Audio By Carbonatix
Inspired by 17th-century German monks who allegedly survived on a rich beer called doppelbock during Lent, an Ohio man has embarked on a 46-day beer diet, dropping all solid food until Easter Sunday.
Many Christians choose not to consume beer during Lent, as a way of abstaining for something they find pleasurable, but Dell Hall, the director of sales at Fifty West Brewing Company in Cincinnati, Ohio, is doing the exact opposite. On March 6th, he embarked on a 46-day beer diet, dropping all solid food and getting his nutrients only from beer and vitamin supplements. Although he admits the first few days were rough, Hall claims he now feels amazing and is 25 pounds lighter than when he started.
“Day two and three were pretty rough. I wanted to bash some Taco Bell after a few beers because that’s what we do,” Dell Hall told the Cincinnati Enquirer. “The last couple days I haven’t been hungry at all. I hope that’s going to be a good sign and I maintain this level of clarity.”
Although the monks that inspired his diet consumed a hearty type of beer they called “liquid bread” due to the high levels of carbohydrates it contained, Hall has opted for variety, drinking whatever beer he craves at that moment. Dell has his first beer at around noon, when the hunger really kicks in, and then a few more after work. He also drinks black coffee, unsweetened tea and sparkling water to keep himself from getting sick of beer.
Even though he claims the beer diet has nothing to do with wanting to shed extra pounds, Dell Hall has been monitoring his weight ever since he started, and by April 7th – a month into his Lent challenge – he had already lost 34 pounds. He’s already dreaming about having a steak After Easter Sunday, but plans to take it easy and allow his stomach to re-adjust to solid food.
“Your digestive system sort of shuts down,” he told Insider. “So you have to slowly re-introduce food.”
Interestingly, Hall says that ever since he adopted his beer diet, his sense of smell has been enhanced somehow, and he can now smell chili in the air from the nearby Pleasant Ridge Chili restaurant.
“Our air in Cincinnati is permeated with the smell of Cincinnati chili. It’s delicious,” Hall said. “There are so many different parlors … I wonder if our sense of smell isn’t in tune to it because it’s everywhere.”
Dell Hall is documenting his 46-day beer-diet on Facebook and YouTube.
Latest Stories
-
Ministry of Gender investigates alleged sharing of intimate videos by foreign national
19 minutes -
Cocoa must be treated as business, not politics- Nana Aduna II
26 minutes -
Barker-Vormawor urges scrutiny of COCOBOD reforms, warns of continued debt burden
33 minutes -
Prince Adu-Owusu: Beyond flowers and grand gestures — How do you want to be loved?
45 minutes -
Seven vehicles burnt as fuel tanker explodes on Nsawam-Accra highway
53 minutes -
Former COCOBOD administration spent syndicated loans on themselves, not farmers – Inusah Fuseini
1 hour -
Mahama vows to end export of raw mineral ores by 2030, shifts focus to local processing
2 hours -
Mahama meets UN Chief, discusses African security & democracy.
2 hours -
Livestream: Newsfile discusses cocoa crisis, galamsey complexity and election credibility in Ghana
2 hours -
Ghana stops cocoa Smuggling by narrowing price gap with neighbours – COCOBOD CEO
2 hours -
COCOBOD CEO admits pricing gap is costing Ghana cocoa sales
2 hours -
Solomon Owusu blames NPP for cocoa crisis, backs government’s new reform agenda
2 hours -
‘Behind The Lens with Queen Liz’ explores the true meaning of Valentine’s Day, Love, Lust or Legacy?
4 hours -
‘I wanted to be an architect but ended up as a nurse’ – Diana Hamilton reveals
5 hours -
From wards to worship: Diana Hamilton reveals how nursing school shaped her destiny
5 hours
