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The traditional food used to remedy exhaustion in healthy, ancestral societies, the research that supports this superfood in the diet and easy ways to get it on the home menu in a convenient and budget-friendly manner.
Energy drinks are the new norm in our exhausted society today. A mind-boggling array of cans or shots are available at gas stations, supermarkets, and health food stores alike.
These beverages are frequently marketed as nutritional supplements, which removes the limit to the amount of caffeine they can contain.
Some brands contain such excessive levels of caffeine that people have ended up in the ER after consuming them.
Some parents are resorting to energy drinks for their exhausted young children on the way to school or athletic events!
Exhausted and stressed college students take it to the next level.
Illegal procurement and abuse of the ADHD drug Adderall helps them stay awake to study and gives them an “edge”.
The Journal of Medical Internet Research produced two major revelations in its six-month study of Adderall:
- It is mentioned most heavily among students in the northeast and south regions of the U.S.
- Tweets about Adderall peak sharply during final exam periods.
Lead researcher Carl Hanson, Professor of health science at BYU, had this to say:
“Adderall is the most commonly abused prescription stimulant among college students. Our concern is that the more it becomes a social norm in online conversation, the higher risk there is of more people abusing it.”
Why Are People So Exhausted?
Seesawing blood sugar from the modern diet loaded with sugar-laden, highly refined carbohydrate foods is no doubt part of the problem. Dr. Ronald Hoffman MD, author of Intelligent Medicine, writes:
Americans love to “carbo-load.” We are a society in love with carbohydrates — and it shows in our poor health standing versus some of the other industrialized nations of the world. In essence, hypoglycemia is low blood sugar, and it is increasingly prevalent in our society. Hypoglycemia can cause an array of symptoms, including dizziness, fatigue, mood changes, PMS, sugar craving, headaches, difficulty concentrating, tremors, temperamental outbursts, depression, excessive sweating, hot flashes, palpitations, cold extremities, abdominal pain, and panic attacks.
While a return to a whole diet where traditional fats are embraced and refined carbs and sugar are kept to a minimum no doubt helps resolve many issues with exhaustion, even those who eat an excellent Traditional Diet and follow a healthful exercise regimen can still suffer from occasional to extended bouts of fatigue.
A friend of mine recently came to me with this exact scenario. A healthy Mom of normal weight who has been eating an excellent Traditional Diet with plenty of blood sugar-stabilizing, healthy fats for years and exercises regularly confessed that she was exhausted and couldn’t figure out why.
Traditional Food for Exhaustion
What to do in those situations?
If the blood sugar is steady and a traditional diet is being followed, are coffee, energy drinks, or some other form of artificial stimulant the only options to get oneself off the couch?
Absolutely not!
When exhaustion is sucking the life out of one’s life, the tried and true remedy is plentiful quantities of liver, the planet’s #1 superfood, known for its mysterious and legendary anti-fatigue factor which science has yet to identify.
A July 1951 article published in the Proceedings of the Society for Experimental Biology and Medicine describes this factor and a study that attempted to identify it.
Benjamin K. Ershoff, Ph.D. divided lab rats into three groups.
- The first group of rats ate a basic rat diet, fortified with 11 vitamins.
- Group 2 ate the same rat diet as group 1, with the addition of supplemental vitamin B complex.
- Group 3 ate the same rat diet as the first two groups but instead of vitamins or B complex, they received 10% of their ration as powdered liver.
Anti-Fatigue Factor
The results of this unique experiment?
A 1975 article in Prevention magazine described the results of the experiment in the following words:
“After several weeks, the animals were placed one by one into a drum of cold water from which they could not climb out. They literally were forced to sink or swim. Rats in the first group swam for an average 13.3 minutes before giving up. The second group, which had the added fortifications of B vitamins, swam for an average of 13.4 minutes. Of the last group of rats, the ones receiving liver, three swam for 63, 83 and 87 minutes. The other nine rats in this group were still swimming vigorously at the end of two hours when the test was terminated. Something in the liver had prevented them from becoming exhausted. To this day scientists have not been able to pin a label on this anti-fatigue factor.”
