Just finished reading In Defense of Food . One of my goals for 2012 was to read at least one book a month and, so far, I'm doing well with this one. I've also read quite an assortment.
I got a little bogged down with all the facts, history, science, studies...but the author provides a very thorough explanation and argument for his approach to eating. He recommends returning to traditional ways of eating real, well-grown and unprocessed foods. He elaborates on how all of the processing of food is depleting them of nutrients. As a result of eating a diet of processed foods, we are overfed but undernourished. From the book...
A loaf of bread is one of the traditional foods that everyone knows. Bread is traditionally made using a remarkably small number of familiar ingredients: flour, yeast, water, and a pinch of salt. But industrial bread has become a far more complicated product of modern food science. As an example, he lists the complete ingredients list for Sara Lee's Soft & Smooth Whole Grain White Bread. It lists over forty ingredients, many unfamiliar [ethoxylated monoglycerides?] and unpronounceable ingredients [azodicarbonamide].
The main point is to return to eating whole foods. The type of foods, according to the author, that your great-grandmother would recognize as food. In summary, return to eating food, and enjoying food, not food products. Not eating things that are incapable of rotting might be a good place to begin. Eat food. Not just to be healthy but to bring pleasure back to eating.
~Kate
1 comment:
Kate - We try as much as possible, but in this society it is soo hard (and expensive). Thanks for the reminder to keep at it.
FYI - I would skip reading The Kite Runner if I were you.
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