Keto While Traveling

Reversed Season 2 partnership with Keto Chow

We are excited to announce a partnership with the Reversed TV show, season 2, to highlight the importance of health and wellness through diet.

The new program is set to start production in February 2021 and will culminate into 10 episodes of 1 hour each. It will showcase the Ketogenic Diet and intermittent fasting as a way to help treat people with underlying diseases with a focus on diabetes. “We have lined up a dream team of health and wellness experts who will educate, inspire and help tell the stories of those living under harsh conditions and how to cope. We hope this will help give the show a voice and touch the millions of people who live with disease everyday,” says Charles Mattocks, director and executive producer of the series.

Chris recently had the opportunity to interview Charles Mattocks. Be sure to check out the video below to learn more.

Renowned Producer/Storyteller Charles Mattocks To Release New Series, Reversed Focuses on the Keto Diet For Health

 

People with Underlying Diseases Should Monitor Their Health, Especially in the Time of Covid, Reversed Will Help Show Them the Way to Better Health

 

February 2, 2021, New York, NY- Charles Mattocks, host of Reversed and Eight Days is an award winning filmmaker and one of the few Black film and tv producers who owns the content he creates. His programs have aired on major TV networks such as WGN, PBS, Discovery and more.

 

Charles Mattocks has carved out an important niche. He has been creating health related content and TV since 2017. Mr. Mattocks and his team chose to move forward during this trying time to continue to highlight the importance of health and wellness through diet. During Covid, it is especially important for people who have underlying diseases to pay close attention to their diet. For everyone, a healthy and nutritious diet is also important when fending off Coronavirus. 

 

Charles also owns and produced another series called Eight Days which was featured on the WGN America network. The new season of Reversed will air in September on the WGN America networks and re-air on COX Communications.

 

The new program is set to start production in February, 2021 and will culminate into 10 episodes that will be 1 hour each. They will showcase the Ketogenic Diet and intermittent fasting as a way to help treat people with underlying diseases with a focus on diabetes. “We have lined up a dream team of health and wellness experts who will educate, inspire and help tell the stories of those living under harsh conditions and how to cope. We hope this will help give the show a voice and touch the millions of people who live with disease everyday,” says Charles.

 

The series will feature high profile experts as: Dr Jason Fung, Dr Ken Berry, Dr Lori Shemek, Karl Shallowhorn and Maria Emmerich as the show’s Keto chef. “Our understanding of how Type 2 Diabetes impacts all illness and disease is vital to reversing it. It is crucial we eliminate underlying health conditions such as type 2 diabetes, obesity, high blood pressure and more to promote a healthy and resilient immune response. These metabolic conditions have their roots in inflammation which is the core underlying cause of most illnesses, disease, faster aging and weight gain. The ketogenic diet and intermittent fasting are both powerful tools to help reverse inflammation leading to protection from illness such as Covid-19 while promoting optimal health,” says Lori L. Shemek, PhD, CMC. 

 

Reversed is about the mental, physical and emotional healing of people. “We have brought some of the best in healthcare together to share ways of naturally healing the body. I hope after this season we can look at how the right lifestyles and exercise combined with what we eat and how we think, can play a role in improving our health,” adds Mattocks. Charles has teamed up with some partners in keto and health to bring this project to life. Those partners include: Keto Mojo, Keto Chow, Carb Manager, Swerve, ENERGYbits, Pork King Good, Select Savory Seasonings, Stevia Sweet BBQ, Redmond Life, Secco Wine Club, Ketonessa, Labin and Kilosophy. Reversed has already locked in more seasons which will cover HIV and mental health. A talk show for the plus size community is also in pre production.

 

About Charles Mattocks

Every career move Celebrity Chef Charles Mattocks has made has been in keeping with his desire to touch lives in a positive way. Inspired by his uncle, the late Bob Marley, Mattocks dared to dream big. After giving a stunning performance in the title role of the Emmy nominated The Summer of Ben Tyler, Mattocks, a single Dad, decided the Hollywood lifestyle was not the best for his young son and moved across the country. His need to create meals that were tasty, nutritious, and affordable led to his career as “The Poor Chef”. Appearances on The today show, Good Morning America, The Talk, Martha Stewart, CNN and Dr. OZ gave him the opportunity to share what he had learned about feeding a family for less money. Mattocks is no stranger to diabetes. He was diagnosed with Type 2 diabetes in 2011 at the age of 38. A tireless advocate for diabetics everywhere, Charles Mattocks, is determined to help stem the time of this deadly disease. Mattocks began to use media as a way to reach the masses. He launched Reversed in 2017 with a vision and passion to help people live better lives.

By |2021-02-18T09:46:12-07:00February 9th, 2021|Categories: On Tour, Keto While Traveling|Tags: , , , , |0 Comments

Results of accelerated 2 year shelf life testing (passed)

Several months ago, the place that packages our samples (and puts a “best before” date on the packages) asked us to get them a report to corroborate the 2-year shelf life claim. So I did. The results came back today. It was conducted as an accelerated test with high humidity and temperature. They checked for changes in the water activity, moisture; total bacteria, yeast, and mold populations. They also did an organoleptic to check that the color, texture, odor, and taste were unaffected – as a powder and mixed with water.

