Understanding Whole Animal Eating and Fat Load
When you eat the whole animal, including organ meats, skin, marrow, and fatty cuts, a single meal can deliver 60-80 grams of fat or more. For someone managing insulin resistance, this high fat density matters because excess dietary fat can temporarily impair insulin signaling in muscle and liver tissue. In my CFP Weight Loss method, we teach that the key is not avoiding fat entirely but understanding how it interacts with your hormonal profile, especially during perimenopause when estrogen decline makes fat storage around the midsection more stubborn.
A typical ribeye steak plus liver and bone marrow might total 70g fat and only 10g carbohydrates. While this keeps carbs low, which helps stabilize blood glucose for people with diabetes or prediabetes, the caloric density reaches 800-1,000 calories quickly. Joint pain often limits activity, so burning those calories becomes harder without strategic movement.
Insulin Resistance: Why Meal Fat Percentage Matters
Research shows that in insulin resistance, high-fat meals can elevate free fatty acids in the blood, promoting further resistance if not balanced with proper timing and activity. From my experience helping thousands in the 45-54 age group, consuming the entire animal provides superior micronutrients like vitamin K2, zinc, and CoQ10 that support mitochondrial health, crucial for metabolic repair. However, without portion awareness, you risk overwhelming your system.
In the CFP approach outlined in my books, we recommend starting with 40-50g of fat per meal for insulin-resistant beginners. This might mean eating the leaner muscle meat primarily and using organ meats or marrow as condiments rather than the main event. Track your blood glucose two hours post-meal; an increase over 20 points suggests the fat load needs adjustment.
Practical Strategies for Balanced Whole Animal Meals
Beginners often feel overwhelmed by conflicting advice, but simple rules work. Pair fatty cuts with fibrous vegetables if your plan allows, or cycle higher-fat days with lower-fat ones using leaner proteins like heart or tongue. For those embarrassed about their obesity or dealing with high blood pressure, this approach eliminates complex meal plans—no calorie counting required if you follow the 30-minute movement rule after eating.
Insurance rarely covers these programs, which is why the CFP method emphasizes affordable nose-to-tail sourcing from local farms. Aim for 25-35% of your plate as visible fat sources initially. Over four weeks, most clients see improved energy, reduced joint inflammation, and 4-8 pounds lost when combining this with resistance-band routines that accommodate knee or back pain.
Long-Term Metabolic Adaptation and Success Tips
Over time, your body adapts to using fat for fuel more efficiently, reversing aspects of insulin resistance. The whole-animal approach supplies complete proteins that preserve muscle during weight loss, preventing the metabolic slowdown common in failed diets. Focus on quality sleep and stress reduction, as cortisol spikes exacerbate hormonal weight gain.
Start small: one organ-inclusive meal weekly, monitor how you feel, and adjust. This method has helped clients manage both weight and chronic conditions without feeling deprived or overwhelmed. Consistency beats perfection—your next meal doesn't need to be perfect, just better informed.