• Whitebrow@lemmy.world
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    22 days ago

    What was the joke again…

    “Humans can survive off a diet consisting of potatoes and butter, as demonstrated by a years long case study commonly known as Ireland”

    Something along those lines.

  • Smoogs@lemmy.world
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    21 days ago

    Alls I know is it isn’t ichiban noodles. I ate those for 3 straight weeks and almost lost my nails and hair.

    Nutrition is really important yo. Eat your veggies and balance your fibre and protein.

    • BlameThePeacock@lemmy.ca
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      22 days ago

      You’re missing a bunch of micro nutrients which would cause problems over time with this. It has all the calories and protein you need though.

      Add in some fat from somewhere like cooking oil, and a handful of vegetables like onions, carrots, etc. and you’d last a fairly normal human lifespan.

    • pet the cat, walk the dog@lemmy.world
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      22 days ago

      Buy dried legumes to get proper protein. Both cereals and legumes have protein, but not the full set of essential amino acids. However they complement each other in this regard, hence people living their entire life on rice, beans, and some fish.

      I’d also advise looking into cheapest vegetables and making a salad out of them. Where I am, it’s potato, carrots, and beets — coincidentally the ingredients for a traditional salad. They can be cheaper than rice.

  • FunkyCheese@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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    22 days ago

    For real, steak.

    Its the ultimate elimination diet

    Beef is very nutrient dense and contains all the nutrients a human needs

    The carnivore diet is a thing, and it is just: beef, water and salt.

    Most people who do this, do branch out after a while and add eggs, fish, liver etc

    • hector@lemmy.today
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      22 days ago

      While you can get all the nutrition you need from eating animals, you have to eat the organs as well. Also the stomach contents of herbivores even. Wolves eat the stomach contents of deer and such to get their green requirements, everyone needs some green in their diet. But liver, kidneys, most of the organs need to be consumed if you live on only animals.

      The germanics basically did for a long time. They ate meat, with a little cheese and milk products and a few veggies thrown in there, a negligible amount of grains, for a long time, including the years after they just appeared in central europe around the 1st century BC or so, there were celts and gauls before that in those areas, both broad terms of many groups to be sure.

      But they were all giants for the day, the men were all 6 foot and above, while the romans were more like 5’2" and subsisted mostly on lentils and grains, along with seafood, but very little meat, at least on campaigns. That extra size and bulk obviously didn’t do the germans much good in war, organization means more than brute strength ever could.

  • howrar@lemmy.ca
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    22 days ago

    You can survive off any single food item for some non-zero amount of time. Nothing we know of can allow you to survive forever. The question is always: how long?

    • kata1yst@sh.itjust.works
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      22 days ago

      I’ve often heard repeated that a human can live on water, potatoes, and salted butter basically indefinitely.

      Not sure how true, but seems plausible.

      • Paragone@lemmy.world
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        22 days ago

        “beriberi” is malnutrition: it means literally “i cannot”.

        You become … not very able to do what you need to do, to survive, on this kind of diet, fairly quickly.

    • gilokee@lemmy.world
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      22 days ago

      god I miss Soylent. Cooking/eating is a huge burden for me (depressed and lazy) so I drank the heck out of Soylent when I was in the US. Now in Japan the only thing close is Calorie Mate and it’s not nearly as good/nutritious. :(

      • ggtdbz@lemmy.dbzer0.com
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        21 days ago

        Not to be all “The safest way to ski is not to go skiing”, but throwing together a meal can be a way to exercise some agency during low days. Even if the food itself isn’t very healthy, the process can be good for you.

        I’ll soak some beans overnight and be forced to boil them the next day. The steps are individually low effort and spaced apart (and you can cook beans with zero onions etc if you want) and at the end you can find yourself sitting in front of a hot bowl of good ass beans and feel hey that was good for me.

        Hell, beans out of a can and tomato out of a can over rice out of a pouch can feel like you at least did something, you know? Delivery is relatively cheap where I live and getting into a cycle of being dependent on mass produced food really didn’t help me feel like I had a lot of control over what was happening in my life.