Recent Posts for the 'Reviews' Category

The Healthiest Meals on Earth by Jonny Bowden

Friday, May 27th, 2011

Note: This is the second book in my quartet of Jonny Bowden’s books.



Question: When is a cookbook not just a cookbook?

Answer: When it’s a food book entitled The Healthiest Foods on Earth by Jonny Bowden

The Healthiest Foods on Earth is a deliciously diverse book that includes food facts, kitchen hints, nutritional nuggets, and easy-to-prepare meals that are not only good tasting and simple to prepare, but also good for you. In addition, the photographs of food and landscape are breathtaking.  This could easily be a coffee table book, but it’s too important to sit in your living room; it belongs in the kitchen. How can one book deliver all of this? Simple. When Jonny Bowden writes a book on health, he draws on all his resources.  In this case, his Girl Friday is Chef Jeannette Bessinger, who combines her culinary skills with Jonny’s fantastic range of on formation about the best foods on Earth.

The layout of the book is user-friendly. Each chapter is a polymeal, a meal that contains the seven “magic” ingredients or their equivalents that are the natural alternative to the polypill, a medical strategy that scientists have conceived to help reduce mortality from heart disease and stroke by 80%. These seven ingredients or their equivalents are: fish, garlic, almonds, fruits, vegetables, dark chocolate, and red wine. Jonny calls this going from “pill to plate.”  (This concept was developed by Oscar Franco, a Columbian scientist.) Both the author and Jeanette agreed that each polymeal would meet three criteria in addition to the seven “magic” foods or their equivalents: it would maximize nutritional taste, it would taste good, and it would be relatively easy to prepare.*

Because Mother Nature has provided us with so many foods that give us comparable benefits, Bowden’s book uses almost the full range of natural foods available. (See his previous book entitled, The 150 Healthiest Foods on Earth, which I reviewed earlier this month) for a complete list of foods, many of which are incorporated in Healthiest Meals.)  Each of the first 10 chapters features a four-course polymeal.  The next three chapters highlight one-pot polymeals with simple sides, and the last chapter (14), provides us with liquid polymeals.

In every chapter Jonny, using his casual style, educates us with details on the health aspects of the ingredients, tips for meal preparation, the recipes themselves gathered by Chef Jeannette Bessinger, a pantry list so you can do one-stop shopping for each meal, and gorgeous color plates of each of the dishes as well, as double paged plates of foods.  In fact, most of the chapters are pre-planned menus that is are all-inclusive, including “suggested swaps, so you can mix and match the dishes in the book for variety in your polymeals. This variety emphasizes good fats (avocado, olive oil, and yes, coconut) and de-emphasizes sugar, which Bowden believes (and I agree) is a bigger culprit than (hydrogenated) fats.

I can’t praise this book enough. The recipes meet all *three criteria and I agree with almost all the concepts. It is my “next-in-line” cookbook for trying new recipes to add to my repertoire. The layout, the information, and the photographs make The Healthiest Meals on Earth a show-stopper, and the ease of preparation make it a “must try” in my menu planning. Get a copy today and start eating the healthiest meals ever!

Here is an easy recipe that you might want to try with Vidalias, since I believe they are in the stores now.

Steam-Baked Vidalia Onions
Cancer-fighting on the Side


Prep Time: 5 minutes
Cook Time: 30 minutes

Ingredients

2 tablespoons (28g) butter
3 garlic cloves, finely minced or pushed through a garlic press
2 medium Vidalia onions, peeled, ends removed, and cut in half across the middle
2 tablespoons (28 ml) water

Preheat the oven to 375 degrees F (190 degrees C, gas mark 5)

In a small saute pan over medium heat, warm the butter until melted, Add the garlic and stir to combine and warm, about 1 minute.
Place the onions, cut side up, and the water in a small glass baking dish with a cover. Gently spoon the garlic butter onto each onion half in equal measures. Cover with the baking dish or an aluminum foil tent, taking care to seal the edges without touching any part of the onion.  Bake until soft to the fork and the garlic is slightly carmelized, about 30 minutes.  Gently lift the onion out of the pan and serve.

Yield: 4 servings

Note: In the book itself, the ingredients are on the left and the directions on the right for ease of reading and following.

