Practical Tips for Integrating Nutritious, Family-Friendly Recipes
“We know that the number one component for aging healthfully and extending our lifespan is the quality of our relationships.” – Shawn Stevenson
On this episode of Well Beyond 40, I’m thrilled to speak with my good friend Shawn Stevenson, bestselling author of Eat Smarter and Sleep Smarter, and host of the top-ranked Model Health Show. Shawn shares the often-overlooked power of communal eating, diving deep into how sharing meals with loved ones can profoundly impact our physical and mental well-being.
Shawn shares how our relationships are fundamental to not only living longer but also living healthier. This episode is a goldmine of actionable advice on fostering these crucial connections through the simple yet profound act of eating together. Shawn’s new family cookbook is filled with delicious, nutritious recipes designed to bring people together around the table, making healthy eating a communal and enjoyable experience.
One of the standout moments is Shawn’s discussion on “healthwashing,” where foods marketed as healthy are actually highly processed and detrimental. He explains how these foods interfere with our metabolism and overall health, and offers practical tips to navigate this tricky landscape. Shawn’s emphasis on making truly nutritious choices that benefit the entire family resonates deeply, especially for those of us striving to maintain our health and vitality in our 40s and beyond.
Tune in to this enlightening episode to hear more about Shawn’s journey, the science behind communal eating, and how you can incorporate these life-enhancing practices into your daily routine. Don’t miss out on Shawn’s invaluable insights and practical tips that will inspire you to build stronger, healthier relationships and take your well-being to the next level. Listen now and transform your health with the power of community!
Freebies From Today’s Episode
Get a FREE copy of Shawn’s “The Waist Reduction Quick-Start Plan”
Timestamps
00:03:49- Shawn Stevenson unpacks the surprising power of eating together with family or friends for better health
00:10:19- The crucial difference between intuitive eating of real food vs. ultra-processed food that skews your nutrient sensing
00:14:19- Shawn is impressively creating recipes from sweet potato protein pancakes to fish dishes in his new cookbook
00:26:14- Investigating how “healthwashing” misleads consumers with foods marketed as healthy that are ultra-processed, and contain carcinogens and obesogens
00:31:45- The importance of detoxification ability in your weight-loss journey
00:36:30- Revealing study: ultra-processed cheese sandwich caused 50% reduction in calorie burn compared to the whole-food version
00:43:33- Remarkable finding: Eating with others you care about at least three times per week has major health benefits
00:46:45- Why managing your waist size matters more than weight for metabolic health and insulin sensitivity
00:49:27- Little-known fact: You can spot reduce belly fat, but it’s not with sit-ups! Grab Shawn’s guide to learn how
Resources Mentioned in this episode
Learn more about Shawn Stevenson and The Model Health Show
7-Day Eat Protein First Challenge
Episode Sponsors:
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JJ: I’m JJ Virgin, PhD dropout, sorry mom, turned four time New York Times best selling author. Yes, I’m a certified nutrition specialist, fitness hall of famer, and I speak at health conferences and trainings around the globe, but I’m driven by my insatiable passion. Satiable curiosity and love of science to keep asking questions, digging for answers and sharing the information that I uncover with as many people as I can.
[00:00:27] JJ: And that’s why I created the Well Beyond 40 podcast to synthesize and simplify the science of health into actionable strategies to help you thrive. In each episode, we’ll talk about what’s working in the world of wellness. From personalized nutrition and healing your metabolism to healthy aging and prescriptive fitness.
[00:00:47] JJ: Join me on the journey to better health so you can love how you look and feel right now and have the energy to play full out at 100. So you’re trying to eat healthier. Maybe you’ve got your workout routine down. And you’re managing stress as best you can, but have you ever thought about the power of eating together with family or friends?
[00:01:08] JJ: We often hear about what we should eat, but what about how we eat and who we eat with? Today I’m incredibly excited because we’re diving into this one. Often overlooked topic with someone who has a wealth of knowledge and insights to share. I’m joined by my longtime buddy, Shawn Stevenson, the best selling author of Eat Smarter and Sleep Smarter, a research scientist, and the host of the amazing Model Health Show, which holds the top spot as the number one health podcast in the United States.
[00:01:38] JJ: This episode is a goldmine of information.
[00:01:41] JJ: Sean Stevenson, welcome back to the show. It is my honor to be here. Well, we’re actually at your show. It’s my honor to be here in my studio with you. Yes. How cool this was. And this is an interesting topic because what we were talking about offline is you did a family cookbook. And at first I was like, well, this podcast is well beyond 40.
[00:02:03] JJ: So there’s not usually little kids at home. They’re not doing family. And what might happen in this situation is you’ve got maybe someone single and they’re just making dinner for themselves or, you know, maybe they’ve got teenagers and who knows where they’re going to show up. So it gets super duper random.
[00:02:23] JJ: Now, I think. Back to when I was in this state where I was single and quite often super random meant I was sitting on the counter by myself eating a bag of siete chips with some hummus. Not really the best way to go with this, but you talk a lot about why we need to eat together and I’m wondering how we solve the problem of This kind of, this kind of stage in life and why we need to, why is it important?
[00:02:51] Shawn Stevenson: This is really the heart of your work too. It’s like, we know the cultural way that things kind of unfold and we need to be intentional about adding certain things in to keep us fit and healthy and not just extending our lifespan, but our healthspan. And, The majority of data, like we’ve got so, we’ve got so many studies on this stuff now, but we know that the number one component for aging healthfully and extending our lifespan is our relationships, the quality of our relationships.
[00:03:23] Shawn Stevenson: And I actually had this really great conversation with Dr. Robert Waldinger, and he’s the director of the longest running longitudinal study on aging. On Human Longevity, Ever Constructed. It’s been over 80 years. He’s the fourth director to get the baton passed to him. And he didn’t even believe the data at first, which was, again, looking at all these other confounding factors.
[00:03:42] Shawn Stevenson: Yes, diet matters. Yes, you know, not smoking. Yes, paying attention to exercise and all these, yes, all this stuff matters. But the quality of our relationships, as he called it, having healthy social bonds was significantly more impactful on how long people live and live healthfully. And we know this, we know that our relationships deeply impact us.
[00:04:04] Shawn Stevenson: And for me, I’m a big why guy. So I’m asking like, why, like, what is it about it? And what it really is, is our relationships are a force multiplier. Our relationships impact our exercise. Yes. Our relationships impact what we’re eating. Our relationships impact how we’re sleeping and how we’re associating with ourselves, our own self talk.
[00:04:26] Shawn Stevenson: Our relationships are impacting, you know, the choices that we make on a day to day basis. So being that it’s controlling so many of those other things, yes, we can like grin and bear it and, you know, do all this stuff solo. But it just makes it more complicated. And so to share this with everybody, for me, this was the, the reason I wrote the book was this was a catalyst of it.
[00:04:49] Shawn Stevenson: And it was this huge meta analysis. It was 148 studies, which is a bunch of studies, but it also included a lot of people. And this was about 300, 000 study participants and these researchers, this was from Brigham Young University. And they found that People who have healthy relationships, healthy social bonds, again, we’ll use that label, they had a 50 percent reduction in all cause mortality.
[00:05:12] Shawn Stevenson: Alright, 50 percent reduction in early death from everything. Alright, that is, again, speaking to an accounted for, beating obesity for exercise, but it was the quality of the relationships that stood out. And so the question is, when life is changing, if we’re not paying attention to this and being intentional about it, yes, things can start to transition to where we’re more isolated, where we are, you know, having like you just used the word random.
[00:05:40] Shawn Stevenson: It’s more random when we’re getting together with people that we care about and that care about us. How can we be more intentional about it moving forward? And that’s what this is really all about. And so just to throw this out, because we mentioned the context of eating, how does this affect our diet?
[00:05:54] Shawn Stevenson: What, what data do we have on this? Well, there was a study that was published actually, uh, right before I started thinking about writing, you know, this cookbook. And this was in 2018 when it was published and it was published in Nutrition Journal. And they found that people who do frequently eat alone and are more, you know, eat in isolation more often, do in fact have poor diet quality overall.
[00:06:15] Shawn Stevenson: They tend to eat more ultra processed foods and they also most notably have a significantly lower intake of essential nutrients that help us to fight off diseases. And what tends to happen again, if we’re just, why would we cook a whole meal for just ourselves? Right? And we start to just like lean on these other things.
[00:06:32] Shawn Stevenson: And so, with all that being said, I feel that under the spirit of eating together, it’s like such a great opportunity to check so many boxes. Yeah. Right? So we can have that relationship time and that connection time and get all those benefits, which we’ll talk about, and also do this with amazing food.
[00:06:51] Shawn Stevenson: And the last time, well, the last time I saw you, I think you were here, right? At the studio, but before that, we were eating together, you know, and just being able to hang out. And also to just, you pick up things too when you’re eating around people. And, you know, it’s just, it’s such a beautiful part of being alive and we don’t want to miss out on, on this.
[00:07:11] Shawn Stevenson: And so this is the homework already. We’re going to get to the homework early in the class, which is let’s set the intention to spend more time and to be that person. If, if you, if you don’t have this as a consistent. Be the person who gets people together, you know, maybe schedule a dinner with friends. I mean, by the way, it’s not just family.
[00:07:32] Shawn Stevenson: It’s not just kids, but also your friends. You know, this could be co workers. This could be, there’s so many different flavors of this. You’re, you’re, I don’t know, the team that you might be on, you know, intramurals or whatever. Get people together and make this a consistent weekly part of your life. Yeah, you know, You know how they say when your kids leave after they graduate high school, they have some horrendous stat of how much you’ll ever see them again.
[00:07:58] JJ: And I’m thinking, huh, cause I see my kids. I see one of my sons every day comes over and walks the dogs. And the other one comes over every Sunday, every Sunday night, my husband, my ex husband and my two kids. And, All the dogs, because they’re involved in the dinner too, a little too involved in my opinion, like not a good dog trainer.
[00:08:18] JJ: Um, we always have this dinner and it’s like, it is the greatest thing. And as you were talking at first, my, I was pushing back a little bit at first cause I was thinking, Oh, but what happens? Cause I hear this so often. Well, my family doesn’t want to eat healthy like I do. Or, you know, for us, all our friends eat the way we eat, so it’s fine.
[00:08:39] JJ: But what would you say to someone who said, I’d love to invite people over, but they, they, you know, want to have a pizza, or they don’t want to eat healthy. I love this. This is the benefit of like, I’ve worked in the real world with real people for many years. You know, I spent a decade working as a clinician and really starting to look at people’s lives, you know, getting a bird’s eye view, because sometimes when you’re in it.
[00:09:03] Shawn Stevenson: We’re not able to see all the, you know, the forest for the trees, right? And so being able to see and to find those leverage points, you know, I’m a big proponent of, of finding leverage. And so this is even the basis of why I created this cookbook. I’m a big foodie. I love, I love food. All right. Our friends are like, we know the people who are like the head of each diet framework, right?
[00:09:27] Shawn Stevenson: The top paleo person, the carnivore person, the vegan person, the eat to live, don’t live to eat person, you know, these are all friends and colleagues. And respectfully, I think that all of them are right and wrong. You know, we can be, have a, you know, really genuine sentiment to say, eat to live, don’t live to eat.
[00:09:45] Shawn Stevenson: You know, food is supposed to be energy, but. For me, just being a very logical person at that, why are we driven to eat certain things? Why are certain things attractive to us? Why do any animals? Why do any creature on earth go towards certain things? And they go towards things that they’re desirable to them.
[00:10:04] Shawn Stevenson: They taste good. And there’s tons of studies on this, even looking at like, you know, um, Sheep, for example, right? This is getting a little weird, but just follow me. There’s this phenomenon called post ingestive feedback. All right. And so these scientists were just trying to understand like, why would these sheep go and eat this particular food at this particular time?
[00:10:26] Shawn Stevenson: And what it is, and we do the same thing as well. Whenever we eat a food, our cells, our bodies are so intelligent. It’s just literally taking notes on What we got along with that food, say we eat some cherries, for example, and our cells are tracking, our cells don’t have labels and names for these things.
[00:10:45] Shawn Stevenson: We do that as humans, but our cells know that it picked up some vitamin C. It picked up a natural food source of melatonin. That’s interesting. It picked up some anthocyanins. It picked up these, you know, array of antioxidants, whatever, you know, some selenium, whatever the case might be, right? It picked up all these different things from these cherries.
[00:11:04] Shawn Stevenson: And so. If we were living in a natural context, if, for example, we would run low on this particular nutrient, maybe our body really needed some of these anthocyanins to heal something. We know, our body remembers, that those cherries have that and it would inspire a craving for us to go and seek out more of those cherries.
[00:11:23] Shawn Stevenson: Right? And so that’s what they were seeing with these sheep. They would go based on the nutrients because they were basically combining flavors along with certain nutrients to try to trick the lamb system. And so they started to crave certain things when they became deficient on certain things. All right.
[00:11:38] Shawn Stevenson: And so, you know, having this as like our blueprint, we’re driven through flavor, but now this is the rub.