Exhaustion Post-Covid
Knowing about the above research for many years, I applied it to resolve my fatigue after our family’s bout with Covid in the summer of 2021.
I consumed 6 capsules of desiccated liver powder (equates to roughly 1/2 ounce of fresh liver) every day for a few weeks.
Fatigue was completely resolved in short order and my previous strength levels returned!
But Wait! What About the Cholesterol!
A common objection to frequent consumption of liver is the high amount of cholesterol.
The truth is that numerous studies show no relationship between diet and cholesterol levels.
In addition, there is no evidence that saturated fat and cholesterol-rich foods like liver contribute to heart disease.
In fact, as Americans have cut back on cholesterol-rich foods in recent decades, rates of heart disease have actually gone up! This is according to Dr. Uffe Ravnskov, MD, Ph.D., author of The Cholesterol Myths.
5 Easy Ways to Eat Liver (even if you hate it)
Should we all wait until science identifies liver’s legendary anti-fatigue factor or start benefiting from this superfood’s ability to raise the exhausted and fatigued of the world off the couch and back into the game of life right away?
Have no fear. Here are several ways to eat liver that are either painless or flat-out delicious. I personally eat a minimum of 4-6 ounces of liver each and every week – many weeks much more than this amount as needed.
Liver and Bacon pate
If strong-tasting beef liver and onions turn your stomach as it does mine, try my recipe for milder tasting liver pate made with chicken livers and bacon that is an excellent dip or spread on toast.
This inclusion of bacon pureed with the liver makes the flavor well accepted even by children.
Liver and rice
Just before you put a pot of soaked rice on to cook, mix in one or two spoonfuls of grated liver.
The liver will impart a wonderful flavor to the cooked rice and your family won’t know the difference.
Note that brown rice works better than white rice for this trick.
Frozen liver “pills”
Chop up raw, grass-fed liver that has been frozen for 14 days or more (eliminates parasite risk) into small pieces. Then, swallow a few each day whole with a glass of water, milk, or juice.
Over the span of a week, you will consume several ounces and no doubt be feeling much more energetic.
Desiccated liver powder
Perhaps the easiest and most convenient way to get your liver is through a freeze-dried, grass-fed, desiccated liver supplement.
I use this when we haven’t been eating enough pate or I’m out of liver to mix with ground beef.
You can take the powder in capsule form or sprinkle it into homemade soups and sauces for a boost of nutrition.
This brand and this brand are clean and tested to be glyphosate-free.
Hide Liver in Ground Beef
An easy way to get liver into your family is to hide it in the ground beef you will use for making burgers or dishes like grassfed meatloaf.
The trick is to keep the amount of ground liver you use small so that no one can taste it. I suggest no more than 20%. For those with very keen taste buds, 10% is better.
Anecdotal Evidence
Will liver really work for you to eliminate exhaustion and fatigue problems? It worked for my friend mentioned earlier in the article.
After I suggested that she start eating liver, she went home and started eating it several times a week.
The next time I asked her about it a few weeks later, she reported that she felt so much better and was experiencing normal energy levels once again.
Will it work for you too? What have you honestly got to lose? Humans have eaten and revered liver as a sacred superfood for millennia.
If you’ve never eaten it, why not try it now?
References
Adderall use as college study aid ‘trending’ on East Coast
Monster Energy Drinks Killed 5 People: Report
Hypoglycemia
Nourishing Traditions
Myths and Truths about Cholesterol
The Liver Files
Lianne @ EAT and get MOVING
Thanks Sarah for the informative article 🙂 I wish I could eat liver more often! I actually love the taste but I can’t have too much since it’s high purine and my body can’t cope really well with high purine proteins. Hopefully one day soon if my gut’s back to being healthy 🙂
Pat in TX
Thank you, Sarah. You have helped already! At the mere thought of consuming liver, I realized I am not as exhausted as I thought:-)
Molly
I’m shocked at this article. Liver is one of the most toxic things you can possibly eat today. It is the primary filter for all of the chemical waste (hormones, antibiotics, GMO corn, pesticides, etc.) from what we eat and what mammals eat. I see a homeopath and he reiterated recently that he wouldn’t touch liver if his life depended on it. I also find it horrifying that rats were tortured to prove what, exactly – that rats who ate liver survived longer? We are not rats; well, maybe some of us are, but that’s a separate issue. This article is reckless and cites nothing significant that would compel me to believe it. How do you guys get away with this stuff?
