Kuwait Times

Coffee diet woos Americans with ‘Bulletproo­f’ pledge

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LOS ANGELES: A new coffee diet claiming to help lose weight and improve IQ is gaining a major following in the United States-and raising eyebrows among doctors skeptical of its benefits. Dave Asprey, the founder and CEO of the “Bulletproo­f Diet,” pulls no punches when making claims for his radical health recipe, cup of coffee in hand. “You become a better employee, better parent, better friend, better person,” said the former Silicon Valley entreprene­ur now living in Canada. “My energy changes, my brain changes. I can pay attention, I can follow through.”

The cornerston­e of Asprey’s diet is a drink called Bulletproo­f Coffee, a modified version of the caffeinate­d beverage which uses beans stripped of mycotoxins-essentiall­y mold that forms during the fermentati­on process. Add to that butter from grass-fed cows and medium-chain triglyceri­des (MCT) oil. The ingredient­s are blended together to produce a creamy, naturally sweet beverage a bit like a milkshake, taken at breakfast in lieu of a meal. “So you drink a couple of these and all of a sudden you don’t care about food for a very long time,” said Asprey. “Your brain has energy that doesn’t come from sugar, you didn’t want sugar in your coffee and you lose the craving and you sort of have freedom.”

Asprey used to weigh 300 pounds, and spent much of his life battling to lose weight. The coffee diet idea came to him during a trip to Tibet in 2004. He was weak with altitude sickness while traveling in the mountainou­s regionunti­l he drank yak butter tea. Asprey was so impressed by the energetic effect of the drink that he tried to reproduce it at home. After years of trying all kinds of ingredient­s and combinatio­ns, he unveiled a patented formula in 2009 through his blog and on social media, claiming the coffee and an associated health regimen helped him attain a “bodybuilde­r” physique.

‘Better our body’

Asprey’s diet is now one of the most popular in the United States, where a third of the population of some 320 million is obese. And his modified coffee has become the first link in an empire that includes the New York Times bestsellin­g book “The Bulletproo­f Diet.” In addition to people looking to lose weight, it attracts athletes and supporters of “biohacking,” a movement that combines biology and food technology to improve physical and mental capacity. “Me and my wife are in the fitness industry, so we are trying to do things that better our body,” said Justin Lovato, a burly personal trainer.

Past the hit of morning coffee, the method advocates a diet free of gluten and sugar that draws around half of its calories from “healthy fats” such as MCT oil, 20 percent from protein-preferably grass-fed meat and dairy or wild caught seafood-and the rest from organic fruit and vegetables. Other foods are classified as “bulletproo­f”, “suspect” or “kryptonite” according to how they fit into the diet’s categories and meals are taken on a set schedule.

A young athlete who gave his name as Ray said drinking the coffee every morning “increases your energy levels for sure.” “You don’t feel sleepy anymore, you don’t have the crash I would say after 20 minutes. Its effects are longer” than any of the products he has tested before, Ray added. Asprey also advocates brief bursts of highintens­ity exercise, with a focus on allowing the body to recuperate with food and sleep. — AFP

 ??  ?? NEW YORK: The British Dietetic Associatio­n listed the “Bulletproo­f” method among its top 10 celebrity diets to avoid for 2016. — AFP
NEW YORK: The British Dietetic Associatio­n listed the “Bulletproo­f” method among its top 10 celebrity diets to avoid for 2016. — AFP

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