For those still worryng about starvation mode, I'd suggest a quick google of that phrase and reading any study published in the last few years. Short-term, the body doen't change metabolic rate based on intake. Meaning if you eat 1-2000 calorie meal today and 20-100 calorie meals tomorrow, your body will essentially be at the same rate the entire time. Even over extended period, the decrease in metabolic rate will be almost entirely due to loss of LBM, rather than an adaptation from the body.
As for all of the studies from back then quoting breakfast as "the most important meal," I would challenge anyone to find causation in the study rather than correlation. Yes, more than half of healthy people eat breakfast in those studies, that doesn't mean it's what caused them to be healthy.
As for all of the studies from back then quoting breakfast as "the most important meal," I would challenge anyone to find causation in the study rather than correlation. Yes, more than half of healthy people eat breakfast in those studies, that doesn't mean it's what caused them to be healthy.