Sarah, The Healthy Home Economist
As with any food, quality matters. Liver from healthy, grassfed cows outside grazing on unsprayed pasture is a wonderful, safe, nontoxic food. These cows are not exposed to antibiotics, hormones or pesticides nor are they eating any GMO grain.
Marianne
Where do you get THIS kind of liver? Please let us know. Thanks, Sarah.
Sarah, The Healthy Home Economist
Local farms. eatwild.com is a good place to start. Also, request the local resources list from your Weston Price Chapter Leader http://www.westonaprice.org
Bebe
U.S. Wellness Meats sells grassfed liver, beef or chicken and sometimes lamb as well. The chicken livers are awesome and milder than beef, if you care to try those first. Here is a link to their beef liver, grass fed and finished:
http://www.grasslandbeef.com/Detail.bok?no=534
sumeyye
Liver processes toxins and after filtering body stores the toxins in the body fat. So liver only does the filtering job. Sarah is not suggesting livers from conventional cows I assume. If you read her blog regulary you would not what she is talking about.
Diana
The liver processes toxins, it doesn’t store them. Research it 🙂
Sharon Bohuslav
My family loves liver prepared this way: I wash it and then I cut it up into small sections; salt and pepper it and then dredge it in a mixture of flour (einkorn) and salt and pepper. I then proceed to fry in coconut oil until it get slightly brown turning to fry on both sides. It tastes great; everyone eats it! Oh, sprinkle some garlic powder into the flour mixture. We also serve it up with sauteed onions and sometimes make gravy from the drippings.
Sherri
And for those of us GF, sub the flour for arrowroot. It is delicious! I also use this breading for frying up sliced rounds of zucchini, which even my zucchini hating son even likes!
tereza crump aka mytreasuredcreations
When I had my 3rd child at home, I bled a bit too much. I was really weak and had never fainted before in my life. I didn’t actually faint but a few times after delivering the baby I thought I would. My body knew exactly what it needed. I was craving liver with onions, orange juice and collard greens. Thankfully my Mom and Grandmother were with me and they fed me a healthy diet for the next week. Within 2 days, I was back up on my feet. I ate liver almost everyday for that week. Just because I wanted it! My mouth would water every time I thought of it. The liver gave me energy and provided the building blocks for my body to replace all the blood I lost. Had no problem breastfeeding my baby or healing. Liver is awesome food!!
Liz
Does cod liver oil (not fermented) provide the same benefits?
Sarah, The Healthy Home Economist
Similar but not completely. Cod liver oil has the fat soluble vitamins but not the benefits from the complete and extremely nutrient dense protein of the liver itself.
Allison Bruner
I loved this article, Sarah! I have never tried liver, but I am excited to learn about it’s benefits today. I do get tired, despite eating a diet rich in healthy fats so, I will be trying liver! Thank you for your insight and keep up the good work. 🙂 Peace, love and happiness to you.
Alison
Is it ok to have the raw frozen liver when pregnant?
Tennille
I have made a big quantity of liver, fried with onions, then ground it up in my vitamix. I then add a bit here and there in pasta, sauce, meatloaf, sausage, etc. I also bought the liver capsules from Radiant Life. I am convinced it is the best “anti-depressant” out there.
Andrea
Hi Sarah, I was excited to read this article because of the title but then was so disappointed with the solution. What can vegetarians do? Are there any equal meatless substitutions?
Sarah, The Healthy Home Economist
Unfortunately, there is no substitute for liver in the plant kingdom.