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Nourishing Traditions: The Cookbook that Challenges Politically Correct Nutrition and the Diet Dictocrats (Paperback)
by Sally Fallon
Category:
Nutrition, Health & fitness |
Market price: ¥ 278.00
MSL price:
¥ 218.00
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MSL Pointer Review:
A full-spectrum nutritional cookbook with a startling nutrition message you can't afford to miss. A proven good investment. |
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Author: Sally Fallon
Publisher: NewTrends Publishing, Inc.; 2nd edition
Pub. in: October, 1999
ISBN: 0967089735
Pages: 688
Measurements: 9.9 x 7.5 x 1.4 inches
Origin of product: USA
Order code: BA00407
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- MSL Picks -
The subtitle of Sally Fallon's revamped cookbook colossus says it all: The Cookbook that Challenges Politically Correct Nutrition and the Diet Dictocrats.
Nourishing Traditions was first published in 1995 and caused quite a stir in the nutritional world. Here was a cookbook authored by two noted nutrition writers that condemned margarine, low-fat diets, skim milk, and the Lipid Hypothesis of heart disease. Here was a book that said excessive carbohydrate intake, even complex, was bad for you. Here was a book that told its readers to eat butter, cook with coconut oil, and drink raw milk. Here was a book that said meat and fish were healthy foods. Here was a book that said tofu and soy milk were unhealthy. Here was a book that extolled the nutritional virtues of organ meats and urged a return to liver with bacon and onions once a week.
What heresy was this?
Fallon, who holds a Masters degree in Literature, studied French cooking while living in France. She is also a self-taught nutrition and food science whiz who learned what a healthy diet was by studying the pioneering work of Dr. Weston Price, DDS, author of the classic Nutrition and Physical Degeneration.
Enig received her doctoral degree in Nutrition Science from the University of Maryland and is a world renowned expert on lipid biochemistry, particularly trans-fatty acids. Enig provides the appropriate scientific background for Fallon's varied and plentiful recipes.
Fallon and Enig are a formidable writing team who have co-authored numerous ground breaking articles on soy and the political machinations of the edible oil industry. This second edition of Nourishing Traditions is their latest delectable offering.
Nourishing Traditions is as much a nutritional handbook as it is a cookbook. Indeed, the book opens with a 70+ page section on nutritional basics, discussing the biochemistry of fats, proteins, and carbohydrates, as well as vitamins, minerals, and enzymes. This section takes special aim at "politically correct" nutrition, pointing out its shortcomings and blatant fallacies. One particularly interesting tidbit is Harvard University's Dr. Frederick Stare's endorsement of Coca-Cola as a healthy, between-meal snack!
The most telling part of this section is Fallon's spirited nutritional defense of saturated fats, especially butter and coconut oil. Drawing on research from Price and Enig (who is an expert on coconut oil and lauric acid, the medium-chain triglyceride found in coconut), Fallon shows her readers why these shunned foods are health promoting and why people need to add them back into their diets. By contrast, however, Fallon includes considerable scientific rhetoric against margarine, vegetable shortening, refined sugar, and vegetable oils: the stepchildren of modern "food technology" and the "Diet Dictocrats."
The revealing nutrition section is followed by the recipes. Fallon has everything covered, from soup to nuts. Different chapters on appetizers, sauces, fermented vegetables, soups, organ meats, traditional meats, fish, whole grains, fruits and vegetables, snack and finger foods, and healthy desserts demonstrate the depth of Fallon's culinary talents and knowledge. They also give the reader hundreds of suggestions for nutrient-dense, good tasting food. Fallon even has a chapter on how to make one's own beverages to replace soda pop and coffee.
The unique thing about this book, however, is the marginal notes that are on every page of the recipe section. Lining the sides of each page are nutritional and scientific tidbits on various foods; nutritional anthropology; nutrition studies; book excerpts from Linus Pauling, H. Leon Abrams, Dr. Price, and other authors; and myths/truths about nutrition with full references to assorted scientific journals. While some of these features were in the first edition, the second edition expands them considerably. They provide an excellent and interesting compliment to the wealth of recipes.
