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Eating Well For Optimum Health: The Essential Guide to Bringing Health and Pleasure Back to Eating by Andrew Weil
Book Summary InformationAuthor: Andrew Weil Edition: Paperback Format: Bargain Price Published: 2001-03-01 ISBN: N/A Number of pages: 320 Accessories:
Book Reviews of Eating Well For Optimum Health: The Essential Guide to Bringing Health and Pleasure Back to EatingBook Review: This book changed my life. Summary: 5 StarsThis book is absolutely fantastic and although I haven't read extensively on the topic, I'd venture to say that it is the definitive guide to nutrition in the marketplace. Let me start by saying that I do not have any significant health or weight issues. However, I have long suspected that I could improve my phsyical and mental well-being through diet and this book has allowed me to do exactly that. By making a few simple dietary changes (i.e., eating more complex carbohydrates and concentrating on getting enough of the "right" types of fat), I feel completely amazing and have more energy than I ever have. It's been a few months since I've read the book and I am now recommending it to everyone I know.
One thing that I like most about this book is that while it provides a philosphy and recipes, it isn't a diet. In fact, one thing the book does is point out a common theme among fad diets: they allow you to eat one thing (whether it's fat or cabbage soup or peanut butter or whatever) and you ultimately end up losing weight because you tire of the permissable food. In contrast, this book systematically goes over the macronutrients (i.e., fat, cabrohydrates, and protein) and micronutrients (e.g., vitamins, antioxidents, etc.) that your body needs and allows you to figure out the rest. I now realize that red meat makes me sleepy but it gives my boyfriend energy - we've been able to incorporate that epiphany into our meal plan and we could not be happier with the results.
Another thing that hooked me on this book was Weil's willingness to blast dietary mantras that have become accepted as absolute truth in our culture. For example, he opens the book by lambasting traditional dietary advice: eat a balanced diet, there are no "good" or "bad" foods, etc. WAIT. What exactly does "balanced" mean? And wait: there are no "good" foods, but is there any conceivable way that eating more leafy greens would harm my health? Nope. There are good and bad foods, at least in a relative sense, and Weil isn't ashamed to admit that. Being that straightforward with the reader early in the book really helped me identify with his philosphy and I'm hooked.
Right now, I'm eating the most delicious, healthful foods that I ever could have imagined with the help of this book. The best part is that it is slightly cheaper than my former diet and easier too. I expect it will only get easier over time as the mantras I have digested become habit. In the meantime, I strongly encourage everyone to read this book so that they too can take a customized, no-nonsense approach to nutrition. This isn't a book for people who want to lose weight fast - it's a book for people who love food and want to use it as a tool to promote their intellectual and physical health.
Summary of Eating Well For Optimum Health: The Essential Guide to Bringing Health and Pleasure Back to EatingAt last, a book about eating (and eating well) or health -- from Andrew Weil, the brilliantly innovative and greatly respected doctor who has been instrumental in transforming the way Americans think about health. Now Dr. Weil -- whose nationwide bestsellers Spontaneous Healing and Eight Weeks to Optimum Health have made us aware of the body's capacitiy to heal itself -- provides us with a program for improving our well-being by making informed choices about how and what we eat. Dr. Weil makes clear how?an optimal diet can both supply the basic needs of the body and fortify the body's defenses and mechanisms of healing. And he always stresses that good food -- and the good feeling it engenders at the table -- is not only a delight but also necessary to our well being so that eating for health means enjoyable eating. Eating Well for Optimum Health is a hugely practical and inspiring book about food, diet and nutrition that stands to change -- for the better and the healthier -- our most fundamental ideas about eating. Hopefully, years from now, Eating Well for Optimum Health will be looked upon as the book that saved the health of millions of Americans and transformed the way we eat--not as the book we overlooked at our own peril. It clarifies the mishmash of conflicting news, research, hype, and hearsay regarding diet, nutrition, and supplementation, and further establishes the judicious Dr. Weil, the director of the Program in Integrative Medicine at the University of Arizona, as a savior of public well-being. If you've ever wondered what "partially hydrogenated soybean oil" really is, been perplexed by contrary news reports about recommended dosages for supplements, or questioned the safety of using aluminum pots for cooking, Dr. Weil will make it all clear. Weil (pronounced "while") bravely criticizes many of the major diet books on the market, and backs up his admonitions with science. He warns readers to not fall under "the spell" of the anticarbohydrate Atkins Diet, but also criticizes the eating plan advocated by Dr. Dean Ornish--which has been granted Medicare coverage for cardiac patients--as being too low fat for the majority of people. (The omega-3 fatty acids missing from Ornish's diet are essential for hormone production and the control of inflammation, he says.) It's also fascinating to learn that autism, Parkinson's disease, and Alzheimer's disease may be caused by omega-3 fatty acid deficiencies, while an excess of omega-6 fatty acids--very common in the typical American diet--can exacerbate arthritis symptoms. Weil's explanation of the chemistry of fats will prove difficult for most readers, but few will want to eat fast-food French fries ever again after reading his appalling reasons for avoiding them, which go way beyond their well-documented heart-clogging capabilities. After a thorough rundown of nutritional basics and a primer of micronutrients such as vitamins, minerals, fiber, and phytochemicals, Weil unveils what he feels is "the best diet in the world," with 85 recipes, such as Salmon Cakes and Oven-Fried Potatoes, that are healthy, tasty, quick to prepare, and complete with nutritional breakdowns. He includes a stirring chapter on safe weight loss (he sympathizes with the overweight and comically recalls his one-week trial of a safflower oil-diet while an undergraduate). Other, equally enlightening sections include tips for eating out and shopping for food (with warnings on various additives and a guide to organics), and a wondrous appendix with dietary recommendations for dozens of health concerns, including allergies, asthma, cancer prevention, mood disorders, and pregnancy. Eating Well is an indispensable consumer reference and one not afraid to lambaste the diet industry and empower the public with information about which the majority of doctors--to the detriment of the public health--are ignorant. --Erica Jorgensen
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