One of the best books on nutrition that I've read so far. It is packed with information, easy to understand, and fun to read (lots of sarcastic humor throughout). Bottom line is eat "real, nutrient-filled food, as close to its natural state as possible: whole, unprocessed, unmodified, and unrefined." And ditch obsessive behavior and "diets". Find what works for you.
Following are what I think are some of the best points from the book:
"Despite all the fat-lowering and cholesterol-obsessing, people are still sick with the same diseases that those changes were supposed to prevent."
"Margarine is the greatest culinary and dietary atrocity ever to be inflicted upon our society."
"The problem isn't too many calories per nutrient-rich bite. It's too many nutrient-poor bites per person."
"Carbohydrate is the only nonessential macronutrient. Modern supermarket carbage (carb rich garbage) is always going to be dirty fuel. All carbs are not created equal."
"When we eat more carbs than our bodies can handle and the excess overwhelms our individual tolerance for too long, the consequences reach far beyond fat storage. Metabolic syndrome. This leaves blood glucose constantly high – a condition that is inflammatory, a precursor to type 2 diabetes, and a risk factor for heart disease."
"It is not about willpower or moderation. It's about eating the right foods. Eating real, unprocessed food and ditching the rest - or, put more simply, eating a Paleo diet."
"There is nothing good in grains, including fiber, that we can’t get from vegetables and fruits with more nutrition and less baggage."
"Gluten free or not, if it comes in a box, bag, or package with a long ingredients list, it’s not good for you."
"On the list of things that matter about our food, calories are dead last."
"Hormones, not lack of willpower, drive hunger and overeating in response to dieting and food restriction."
"Nutrient synergy is the reason real, whole foods are good for us and not toxic, as isolated or synthetic nutrients could very well be."