Nourishing Traditions is above all a cookbook that respects and promotes the culinary traditions of our ancestors, ancestors virtually untouched by cancer, heart disease, Alzheimer's, multiple sclerosis, etc. It is by following these traditions, says Fallon, that we will find true and lasting health for ourselves and our children. In my public lectures, I always recommend this book to my audiences as an absolutely essential guide to healthy living and eating. Find out why. Buy this book.
It is a controversial book on a number of fronts, as you can believe from the quoted reviews, both positive and negative. But it is fairly understandable, as the very nature of a topic like nutrition frequently invites divided opinions. While most of us know that it is clear that something has gone badly wrong with out diet, what we don’t know is what we should do about it - the blizzard of contradictory theories and advice is profoundly perplexing. Sadly enough, the more one learns about the unhealthy influence of the food processing industry on both the researchers and the regulators, the more skeptical one becomes of nutritional guidelines from the food establishment.
Common sense suggests two ways out of this confusion. The first is to eat as our pre-agricultural ancestors ate - the paleo diet - on the assumption that these are the foods we are genetically adapted to consume. But for most, this is impractical and over restrictive.
The second approach, and the one adopted here, is to review the modern research in the light of what we know of the wholesome traditional diets that sustained many cultures for millennia - cultures that were free of the diet-related degenerative diseases of today. It is an exciting and fruitful line of enquiry, and this book is much the best source.
Despite the negative reviews, we recommend this book to readers as an excellent cookbook as well as an important reference on nutrition. It is advisable that you read the book along with some other some other MSL selected titles to access more time-proven healthy recipes and to have a fuller understanding of what nutrition advice works best for you and your family.
Target readers:
Anyone who cares about their nutrition and health.
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SALLY FALLON is the founder and president of the Weston A. Price Foundation, a nonprofit organization that boasts over 300 chapters throughout the United States and abroad. The Weston Price quarterly journal, Wise Traditions, reaches 6,500 subscribers per issue.
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From the Publisher:
The Diet Dictocrats don't want you to know that...
Your body needs old-fashioned animal fats. New-fangled poly- unsaturated oils can be bad for you. Modern whole grain products can cause health problems. Traditional sauces promote digestion and assimilation. Modern food processing denatures our foods but ancient preservation methods actually increase nutrients in fruits, nuts vegetables, meats and milk products!
At last a successful challenge to Politically Correct Nutrition and the Diet Dictocrats!
Recalling the culinary customs of our ancestors, and looking ahead to a future of robust good health for young and old, Nourishing Traditions offers modern families a fascinating guide to wise food choices and proper preparation techniques. Sally Fallon unites the wisdom of the ancients with the latest independent and accurate scientific research in over 700 delicious recipes that will please both exacting gourmets and busy parents.
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View all 9 comments |
T. Hartle (MSL quote), USA
<2007-01-05 00:00>
This book promotes the notion that animal fats are necessary for our health and hormonal balance and yet these claims are not supported by sound research, in fact much research has been conducted proving the exact opposite. This book promotes a diet that could be potentially very dangerous for individuals with diabetes, heart disease, cancer, uterine fibroids, hormonal problems and other health issues.
In our society we certainly do not have any lack of saturated animal fats in our diets and we are plagued with many hormonal problems such as serious menopausal symptoms, early puberty, as well as heart disease, cancer and many other illnesses.
In Asian countries they do not eat much animal flesh and do not experience any where near the rate of osteoporosis, heart disease, menopausal symptoms that we have in the U.S.
I have seen many people recover from uterine fibroids, high blood pressure, even type II diabetes and other illnesses by eating a plant based diet. This book is based more on opinion than sound nutritional research.