[00:11:45] JJ: Yeah, I was just saying, nowadays,
[00:11:47] Shawn Stevenson: this desire to eat tasty things has been manipulated by brilliant, I’m talking, they’re, they’re, they’re brilliant food scientists. And one of the more recent, well, this was actually decades ago, but it should really been perfected recently, is something called a gas chromatograph.
[00:12:05] Shawn Stevenson: And basically, you know, scientists were able to isolate. The chemistry to make certain flavors, right? So that cherry that I mentioned earlier, they can use chemistry to come up with that cherry flavor. Now add that cherry flavor to things that are not cherry, right? We can add that to Coke. We can add that to ice cream.
[00:12:23] Shawn Stevenson: We can add that to candy and it doesn’t have to taste exactly the same. That’s the thing. Cause he was like, well, the Coke doesn’t really taste like cherry, but it’s just enough to like, Muddy of those metabolic waters where your body doesn’t really know, like, what am I actually getting with this flavor, right?
[00:12:39] Shawn Stevenson: And obviously the addiction quality there, you know, and the gluteomorphins and the sugar and all these different things that really manipulate our biology. And so I’m saying all this to say that what if, and you are, everybody already knows that this is real, but what if we can have the most amazing food experiences with real food?
[00:13:03] Shawn Stevenson: And that’s the hallmark of the Smarter Family Cookbook, you know, my family, we’ve, we’ve always been like, we love brunch, you know, breakfast for dinner type family, you know, like we’ll, we’ll do that. And but I also know that going to McDonald’s and the hot cakes and sausage that I used to get, or, you know, International Hot House of Pancakes, I hop now, um, the quality of those things is so poor and you feel it, you feel that food coma after eating that stuff.
[00:13:31] Shawn Stevenson: And so. I came up with this amazing sweet, instead of this highly refined flour, using sweet potatoes as the base and making these delicious sweet potato protein pancakes. Really? So increasing the protein fraction. Sweet potato as
[00:13:45] JJ: a base?
[00:13:45] Shawn Stevenson: Yes.
[00:13:46] JJ: How do you do that? All right. Let’s hear it. So, I mean, this is Like now I want to dig into the cookbook.
[00:13:53] JJ: Because I didn’t get this ahead of time. Yeah. But I just flipped it open. I flipped it open and I saw bacon and I was like, all right, we can, we can have a conversation because there’s bacon in here. You say
[00:14:02] Shawn Stevenson: this too. Everybody’s invited to the picnic. All right. Everybody’s invited to the Eats Smarter Family Cookbook.
[00:14:08] Shawn Stevenson: We’ve got recipes for every diet. So you
[00:14:10] JJ: covered every religion in here. What is your, because that’s, I mean, that’s how I think of these things. It’s like, you know, I, I view diets as tools. Yeah. Let’s see. So maybe, maybe carnivore for a month is going to do some great healing and then you move over to something else.
[00:14:25] JJ: They’re tools. But I, it’s so amazing. I flipped right to sweet potato protein pancakes. So first thing I have to ask you is, did you make these recipes up?
[00:14:32] Shawn Stevenson: Yes.
[00:14:33] JJ: You really did.
[00:14:33] Shawn Stevenson: These are my recipes. I am so impressed. I’ll tell you, there’s a hundred recipes, right? And there’s also 250 scientific references.
[00:14:41] Shawn Stevenson: Embedded in this book too, like why we do what we’re doing. And
[00:14:43] JJ: this was like number one
[00:14:45] Shawn Stevenson: cookbook, number one new release cookbook in in the United States when it came out. That’s a
[00:14:49] JJ: huge, huge thing.
[00:14:50] Shawn Stevenson: It’s nuts. This is a
[00:14:51] JJ: huge thing. Usually the number one cookbook is something. Like the Paula Deen or that Barefoot Contessa.
[00:14:59] JJ: It’s, you know, pissed off,
[00:15:00] Shawn Stevenson: but buy my cookbook anyways. It’s the
[00:15:02] JJ: ones that’s like, I’m going to take a donut, cut it in half and put a burger in there. Right? I mean, that’s what it usually is. It’s not this. It’s not honey sriracha salmon and sheep pan fish with Meyer mayo, lemon sauce and asparagus. Amazing.
[00:15:15] JJ: Okay. Let’s go back to the sweet potatoes.
[00:15:17] Shawn Stevenson: Yes. So, oh, but also just to, right before we get to that, my I love how you called it. Basically, these diet camps do become really religiosity, really. Um, I think that it’s, it’s really valuable if you experiment with any, any of these things to speak from a place of experience.
[00:15:38] Shawn Stevenson: And so, I’ve done all the things. I’ve been in this field for 21 years and I’ve done, but I’ll do them years at a time. I was trying to explain to somebody yesterday, I was at my son’s basketball practice, um, that I was, I did a vegan diet Protocol for five years when I was, I was a vegan
[00:15:55] JJ: for five years.
[00:15:56] Shawn Stevenson: Yeah. And when I was a hundred percent raw food for over two years, I couldn’t do that living in Missouri in the winter.
[00:16:03] JJ: Wow.
[00:16:03] Shawn Stevenson: Right. And I didn’t, this is when I do something, I’m a hundred percent type of person, you know, so the only hot thing that I had was tea. Oh my goodness. You know, and we had, we were dehydrated.
[00:16:16] Shawn Stevenson: I don’t want to talk about that. I don’t want to talk about how I was, but I’ll tell you the beginning of that was amazing. You know, the level of clarity, the energy, all the things, but also you got to look at What was I coming from?
[00:16:30] JJ: Exactly.
[00:16:31] Shawn Stevenson: So what were you coming from? I was living in Ferguson, Missouri, you know, one of the most notable food deserts, quote, food deserts in the United States.
[00:16:38] Shawn Stevenson: And, and I also want to make a shift with that term because that evokes this belief that like it’s hard to find healthy food. No, the healthy food was there. It’s really more akin to like a food swamp where we’re just inundated with really, really low quality food. And there’s healthy food there as well.
[00:16:57] Shawn Stevenson: Oh, we’re not attuned, we’re not attuned to it. I didn’t know. Don’t you feel like
[00:17:00] JJ: that’s everybody nowadays, though? Like if you go into a Publix or a Vons, there’s healthy food there, but you’re also inundated. With all of the rest of the stuff.
[00:17:13] Shawn Stevenson: Yeah. I mean, what it really is living in a place like Ferguson, it’s an extreme.
[00:17:17] Shawn Stevenson: It’s a, it’s a, it’s an extreme because when I walk out of my apartment complex, there’s like a liquor store and then there’s a Papa John’s, there’s a Dairy Queen. There’s, you know, there’s two McDonald’s within a mile radius. Like, I mean, I’m just surrounded by this, and it’s very cheap. It’s like, zoning, like, this shouldn’t even be allowed, but in that community, and I don’t see that living in Sherman Oaks, there’s nothing remotely close to all that exposure.
[00:17:44] Shawn Stevenson: So that’s, that’s really what it is. And, um, so with that being said, paleo protocol, you know, again, all these guys are my friends. Um, the, the keto protocol, it, I don’t really share this. Often only a couple of you know this. I’m leaning in. When I went in for my book prior to this one, Eat Smarter, which was, you know, a really special book.
[00:18:07] Shawn Stevenson: When I went in for that book deal, I had like maybe 11 offers for that. When I went into my, who I ultimately chose, they were just like, so what is this book going to be? This is going to be like a keto book, you know? And they had all these keto books from their authors on the shelf, it’s hot. So they’re doing what’s hot, right?
[00:18:23] Shawn Stevenson: And I’m just like, no, this is kind of like a anti any of these frameworks, because my advocation through that book was to teach you how to make choices that work for you, where you are right now, and knowing that that’s probably going to change and that’s okay. And so with all that being said, Everybody should be invited.
[00:18:41] Shawn Stevenson: We need to stop with all this infighting because the reality is, and this is according to the BMJ, one of our most prestigious medical journals, while 65 percent of the average American’s diet is ultra processed, fake, newly invented food. Yeah,
[00:18:55] JJ: that’s amazing. And we’re
[00:18:56] Shawn Stevenson: in here, we’re fighting about eating asparagus.
[00:18:59] Shawn Stevenson: Like, this diet says asparagus is bad. Like, just, if we focus on real food and what unites us, and we could talk about the minutiae, but, We’re not going to help people if we’re being dogmatic.
[00:19:09] JJ: Amen.
[00:19:11] Shawn Stevenson: So. Nature
[00:19:11] JJ: in the majors. Yeah.
[00:19:13] Shawn Stevenson: And now, you know, to circle to the sweet potato pancakes. So you can make the sweet potatoes, whatever works for you.
[00:19:20] Shawn Stevenson: You know, this could, you could bake them. You could, you know, peel them and, and, you know, boil it. You could pop them in the microwave. I’m not a big fan of the microwave, but just to get it soft so that you could stir it as make it a batter, you know, and add the other ingredients. How’d you
[00:19:33] JJ: find out about making sweet potato pancakes?
[00:19:34] JJ: Pancakes out of sweet potatoes. Did you come up with this?
[00:19:37] Shawn Stevenson: So the closest thing that I had an exposure to was like, honestly, I came to LA before I moved here and I had a sweet potato donut at this restaurant, right? And it always stuck in my mind and I was like, how can I make this into a pancake and also add protein?
[00:19:52] JJ: Yeah,
[00:19:52] Shawn Stevenson: right. So you can use your respective protein powder, whether it’s a whey protein or you know, But vegan or vegetarian option, uh, to increase the protein fraction as well. So you don’t feel that food coma.
[00:20:03] JJ: Nice.
[00:20:04] Shawn Stevenson: And there’s also, but the, the, here’s the magic in the experimenting is like finding the right texture because you don’t want your, some of these people are making these healthy pancakes and they’re all, they’re nutty as shit.
[00:20:17] Shawn Stevenson: Sean, I’ll tell you the funniest
[00:20:18] JJ: story. I had, I think it was when we were doing sugar impact diet cookbook. And, You know, I went, we had a food stylist make this stuff, and then I was going on one of the news shows, and we had all the food sitting there, and we were going to talk it through. Well, the pancakes had been sitting there for like two hours before I’m going on, and this newscaster goes to grab one of these things.
[00:20:39] JJ: It was like grabbing a tire. I mean, it was, and, and I’m like, and it’s live. I’m like, I’m like, no.
[00:20:48] Shawn Stevenson: I’ve had one of those experiences. You know, I went on, um, uh, uh, a TV show when I was working as a nutritionist and doing nutrition classes. And it was a hot, hot chocolate that I was making and they kept it in this kettle, right?
[00:21:03] Shawn Stevenson: And it was simmering to keep it hot. So it thickened up. All right. And the, the news anchors like pouring it. And at the end of the segment, and it’s just like coming out and like, it’s not coming out right. Yeah. And I’m just like, Oh my God. So,
[00:21:17] JJ: but
[00:21:18] Shawn Stevenson: yeah, you know, and that’s the, that’s the news for you.
[00:21:21] JJ: But,
[00:21:21] Shawn Stevenson: you know, funny enough, one of the cool experiences was, um, the week that the book came out, the Eastman Family Cookbook, I went on Good Morning America.
[00:21:29] Shawn Stevenson: And, um, I had this amazing chili recipe that’s in the book, by the way. And. Within that, just being able to bring my family along, you know, so I have my two sons there with me and my wife and just kind of taking them on this adventure and getting them these exposures. And so this is very much about family and not just eating together, but just finding active activities and just being more.
[00:21:53] Shawn Stevenson: intentional about how can you find time to spend time, you know, especially when everybody’s got stuff, you know, as, as people get old. Yes. And that, that statistics you mentioned about like how little you’ll spend time with your kid after a certain age, it’s like that stuff can hit you, you know, punch in the gut, or it can be a catalyst for like, let me really focus right now.
[00:22:14] Shawn Stevenson: You know, and really see this person and invest in them and, and, and love them as much as I can.
[00:22:21] JJ: And they’ll probably come back
[00:22:22] Shawn Stevenson: if you do that. They’ll probably come back.
[00:22:24] JJ: But you’ve, you brought up a couple of things that have jarred my memory. One of them, you know, you’re finally coming to MindShare this year.
[00:22:30] JJ: Yay. And one of the things that I’ve always prided myself there is because here, you’ve got all of these health experts. So literally we have. The fruititarian, the vegan, the carnivore, the keto, the paleo, I mean everything, right? The chef’s there to try to find a hotel that would pull this off. Um, but it’s always been my joke as I go, I have the carnivore and the keto and the vegan all eating together.
[00:22:53] JJ: Yeah. And everyone gets along. This last weekend when we did our wine mastermind, the, we found a French chef in Paso Robles and he had to cook without gluten or butter. He was like, He took this on as his greatest challenge. Then we had vegans, and we had keto, we had everything in there, and everyone’s, everyone’s eating together, and no one’s judging each other, and it was super fun.