On the page opposite the directions are these Notes from the Kitchen:

These onions are an easy, low-glycemic, sweet tasting, and sulfur-rich delight!
When choosing onions, be aware that different types of onions have different health-promoting chemicals. The stronger-tasting ones have superior properties.
• Onion tips: Peel it under water for ease. If the onions make you cry when cutting, stick your head in the freezer for a few moments and the irritation will diminish.
The preparation of the garlic is key to its health benefits. The garlic clove has to be crushed or chopped, the more finely the better, in order for the compounds in it to interact and form allicin, which is the substance responsible for most of the good stuff garlic does.
Allicin begins to degrade shortly after it’s produced, so the fresher it is when you use it, the better.  Adding chopped garlic to dishes as the last ingredient while cooking is always a good idea. Garlic experts advise crushing a little garlic and combining it with the cooked food shortly before serving.  Alllicin–the health-giving compound–is completely destroyed by microwaving. Sorry!

These Kitchen Hints plus other features in the book, coupled with the previous book I reviewed, The 150 Healthiest Foods on Earth, both by Fairwind Press, make great companions. Also make a great wedding gift!

NOTE: I will review the other 2 books next month.

Just Like Someone Without Mental Illness Only More So by Kurt Vonnegut, M.D.

Friday, May 20th, 2011

Mark Vonnegut, son of the late, great Kurt Vonnegut, Jr., has written another memoir about going crazy now and again. (Eden Express was written when the author was in his late twenties, after his earlier breakdown.) Since May is National Mental Health Month and my family history of mental illness is similar to Mark’s, I knew I had to read this book.

Mark’s mind jumps from thought to thought, weaving in and out his mental breakdowns over the last three decades. Now in his early 60s and a practicing pediatrician, the memoir takes us into his mind, both when he calls himself “crazy” and when he is “almost normal.”

I like his honesty, even when it is extremely personal. I also like his wit and his ability to make going crazy a side effect of living in our crazy world.  Vonnegut tells us details about his mother’s  and sister’s mental problems. Both he and his sister compound their problems with alcoholism, and the author takes us down that road as well.

Here is a paragraph about his honest explanation of his illness from page 122:

“With four psychotic breaks to my credit and a solid four-straight- generation family history of hyper-religiosity, voices, delusions, etcetera, I more than met diagnostic criteria for bi-polar disease, formerly known as manic-depression, which was why I was taking lithium….”

This book was a kind of touchstone for me. I see that you can have mental breakdowns and recover to lead a full life, although sometimes beset with hearing voices. But Vonnegut did become a pediatrician, receiving his degree in medicine for Harvard Med School, no small feat for even an “uncrazy” person.

My own bouts with depression scare me, because I always feel that a meltdown is in the wings, unannounced, even though the two major “episodes” were after childbirth (postpartum depression) and while going through menopause and divorce at the same time (which will not happen again, at least not the menopause!) But this book gave me hope that one can survive mental illness and lead a productive life, although somewhat scattered life.

Vonnegut’s memoirs also include stories about his author-famous dad, Kurt Vonnegut and about his mother’s death from cancer and other family issues that give you a fuller picture of the younger Vonnegut’s life, crazy as it may seem.

There are also small photos of Mark Vonnegut’s artwork, which I liked.  His father passed along the gift to him that art (music, poetry, painting, short stories) “was a way out of wherever you were and a way to find out what the hell happens next and not have it be just the same old thing” (p. 192).

This memoir is quick reading, even though the topic is somewhat heavy, because the author has a way of writing that sounds as though he is chatting with you in your living room. It’s very readable.

Right after completing the book, I was reading the lead story in the Arts & Entertainment of the May 8th Philadelphia Inquirer. The Marian Anderson Award was going to Mia Farrow for her humanitarian work African Relief Programs through UNICEF.  In the article, the writer, Carrie Rickie discusses how much Farrow does, given the number of children she has birthed (4) and adopted (11). She (Farrow) jokingly says that “she does what she does because ‘my OCD focuses my ADD.’” Don’t we all have our mental issues?

I think we are all a bit crazy in this fast-paced, terrorist-fear ridden world that has shrunk to the size of a cell phone and expanded because of sites such as Facebook. According to Vonnegut, “There are no people anywhere who don’t have some kind of mental illness. It all depends on where you set the bar and how hard you look.  What is a myth is that we are mostly mentally well most of the time.”

That’s good too know. Now I can be a little bit crazy and know I am in good company!


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