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Fallon Sally - Nourishing traditions : the cookbook that challenges politically correct nutrition and the diet dictocrats

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Fallon Sally Nourishing traditions : the cookbook that challenges politically correct nutrition and the diet dictocrats
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    Nourishing traditions : the cookbook that challenges politically correct nutrition and the diet dictocrats
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This well-researched, thought-provoking guide to traditional foods contains a startling message: Animal fats and cholesterol are not villains but vital factors in the diet, necessary for normal growth, proper function of the brain and nervous system, protection from disease and optimum energy levels. Sally Fallon dispels the myths of the current low-fat fad in this practical, entertaining guide to a can-do diet that is both nutritious and delicious.

Nourishing Traditions will tell you:

  1. Why your body needs old fashioned animal fats
  1. Why butter is a health food
  1. How high-cholesterol diets promote good health
  1. How saturated fats protect the heart
  1. How rich sauces help you digest and assimilate your food
  1. Why grains and legumes need special preparation to provide optimum benefits
  1. About enzyme-enhanced food and beverages that can provide increased energy and vitality
  1. Why high-fiber, lowfat diets can cause vitamin and mineral deficiencies

Topics include the health benefits of traditional fats and oils (including butter and coconut oil); dangers of vegetarianism; problems with modern soy foods; health benefits of sauces and gravies; proper preparation of whole grain products; pros and cons of milk consumption; easy-to-prepare enzyme enriched condiments and beverages; and appropriate diets for babies and children.

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About the First Edition

I have to recommend... Nourishing Traditions by Sally Fallon. The first chapter of her book is so right on target that I feel a little guilty for taking her ideas. But what she pointed out is that independent producers of foodsuch as people who present us with meat, poultry, eggs and butterprovide the lowest profit margin in the industry. People who put out junk food...have an incredible return on invested capital because they are putting out low-cost items and making a very high profit.

Robert C. Atkins, MD
Author of The Atkins' New Diet Revolution

Nourishing Traditions is more than a cookbookit's an education that will lead you to "cook with pride," as you will know that you are giving your family the proper nourishment for a lifetime of vigorous good health. Now that is the real "joy of cooking!"

William Campbell Douglass, MD
Author of The Milk Book

Nourishing Traditions...is a work of genius...richly encyclopedic.... Run, don't walk to the nearest phone and order Nourishing Traditions.

Clara Felix
Author of the Felix Letter

This cookbook is unique.... Nourishing Traditions throws down the gauntlet to challenge the "Diet Dictocrats."

Beatrice Trum Hunter
Author of Consumer Beware

As a convinced vegetarian of some 25 years, I opened Sally Fallon's book to her many meat recipes and immediately closed it again. But then I figured that there must be more to it than that. There is.... I was surprised at the wealth of information to help me (even as a vegetarian) make better food choices and prepare the ones I have chosen to get the most nourishment from them.

Peter Hinderberger, MD, Past President
Physicians Association for Anthroposophical Medicine

I figured it would be only a matter of time before people would realize that lowfat and low-cholesterol diets were highly overrated for healthfulness. Now comes a cookbook author and food writer who is well aware of the politically correct nutrition misinformation, but who also has the knowledge and courage to challenge its assumptions.

Gene Logsdon
Author of the Contrary Farmer

NOURISHING TRADITIONS

The Cookbook that Challenges Politically Correct Nutrition and the Diet - photo 1

The Cookbook that Challenges Politically Correct Nutrition and the Diet Dictocrats

REVISED SECOND EDITION

Sally Fallon

with Mary G. Enig, Ph.D.

Cover Design by Kim Waters Murray

Illustrations by Marion Dearth

NOURISHING TRADITIONS

The Cookbook that Challenges Politically Correct Nutrition and the Diet Dictocrats

REVISED SECOND EDITION

Sally Fallon

with Mary G. Enig, Ph.D.

Cover Design by Kim Waters Murray

Illustrations by Marion Dearth

Copyright 1999, 2001 NewTrends Publishing, Inc. All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced or transmitted in any form or by any means, electronic or mechanical, including photocopying, recording, or by any information storage and retrieval system, without permission in writing from the publisher.

A Note to the Reader: The ideas and suggestions contained in this book are not intended as a substitute for appropriate care of a licensed health care practitioner.