[00:23:16] Shawn Stevenson: To make French dish, I would make this dish without
[00:23:20] JJ: the butter. Then, you know, Cynthia and I did something in Miami last year, and what we decided to do, we rented an Airbnb, and we decided, It’s probably not the best idea, but it was very fun. We, we just, we all made dinners and breakfasts together. Now, granted, dinner ended up being at like nine o’clock at night.
[00:23:37] JJ: Cause we start cooking at six and it became a whole thing, but it was so fun. And so when you look at ways that you can spend time together, you can actually do the whole thing together. Like, have people over and, you know, we’ll either have people bring things, like if we’re doing a holiday, everyone brings something, or my son Bryce loves to cook, so we’re all in the kitchen cooking together.
[00:23:59] JJ: And it’s super fun.
[00:24:00] Shawn Stevenson: This is, this goes back to, you know, that, that initial question of like, the apprehension that might be there, right? So if we’re already coming to the table, literally, like, I just recently had over a friend of mine, uh, Dr. Michael Beckwith came by, and he was like, He’s more, you know, plant based, right?
[00:24:18] Shawn Stevenson: And so we have this, uh, enchilada. So it’s like a sweet potato enchilada bake, which is fire, so good. But there’s the template of the recipe is vegetarian, right? And but you can add whatever you want, ground beef. So we made another version that had ground beef. That’s more like pizza like for me personally, right?
[00:24:40] Shawn Stevenson: But why haven’t I been invited
[00:24:42] JJ: over? What’s a girl gotta do? You can move in, JJ. Don’t say that, be very careful.
[00:24:49] Shawn Stevenson: Be careful what you ask for. Yep, yep, yep. But, you know, and the same thing, you know, we’re, we love burgers as well. You know, we’re, we’re a burger family. So, we’ve got a grass fed beef burger we’ve got, which is a quintessential, like, dad burger.
[00:25:02] Shawn Stevenson: We’ve got a salmon burger, which is, uh, It’s probably my favorite recipe right now. I just, it’s so good. It’s just so good. So it’s a salmon, it’s a salmon burger. You know, you use it, you need a binder. And, but it’s the, it’s this amazing olive mayo that goes along with it and the arugula, which again, all these things are options to put on what you, on the burger, but the combination together.
[00:25:23] Shawn Stevenson: We’ll knock your socks off. All right. And then we, but we also have a real food veggie burger too, because that’s another issue. Like folks are wanting to do a vegetarian protocol and they’re eating these trash. Yeah. Like talk about the plant
[00:25:39] JJ: based meat out there. Let’s, let’s just get into it a little bit.
[00:25:41] JJ: Cause you know, you talked about ultra process, but I feel like the gray zone that’s dangerous is this area of poser foods.
[00:25:50] Shawn Stevenson: Yeah.
[00:25:51] JJ: You know, they hide out at Whole Foods. Yeah. They look like they’re, they’re healthy. What’s up with them?
[00:25:57] Shawn Stevenson: So this is using this, it’s a term called health washing, right? Because I do not know this term.
[00:26:04] Shawn Stevenson: Yeah. So it’s just using these catch catch phrases, these healthy terms like gluten free. Like plant based, like, you know, like for us, you know, when we got started in this field, low fat, slapping that label on there, it’s health washing. It’s using, it’s using this like framework or this, you know, this moniker in the minds of the people and applying that to your food to negate the fact that this is an ultra processed garbage, right?
[00:26:30] Shawn Stevenson: So for me, when I was trying to get healthy and not eat a kid’s cereal anymore because I was eating like You know, honey nut Cheerios or whatever. And I was like, I’m going to eat these Quaker oatmeal squares, right? The, there’s nothing more wholesome than the Quaker, you know, and, uh, but not realizing that this is an ultra processed food to the highest degree.
[00:26:50] Shawn Stevenson: And actually this was, this is a fun fact. Which I had no idea about this when I was doing the research for the book, but I was utilizing some data from the Environmental Working Group, and they actually went and tested the most popular cereal brands for glyphosate, right? And by the way, glyphosate, and this is, you know, the, the World Health Organization and their data, is classified as a class 2a carcinogen.
[00:27:17] Shawn Stevenson: All right. So this is not, it does not absolutely cause cancer. It’s probable. It probably causes cancer in humans. All right. And so they, they looked at all these foods and basically they found every popular cereal was contaminated with glyphosate at levels that are higher than what was deemed to be safe.
[00:27:35] JJ: Wow.
[00:27:36] Shawn Stevenson: And, and our body stores this. Well, we can, we can circle back and talk about that. Yes. Let’s circle back. But the highest concentration. of glyphosate, and all the cereals it tested was Quaker oatmeal squares. My former favorite cereal, when Ann met me, I had a bunch of, because I was trying to recycle, even though I lived in the hood, I was trying to do my part, right?
[00:27:55] Shawn Stevenson: So there was all these empty boxes when she came over the first time of this Quaker oatmeal cereal. And little did I know, I was consuming such a high amount of number, number one, of course, probable human carcinogen, but also a notable obesogen.
[00:28:08] JJ: Yeah.
[00:28:09] Shawn Stevenson: Are. Yeah. Talk about obesogens. So these are, as a carcinogen, is a cancer causing agent?
[00:28:15] Shawn Stevenson: Obesogens are obesity causing agents. So these manipulate our biology in, in such a way that they contribute or fortify or sustain obesity. Outside of the context of this calories in, calories out model, it alters our metabolism so that our body starts to tilt towards body fat accumulation. And the thing about any of these conversations, you know, it’s, it’s unfortunately, you know, I went to a conventional university and took multiple biology classes and nutritional science and all this stuff.
[00:28:48] Shawn Stevenson: And we were not taught these things. And we were taught this very linear, Just really tunnel vision about looking at human biology. And the reality is, for example, just understanding our fat cells. Like we in our society, we’re kind of programmed to hate our fat cells. Like we just want them to go away, but our fat cells are incredibly intelligent, efficient, Like, they’ve helped us to evolve and survive as a species, like, they’re there to be able to store energy in the case that we need it.
[00:29:20] Shawn Stevenson: Thank you, fat cells. Here’s one of the insights that I was not taught in school. Our fat cells can expand upwards of, you know, contain a thousand times its, its, its size, its value. So they can expand substantially, it can carry a lot, but they’re not designed to carry that much. And so when our fat cells begin to become, we’ll say.
[00:29:42] Shawn Stevenson: overly filled, it starts to set off an immune response, right? And so this is one of the things that we see when we venture into a high state of overweight and obesity is an overactive immune system, right? So essentially it’s sending out a false distress signal to our immune system that we’re carrying an infection, right?
[00:30:01] Shawn Stevenson: And so this higher level of inflammation, which everybody’s talking about now, I’ve been talking about this for a decade, you know, this inflammation component, this is increasing the risk of all manner of. Disease and dysfunction, whether it’s infectious diseases, chronic diseases, inflammation is really this kind of hallmark.
[00:30:18] Shawn Stevenson: And with that being said, our fat cells with these compounds, they can be lipoic or lipo. So phobic is like, I don’t mess with you. Mm-Hmm. Phi is, let me end, let me, let me end, let me connect. And so compound like glyphosate is lipophilic. Alright, so, those fat cells will gladly contain that and hold on to it.
[00:30:40] Shawn Stevenson: And this is one of the things, and there’s some data on this, we can actually put a study for folks in your show notes as well, showing that as people are losing weight, they’re seeing an increase in some of these compounds in their bloodstream. And it can be one of those things that is a little bit scary.
[00:30:56] Shawn Stevenson: And do we want to lose weight very quickly if we’re going to increase this overall kind of toxic load that our body’s trying to deal with and metabolize? Because our fat cells essentially are helping to keep us safe in a highly toxic world.
[00:31:08] JJ: Right. And it’s why we need to make sure that there’s so much when you start to think about losing weight that you need to think about to do it safely.
[00:31:18] JJ: And one of them is the ability of your body to detoxify well. Okay. Cool. So the minute you started talking about all your, your oatmeal squares, cause your body, I used to say your body isn’t a bank account, it’s a chemistry lab. Now I say it is a bank account, it is a chemistry lab, and it’s a history book.
[00:31:35] JJ: And you look at your fat cells as the little history books, right? And as you’re releasing fat, you’re freeing up all these toxins. You better be getting it out or you’re going to get in trouble. So You know, sauna for the win, all those non starchy deep green leafies and fiber and protein. So what, what is your process when you’re, you know, what do you tell people about these obesogenic foods and now you’re freeing up fat?
[00:32:02] JJ: What do they do?
[00:32:03] Shawn Stevenson: And by the way, let’s add to the mix. Exercise as well. And I, if you just even look at the word exercise, it’s very close to the word exorcise, which is like to get rid of something, right? From all my years of research and Just look again, we’ve created the label of exercise and we have an image of what that is.
[00:32:25] Shawn Stevenson: Movement is a primary mode of detoxification for the body as well, you know, so just having these things we can it’s more complicated today because we are living in a It’s a pretty complicated environment, but if we’re subscribing to these things, like you just said, making sure that we’re sweating, right?
[00:32:44] Shawn Stevenson: Whether that’s with the sauna, whether that’s through exercise, you know, maybe put, you know, a hoodie on or something like that. And eating really high quality foods, our bodies can still handle a lot of this stuff. And so
[00:32:57] JJ: So 65 percent of Because I just heard this actually on another podcast this morning that we’re eating like 65 70 percent of our diet is ultra processed foods.
[00:33:07] Shawn Stevenson: Yeah.
[00:33:07] JJ: And so if all that someone did, and there’s no way to eat ultra processed foods without getting toxins.
[00:33:16] Shawn Stevenson: Yeah.
[00:33:16] JJ: Right? Besides just, you know, poor nutrient value. And so you’re not getting the nutrient density you need. You’re getting a lot of, like, simple carbs, sugars, but you’re also getting things like glyphosates and bad oils, damaged oils.
[00:33:30] JJ: Like it’s just a
[00:33:32] Shawn Stevenson: Listen. One of the most overlooked aspects of this is, again, all these newly invented, you know, food dyes and, you know, artificial flavorings and, you know, all of these things, it’s just a conglomeration of chemicals, you know, it’s not really food, like to call Kellogg’s, you know, Corn Flakes or, you know, Lucky Charms food is like, it’s really stretching it.
[00:33:59] Shawn Stevenson: It’s not really food. It’s like all of these things are incredibly abnormal and so far removed from anything real.
[00:34:05] JJ: But now we’ve created like, this is where I have had the challenge with intuitive eating. Cause I go intuitive eating doesn’t work unless you’re eating real food and you’d have to have been eating real food for a while so that your body recognizes it.
[00:34:19] JJ: Because if you’ve been eating ultraprocessed food, you’ve so screwed up your nutrient sensing and your taste buds that you have no idea what you’re really looking for.
[00:34:29] Shawn Stevenson: Yeah, yeah. The intuition that’s saying to call Papa John’s is like, that’s a new, that’s a new intuition. You know what I mean? And, but here’s the thing too, and not to, not to completely villainize these entities, you know, these companies, you know, Papa John’s, uh, for example.
[00:34:48] Shawn Stevenson: When I was In college, we had the Papa John’s special at my campus, and it’d be 5 for a large, one topping, you know, and we use that generously, you know, and it’s like, these are all food experiences that are part of being in the world. This world in 2024, which is amazing. Like it’s really cool. We’ve got all these cool things that we can come up with and invent and all this stuff.
[00:35:12] Shawn Stevenson: But when it becomes the majority of our diet, or even, even a sizable percentage of our diet, all manner of metabolic problems start to happen. It’s just because it’s not real food, you know? And so, My advocation is for people to, let’s not villainize that stuff or even like psychologically try to fight ourselves.
[00:35:29] Shawn Stevenson: Let’s just crowd it out. Crowd it out with the good stuff. Just focus more on adding in rather than subtracting.
[00:35:35] JJ: I had a great mentor early on in nutrition. He said, he said, add before you take away. And it is why I like the E protein first. I’m like, if you do that, it crowds some of it out. I mean, you think of little kids, they get full and stop eating.
[00:35:51] JJ: Now, it might not be that much anymore because they’re eating ultra processed food. And I think I heard you, didn’t you talk about that cheese sandwich study?
[00:36:01] Shawn Stevenson: Yes. Yes, I did. How do you remember that? Yeah.
[00:36:03] JJ: I heard you talking about it on some, Podcast. I’m like, I got to find that cheese sandwich study, but I’d love you to share it because that’s such a great example of what these things can do.
[00:36:12] Shawn Stevenson: Yeah. So I talked about this in my, in my previous book, the just eat smarter. So it’s more of the big idea book. And this was a huge national bestseller. Just like took off like a rocket. I was blown away. Um, and it was the number one new release in the United States as well, but. Um, the cookbook is different, you know, like that’s more like eat this and you know, the pictures and all this stuff.
