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Eating Well for Optimum Health

The Essential Guide to Food, Diet and Nutrition

ebook
1 of 1 copy available
1 of 1 copy available
From one of our most trusted authorities on health and alternative health care, a comprehensive and reassuring book about food, diet, and nutrition.
Building on the scientific and philosophical underpinnings of his enormous bestseller Spontaneous Healing, the body's capacity to heal itself, and presenting the kind of practical information that informed his 8 Weeks to Optimum Health, Dr. Weil now provides us with a program for improving our well-being by making informed choices about how and what we eat. He explains the safest and most effective ways to lose weight; how diet can affect energy and sleep; how foods can exacerbate or minimize specific physical problems; how much fat to include in our diet; what nutrients are in which foods, and much, much more. He makes clear that an optimal diet will both supply the basic needs of the body and fortify the body's defenses and mechanisms of healing. And he provides easy-to-prepare recipes in which the food is as sensually satisfying as it is beneficial.
Eating Well for Optimum Health stands to change - for the better and the healthier - our most fundamental ideas about eating.
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    • Publisher's Weekly

      March 6, 2000
      Now considered one of holistic medicine's most authoritative voices, Weil (Spontaneous Healing; 8 Weeks to Optimum Health) provides a common-sense approach to healthy eating. While much of this information can be found in other volumes, Weil illuminates the often confusing and conflicting ideas circulating about good nutrition, addressing specific health issues and offering nutritional guidance to help heal and prevent major illnesses. Of particular value is his examination of recent fads, such as low-carbohydrate, vegan and "Asian" diets, with an eye toward debunking the myths about them while highlighting their valuable aspects. Readers will appreciate the brief stories of individuals who have made big changes in their eating habits and solved chronic health problems, as well as recipes for foods that Weil feels will satisfy nutritional needs and the taste buds. Although not the first to link the rise of cancer, heart disease and obesity with the now-prevalent consumption of fast food and processed foods that contain a lot of sugar and few, if any, micronutrients, Weil's articulate plea to reflect on the consequences is convincing. Despite Weil's emphasis on a diet of fresh fruits and vegetables, unprocessed foods and much less meat and dairy products than most Americans are used to, readers will notice a profoundly realistic observation of what changes they can readily incorporate into their busy lives. And they will be heartened to learn that they can eat nutritious foods and still get much pleasure from them.

    • Library Journal

      October 1, 1999
      The good doctor relies on the philosophy behind his hugely best-selling Spontaneous Healing to help readers make sensible choices about what to eat. The 750,000-copy first printing says it all.

      Copyright 1999 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

    • Booklist

      March 1, 2000
      Two of the four parts of the program Weil so persuasively presented in the mega-selling "Eight Weeks to Optimum Health" (1997) dealt with oral intake of food and dietary supplements, respectively. This book expands upon those two constituents, proposing how and explaining why one should follow Weil's dietary advice long beyond the eight weeks it takes to get healthy. That advice is based on seven propositions: we must eat to live, eating is pleasurable, food can be simultaneously healthy and pleasurable, eating is often an important social activity, diet reflects personal and cultural identity, how one eats affects health, and changing diet can help manage disease and restore health. One huge and five much shorter chapters follow, and as Weil did in previous books, he appends to each chapter one or two personal testimonials to the value of its counsel. The big chapter explains human nutrition by considering the macronutrients (carbohydrates, fats, proteins) and the micronutrients (vitamins, minerals, fiber, phytochemicals) separately, and the former at much greater length and depth; this chapter alone makes the book more solidly informational than "Eight Weeks." The short chapters outline the "worst" and "best" diets "in the world," mull over weight-loss dieting, advise on grocery shopping and dining out, and encourage personal cooking. Clarity, pertinence, and reasonableness again characterize Weil's writing, and a hefty clutch of recipes concludes. ((Reviewed March 1, 2000))(Reprinted with permission of Booklist, copyright 2000, American Library Association.)

    • Library Journal

      April 1, 2000
      The purpose of Weil's (Spontaneous Healing) latest book is to look at and clarify "the issues and controversies surrounding food and nutrition" and to "establish a sense of what eating well means." He accomplishes this nicely by first discussing in a long chapter the macronutrients (carbohydrates, fats, protein) and the micronutrients (vitamins, minerals, fiber, and protective phytochemicals), outlining the role that each of these nutrients plays, the best kind of each, and suggested amounts of each. Weil also analyzes some of the currently popular diets and includes recipes for dishes that he feels provide the best kind of diet--low in carbohydrates, fats, and protein and high in fresh fruits and vegetables. Between each chapter are vignettes of patients who have altered the way they eat following Weil's suggestions and who are much healthier for making the changes. Well written and very understandable, this is a worthy complement to Dorothy Gault-McNemee's God's Diet (LJ 11/15/99). Highly recommended for consumer health collections. [Previewed in Prepub Alert, LJ 10/1/99.]--Mary J. Jarvis, Pampa, TX

      Copyright 2000 Library Journal, LLC Used with permission.

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  • English

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