Published by:
NewTrends Publishing, Inc.
Washington, DC 20007

US and Canada Orders (877) 707-1776
Overseas Orders: (574) 268-2601
www.newtrendspublishing.com newtrends@kconline.com

Available to the trade through
National Book Network 800-462-6420
ISBN: 978-0-9670897-3-7

For Sarah, Nicholas, James and Davidson
and their children

ACKNOWLEDGMENTS

The authors are grateful to Marianne Gregory, whose suggestion planted the seed for this book; to those who watered it with their encouragement and help including Dr. Alsop Corwin, H. Leon Abrams, Jr., Steven Acuff, Patrick Von Mauck, Dr. Meira Fields, Leyla Uran, Zeynep Gur, Tamas and Hajna Dakun, Pam Howar, Jeffrey Dearth, Valerie Curry, Charlie Votaw, Richard Thomas, Tom Dix, Cy Nelson, Randolph and Ginny Aires, Carmen and George Denby, Trudy Fallon, Jon Cutler, Supat Sirivicha, Ira Wexler, Chris Archilla, Vladimir Ratsimer, Lynn Greaves, Kurt Reiman, Fred Gregory, Dr. Artemis Simopoulos, William Shawn, Christopher Hartman, Bob White, Diana Vivian, Mary Hudson and Milka Halama; and to John Fallon whose support and enthusiasm never faltered. Particular thanks goes to Maggie Wetzel who always used butter.

We also wish to thank those who contributed recipes: Maggie Wetzel, Harry Wetzel and Katie Wetzel; Marianne Gregory; John Desmond; Rosemary Barron; Sally Hazel Fallon, Anne Marie Fallon and Tom Fallon; Philomena Aparicio; Madeline Curry; Moustafa and Lynn Soliman; Sue Rogers; Carole Valentine; Audrey Powell; Maribel Kim; Vivian Mason; June Shields; Marie Meyer; Taiwo Obi; Thomas Connelly; Isabel Molin; Maria de Lourdes Campos; Tony Rossi, Mary Jo Bierline; Emily Sagar; Karen Acuff; Soroor Ehteshami; Maria Noguera and Marie Claude Leduc.

We are also grateful to the many individuals who contributed to the second edition. Jenny Mathau, Kasia Welin Grossman and Valerie Mortensen helped immeasurably with their detailed lists of questions and recipe suggestions. Thank you also to Tom Cowan, Jan LaTourette, Geoffrey Morell, Jake McGuire, Rebeccah and Eugene Yen, Donna Gates, Sandy Cameron, Lee Clifford, Julie Thomas, Lisa Millimet, Ali-Reza Fassihi, Betsy Pryor, Steve Foxman, Valerie McBean, Walter Scharrer, Maury Silverman, Trauger Groh, John MacArthur, Walter Felber, Louise Dwyer, Pilar Bastida, Marguerite Wyner, David Morris, Cynthia Renfrow, Nee Sinclair, Jayne Taylor, Richard Dobbs, Sally Eauclaire Osborne, Christian Elwell, El King, Renee Bartol, Zahra Partovi, Robert Irons, Terence Martin, Harley Lyons, Maryanna Erzinger, Eva Holland, Joe Hilgendorf, Stephen Byrnes, Winnie Barker, Roberto Aparacio, Loren Zanier, Karine Bauch, Brenda Ruble, Chuck Eisenstein, Deanna Buck, Hy Lerner, Tom Heinrichs, Becky Mauldin, Josh Knox, Marie Bishop and Christopher Cogswell, with particular thanks to Nancy Morris, Catherine Czapp and Pam Holmes for their proofreading labors and to Pam Holmes and her daughter Katie for getting the recipe index in shape. Finally, thanks to Harry Wetzel, whose financial support made publication possible.

CONTENTS
PREFACE

Technology is a generous benefactor. To those who have wisely used his gifts he has bestowed freedom from drudgery; freedom to travel; freedom from the discomforts of cold, heat and dirt; and freedom from ignorance, boredom and oppression. But father technology has not brought us freedom from disease. Chronic illness in industrialized nations has reached epic proportions because we have been dazzled by his stepchildrenfast foods, fractionated foods, convenience foods, packaged foods, fake foods, embalmed foods, ersatz foodsall the bright baubles that fill up the shelves at our grocery stores, convenience markets, vending machines and even health food stores.

The premise of this book is that modern food choices and preparation techniques constitute a radical change from the way man has nourished himself for thousands of years and, from the perspective of history, represent a fad that not only has severely compromised his health and vitality but may well destroy him; and that the culinary traditions of our ancestors, and the food choices and preparation techniques of healthy nonindustrialized peoples, should serve as the model for contemporary eating habits, even and especially during this modern technological age.

The first modern researcher to take a careful look at the health and eating habits of isolated traditional societies was a dentist, Dr. Weston Price. During the 1930's, Dr. Price traveled the world over to observe population groups untouched by civilization, living entirely on local foods. While the diets of these peoples differed in many particulars, they contained several factors in common. Almost without exception, the groups he studied ate liberally of seafood or other animal proteins and fats in the form of organ meats and dairy products; they valued animal fats as absolutely necessary to good health; and they ate fats, meats, fruits, vegetables, legumes, nuts, seeds and whole grains in their whole, unrefined state. All primitive diets contained some raw foods, of both animal and vegetable origin.

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