[00:36:33] Shawn Stevenson: But the initial book, Eat Smarter, I talked about this study and you know, what the researchers did was they had test subjects to consume, you know, these two different sandwiches. So it’s basically like a crossover study. And one is what they called, you know, whole food sandwich and put that in air quotes and another was an ultra process version of it.
[00:36:53] Shawn Stevenson: And here’s the key. They were the same amount of. fats, proteins, and carbohydrates. And they had the same amount of fats, proteins, and carbohydrates, and the same amount of calories. This is very important. All right. Same amount, but one food was whole grain bread and cheddar cheese. And the other was White bread and cheese product.
[00:37:16] JJ: What I got sent to school with almost every day growing up, by the way. I
[00:37:19] Shawn Stevenson: know
[00:37:19] JJ: about
[00:37:20] Shawn Stevenson: that. All right. So the cheese product, that’s like Kraft singles. Then it’s not called Kraft cheese. It’s called singles because they can’t legally call it cheese. It’s cheese product. All right. So same amount of calories, same macronutrient ratio.
[00:37:35] Shawn Stevenson: Here’s what happened. After consuming the respective sandwiches, the people when they ate the ultra processed version of the sandwich, they had about a 50 percent reduction in calorie burn after eating that sandwich. All right. It effectively was creating like what I would call hormonal clogs to where the body was not metabolizing and releasing this energy.
[00:37:57] Shawn Stevenson: It was just like, Crowding it away, sticking it away and holding on to it. And again, this is outside of the context of calories. It’s not just calories in, calories out. It’s the quality of food that you’re eating is an epicaloric controller. of how your body’s going to handle those calories, right?
[00:38:17] Shawn Stevenson: Calories do matter. It’s a, again, this is a socially accepted term that we use to describe the energy content in the food, but even that is massively flawed. And in that book actually took people through the origin because again, I’m a big Y guy that where this calorie concept come from. And it didn’t start off in nutrition.
[00:38:37] Shawn Stevenson: It was like in physics, you know, but then it, Kind of parlayed its way over into nutrition and you got to understand the nutrition calorie content on these different processed foods. They’re not using a bomb calorimeter in measuring how much they’re just it’s gross. It’s like grass generally accepted as like this is how much is in there.
[00:38:57] Shawn Stevenson: You don’t know. And I think it can be
[00:38:59] JJ: it can vary. By like 20%.
[00:39:02] Shawn Stevenson: Yeah.
[00:39:02] JJ: Could you imagine if your savings account interest rate varied by 20 percent or your budget, you were off by 20%? Oh man, that
[00:39:09] Shawn Stevenson: would be crazy. Like, I mean,
[00:39:10] JJ: that could be the difference between going bankrupt or not.
[00:39:13] Shawn Stevenson: Yeah.
[00:39:13] JJ: So that’s what I’ve heard is it can be off by 20 percent of course, and it’s how you’re metabolizing it as well.
[00:39:19] Shawn Stevenson: Yeah. And that’s the key too. You know, you have a unique metabolism. My metabolism is not like yours and how our bodies process. certain aspects of those calories as well. You know, you’re, again, the protein first concept is so intelligent. Like it’s just, it’s easy. It’s, it’s, number one, it’s easy. And it is incredibly effective because when you’re consuming, again, like we’ll go back and use a bomb calorimeter.
[00:39:47] Shawn Stevenson: And if people are like wondering what the hell is that, um, this is the original way that we measured how much energy is in food, right? So you basically incinerate the food and see how much it can heat up water basically. And here’s the rub with these calorie counts. It’s not taking into account the indigestible.
[00:40:07] Shawn Stevenson: Parts of the food, right? You don’t, you’re not a bio calorimeter. You don’t process and take the calories out of everything that’s supposed to be in there. You don’t. And also certain things cost more calories to burn, right? And that’s the protein. Protein is more expensive. Your body burns more energy to break down the protein.
[00:40:27] Shawn Stevenson: And I believe my theory, because we don’t know why, my theory is that it is such a valuable macronutrient for our biology, for our evolution. Our body really goes to work to get as much as it can from that protein. So it really puts emphasis and energy on breaking those, that, that protein dense food into amino acids.
[00:40:48] Shawn Stevenson: Because every cell in your body is using amino acids. When we’re talking about hormones, estrogen, and testosterone, and neurotransmitters, and all this stuff, these are all based on amino acids. Of course, yes, fat is a component too, by the way, cholesterol with building our sex hormones. But we’re talking about amino acids, all right?
[00:41:07] Shawn Stevenson: Our hormones, our amino acids. And so, it’s so valuable to build the stuff that life happens on, that things run on.
[00:41:14] JJ: And we don’t have any storage depot, really, for them. Unless we want to rip up our muscles. I mean, we’ve got fat stores. Like, while fat’s essential and protein’s essential, we have a place to store fat.
[00:41:25] JJ: It is really interesting that mother nature didn’t make it so that we could really, that we have to have those amino acids in. All the time.
[00:41:35] Shawn Stevenson: So what does this point to with this, you know, whole food meal versus ultra processed meal? My advocation is at least 80 percent if you could target that being real food that you can actually recognize where it comes from and just kind of, you know, leave the play, you know, 20 percent play room.
[00:41:54] Shawn Stevenson: I personally probably have around 90 10, you know, because I don’t want to be that person because I’m, some people might think that I’m a hundred percent. I don’t eat anything that would be deemed to be, you know, like an ultra processed food. But if I’m like taking my son to, I don’t know, the basketball game and I don’t know what the hell is in those nachos, um, it’s okay.
[00:42:18] Shawn Stevenson: You know, I have a couple of nachos, you know, but
[00:42:21] JJ: I think we get, if we get a B plus A minus, the way I see it is the poorer your metabolic health, the smaller your margin for error. Because you got to heal your metabolism. But once you’re there, right, once you’re there, like A B
[00:42:37] Shawn Stevenson: You just said one of the most profound things that we don’t think about.
[00:42:40] Shawn Stevenson: The best time to have a food that might be sketchy is when you feel good, is when you’re healthy. But we tend to do it at the opposite time. When we’re feeling down, when we might be, you know, really stressed out. Your body is going to interact with that food very differently. And that’s another thing that I, you know, I’m addressing in the E Smarter Family Cookbook is like how your body associates with food is different based on your mental and emotional state.
[00:43:05] Shawn Stevenson: And this is why eating with friends and family. It has all these really remarkable health outcomes. And so, um, just for example, there’s a study done on workers at IBM and you know, and working in tech can be pretty stressful, but they found if the test subjects, if the study participants were able to consistently eat a meal with their family, you know, quote, make it home for dinner, their work stress and just overall life stress, it just stayed, it stayed quote manageable.
[00:43:34] Shawn Stevenson: And they were able to metabolize the stress efficiently in their lives. Work morale stayed high, productivity stays high. But as soon as work obligations start cutting into them being able to spend time with their family, guess what? Work morale starts to decline rapidly. Productivity goes down and overall health goes down because stress is not getting metabolized.
[00:43:55] Shawn Stevenson: And stress, this was published in JAMA, Journal of the American Medical Association. These researchers, Determine, again, this is a meta analysis looking at multiple studies, that 80%, upwards of 80 percent of all doctor visits today are for stress related illnesses.
[00:44:13] JJ: Wow. So
[00:44:13] Shawn Stevenson: stress is literally killing us, and it’s just really, again, how it’s altering our biochemistry.
[00:44:20] Shawn Stevenson: And just flooding our system with all of these helpful in the right context, but really health detracting and damaging, you know, uh, stress hormones and breaking down our tissues and messing up our digestion. The list goes on and on. When we’re eating in this parasympathetic relaxed state with people that we care about, oxytocin is running high and our digestion is improved.
[00:44:45] Shawn Stevenson: When we’re eating with people that we care about, we tend to eat. It depends on the context. Different studies, we tend to eat more for people that tend to under eat real food because they’re just making their kind of mono meal for themselves. So people are eating more healthfully. But here’s the big thing.
[00:45:04] Shawn Stevenson: When you eat with other people, according to researchers at Harvard, we eat significantly more vital nutrients that help to defend us against diseases. So yeah, it’s just, it really does matter. And so. My homework at the beginning was, if you don’t already do this on a consistent basis, their data indicates, and this is from studies published in JAMA and also the journal of Pediatrics too, so for adults and children, but in particular with children too, three meals per week.
[00:45:31] Shawn Stevenson: That’s the minimum effective dose. Three meals per week with people that you care about.
[00:45:36] JJ: That’s doable.
[00:45:37] Shawn Stevenson: Yes.
[00:45:38] JJ: Three meals. Yeah. I mean, you got 21.
[00:45:40] Shawn Stevenson: Yeah. Yeah. Three meals a week. So this could be Sunday brunch and maybe a dinner, you know, a couple of dinners through the week. This could be lunch. This could be, it doesn’t, you can flavor whatever way you want.
[00:45:53] Shawn Stevenson: Those three meals a week really do make a difference with our metabolic health, with our mental health, and with our longevity.
[00:45:59] JJ: And if you do those three meals a week and you do them from your cookbook, it’s like exponential. Bang for the buck. There you go. Now you have something cool that you are giving everyone.
[00:46:10] JJ: It is your waste reduction quick start plan. First of all, like who doesn’t love that name? And why is it so important to reduce our waste specifically?
[00:46:22] Shawn Stevenson: Well, this goes back to the concept of waste management versus weight management, you know, and what really has more of the long tail benefits. And you know this, you’ve been talking about this for years of just being hyper focused on the scale and not your body composition.
[00:46:37] Shawn Stevenson: And we know that carrying excess around the waist and by the way, you don’t have to be like You don’t have to be super slim, right? Having a little bit of something to hold on to is okay. All right. But we know when we get into that place where we have a nice amount of excess is a clear indication, number one, of insulin resistance.
[00:46:59] Shawn Stevenson: You know, our bodies are starting to store fat in a way that it’s an adaptation. And our body’s trying to protect us in a way. So this could be from the context of the food that we’re eating, but also stress is another.
[00:47:11] JJ: And when estrogen dumps, you store more fat around your belly because you’re producing estrogen that way.
[00:47:17] JJ: So I love, I was, when I saw waste reduction, I’m like, Good, because I think one of the easiest ways that we can measure and stay on it at home is there’s a Bluetooth tape measure called Renpho, so it’ll read right into an app, so it’s easy to track on your phone, and every week do a waist to hip, so you can look at your waist to height, waist to hip.
[00:47:39] JJ: And just make sure you’re tracking progress there.
[00:47:43] Shawn Stevenson: Yeah. And also, of course, this is one of the, if we’re being honest, it’s one of the vanity metrics that we, that we look at. And I remember, you know, when I was working with people day in and day out and, you know, I would take their waist measurement and of course, you know, the weight and all these other different measurements, we do body fat and all this stuff too.
[00:48:00] Shawn Stevenson: We would see, let’s just say, for example, we see about a two inch waist, reduction in two weeks. It was about two and a half inches on average. This was average. That’s huge. All right. And somebody might come in, you know, after two weeks and they’ve lost three inches off their waist. They only lost one pound.
[00:48:20] Shawn Stevenson: Guess what? They would be like, feeling like, um, I didn’t do enough. This isn’t working. I’m like,
[00:48:25] JJ: you lost
[00:48:26] Shawn Stevenson: three inches off your waist. And here’s the thing, before we do all their measurements, they’re already coming in. Like, they’re pumped. They’re just like, I feel so good. Like, my clothes are fitting better and all this stuff.
[00:48:37] Shawn Stevenson: But the scale messed with their head. And the scale, again, this is a great, it’s a great tool to have. But when we are centered on that without context, you know, and so just being able to work through that and also putting that into this quick start guide as well, just some of these insights and cues and because a lot of times we, I would have people come in, like, you know, somebody I’m thinking about, you know, they’re a former athlete, right?
[00:49:01] Shawn Stevenson: And so they’re coming in, there’s like, you know, I love my legs and my arms, but then they get up, they get up out of their chair and they grab it. They grab their, their stomach and shake it at me, but I just want to get rid of this. And I was, I’m not, I’m not ready for that. You know, like they just, we’re talking and then he’s get up and grabbing it and shaking it at me.
[00:49:18] Shawn Stevenson: And, um, there’s like, I want to spot, I just want to get rid of this. Right? And just these things that you’ve talked about over the years of like spot reduction and things like that. Now to say that you can’t target a spot, that’s not 100 percent true. And so that’s another thing that we’re sharing in that as well.
[00:49:34] Shawn Stevenson: It’s just like how do you actually science backed way target the belly fat area? Yeah, so all that’s in there. And it’s not sit ups. It’s not sit ups. Not sit ups. There you
[00:49:44] JJ: go for spot reduction. You actually can, it’s not sit ups.
[00:49:47] Shawn Stevenson: Yeah. You’ll have to
[00:49:48] JJ: get the waist reduction quick start guide to find out more.
[00:49:52] JJ: There, how’s that for a, so where shall you get that? You’ll get that at jjvirgin. com forward slash, where’d we put it? Eating habits. I think because we’ve already got Sean backslashes. So jjvirgin. com forward slash eating habits. This was really enlightening. I will be honest, I didn’t know where we were going to go.
