The
Daily
Fix
Rest
Creamy Asparagus Soup
Cancer as a Mitochondrial Metabolic Disease
Why Mitochondrial Failure—not Genetic Mutation—Drive Cancer
Rest day
A silky asparagus soup blended with cream, Parmesan, lemon, and added protein
Ingredients
For the Soup:
2 Tbsp butter or beef tallow
1 medium onion, diced
3 cloves garlic, minced
1 ½ lb fresh asparagus, trimmed and chopped (reserve tips for garnish if desired)
4 cups chicken broth (unsalted)
1 cup heavy cream
2 oz cream cheese
½ cup grated Parmesan cheese
Zest of 1 lemon
2 Tbsp fresh lemon juice (adjust to taste)
Salt and black pepper, to taste
1 cup cooked shredded chicken thigh or breast
Optional Garnish:
Reserved asparagus tips, lightly sautéed in butter
Extra Parmesan
Fresh chives or parsley
Lemon wedges for serving
Macronutrients
(per serving, serves 4)
Protein: 22g
Fat: 40g
Carbs: 12g
Preparation
In a large pot, melt butter or tallow over medium heat. Add onion and garlic, cooking 3–4 minutes until softened and fragrant.
Add chopped asparagus (reserving tips if desired). Stir well, then pour in chicken broth. Bring to a simmer and cook for 10–12 minutes until the asparagus is very tender.
Using an immersion blender (or carefully in batches in a countertop blender), puree the soup until smooth.
Return soup to pot. Stir in heavy cream, cream cheese, Parmesan, lemon zest, lemon juice, salt, and pepper. Simmer gently 3–4 minutes until creamy. Add shredded chicken. Adjust lemon to taste.
Ladle into bowls, garnish with sautéed asparagus tips, extra Parmesan, fresh herbs, and a squeeze of lemon if desired. Serve hot.
Enjoy the recovery time, or make-up anything you missed from last week.
In this BSI Medical Society presentation, Professor Thomas Seyfried challenges the dominant somatic mutation theory of cancer, arguing instead that cancer is fundamentally a metabolic disease rooted in mitochondrial dysfunction. Drawing on decades of research, he contends that damage to cellular respiration forces cells to rely on fermentation—primarily of glucose and glutamine—driving uncontrolled growth and malignancy. Genetic mutations, in this view, are downstream effects rather than the initiating cause.
Seyfried supports this paradigm shift with historical analogies, experimental data, and clinical case studies in both humans and animals, highlighting metabolic therapies such as ketogenic diets and targeted metabolic drugs. He calls for a reorientation of cancer treatment away from approaches that may further damage mitochondria, including radiation and chemotherapy, and toward strategies that restrict cancer’s metabolic fuel supply. The lecture ultimately urges a fundamental rethink of cancer biology, research priorities, and therapeutic design.
TUESDAY 260203