All living things have hormones running through their bodies and when we eat their flesh we consume these hormones which can actually throw off our delicate hormonal balance not help it. I would not recommend this book as it basicly strives to justify the unhealthy diet of America despite the growing number of Americans suffering from debilitating diseases. |
An American reader (MSL quote), USA
<2007-01-05 00:00>
Spare me the lovely, delicate little drawings - a trick to get health-conscious, counterculturally influenced young people to look inside this book.
I disagree with the premise of this book - which is just more Atkins hype: that consuming more and more animal flesh and having meat or dairy as the base of your diet will somehow make you healthier than the person who has a grain-based diet with plenty of beans, nuts and vegetables as well as fruit (and perhaps occasional dairy, meat or fish when necessary or maybe having more of these foods at certain times in one's life.)
The information about fermented foods can be found elsewhere including Michio Kushi's books on Macrobiotics or other such publications (that actually are based on facts regarding the traditional Asian diets.) The fact is all the regions of the world have whole grains as their base, not meat! In Europe and North America it is wheat, Asia it is rice, Latin American it is corn, etc. (Didn't someone say that "bread is the stuff of life?") Although meat has been used by people over thousands of years, never was it the centerpiece of anyone's diet. I mean, how many chickens, lambs and cows can most people afford to slaughter every day to keep up such a habit? Not to mention that giving your kids a quart of dairy milk every day is an excellent way to keep them permanently stuffed up and congested as well as more at risk for other, more serious health complications.
As for not eating junk food, using only whole, unprocessed grains and stopping our dependence upon the medical-pharmaceutical industry, as well as the horrors of margarine (which we have known for years) Fallon is just preaching to the choir. There are plenty of books that have been written by doctors themselves that stress a healthy, balanced diet based on whole grains and vegetables to avoid or reverse cancer, heart disease and diabetes. |
Kerrri Northey (MSL quote), Australia
<2007-01-05 00:00>
I note that some reviewers have criticized the book for its lack of scientific rigor. I think that the sections on what to eat and how to prepare food and why are reasonably supported for this type of book. After all it is not a scientific paper. The little snippets of information on each page however are probably of various degrees of rigor. An excerpt from Tom Sawyer for example is hardly scientific evidence, but I thought it was interesting nevertheless.
I haven't cooked a lot of the recipes, partly because of the time required to prepare them. But, I have modified what I eat and how I prepare it. In many instances this meant modifying my existing recipes to suit. For example, I make real stock now. I have also drastically modified my fats based not only on this book but also other good sources.
As for Dr Price, the book clearly says he was a dentist. As far as I can tell his qualification was DDS (Doctor of Dental Science) and he therefore clearly merits the title.
This is one of my favorite books and I recommend it to anyone with a real interest in healthy eating. Whether you agree with everything or not it is an invaluable resource and food for thought.
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Julie Morris (MSL quote), USA
<2007-01-05 00:00>
I absolutely love this book. I have to be careful not to spend too much time reading it, there's so much information on every page. Most of the recipes I've tried have turned out very well as long as I follow them well. My kids love the baking I do with it.
Also, I have switched to raw milk, as my children are big milk addicts. Their health has improved because of it, and they never fail to get sick when the raw milk is unavailable. If you get your milk from a reputable source, there is no need to worry about contamination. You can get salmonella from pasteurized milk as well. The taste is much better, and my husband can drink it without his stomach being bothered. This subject is well worth further study if you are skeptical.
Anyway, as far as the time involved, mostly you have to plan ahead. Soaking your grains does not require extra work so much as extra time. It demands a new way of life, which for me has been more of a gradual process of adding one new thing at a time instead of becoming overwhelmed with trying to change everything at once. Add what works for you and live a better life even if it's not perfect. I can't tell you how much better real food tastes and how much better you feel when you cut out processes and refined foods. this is "health" food that pleases the pickiest of eaters and never looks scary! |
View all 9 comments |
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