[00:50:11] JJ: I’m like, how are we going to talk about eating with family every night? And the fact that three times a week you could do this, because I’m always looking for what’s the prescription number here for whatever the thing is, whether it’s steps or weight training or sleep. Three meals a week is totally doable.
[00:50:28] Shawn Stevenson: Yeah.
[00:50:29] JJ: How cool.
[00:50:30] Shawn Stevenson: Yeah. And this is based on science. It’s based on real data from the real world with real people. And so, yeah, it just, if we could target that minimum effective dose, we can get a lot of, a lot of benefit in our lives. Now
[00:50:43] JJ: we need the next study done at Harvard with your book as the recipes.
[00:50:47] Shawn Stevenson: Come on now. Let’s do it. I mean, we could change the world. Come on, Harvard, let’s do it. Now you’re talking about changing the world.
[00:50:52] JJ: Right? Well, this book is one that could do it. So there you go. Thank you. Thank you. Eat Smarter Family Cookbook.
[00:50:59] JJ: Why should I care about eating with others? Or how does dining with friends or family actually impact my health? Well, Sean is here to unpack all of that. We’ll explore why relationships and social bonds are so crucial to not just living longer, but living healthier.
[00:51:16] JJ: Sean shares insights from his conversation with Dr. Robert Waldinger, who oversees the longest running study on human longevity, emphasizing that our relationships are a key factor in our overall well being. We’ll We also dig into how we can eat to support our stress levels and improve mental health, significantly reducing the risk of stress related illnesses.
[00:51:36] JJ: Sean breaks down the studies and shares practical, actionable advice on how to make this a part of your life. Sean’s new family cookbook is packed with delicious recipes designed to bring people together around the table. Ever wonder about those so called healthy foods that still feel Off? Sean and I dive into the concept of health washing, where foods are marketed as healthy but are actually highly processed and detrimental, and how these ultra processed foods interfere with our metabolism and well being.
[00:52:04] JJ: Stay tuned for tips on how to navigate this tricky landscape, find balance, and make truly nutritious choices that benefit your whole family. So if you’ve been curious about how to take your health to the next level, or if you’re looking for ways to use food to connect more deeply with the people around you, this episode is for you.
[00:52:22] JJ: Stick around as Sean and I delve into the power of communal eating and how it can transform your health and happiness. You’re going to want to hear this, and I will be right back with Shawn Stevenson. So stay with me.
[00:52:43] JJ: Shawn Stevenson, welcome back to the show.
[00:52:47] Shawn Stevenson: It is my honor to be here.
[00:52:48] JJ: Well, we’re actually at your show. It’s my honor to be here
[00:52:52] Shawn Stevenson: in my studio with you.
[00:52:54] JJ: Yes. How cool this was. Yes. And. This is an interesting topic because what we were talking about offline is you did a family cookbook and at first I was like, well, this podcast is well beyond 40.
[00:53:05] JJ: So there’s not usually little kids at home. They’re not doing family. And what might happen in this situation is you’ve got maybe someone single. And they’re just making dinner for themselves. Or, you know, maybe they’ve got teenagers and who knows where they’re going to show up. So it gets super duper random.
[00:53:26] JJ: Now, I think back to when I was in this state where I was single, and quite often super random meant I was sitting on the counter by myself eating a bag of siete chips with some hummus. Not really the best way to go with this. But you talk a lot about why we need to eat together. And I’m wondering how we solve The problem of this kind of, this kind of stage in life and why we need to, why is it important?
[00:53:54] Shawn Stevenson: This is really the heart of your work too. It’s like we know the cultural way that things kind of unfold and we need to be intentional about adding certain things in to keep us fit and healthy and not just extending our lifespan, but our health span. And we need to The majority of data, like we’ve got so, we’ve got so many studies on this stuff now, but we know that the number one component.
[00:54:19] Shawn Stevenson: for aging healthfully and extending our lifespan is our relationships, the quality of our relationships. And I actually had this really great conversation with Dr. Robert Waldinger, and he’s the director of the longest running longitudinal study on human longevity ever constructed. It’s been over 80 years.
[00:54:36] Shawn Stevenson: He’s the fourth director to get the baton passed to him. And he didn’t even believe the data at first, which was, again, Looking at all these other confounding factors, yes, diet matters. Yes, you know, not smoking. Yes, paying attention to exercise. Yes, all this stuff matters. But the quality of our relationships, as he called it, having healthy social bonds, was significantly more impactful on how long people live and live healthfully.
[00:55:02] Shawn Stevenson: And we know this. We know that our relationships deeply impact us. And for me, I’m a big why guy, so I’m asking like, why? Like, what is it about it? And what it really is, is Our relationships are a force multiplier. Our relationships impact our exercise. Our relationships impact what we’re eating. Our relationships impact how we’re sleeping and how we’re associating with ourselves, our own self talk.
[00:55:29] Shawn Stevenson: Our relationships are impacting, you know, the choices that we make on a day to day basis. So being that it’s controlling so many of those other things, yes, we can like grin and bear it and, you know, exercise, do all this stuff solo. But it just makes it more complicated. And so to share this with everybody, for me, this was the reason I wrote the book was, this was a catalyst of it.
[00:55:52] Shawn Stevenson: And it was this huge meta analysis. It was 148 studies, which is a bunch of studies, but it also included a lot of people. And this was about 300, 000 study participants. And these researchers, this was from Brigham Young University, and they found that. People who have healthy relationships, healthy social bonds, again, we’ll use that label, they had a 50 percent reduction in all cause mortality.
[00:56:14] Shawn Stevenson: All right, 50 percent reduction in early death from everything. All right, that is again, speaking to an eight, accounted for beating obesity for exercise, but it was the quality of the relationships that stood out. And so the question is, when life is changing, if we’re not paying attention to this and being intentional about it, yes, things can start to change.
[00:56:36] Shawn Stevenson: transition to where we’re more isolated, where we are, you know, having like you just used the word random. It’s more random when we’re getting together with people that we care about and that care about us. How can we be more intentional about it moving forward? And that’s what this is really all about.
[00:56:51] Shawn Stevenson: And so just to throw this out, because we mentioned the context of eating, How does this affect our diet? What, what data do we have on this? Well, there was a study that was published actually, uh, right before I started thinking about writing, you know, this cookbook, and this was in 2018 when it was published, and it was published in Nutrition Journal.
[00:57:07] Shawn Stevenson: And they found that people who do frequently eat alone and are more, you know, eat in isolation more often, do in fact have poor diet quality overall. They tend to eat more ultra processed foods, and they also most notably have a significantly lower intake of essential nutrients. That help us to fight off diseases.
[00:57:27] Shawn Stevenson: And what tends to happen, again, if we’re just, why would we cook a whole meal for just ourselves, right? And we start to just like lean on these other things. And so with all that being said, I feel that under the spirit of eating together, it’s like such a great opportunity to check so many boxes, right?
[00:57:45] Shawn Stevenson: So we can have that relationship time and that connection time and get all those benefits which we’ll talk about and also do this with amazing food. And the last time, well the last time I saw you I think you were here at the studio but before that we were eating together. You know, and just being able to hang out and also to just, you pick up things too when you’re eating around people.
[00:58:08] Shawn Stevenson: And you know, it’s just, it’s such a beautiful part of being alive and we don’t want to miss out on, on this. And so this is the homework already. We’re going to get to the homework early in the class, which is let’s set the intention to spend more time and to be that person. If, if you, if you don’t have this as a consistent.
[00:58:28] Shawn Stevenson: You know, your life, be the person who gets people together. You know, maybe schedule a dinner with friends. I mean, by the way, it’s not just family. It’s not just kids, but also your friends. You know, this could be coworkers. This could be, there’s so many different flavors of this. You’re, you’re, I don’t know, your team that you might be on, you know, intramurals or whatever.
[00:58:47] Shawn Stevenson: Get people together and make this a consistent weekly part of your life.
[00:58:53] JJ: You know how they say when your kids leave after they graduate high school, they have some horrendous stat of how much you’ll ever see them again? And I’m thinking, huh, because I see my kids, I see one of my sons every day comes over and walks the dogs, and the other one comes over every Sunday, every Sunday night, my husband, my ex husband, and my two kids, and, um, All the dogs, because they’re involved in the dinner too, a little too involved in my opinion, like not a good dog trainer, um, we always have this dinner and it’s like, it is the greatest thing.
[00:59:26] JJ: And as you were talking at first, my, I was pushing back a little bit at first because I was thinking, oh, but what happens, because I hear this so often, well, my family doesn’t want to eat healthy like I do.
[00:59:37] Shawn Stevenson: Mm
[00:59:38] JJ: mm-Hmm. or, you know, for us, all our friends eat the way we eat, so it’s fine. But what would you say to someone who said, I’d love to invite people over, but they, they, you know, wanna have a pizza or they don’t want to eat healthy.
[00:59:49] Shawn Stevenson: I love this. Well see, this is the benefit of like, I’ve worked in the real world with real people for many years, you know? Mm-Hmm. . I spent a decade working as a clinician and really starting to see, look at people’s lives. You know, getting a bird’s eye view. ’cause sometimes when you’re in it. We’re not able to see all the, you know, the forest for the trees, right?
[01:00:09] Shawn Stevenson: And so being able to see and to find those leverage points, you know, I’m a big proponent of, of finding leverage. And so this is even the basis of why I created this cookbook. I’m a big foodie. I love, I love food. All right, our friends are like, we know the people who are like the head of each diet framework, right?
[01:00:29] Shawn Stevenson: Right. The top paleo person, the carnivore person, the vegan person, the eat to live, don’t live to eat person, you know, these are all friends and colleagues and respectfully I think that all of them are right and wrong. You know, we can be, have a, you know, really genuine sentiment to say eat to live, don’t live to eat.
[01:00:47] Shawn Stevenson: You know, food is supposed to be energy, but. For me, just being a very logical person at that, why are we driven to eat certain things? Why are certain things attractive to us? Why do any animals, why do any creature on earth go towards certain things? And they go towards things that they’re desirable to them.
[01:01:07] Shawn Stevenson: They taste good. And there’s tons of studies on this, even looking at like, you know, um, sheep for example, right? This is getting a little weird, but just follow me. There’s this phenomenon called post ingestive feedback. All right, and so these scientists were just trying to understand like why would these sheep go and eat this particular food at this particular time?
[01:01:29] Shawn Stevenson: And what it is, and that we’re, we do the same thing as well. Whenever we eat a food, our cells, our bodies are so intelligent. It’s just literally taking notes on what we got along with that food. Say we eat some Cherries, for example, and our cells are tracking, our cells don’t have labels and names for these things.
[01:01:48] Shawn Stevenson: We do that as humans, but our cells know that it picked up some vitamin C. It picked up a natural food source of melatonin. That’s interesting. It picked up some anthocyanins. It picked up these, you know, array of antioxidants, whatever, you know, some selenium, whatever the case might be, right? It picked up all these different things from these cherries.
[01:02:07] Shawn Stevenson: And so, if we were living in a natural con Context, if for example, we would run low on this particular nutrient, maybe our body really needed some of these anthocyanins to heal something. We know our body remembers that those cherries have that, and it would inspire a craving for us to go and seek out more of those cherries.
[01:02:25] Shawn Stevenson: Right? And so that’s what they were seeing with these sheep. They would go based on the nutrients because they were basically combining flavors along with certain nutrients to try to trick the lamb system. And so they start to crave certain things when they became deficient on certain things. All right.
[01:02:40] Shawn Stevenson: And so, you know, having this as like our blueprint, we’re driven through flavor, but now this is the rub.
[01:02:48] JJ: Yeah, I was just gonna say, and nowadays.
[01:02:50] Shawn Stevenson: This desire to eat tasty things has been manipulated. Right. By brilliant, I’m talking, they’re, they’re, they’re brilliant food scientists. And one of the more recent, well, this was actually decades ago, but it should really been perfected recently, is something called a gas chromatograph.
[01:03:08] Shawn Stevenson: And basically, you know, scientists were able to isolate the chemistry to make certain flavors. Right? So that cherry that I mentioned earlier, they can use chemistry to come up with that cherry flavor and now add that cherry flavor to things that are not cherry. Right? We can add that to Coke. We can add that to ice cream.
[01:03:26] Shawn Stevenson: We can add that to candy. And it doesn’t have to taste exactly the same. That’s the thing. Because you’re just like, well, the Coke doesn’t really taste like cherry. But it’s just enough to like muddy up those metabolic waters where your body doesn’t really know like, what am I actually getting with this flavor?
[01:03:40] Shawn Stevenson: Right? And obviously the addiction quality there, you know, and the gluteomorphins and the sugar and all these different things that really manipulate our biology. And so I’m saying all this to say that what if, and you are, everybody already knows that this is real, but what if we can have the most amazing food experiences with real food?
