking. – Aaron B. Apr 8 2012 at 12:02
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I got into a similar argument involving my love of avocados... as they were not available in the paleolithic and have been bred only over the past 500 years or so to even have enough flesh for human consumption.

My response? So what?

I do eat fairly copious amounts of kerrygold butter. On the other hand, as much as I love cheese I hardly eat it (mostly because good cheese is $$$, and a binge trigger for me). Some mornings (maybe twice a month) I might put heavy cream in my coffee. I purposely avoid lactose because I get ill from it. But I don't restrict Dairy because it isn't "paleo" - I restrict dairy because I don't how I feel when I eat foods I can't / don't digest well. I still consider my overall diet "paleo" - in fact a lot closer to 1.0 principles than most (I avoid starches), but in the grand scheme of things, the impact of dairy is much less severe than the impact of beans, grains, and tubers to my body.

If I did find a grain I could tolerate well (Oats are the only likely candidate thusfar, but I only eat tiny amounts in haggis) I might try those.

For myself, I use(d) Paleo as the base of the way I eat... and then evolved it to suit my specific needs.

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"So what" suits me. The best paleo gesture for many would be to stop blogging and go for a 20 mile walk. – thhq Apr 7 2012 at 20:37
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I agree - so what? My European ancestors explicitly evolved the genes to handle dairy. I have 'em. I can eat dairy, no issues. Since I know that about myself - why not eat dairy? At the same time I understand that many people, perhaps the majority, don't have those genes. So they should avoid dairy. Live and let live, right? – IfYouSaySo Apr 13 2012 at 0:14
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Dairy is definatly a grey area to me.A few rules i try to follow:

1 Restrict insulin promoting dairy ie milk 2 Eat fermented unpasturised from a good source 3 As with everything do in moderation

I tried to live without dairy for two months and didnt really notice a difference now im in poland visiting family and have access to fresh cow and goats milk from family. I think this has a diffferent taste altogether and "feels" more natural (i know it sounds crazy but i can feel it nourishing my body!).

When back in england i dont bother with shop bought milk. its just not worth it.

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As some have said already, if they're well-tolerated by an individual, there's no reason to avoid them. "Because the caveman" did or didn't do something isn't really the final say on a food or lifestyle. None of us really live like cavemen.

My understanding is that it's different from Atkins in the food quality approach, and in the fact that Paleo itself isn't necessarily low-carb. I suppose any version of Paleo is lower carb than the SAD or AHA recommended diet, but Paleo is mainly concerned with food quality. Macronutrient ratios will vary from individual to individual.

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Who cares? Why be obsessive about it?

Of course they're not paleo. Every bite you eat is Neolithic unless you eat wild things.

More and more I believe the best way to emulate our ancestors is to include plenty of meat in the diet and to stay very active. The rest is playful reenactment, not to be taken too seriously.

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I had not noticed that the OP was obsessive about it? – Warren D Apr 8 2012 at 6:34
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@warren excluding a food group because it is not "paleo" is obsessive IMO. – thhq Apr 8 2012 at 11:30
The guy is just asking a question about why some people consider dairy, paleo? Hardly what you could call being "obsessive". – Warren D Apr 12 2012 at 18:32
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Butter, cheese and cream taste good.

That is why.

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It's my understanding that it's a fudging of the rules, based on lactose. The lactose in dairy products causes problems because many humans haven't fully evolved lactase persistence to break it down; however, "processed" dairy products such as butter and cream (doing anything to the milk besides drinking it is a form of processing) have most of their lactose removed. Since the evolutionary bad actor is gone, and they're delicious, many consider them consistent with a paleo diet in a scientific sense, though not historically accurate.

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Fwiw Casein is also a significant problem. I handle lactose no problem but Casein screws me up in different ways. Or did. Butter and cream have both of these removed because they are more-or-less pure butter fat. – Satchmo Apr 13 2012 at 3:21
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They are not paleo. I think the corporations are trying to trick people into telling them hey this is paleo without evidence that it is. I think they are doing so, so they dont lose out on money on their dairy prodcuts and etc...,. They are tryign to make paleo into a fad diet and it is not a fad diet.

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I still make kefir with milk, I don't think it's the corporations that got me in the end, more like the delicious, locally available milk... – JeJ Apr 7 2012 at 13:29
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"The corporations" have nothing to do with it. Paleo isn't even on their radar. The dairy co-ops and processors (too often the same thing) still orient all their marketing to the low-fat end of things. The high-fat dairy products sit quietly in the dairy case in the back of the store, rarely promoted. When they are promoted, it's as a decadent treat -- this tastes so good you won't care that it's killing you -- and never as a healthier alternative, which would be the way to appeal to the paleo crowd. – Aaron B. Apr 7 2012 at 14:48
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Corporations tricking people into paleo? Lookout! The grass-fed black helicopters are coming! – Joshua Apr 7 2012 at 17:10
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If you don't read Pyncheon you might enjoy him. A genius of grand conspiracy fiction, but be prepared for stream-of-consciousness. – thhq Apr 7 2012 at 20:41
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Thhq - nice! I lol'd. Regarding this answer: the farmer I buy raw milk from is not a corporation trying to trick me, and the local creamery that sells delicious grass-fed cream isn't out to fool me, either. They love their animals; they have a great product; it works in my diet; I purchase it. Nom. – Blossom1 Apr 12 2012 at 19:51
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