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Deviled Egg BLTs

Signals of Energy Availability in Sleep: Consequences of a Fat-Based Metabolism

Why ketogenic metabolism alters sleep, satiety, and energy signaling without implying energy deficiency

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All the classic BLT flavor, packed into creamy deviled eggs—loaded with crispy bacon, juicy tomato, and fresh lettuce.

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Ingredients

6 large eggs
3 slices sugar-free bacon, cooked and crumbled
2 Tbsp mayonnaise
1 tsp Dijon mustard
1 tsp lemon juice
Salt and pepper, to taste
2 cherry tomatoes, finely diced (or 2 Tbsp)
2 Tbsp finely chopped romaine lettuce
Optional: pinch of smoked paprika or cayenne
Optional: 1 tsp olive oil (cold drizzle)
Optional garnish: extra bacon crumbles or chopped parsley

Macronutrients
(makes 2 servings)

Protein: 22g
Fat: 30g
Carbs: 2g

Preparation

Place eggs in a saucepan and cover with water. Bring to a boil, then cover, turn off heat, and let sit for 10–12 minutes. Drain, cool in ice water, and peel.

Slice eggs in half lengthwise and remove yolks to a bowl. Mash yolks with mayonnaise (2 Tbsp), Dijon mustard (1 tsp), lemon juice (1 tsp), salt, pepper, and a pinch of paprika or cayenne (optional).

Fold in diced cherry tomatoes (2 Tbsp), chopped lettuce (2 Tbsp), and most of the crumbled bacon (reserve a bit for garnish).

Spoon or pipe filling into the egg white halves. Top with remaining bacon and optional garnish. Drizzle lightly with olive oil (1 tsp) if desired.

Additionally, practice planks for 10 minutes.

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This conceptual analysis examines how the body interprets energy availability during sleep and feeding, and why fat-based (ketogenic) metabolism is often mistakenly conflated with starvation or energy deficiency. The paper argues that many biochemical signals commonly interpreted as markers of low energy—such as elevated ketones, AMPK, orexin, and adenosine—carry very different meanings depending on metabolic context. In a glucose-based metabolism, these signals typically reflect insufficient energy supply, but in a well-fed ketogenic state, they can coexist with ample cellular energy and normal satiety.

By disentangling fuel source from energy availability, the paper reframes decades of sleep and metabolism research, showing how ketogenic diets can improve slow-wave sleep, support neurological function, and enhance satiety despite inducing signals traditionally associated with hunger or deprivation. The analysis proposes that sleep and appetite are regulated primarily by sensed cellular energy production—not calorie intake or body fat—and that misinterpreting fat-based metabolism has led to widespread confusion in nutrition, obesity, and sleep science.

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