[01:04:06] Shawn Stevenson: And that’s, what The hallmark of the Eastmarter family cookbook, you know, my family, we’ve, we’ve always been a like, we, we love brunch, you know, breakfast for dinner type family, you know, like we’ll, we’ll do that. And, but I also know that going to McDonald’s and the hot cakes and sausage that I used to get, or, you know, international hot house of pancakes, I hop now.
[01:04:28] Shawn Stevenson: Um, the quality of those things is so poor and you feel it, you feel that food coma after eating that stuff. And so I came up with this amazing sweet, instead of this highly refined flour, using sweet potatoes as the base and making these delicious sweet potato protein pancakes. Really? Sweet potato as
[01:04:48] JJ: a base?
[01:04:48] Shawn Stevenson: Yes.
[01:04:49] JJ: How do you do that?
[01:04:50] Shawn Stevenson: All right. Let’s hear it. So, I mean, this is
[01:04:53] JJ: Like now I want to dig into the cookbook because I didn’t get this ahead of time.
[01:04:57] Shawn Stevenson: Let me, let me say this too. Everybody’s invited to the picnic. All right, everybody’s invited to the Eastmarter Family Cookbook. We’ve got recipes for every diet.
[01:05:06] Shawn Stevenson: So you
[01:05:07] JJ: covered every religion in here. What is your, because that’s, I mean, that’s how I think of these things. It’s like, you know, I, I view diets as tools. So maybe, maybe carnivore for a month is going to do some great healing and then you move over to something else. They’re tools. But I, it’s so amazing.
[01:05:23] JJ: I flipped right to sweet potato protein pancakes. So first thing I have to ask you is, did you make these recipes up?
[01:05:28] Shawn Stevenson: Yes.
[01:05:29] JJ: You really
[01:05:29] Shawn Stevenson: did. These are my recipes. I am so impressed. I’ll tell you, there’s a hundred recipes, right? And there’s also 250 scientific references. There it is. Embedded in this book too, like why we do what we’re doing.
[01:05:39] Shawn Stevenson: And
[01:05:40] JJ: this was like number one. Cookbook. Number
[01:05:42] Shawn Stevenson: one new release cookbook in the United States. That’s a
[01:05:45] JJ: huge, huge thing.
[01:05:47] Shawn Stevenson: It’s
[01:05:47] JJ: nuts. This is a huge thing. Usually the number one cookbook is something like the Paula Dean or the Barefoot Contessa. Gordon Ramsey, you know, pissed off,
[01:05:57] Shawn Stevenson: but buy my cookbook anyways.
[01:05:58] Shawn Stevenson: Well, it’s the
[01:05:58] JJ: ones that’s like, I’m going to take a donut, cut it in half and put a burger in there, right? I mean, that’s what it usually is. It’s not this, it’s not honey sriracha salmon and sheet pan fish with mayo, lemon sauce, and asparagus. Amazing. Okay. Let’s go back to the sweet potatoes.
[01:06:13] Shawn Stevenson: Yes. So, oh, but also just to, right before we get to that, my, I love how you called it, basically these diet camps do become really religiosity, really.
[01:06:25] Shawn Stevenson: Um, I think that it’s, it’s really valuable if you experiment with any, any of these things to speak from a place of experience. And so, I’ve done all the things. I’ve been in this field for 21 years and I’ve done, but I’ll do them years at a time. I was trying to explain to somebody yesterday, I was at my son’s basketball practice, um, that I was, I did a vegan protocol for five years.
[01:06:50] Shawn Stevenson: When I was, I was a vegan
[01:06:51] JJ: for five years.
[01:06:52] Shawn Stevenson: Yeah, I was a hundred percent raw food for over two years. I couldn’t do that. Living in Missouri in the winter. Wow. All right, and I didn’t, this is, when I do something, I’m a hundred percent type of person, you know, so the only hot thing that I had was tea. Oh my goodness.
[01:07:09] Shawn Stevenson: You know, and we had, weren’t you gassy? We were dehydrated. I don’t want to talk about that. I don’t want to talk about how I was. Yes.
[01:07:16] JJ: Yes, he was.
[01:07:17] Shawn Stevenson: But I’ll tell you, the beginning of that was amazing. You know, the level of clarity, the energy, all the things, but also you got to look at what was I coming from?
[01:07:25] JJ: Exactly.
[01:07:26] Shawn Stevenson: So what were you coming from? I was living in Ferguson, Missouri, you know, one of the most notable food deserts, quote food deserts. in the United States. And, and I also want to make a shift with that term because that evokes this belief that like it’s hard to find healthy food. No, the healthy food was there.
[01:07:44] Shawn Stevenson: It’s really more akin to like a food swamp, where we’re just inundated with really, really low quality food. And there’s healthy food there as well. But we’re not attuned, we’re not attuned to it. I didn’t feel like
[01:07:56] JJ: that’s everybody nowadays, though. Like if you go into a Publix or a Vons, There’s healthy food there, but you’re also inundated.
[01:08:08] JJ: With all of the rest of the stuff.
[01:08:09] Shawn Stevenson: Yeah. I mean, what it really is living in a place like Ferguson, it’s an extreme. It’s a, it’s a, it’s an extreme because when I walk out of my apartment complex, there’s like a liquor store and then there’s a Papa John’s, there’s a Dairy Queen, there’s You know, there’s two McDonald’s within a mile radius, like, I’m just surrounded by this.
[01:08:28] Shawn Stevenson: And it’s very cheap. It’s like, zoning, like, this shouldn’t even be allowed, but in that community, and I don’t see that living in Sherman Oaks, there’s nothing remotely close to all that exposure. So that’s, that’s really what it is. And, um, so with that being said, paleo protocol, you know, again, all these guys are my friends.
[01:08:48] Shawn Stevenson: Um, the, the keto protocol. I don’t really share this often, only a couple of you know this. I’m leaning in. When I went in for my book prior to this one, Eat Smarter, which was, you know, um, a really special book. When I went in for that book deal, I had like maybe 11 offers for that. But when I went into my, who I ultimately chose, they were just like, so what is this book going to be?
[01:09:13] Shawn Stevenson: This is going to be like a keto book. You know, they had all these keto books from their authors on the shelf. It’s hot. So they’re doing what’s hot, right? And I’m just like, no, this is kind of like a anti any of these frameworks because my advocation through that book was to teach you how to make choices that work for you where you are right now and knowing that that’s probably going to change and that’s okay.
[01:09:33] Shawn Stevenson: And so with all that being said, everybody should be invited. We need to stop with all this infighting because the reality is, and this is according to the BMJ, one of our most prestigious medical journals. About 65 percent of the average American’s diet is ultra processed, fake, newly invented food. Yeah,
[01:09:52] JJ: that’s amazing.
[01:09:52] JJ: And we’re
[01:09:52] Shawn Stevenson: in here, we’re fighting about eating asparagus. Like, this diet says asparagus is bad. Just if we focus on real food and what unites us and we could talk about the minutiae But we’re not gonna help people if we’re being dogmatic.
[01:10:06] JJ: Amen. Nature in the majors. Yeah,
[01:10:09] Shawn Stevenson: and now, you know to circle to the sweet potato pancakes So you can make the sweet potatoes, whatever you want It works for you, you know, this could, you could bake them, you could, you know, peel them and, and, you know, boil it.
[01:10:21] Shawn Stevenson: You could pop them in the microwave. I’m not a big fan of the microwave, but just to get it soft so that you could stir it as make it a batter, you know, and add the other ingredients. How’d you
[01:10:29] JJ: find out about making pancakes out of sweet potatoes? Did you come up with this?
[01:10:33] Shawn Stevenson: So the closest thing that I had an exposure to was like, uh, honestly, I came to LA before I moved here and I had a sweet potato donut.
[01:10:42] Shawn Stevenson: At this restaurant, right? And it always stuck in my mind and I was like, how can I make this into a pancake and also add protein? Yeah, right. So you can use your respective protein powder, whether it’s a whey protein or you know, vegan or vegetarian option to increase the protein fraction as well. So you don’t feel that food coma.
[01:11:00] JJ: Nice. And
[01:11:00] Shawn Stevenson: there’s also, but the, here’s the magic in the experimenting is like finding the right texture. That’s the key because you don’t want your, some of these people are making these healthy pancakes and they’re all, they’re nutty as shit. Oh, Sean, I’ll tell you the
[01:11:14] JJ: funniest story. I had, I think it was when we were doing Sugar Impact Diet Cookbook, you know, I went, we had a food stylist make this stuff and then I was going on one of the news shows and we had all the food sitting there and we were going to talk it through.
[01:11:28] JJ: Well the pancakes had been sitting there for like two hours before I’m going on and this
[01:11:44] Shawn Stevenson: I’ve had one of those experiences, you know, I went on, um, uh, uh, a TV show when I was working as a nutritionist and doing nutrition classes and it was a hot, hot chocolate that I was making and they kept it in this kettle. Right? And it was simmering to keep it hot, so it thickened up. All right? And the news anchor’s like pouring it at the end of the segment, and it’s just like coming out and like, it’s not coming out right.
[01:12:10] Shawn Stevenson: It’s like
[01:12:10] JJ: droppy. Yeah. And
[01:12:11] Shawn Stevenson: I’m just like, Oh my God.
[01:12:13] JJ: Yeah. And it’s life.
[01:12:14] Shawn Stevenson: But yeah, you know, and that’s the, that’s the news for you. But you know, funny enough, one of the cool experiences was, um, the week that the book came out, the East Morning Family Cookbook, I went on Good Morning America and um, I had This amazing chili recipe that’s in the book, by the way, and within that, just being able to bring my family along, you know, so I have my two sons there with me and my wife and just kind of taking them on this adventure and getting them these exposures.
[01:12:41] Shawn Stevenson: And so this is very much about family and not just eating together, but just finding active activities and just being more, you know, Intentional about how can you find time to spend time, right? You know, especially when everybody’s got stuff, you know, it’s as people get up Yes and that that statistics you mentioned about like how little you’ll spend time with your kid after a certain age is like that stuff can Hit you, you know punch in the gut or it can be a catalyst for like let me really focus right now, you know and really see this person and Invest in them and love them as much as I can.
[01:13:17] JJ: And they’ll probably come back
[01:13:18] Shawn Stevenson: if you do that. They’ll probably come back.
[01:13:20] JJ: But you brought up a couple things that have jarred my memory. One of them, you know, you’re finally coming to MindShare this year, yay. And one of the things that I’ve always prided myself there is because here you’ve got all of these health experts.
[01:13:32] JJ: So literally we have The fruititarian, the vegan, the carnivore, the keto, the paleo, I mean everything, right? The chef’s there to try to find a hotel that would pull this off. Um, but it’s always been my joke as I go, I have the carnivore and the keto and the vegan all eating together.
[01:13:49] Shawn Stevenson: Yeah.
[01:13:50] JJ: And everyone gets along.
[01:13:51] JJ: This last weekend when we did our wine mastermind, the, we found a French chef in Paso Robles and he had to cook without gluten or butter. He was like. He took this on as his greatest challenge. But then we had vegans, and we had keto, we had everything in there, and everyone’s eating together, and no one’s judging each other, and it was super fun.
[01:14:13] Shawn Stevenson: To make French dish, I would make these things without people. Butta! He’s like,
[01:14:16] JJ: he was very, then, you know, Cynthia and I did something in Miami last year, and what we decided to do, we rented an Airbnb, and we decided, It was probably not the best idea, but it was very fun. We, we just, we all made dinners and breakfasts together.
[01:14:31] JJ: Now granted, dinner ended up being at like nine o’clock at night, cause we start cooking at six and it became a whole thing. But it was so fun. And so when you look at ways that you can spend time together, you can actually do the whole thing together. Like have people over and, you know, we’ll either have people bring things, like if we’re doing a holiday, everyone brings something, or my son Bryce loves to cook, so we’re all in the kitchen cooking together.
[01:14:55] JJ: And it’s super fun.
[01:14:56] Shawn Stevenson: This goes back to, you know, that, that initial question of like the apprehension that might be there. Right? So if we’re already coming to the table, literally, like I just recently had over a friend of mine, uh, Dr. Michael Beckwith came by and he’s more, you know, plant based, right? And so we have this.
[01:15:17] Shawn Stevenson: Uh, enchilada, so it’s like a sweet potato enchilada bake, which is fire, it’s so good. But there’s, the template of the recipe is vegetarian, right? And but you can add whatever you want, ground beef, so we made another version that had ground beef that’s more like pizza like for me personally, right? And why haven’t I been invited
[01:15:38] JJ: over?
[01:15:39] JJ: What’s a girl gotta do? You can move in, JJ. Don’t say that, be very careful.
[01:15:45] Shawn Stevenson: Be careful what you ask for. Yep,
[01:15:48] JJ: yep, yep. But, you know,
[01:15:48] Shawn Stevenson: and the same thing, you know, we’re, we love burgers as well. You know, we’re, we’re a burger family, so we’ve got a grass fed beef burger we’ve got, which is a quintessential, like, dad burger.
