Jewels:
I read and went over the website. There are some statements which are categorically false.
***Claim 1: If you begin eating 2,500 calories per day then your metabolism will adjust itself so that your body begins burning 2,500 calories per day.
If you try to starve yourself by suddenly eating 1,000 calories per day then your metabolism will again ADJUST ITSELF so that your body begins to burn only 1,000 calories per day.***
This is false. Many people achieve enduring changes in body weight. If your metabolism was able to adjust itself in such a fashion, it would be the ultimate homeostatic mechanism. Not to mention, people vary greatly in their basal metabolic rate (the rate at which they utilize energy to maintain bodily processes when resting).
***Claim 2: To make this work you need to SHIFT the types of calories eaten as shown in our diet on the next page, and if you do this then your metabolism will burn all of the calories eaten. Then, when it finishes burning those calories it will find the nearest available fat tissue on your body and burn that too...***
This is false. Your body breaks down what you eat and uses a mix of fatty tissues and sugar stores to maintain current activity. Your fat deposits are constantly being used and replaced.
***Claim 3: Of course, in order for this dieting technique to work you also need to eat foods which have been rated "Fat Burning Compatible" -- because the foods you eat must be easy to burn (so that your metabolism will burn them entirely and then switch to burning your fat tissue after that).***
This is complete nonsense. This would completely negate protein because it is easily the macronutrient that takes the longest to digest. If this had any semblence of truth, we'd all be living off candy and baked potatoes.
***Claim 4: It's true, and the only reason why fat tissue is being stored on your body is because your body's fat burning hormones are not being released after each meal in the correct amounts.***
That magic hormone he is speaking of is Glucagon. The problem is eating INHIBITS its release. Changing what you eat doesnt change your glucagon levels. What changes it are your current energy expenditures.
You can't trick your metabolism with different foods. Foods are made up of protein, carbs, and fats.
Michael