There is so much conflicting information out there about what we should eat. Thousands of new diet books are published every year claiming they have "the solution" whether it's paleo, keto, whole30, Atkins, etc. With so much information out there how do you decide what to eat? That's where this unique book comes in - a collaboration between Polyface farmer and master of the unorthodox Joel Salatin and Dr. Sina McCullough, a Ph.D. in Nutrition who reversed her autoimmune disorder through diet. Written like a conversation between Joel and Sina, the book covers how to chart your own food path and the steps to take in order to get to optimum health. The first section covers creating your personalized roadmap to health. There are questions to help you create goals for both health and eating and a quiz designed to help you see where you currently are with food and where you'd like to be. The second section is the largest and gives 34 tips on how to shift from low to high quality processed food. The third section gives tips for shifting from high quality processed food to whole foods. The fourth section gives tips on shifting from whole foods to locally grown whole foods. The fifth section gives tips on going from locally grown food to growing your own food. At the end of the book in the Appendix Joel and Sina both give a brief biography and share how they met and decided to collaborate on this book.
I'm a HUGE Joel Salatin fan, so I'm always excited when he has a new book. This one is very different, but still very challenging and inspiring. I really like that they go from making better choices with processed food all the way to growing your own food. Having drastically changed my own diet about 10 years ago it is a process and I'm still not perfect or where I want to be. I really appreciate that they both understand that eating better is a process and they have so many great tips to help people improve with manageable steps. I also really liked the first section and want to go back and think more about what goals I want to work toward and things I could do better. This is honestly a book for ANYONE who wants to improve their eating, but might feel overwhelmed with all the choices/plans/ideas out there.
Some quotes I liked:
[on preservatives in food] "I saw one of the greatest demonstrations of this in California at a school farm...one of the first assignments for the students was to bring some food to class. Students brought Twizzlers, Oreo cookies, gummy worms, marshmallows and squeezable cheese. The teachers brought an orange, apple, lettuce and a green bean. The students put all their contributions in the worm box on one end and the teachers put theirs in the other end. The next week the students ran to the box, opened the lid, and found all their contributions sitting there untouched. The teachers' contributions, on the other hand, were completely gone. Digested. As the students puzzled over the phenomenon, the teachers made their point: 'why would you want to eat something worms won't even eat?' Wow! The point is, what drives life is death and decomposition. If it won't rot, it won't decay. If it won't rot, it won't digest." (p. 107-8)
"Back in 1985, Monsanto was manufacturing rBGH [recombinant bovine growth hormone]. They conducted experiments on cows across the United States by injecting them with rBGH - the first genetically engineered hormone in our food supply. Nobody knew what would happen. Yet, beginning in 1985, the FDA allowed Monsanto to sell the experimental milk (and meat) for human consumption with no restrictions while the rBGH drug was still in the experimental phase of development. Even worse, the FDA did not require those experimental products to be labeled. That means, for 8 years, she of us drank experimental milk and ate experimental meat without knowing it. And when the GAO [Government Accountability Office] called them out, the FDA stood behind their decision...'The FDA does not require the labeling of food products derived from animals involved in drug treatment trials...we [the GAO] believe the public should have the right to know which food products have been produced from animals being tested with investigational drugs. Consequently, we disagree with the FDA on this point.'" (p. 148)
[Things that came to light during litigation against Monsanto over Roundup cancer claims] "Monsanto wrote research papers in secret and then passed them off as written by scientists in academia. A Monsanto executive told other company officials that costs could be kept down by writing research papers themselves and then hiring academics to put their names on the papers....The U.S. Department of Heath and Human Services planned to conduct a scientific review of the safety of glyphosate. But senior EPA officials killed the review...Even though Monsanto adamantly claims that Roundup is safe for us to eat and does not cause cancer, Monsanto's lead toxicologist stated in her deposition that she 'cannot say that Roundup does not cause cancer' because 'we [Monsanto] have not done the carcinogenicity [cancer] studies with Roundup.'" (p. 167)
"How much glyphosate gets used, anyway? On soybeans alone, 120 million pounds. On corn alone, 95 million pounds. All other uses amount to about 60 million pounds. Add all those up and you have 275 million pounds...every year that's how much Roundup herbicide is dumped onto the U.S. That doesn't count use in any other country." (p. 168)
"I've decided the most prominent benchmark designating folks who 'get it' with food is leftovers...By definition, leftovers means that you did not eat single service portions. How much food today is sold in single service packaging?" (p. 191)
"When Teresa and I go to potlucks, she always brings at least two and often three dishes - more than anyone else. The reason is so I'll have something to eat. She puts it on the table with all the other dishes, but I make sure I know which ones are hers. Then when I go through the line I concentrate on her stuff." (p. 194) I do the SAME - especially with holiday meals.
"One of the most intriguing things to me, in this domestic culinary space, is that at the very time in history when we've never enjoyed so many labor-saving techno-gadgets, we've never been more reluctant to prepare our own food. As food prepared outside the home escalates north of 50 percent these days, our techno-glitzy kitchens sit idle, and that's a shame. Never in history has cooking been more efficient. Never before has from-scratch cooking been easier. And yet here we are buying highly processed foods and going out to eat routinely." (p. 263)