[01:15:58] Shawn Stevenson: We’ve got a salmon burger, which is It’s probably my favorite recipe right now. I just, it’s so good. What is it? So it’s a salmon, it’s a salmon burger, you know, you use it, you need a binder. And, but it’s the, it’s this amazing olive mayo that goes along with it and the arugula, which again, all these things are optional to put on what you, on the burger, but the combination together will knock your socks off.
[01:16:21] Shawn Stevenson: All right. And then we, but we also have a real food veggie burger too, because that’s another issue. Like. Folks are wanting to do a vegetarian protocol, and they’re eating these trash.
[01:16:33] JJ: Yeah, talk about the plant based meat out there. Let’s, let’s just get into it a little bit because, you know, you talked about ultra processed, but I feel like the gray zone that’s dangerous is this area of poser foods.
[01:16:46] Shawn Stevenson: Yeah.
[01:16:47] JJ: You know, they hide out at Whole Foods. They look like they’re, they’re healthy. What’s up with them?
[01:16:54] Shawn Stevenson: So this is using this, it’s a term called health washing. Yeah. Yeah. Yeah. I did not know this
[01:16:59] JJ: term.
[01:17:00] Shawn Stevenson: Yeah, so it’s just using these catchphrases, these healthy terms, like gluten free, like plant based, like, you know, like for us, you know, when we got started in this field, low fat, slapping that label on there, it’s health washing.
[01:17:14] Shawn Stevenson: It’s using Snack
[01:17:15] JJ: wells.
[01:17:15] Shawn Stevenson: It’s using this like framework or this, you know, this moniker in the minds of the people and applying that to your food. To negate the fact that this is an ultra processed garbage, right? So for me when I was trying to get healthy and not eat a kid’s cereal anymore because I was eating like You know, honey nut Cheerios or whatever.
[01:17:35] Shawn Stevenson: And I was like, I’m going to eat these Quaker oatmeal squares, right? There’s nothing more wholesome than the Quaker, you know? And, but not realizing that this is an ultra processed food to the highest degree. And actually this was, this is a fun fact, which I had no idea about this when I was doing the research for the book, but I was utilizing some data from the environmental working group and they actually went and tested the most popular cereal brands for glyphosate, right?
[01:18:01] Shawn Stevenson: And by the way, glyphosate. And this is, you know, the, the World Health Organization and their data is classified as a class 2A carcinogen. All right. So this is not, it does not absolutely cause cancer. It’s probable. It probably causes cancer in humans. All right. And so they, they looked at all these foods and basically they found every, Popular cereal was contaminated with glyphosate at levels that are higher than what was deemed to be safe.
[01:18:32] JJ: Wow.
[01:18:33] Shawn Stevenson: And our body
[01:18:34] JJ: stores this.
[01:18:35] Shawn Stevenson: Well, we can circle back and talk about that. Yes,
[01:18:37] JJ: let’s circle back.
[01:18:37] Shawn Stevenson: But the highest concentration of glyphosate and all the cereals it tested was Quaker oatmeal squares. My former favorite cereal when Ann met me, I had a bunch of, because I was trying to recycle, even though I lived in the hood, I was trying to do my part, right?
[01:18:51] Shawn Stevenson: So there was all these empty boxes when she came over the first time of this Quaker oatmeal cereal. And little did I know I was consuming such a high amount of number, number one, of course, probable human carcinogen, but also a notable obesogen.
[01:19:05] JJ: Yeah.
[01:19:06] Shawn Stevenson: Yeah, talk about obesogens. So these are, as a carcinogen is a cancer causing agent, obesogens are obesity causing agents.
[01:19:13] Shawn Stevenson: So these manipulate our biology in such a way that they manipulate us. Contribute or fortify or sustain obesity outside of the context of this calories in, calories out model. It alters our metabolism. So that our body starts to tilt towards body fat accumulation. And the thing about any of these conversations, you know, it’s, it’s, unfortunately, you know, I went to a conventional university and took multiple biology classes and nutritional science and all this stuff.
[01:19:45] Shawn Stevenson: And we were not taught these things. And we were taught this very linear, Just really tunnel vision about looking at human biology. And the reality is, for example, just understanding our fat cells. Like we, in our society, we’re kind of programmed to hate our fat cells. Like we just want them to go away.
[01:20:03] Shawn Stevenson: But our fat cells are incredibly intelligent, efficient, Like, they’ve helped us to evolve and survive as a species. Like, they’re there to be able to store energy in the case that we need it. Thank you, fat cells. Here’s one of the insights that I was not taught in school. Our fat cells can expand upwards of, you know, contain a thousand times its, its, its size, its value.
[01:20:29] Shawn Stevenson: So they can expand substantially, it can carry a lot, but they’re not designed to carry that much. And so when our fat cells begin to become, we’ll say, overly. filled, it starts to set off an immune response, right? And so this is one of the things that we see when we venture into a high state of overweight and obesity is an overactive immune system, right?
[01:20:52] Shawn Stevenson: So essentially it’s sending out a false distress signal to our immune system that we’re carrying an infection. Right. And so this higher level of inflammation, which everybody’s talking about now, I’ve been talking about this for a decade, you know, this, this inflammation component. This is increasing the risk of all manner of disease and dysfunction, whether it’s infectious diseases, chronic diseases.
[01:21:12] Shawn Stevenson: Inflammation is really this kind of hallmark. And with that being said, our fat cells with these compounds, they can be lipophilic or lipophobic. So phobic is like, I don’t mess with you. Philic is Let me in. Let me, let me in. Let me connect. And so a compound like glyphosate is lipophilic. All right. So those fat cells will gladly contain that and hold onto it.
[01:21:36] Shawn Stevenson: And this is one of the things, and there’s some data on this. We can actually put a study for folks in your show notes as well, showing that as people are losing weight, they’re seeing an increase in some of these compounds in their bloodstream. Right. And it can be one of those things that, you know, is a little bit scary.
[01:21:52] Shawn Stevenson: And do we want to lose weight very quickly if we’re going to increase this overall kind of toxic load that our body’s trying to deal with and metabolize? Because our fat cells essentially are helping to keep us safe in a highly toxic world.
[01:22:05] JJ: Right. And it’s why we need to make sure that There’s so much when you start to think about losing weight that you need to think about to do it safely.
[01:22:14] JJ: And one of them is the ability of your body to detoxify well. So the minute you start talking about all your, your oatmeal squares, cause your body, I, I liked, I used to say your body isn’t a bank account, it’s a chemistry lab. Now I say it is a bank account, it is a chemistry lab, and it’s a history book.
[01:22:32] JJ: And you look at your fat cells as the little history books, right? As you’re releasing fat, you’re freeing up all these toxins. You better be getting it out or you’re gonna get in trouble. So, you know, sauna for the win, all those non starchy deep green leafies and fiber and protein. So what, what is your process when you’re, you know, what do you tell people about these obesogenic foods and now you’re freeing up fat?
[01:23:00] Shawn Stevenson: And by the way, let’s add to the mix exercise as well. And I, if you just even look at the word exercise, it’s very close to the word exorcise, which is like to get rid of something, right? From all my years of research and, you know, Again, we’ve created the label of exercise and we have an image of what that is.
[01:23:22] Shawn Stevenson: Movement is a primary mode of detoxification for the body as well. You know, so just having these things, we can, it’s more complicated today because we are living in a pretty complicated environment, but if we’re, Subscribing to these things, like you just said, making sure that we’re sweating, right?
[01:23:41] Shawn Stevenson: Whether that’s with the sauna, whether that’s through exercise, you know, maybe put, you know, a hoodie on or something like that. And eating really high quality foods, our bodies can still Handle a lot of this stuff. And so,
[01:23:54] JJ: so 65 percent Because I just heard this actually on another podcast this morning that we’re eating like 65 70 percent of our diet is ultra processed foods
[01:24:04] Shawn Stevenson: Yeah
[01:24:04] JJ: And so if all that someone did and there’s no way to eat ultra processed foods without getting toxins
[01:24:12] Shawn Stevenson: Yeah.
[01:24:13] JJ: Right? Besides just, you know, poor nutrient value. And so you’re not getting the nutrient density you need. You’re getting a lot of like simple carbs, sugars, but you’re also getting things like glyphosates and bad oils, damaged oils, like it’s just a
[01:24:28] Shawn Stevenson: Listen. One of the most overlooked aspects of this is, again, all these newly invented, you know, food dyes and, you know, artificial flavorings and, you know, all of these things.
[01:24:40] Shawn Stevenson: It’s just a conglomeration of chemicals. You know, it’s not really food. Like, to call Kellogg’s, you know, Corn Flakes or, you know, Lucky Charms food is like, it’s really stretching it. It’s not really food. It’s like all of these things are incredibly abnormal and it’s so far removed from anything real.
[01:25:02] JJ: But now we’ve created like, this is where I have had the challenge with intuitive eating because I go intuitive eating doesn’t work unless you’re eating real food and you’d have to have been eating real food for a while.
[01:25:14] JJ: So that your body recognizes it because if you’ve been eating ultraprocessed food You’ve so screwed up your nutrient sensing and your taste buds that you have no idea what you’re really looking for
[01:25:26] Shawn Stevenson: Yeah, the intuition that’s saying to call Papa John’s Like that’s a new that’s a new intuition. You know what I mean?
[01:25:35] Shawn Stevenson: And but here’s the thing too and not to Not to completely villainize these entities, you know, these companies, you know, Papa John’s, uh, for example. In college, we had the Papa John’s special at my campus and it’d be five dollars for a large one topping, you know, and we use that generously, you know, and it’s like, these are all food experiences that are part of being in this world in 2024, which is amazing.
[01:26:04] Shawn Stevenson: Like, it’s really cool. We’ve got all these cool things that we can come up with and invent and all this stuff, but when it becomes the majority of our diet, or even Even a sizable percentage of our diet, all manner of metabolic problems start to happen. It’s just because it’s not real food, you know. And so my advocation is for people to, let’s not villainize that stuff or even like psychologically try to fight ourselves.
[01:26:26] Shawn Stevenson: Let’s just crowd it out. Crowd it out with the good stuff. Just focus more on adding in rather than subtracting.
[01:26:32] JJ: I had a great mentor early on in nutrition. He said, he said, add before you take away. And it is why I like the E protein first. I’m like, if you do that, It crowds some of it out. I mean, you think of little kids, they get full and stop eating.
[01:26:48] JJ: Now, it might not be that much anymore because they’re eating ultra processed food. And I think I heard you, didn’t you talk about that cheese sandwich study?
[01:26:57] Shawn Stevenson: Yes, yes I did. How’d you remember that? Yeah.
[01:27:00] JJ: I heard you talking about it on some podcast. I’m like, I got to find that cheese sandwich study, but I’d love you to share it because that’s such a great example of what these things can do.
[01:27:08] Shawn Stevenson: Yeah. So I talked about this in my, in my previous book, the just eat smarter. So it’s more the big idea book. And this was a huge national bestseller. Just like took off like a rocket. I was blown away. Um, and it was the number one new release in the United States as well. But, um, the cookbook is different, you know, like that’s more like eat this and, you know, the pictures and all this stuff.
[01:27:30] Shawn Stevenson: But the initial book, Eat Smarter, I talked about this study and, you know, what the researchers did was they had test subjects to consume, you know, these two different sandwiches. So it’s basically like a crossover study. And one is what they called, you know, whole food sandwich. I’ll put that in air quotes.
[01:27:46] Shawn Stevenson: And another was an ultra process version of it. And here’s the key. They were the same amount of fats, proteins, and carbohydrates, and the same amount of calories. This is very important. All right. Same amount, but one food was whole grain bread and cheddar cheese. And the other was. White bread and cheese product.
[01:28:08] JJ: What I got sent to school with almost every day growing up, by the way. I
[01:28:11] Shawn Stevenson: know about
[01:28:12] JJ: that.
[01:28:12] Shawn Stevenson: All right. So the cheese product that’s like Kraft singles. Then it’s not called Kraft cheese. It’s called singles because they can’t legally call it cheese. It’s cheese product. All right, so same amount of calories, same macronutrient ratio.
[01:28:27] Shawn Stevenson: Here’s what happened. After consuming the respective sandwiches, the people when they ate The ultra processed version of the sandwich, they had about a 50 percent reduction in calorie burn after eating that sandwich. All right. It effectively was creating like what I would call hormonal clogs to where the body was not metabolizing and releasing this energy.
[01:28:49] Shawn Stevenson: It was just like crowding it away, sticking it away and holding on to it. And again, this is outside of the context of calories. It’s not just calories in, calories out. It’s the quality of food that you’re eating is an epicaloric controller of how your body’s going to handle those calories, right?
[01:29:09] Shawn Stevenson: Calories do matter. It’s a, again, this is a socially accepted term that we use to describe the energy content in a food, but even that is massively flawed. And in that book actually took people through the origin. I’m a big Y guy. Where did this calorie concept come from? And it didn’t start off in nutrition, it was like in physics, you know, but then it kind of parlayed its way over into nutrition.