The short version is: they agree that a claim of a 2-year shelf life is acceptable for the product.

So what does that mean for you? The date we have stamped on the packages should represent the date it should last until with no discernable change in taste – and it’ll likely be absolutely fine even MUCH longer than that. The packaging we are using has an extremely good oxygen barrier and likely lasts a REALLY long time before you’re going to see any degradation in the flavor or the protein. You will, however, see degradation in many of the vitamins once you get really far out past the “best by” date. If you intend to use Keto Chow for ALL of your meals for several weeks, I would not recommend using “expired” product. If you’re using it once or twice a day, you are unlikely to experience adverse effects or deficiencies.

Planning on stocking up on some non-perishable food? Along with many of the suggestions you’ll find in a recent blog post by Dr. Adam Nally, he says:

… this has been a wonderful and needed addition to our food storage.  Simply adding water, avocado oil, butter or cream to the KetoChow powder creates and instant, and very healthy ketogenic meal

Apparently, you should also take up bow hunting.

Discussion: The water activities of the products are so low that they do not support the growth of microorganisms. However, the products are not sterile as some bacterial populations existed, possibly spore formers. For item 1, microbiological populations hovered around detection limits (100 CFU/g) for the course of the study with 1 container having a higher load (2,800 CFU/g on day 597). For item 2, microbiological populations mostly remained below detection limits. No yeast or molds were detected in either product. Overall, the data shows that microbiological populations are extremely low, and the products do not support the growth of microorganisms. The client states that the product should be refrigerated after mixing with water. [the testing lab] agrees with this precaution since the product would be capable of supporting microbiological growth after being added to water. Interestingly, moisture levels increased somewhat in both products [over the course of the test]. Water activity values fell slightly. There were no detectable declines of organoleptic quality observed over the course of the study. [the testing lab] feels the product remained unchanged over the course of the sutyd[sic].

*Recommended Shelf Life: Based upon the analytical and organoleptic data obtained over the course of this shelf life study, it is the opinion of [the testing lab] that a shelf life of 2 years is attainable and acceptable for the product analyzed herein.

By |2020-03-10T15:03:40-06:00March 10th, 2020|Categories: Keto Chow, Keto While Traveling, Future Foods|Tags: , , , , |2 Comments

Kinda last minute Meat-Up in Anaheim California this Thursday

Miriam and I (Chris) were headed to California this week for a (now canceled) trade show. Since it’ll cost almost as much to cancel our flights and hotel, we’ve decided to go ahead and fly to California anyway and turn it into an impromptu meet up! If you’re in the LA area, head over to this post on our Facebook page and leave a comment! We’ll be nailing down the time and place once we get enough suggestions.

By |2020-03-03T10:14:57-07:00March 3rd, 2020|Categories: On Tour, Keto Chow, Keto While Traveling|0 Comments

Keto Chow on the Pacific Crest Trail

Guest post by Jessie.

Many of the people reading this post might enjoy hiking, some others might like camping… but would you want to hike and camp for five months straight? Living out of your backpack as you trek through some of the most amazing and treacherous terrains this country has to offer, sleeping in a tent nearly every night after a grueling 25–30 mile hike each day?

In 2017, I decided that walking 2,650+ miles from Mexico to Canada on the Pacific Crest Trail (PCT) sounded like my idea of “fun”. So, I quit my job and became a ketogenic thru-hiker.

Eating keto in the backcountry is no easy feat: there’s no refrigeration, no electricity, no kitchen… There’s a reason why keto hiking (especially long-distance keto thru-hiking) hadn’t been well documented; there were no accounts from successful thru-hikes as of 2017. I was told “you won’t make it 100 miles”, and bets were placed on whether I’d give up keto (or give up the hike) when I “finally came to [my] senses” and realized carbs were necessary for endurance endeavors.

Next Mile Meals Hiking the Pacific Crest Trail

They were so very wrong. Not only is keto hiking and backpacking absolutely possible, it’s our preferred way to backpack, lightening the load by carrying calorically dense food and providing stable, predictable energy to power up the mountains and thru the trek.

Crucial to the success of a keto thru-hike is the food chosen each day: what options do we have that are nutritionally-complete, shelf-stable, light-weight, and easy to pack? Clearly, Keto Chow does the trick! 2,650+ miles later, here’s how a daily breakfast of Keto Chow fueled the miles, and what other food options exist for ketogenic hikers, hunters, and backpackers looking to take their keto diet on the trail.

Keto Chow in the “Front Country”

I may have been the one hiking, but my partner, Christopher, was Mission Control at home, making sure my meals were sent ahead of me along the way, including my daily dose of Keto Chow. At home, we store our Keto Chow in large glass jars, and scoop straight from the jar to bottle or blender. On our first keto treks, we tried a portable version of the same method, using one large Ziploc with a scoop and a few days of Keto Chow. Handling the scoop with dirty hands and storing it in the bag risked spoiling the Keto Chow, but without the scoop and with no scale, it was extremely hard to accurately measure one portion.

