Coffee. Butter. Oil.
Separately those ingredients don’t exactly tick all the traditional
boxes for a balanced breakfast. But together they are the three
components you need to make Bulletproof coffee, a frothy,
energy-igniting beverage that has surged in recent years to become the toast of Silicon Valley.
Its promises are multitude, at least according to its creator,
cloud-computing pioneer and "Bulletproof Executive" Dave Asprey, who
refined his recipe after trying a tea made with yak-butter in Nepal.
Among Bulletproof coffee's listed benefits: It triggers weight loss
by way of ketosis, a metabolic state triggered by a lack of carbs that
kicks fat-burning into overdrive; it kills pesky cravings; and it boosts
cognitive function, mainlining a shining dose of mental clarity into
your foggy morning skull. Maybe it would even fold my laundry.
Most of all, though, Bulletproof coffee is intended to be efficient,
an easy way for the biohacking crowd to slurp down fats and calories
(460 of them!) without so much as sniffing a processed carbohydrate. Why
eat a muffin that goes straight to your muffin top, the thinking goes,
when you could drink down the metabolic equivalent of supercharged
battery acid every morning?
No comments:
Post a Comment