[01:29:35] Shawn Stevenson: And you got to understand the nutrition calorie content on these different products, Process foods. They’re not using a bomb calorimeter in measuring how much they’re just it’s gross It’s like grass generally accepted as like this is how much is in there You don’t know
[01:29:50] JJ: and I think it can be it can vary by like 20%.
[01:29:54] JJ: Yeah, could you imagine if your Savings account interest rate varied by 20 percent or your budget you were off by 20 percent Oh, man, like I mean that could be the difference between going bankrupt or not
[01:30:05] Shawn Stevenson: Yeah.
[01:30:05] JJ: So that’s what I’ve heard is it can be off by 20 percent of course, then it’s how you’re metabolizing it as well.
[01:30:11] Shawn Stevenson: Yeah. And that’s the key too. You know, you have a unique metabolism. My metabolism is not like yours and how our bodies process certain aspects of those calories as well. You know, you’re again, the protein first concept is so intelligent. Like it’s just, it’s easy. It’s number one, it’s easy. And it is incredibly effective because when you’re consuming, again, like go back and use a bomb calorimeter.
[01:30:39] Shawn Stevenson: And if people are like, wonder what the hell is that? Um, this is the original way that we measured how much energy is in food, right? So you basically incinerate the food and see how much it can heat up water basically. And here’s the rub with these calorie counts. It’s not taking into account the indigestible.
[01:30:59] Shawn Stevenson: Parts of the food, right? You don’t, you’re not a bio calorimeter. You don’t process and take the calories out of everything that’s supposed to be in there. You don’t. And also certain things cost more calories to burn, right? And that’s protein. Protein is more expensive. Your body burns more energy to break down the protein.
[01:31:19] Shawn Stevenson: And I believe my theory, because we don’t know why, my theory is that It is such a valuable macronutrient for our biology, for our evolution. Our body really goes to work to get as much as it can from that protein. So it really puts emphasis and energy on breaking those, that, that protein dense food into amino acids because every cell in your body is using amino acids.
[01:31:43] Shawn Stevenson: When we’re talking about hormones, estrogen and testosterone and neurotransmitters and all this stuff, these are all based on amino acids. Of course, yes, fat is a component too, by the way, cholesterol with building our sex hormones. But we’re talking about amino acids. All right, our hormones are amino acids.
[01:32:01] Shawn Stevenson: And so, it’s so valuable to build the stuff that life happens on, that things run on.
[01:32:06] JJ: And we don’t have any storage depot really for them, unless we want to rip up our muscles. I mean, we’ve got fat stores. Like, while fats essential and proteins essential, we have a place to store fat. It is really interesting that Mother Nature didn’t make it so that we could really, that we have to have those amino acids in all the time.
[01:32:26] Shawn Stevenson: Yeah. Yeah. So what does this point to with this, you know, whole food meal versus ultra processed meal? My advocation is at least 80 percent if you could target that being real food that you could actually recognize where it comes from and just kind of, you know, leave the play, you know, 20 percent play room.
[01:32:46] Shawn Stevenson: I personally probably hover around 90 10. You know, because I don’t want to be that person because I’m, some people might think that I’m a hundred percent, like, I don’t eat anything that would be deemed to be, you know, like a ultra processed food. But if I’m like taking my son to, I don’t know, the basketball game and, I don’t know what the hell is in those nachos.
[01:33:10] Shawn Stevenson: It’s okay, you know, I have a couple of nachos, you know, but
[01:33:13] JJ: I think we get if we get a B plus A minus so the way I see it is the Poor your metabolic health the smaller your margin for error because you got to heal your metabolism, but once you’re there Right once you’re there like A minus B plus.
[01:33:29] Shawn Stevenson: You just said one of the most profound things that we don’t think about.
[01:33:32] Shawn Stevenson: The best time to have a food that might be sketchy is when you feel good, is when you’re healthy. But we tend to do it at the opposite time. When we’re feeling down, when we might be, you know, really stressed out. Your body is going to interact with that food very differently. And that’s another thing that I, you know, I’m addressing in the E Smarter Family Cookbook is like, how your body associates with food is different based on your mental.
[01:33:56] Shawn Stevenson: And this is why eating with friends and family has all these really remarkable health outcomes. And so, um, just for example, there was a study done on workers at IBM. And you know, and working in tech can be pretty stressful, but they found if the test subjects, if the study participants were able to consistently eat a meal with their family, you know, quote, make it home for dinner, their work stress and just overall life stress, it just stayed, it stayed quote, manageable.
[01:34:26] Shawn Stevenson: And they were able to metabolize the stress efficiently in their lives. Work morale stayed high, productivity stays high. But as soon as work obligations start cutting into them being able to spend time with their family, guess what? Work morale starts to decline rapidly, productivity goes down, and overall health goes down because stress is not getting metabolized.
[01:34:46] Shawn Stevenson: And stress, and this was published in JAMA, Journal of the American Medical Association, these researchers Again, it’s a meta analysis looking at multiple studies that stress, 80 percent upwards of 80 percent of all doctor visits today are for stress related illnesses. Wow. So stress is literally killing us.
[01:35:08] Shawn Stevenson: And it’s just really, again, how it’s altering our biochemistry and just flooding our system with all of these helpful in the right context, but really health detracting and damaging. You know, uh, stress hormones and breaking down our tissues and messing up our digestion. The list goes on and on. When we’re eating in this parasympathetic relaxed state with people that we care about, oxytocin’s running high and our digestion is improved when we’re eating with people that we care about.
[01:35:39] Shawn Stevenson: We tend to eat, it depends on the context, different studies, we tend to eat more for people that tend to under eat real food. Because they’re just making their kind of mono meal for themselves. So people are eating more healthfully, but here’s the big thing. When you eat with other people, according to researchers at Harvard, we eat significantly more vital nutrients that help defend us against diseases.
[01:36:04] Shawn Stevenson: So yeah, it’s just, it really does matter. And so my homework at the beginning was be, if you don’t already do this on a consistent basis, Their data indicates, and this is from studies published in JAMA and also the journal Pediatrics too, so for adults and children, but in particular with children too, three meals per week.
[01:36:23] Shawn Stevenson: That’s the minimum effective dose. Three meals per week with people that you care about.
[01:36:28] JJ: That’s doable.
[01:36:29] Shawn Stevenson: Yes.
[01:36:30] JJ: Three meals. Yeah. I mean, you got 21.
[01:36:32] Shawn Stevenson: Yeah. Yeah. Three meals a week. So this could be Sunday brunch and maybe a dinner, you know, a couple of dinners through the week. This could be, Lunch, this could be, it doesn’t, you can flavor it whatever way you want, but those three meals a week really do make a difference with our metabolic health, with our mental health, and with our longevity.
[01:36:51] JJ: And if you do those three meals a week, and you do them from your cookbook, it’s like exponential. Bang for the buck. There you go. Now you have something cool that you are giving everyone. It is your waste reduction quick start plan. First of all, like who doesn’t love that name? And Why is it so important to reduce our waste specifically?
[01:37:14] Shawn Stevenson: Well, this goes back to the concept of waste management versus weight management, you know, and what really has more of the long tail benefits. And you know, this, you’ve been talking about this for years of just being hyper focused on the scale and not your body composition. And we know that carrying excess around the waste, and by the way, you don’t have to be like, You don’t have to be super slim, right?
[01:37:40] Shawn Stevenson: Having a little bit of something to hold on to is okay, right? But we know when we get into that place where we have a nice amount of excess, there’s a clear indication, number one, of insulin resistance. You know, our bodies are starting to store fat in a way that it’s an adaptation, and our body’s trying to protect us in a way.
[01:37:59] Shawn Stevenson: So this could be from the context of the food that we’re eating, but also stress is another.
[01:38:03] JJ: And when estrogen dumps. You store more fat around your belly because you’re producing estrogen that way. So I love, I was, when I saw waste reduction, I’m like, good. Cause I think one of the easiest ways that we can measure and stay on it at home is there’s a Bluetooth tape measure called Renpho.
[01:38:23] JJ: So it’ll read right into an app. So it’s easy to track on your phone and every week do a waist to hip. So you can look at your waist to height, waist to hip, and just make sure you’re tracking progress there.
[01:38:35] Shawn Stevenson: Yeah, and also, of course, this is one of the, if we’re being honest, this is one of the vanity metrics that we, that we look at.
[01:38:40] Shawn Stevenson: And I remember, you know, when I was working with people day in and day out and, you know, I would take their waist measurement and of course, you know, weight and all these other different measurements. We do body fat and all this stuff too. But we would see, let’s just say for example, we see about a two inch waist reduction in two weeks.
[01:38:58] Shawn Stevenson: It was about two and a half inches on average. This was average. That’s huge. All right. And somebody might come in, you know, after two weeks and they’ve lost three inches off their waist, but they only lost one pound. Guess what, they would be, like, feeling like, I’m I didn’t do enough. This isn’t working.
[01:39:17] Shawn Stevenson: I’m like, you lost three inches off your waist. And here’s the thing, before we do all their measurements, they’re already coming in like, they’re pumped. They’re just like, I feel so good. Like my clothes are fitting better and all this stuff. But the scale messed with their head. And the scale, again, this is a great, it’s a great tool to have.
[01:39:34] Shawn Stevenson: But when we are centered on that without context, it’s hard. You know, and so just being able to work through that and also putting that into this quick start guide as well, just some of these insights and cues and, because a lot of times we, I would have people come in, like. You know, somebody I’m thinking about, you know, they’re a former athlete, right?
[01:39:53] Shawn Stevenson: And so they’re coming in. There’s like, you know, I love my legs and my arms, but then they get up, they get up out of their chair and they grab it. They grab their, their stomach and shake it at me. But I just want to get rid of this. And I was, I’m not, I’m not ready for that. You know, like they just, we’re talking and then he’s get up and grabbing it and shaking it at me.
[01:40:10] Shawn Stevenson: And, um, there’s like, I want to spot, I just want to get rid of this. And just these things that you’ve talked about over the years of like spot reduction and things like that. Now, to say that you can’t target a spot, that’s not 100 percent true. And so that’s another thing that we’re sharing in that as well, is just like, how do you actually, science backed way, target the belly fat area?
[01:40:32] Shawn Stevenson: Yeah. So all that’s in there.
[01:40:33] JJ: And it’s not sit ups.
[01:40:34] Shawn Stevenson: It’s not sit ups. It’s not sit ups. There
[01:40:36] JJ: you go. For spot reduction. You actually can. It’s not sit ups. You’ll have to get the Waste Reduction Quick Start Guide to find out more. There. How’s that for a So, where shall you get that? You’ll get that at jjvirgin.
[01:40:48] JJ: com forward slash, where’d we put it? Eating habits. I think because we’ve already got Sean backslashes. So jjvirgin. com forward slash eating habits. This was really enlightening. I will be honest, I didn’t know where we were going to go. I’m like, how are we going to talk about eating with family every night?
[01:41:06] JJ: And the fact that three times a week you could do this, because I’m always looking for what’s the prescription number here for whatever the thing is, whether it’s steps or weight training or sleep, three meals a week is totally doable. It’s doable.
[01:41:20] Shawn Stevenson: Yeah.
[01:41:21] JJ: How cool.
[01:41:22] Shawn Stevenson: Yeah. And this is based on science. It’s based on real data from the real world with real people.
[01:41:28] Shawn Stevenson: And so, yeah, it just, if we could target that minimum effective dose, we can get a lot of, a lot of benefit in our lives. Excellent. Now we
[01:41:35] JJ: need the next study done at Harvard with your book as the rest piece.
[01:41:39] Shawn Stevenson: Come on now. Let’s do it. We could change the world. Come on, Harvard. Let’s do it. Now you’re talking about changing the
[01:41:43] JJ: world.
[01:41:43] JJ: Right? Well, this book is one that could do it. So there you go. Thank you. Thank you. Eat Smarter, Family Cookbook.
[01:41:55] JJ: Be sure to join me next time for more tools, tips, and techniques you can incorporate into everyday life to ensure you look and feel great and are built to last. Check me out on Instagram, Facebook, and my website, jjvirgin. com. And make sure to follow my podcast at subscribetojj. com so you don’t miss a And hey, if you’re loving what you hear, don’t forget to leave a review.
[01:42:21] JJ: Your reviews make a big difference in helping me reach more incredible women just like you to spread the word about aging powerfully after 40. Thanks for tuning in, and I’ll catch you on the next episode.
[01:42:43] JJ: Hey, JJ here, and just a reminder that the Well Beyond 40 podcast offers health, wellness, fitness, and nutritional information. That’s designed for educational and entertainment purposes only. You should not rely on this information as a substitute for, nor does it replace, professional medical advice, diagnosis, or treatment.
[01:43:00] JJ: If you have any concerns or questions about your health, you should always consult with a physician or other health care professional. Make sure that you do not disregard, avoid, or delay obtaining medical or health related advice from your healthcare professional because of something you may have heard on the show or read in our show notes.
[01:43:17] JJ: The use of any information provided on the show is solely at your own risk.
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