On multi-day trips, our big food breakthrough was packing each day’s food portions into separate clear plastic bags, which made it easy to pull out that day’s food in the morning and pack the bear can away. Christopher stuck with this system for my PCT supplies, so he portioned out Keto Chow to pack it with each day’s food.

Christopher's Food Prep

Christopher prepping a few hundred miles worth of food re-supply boxes to ship to trail towns along the PCT

A Ziploc snack-sized bag was a perfect fit for one meal of Keto Chow with powdered cream. Christopher weighed out a full scoop of Keto Chow, added heavy cream powder and MCT powder, zipped it up, and shook it to mix the powders up. (When we tested these trailside, we had issues with the cream and MCT powder clumping up, and found that pre-mixing the dry powders helped everything mix smoothly.) When new flavors were available over that summer, he sent me samples to try and wrote the names on the bags in Sharpie. (Chocolate Peanut Butter still came out on top.)

Recipe/Macros

  1. One scoop of Keto Chow 2.0 (Chocolate Peanut Butter)
  2. 10g MCT powder
  3. 30g heavy cream powder
  4. Add water, shake to blend, and enjoy!
  • Calories: 450
  • Protein: 34g
  • Fat: 31g
  • Net carbs: 7.5g

A note on carb count: the high daily calorie burn of backpacking and thru-hiking seemed to give us extra headroom for net carbs, so the relatively high amount of carbs in these breakfasts wasn’t an issue for us. If you’re looking to reduce the carb count, swap the powdered heavy cream for avocado oil; it’s available in single-serve 1–2 oz portions online or you can carry it in a small sealed container like a water bottle.

Keto Chow in the Backcountry

Pacific Crest TrailOur preferred method of making Keto Chow at home is with our immersion blender, but as much as we’d love to take that on the trail with us, the backcountry is lacking in a few key requirements to make that happen. So, we transition from electrical to mechanical when on the trail.

To keep it simple, you can just pack a basic blender bottle, which fulfills the basic requirements of “insert Keto Chow → add liquid → shake →  drink”. However, if you’re anything like us, every ounce matters when you’re carrying it on your back. To lighten the load, we use a 1 qt Ziploc Container and Wire Whisk Balls. The Ziploc container weights a bit less than a standard blender bottle and can also store a stove and fuel canister while hiking. We recommend purchasing a few of each in case they break or get lost—when your only containers go out-of-commission on trail, it’s not easy to MacGyver a solution mid-trek (cue flashback when I had to mix my breakfast shake with my hair comb for a week when my whisk ball was left behind at a trail town).

Timing-wise, I prepared my shake the night before so it was ready for breakfast the next day. The Pacific Crest Trail crosses a wide variety of terrain—desert, alpine, grassy plains, etc…—but most nights dipped low enough to keep the shakes around “fridge temperature” until the next morning (even in the desert). If the overnight temps were too high, I waited until the next morning, found a cold stream to filter water from, and drank my shakes on-the-go.

Next Mile Meals + Keto ChowIn the Sierra Nevada, I had the benefit of snow (perhaps the only positive of trudging through frozen snowfields for weeks at a time). This meant I could make my shake, bury it in a nearby snowbank, and have a frosty meal ready for me the next morning. I made sure to cleanly seal the container and bury it deep so that animals couldn’t find it, and I used an Ursak or a Bear Vault to prevent critter intrusions.


I’d drink our shake while breaking down camp (usually alongside a strong cup of coffee), and scrub out the container with filtered water and a rag. Every few days, I’d give it a good soapy wash to keep it clean, pick up my next post office maildrop from Christopher with its resupply of Keto Chow, and head back onto the trail.

Start the Day with Keto Chow
End the Day with Next Mile Meals

Keto Chow provided a much-needed dose of healthy nutrients each day, but as the hike planning progressed, I found myself struggling to find other keto-friendly food options, especially when craving a warm hearty dinner each night. Conventional “just add water” backpacking meal options are stuffed full with cheap carbs—rice, pasta, potatoes—because they’re inexpensive to make and shelf-stable. With my mornings kicking off with Keto Chow but unable to find an evening bookend for our meals, I made my own dinners from six trail-tested recipes and when I returned home, Christopher and I launched Next Mile Meals!

Eating Keto on the Trail

On the Next Mile Meals site, we’ve made shelf-stable freeze-dried meals available to every keto hiker, hunter, and outdoor adventurer to fuel their own treks. We’re also an educational resource: we did the math on why keto backpacking is perhaps the best weight-savings strategy, and even posted the DEXA scans of what ketogenic hiking does to one’s body to encourage other hikers wanting to stay keto while out adventuring.

Now a year into the company’s launch, we get emails nearly every day from customers who thought their backcountry hobbies were off-limits to them because of their diet or health restrictions. With Keto Chow and Next Mile Meals, no one has to choose between their health or their hobbies anymore. You can have your (sugar-free) cake and eat it too!

Happy Hiking!
Jessie & Christopher

By |2019-03-13T08:51:57-06:00March 13th, 2019|Categories: Keto Chow, Keto While Traveling|Tags: , , , |2 Comments