Joy Bauer, New York Times bestselling author, fitness guru, and diet expert for the Today Show, offers more than 75 delicious, healthy meals your family will love in Slim and Scrumptious. Here are with low-fat, low-calorie, low-cost recipes packed with high nutrition, high energy, and high marks sure to please every member of your hungry clan—for fresh, healthy, mouthwatering meals that will help you beat the high cost of eating out—from the creator of Joy’s Life Diet aka Your Inner Skinny.
At first glance, I thought "blah, another low fat cookbook with bland recipes." Then I decided to sign it out anyway, just to see. Then I found the buffalo-style chicken chili...and was roped in.
Great layout, great pictures, a variety of recipes.
Tried: Lowfat Cheesecake Fruit Dip - wonderful. I want to try this with cardamom instead of cinnamon.
Buffalo Chili - GREAT...so good... Hummus - not so hot. I prefer the olive oil taste over the sour cream tang of greek yogurt.
Cocoa Almonds - my god, they taste like nutty crunchy brownie niblets... For "good for you" food, they're a little TOO good. I keep snagging a few every time I walk through the kitchen.
Brown sugar/cinnamon almonds - also delicious.
To try: Broccoli Soup Sesame Chicken Strips Some of the dips
Recipes are simple, easy, and are turning out to be quite good. I'm wanting to buy this, now...especially as it's available on kindle!
This book seemed a little dated; also, for me it had a lot of steps and wasn't as quick-cook as I usually like. I also don't understand the whole eggs benedict recipe - my guests definitely would not like that substitution.
Her chicken and meat dishes were strong; this book does include complete nutritional info. I would have liked more pictures, and while it gave me some good ideas, I don't like it enough to work it into rotation.
I'm skeptical and worried that she's a nutritionist who is advocating margarine (real butter can never be as bad as that scary stuff) but other than that the advice seems fairly sound. She "sneaks" lots of veggies into not-usually-healthy dishes and cuts the fat and calories.
(I'm not sure why she's SO OBSESSED with animal protein, though; there are maybe 3 or 4 vegetarian recipes out of like 70...)
I appreciate how she structured the serving sizes to be LARGE (2 cups, for example) so people are satisfied with one. So the calorie counts may look a tiny bit high occasionally but hopefully you won't be needing to go back for seconds.
I wished there were more pictures, especially of finished dishes rather than fancily-styled piles of ingredients. ("No, no, MORE grains of rice on the can of tomato. A few more. OK, PERFECT! Shoot!"). A few of the full-meal pictures there were were preposterous. I know just for the sake of styling, but a side of veggies is not THREE snow peas, sheesh.
I know most authors do not want to take up page space with pictures, but this book includes pictures of ingredients, but not the finished food product. Help me out here people!
I found two recipes in this book to try and one has already been a huge hit. The recipes I chose also happen to have pictures...hmmmm, go figure
Great recipes full of flavor and light on calories! We will be adding a lot of these dishes to our list of faves and go-to dishes. She does a nice job of covering a variety of types of meals- breakfast, lunch, soups, dinner and snacks.