Monday, April 23, 2012

FOOD RULES - RULE #64

THE END! This is it, everyone! We have reviewed all of the Food Rules, from #1 to #64.

And guess what? I am going to post all of them again. :) I think they were great and should be reviewed again. This time, I will add a short commentary of my own with each one to share where I have succeeded with them and the areas that I still need to work on.


from, "Food Rules: An Eater's Manual," by Michael Pollan

*****

PART III: How Should I Eat? (Not too much.)

Rule #64 - Break the rules once in a while.

Obsessing over food rules is bad for your happiness, and probably for your health, too. Our experience over the past few decades suggests that dieting and worrying too much about nutrition has made us no healthier or slimmer; cultivating a relaxed attitude toward food is important. There will be special occasions when you will want to throw these rules out the window. All will not be lost (especially if you don't throw out Rule #60). What matters is not the the special occasion but the everyday practice - the default habits that govern your eating on a typical day. "All things in moderation," it is often said, but we should never forget the wise addendum, sometimes attributed to Oscar Wilde: "Including moderation."

*****

Eat food. Not too much. Mostly plants.

Friday, April 20, 2012

FOOD RULES - RULE #63

from, "Food Rules: An Eater's Manual," by Michael Pollan

*****

PART III: How Should I Eat? (Not too much.)

Rule #63 - Cook.

In theory, it should make little difference to your health whether you cook for yourself or let someone else do the work. But unless you can afford to hire a private chef to prepare meals exactly to your specifications, letting other people cook for you means losing control over your eating life, the portions as much as the ingredients. Cooking for yourself is the only sure way to take back control of your diet from the food scientists and food processors, and to guarantee you're eating real food ad not edible food-like substances, with their unhealthy oils, high-fructose corn syrup, and surfeit of salt. Not surprisingly, the decline in home cooking closely parallels the rise in obesity, and research suggests that people who cook are more likely to eat a more healthful diet.

*****

Eat food. Not too much. Mostly plants.

Monday, April 16, 2012

FOOD RULES - RULE #62

from, "Food Rules: An Eater's Manual," by Michael Pollan

*****

PART III: How Should I Eat? (Not too much.)

Rule #62 - Plant a vegetable garden if you have the space, a window box if you don't.

What does growing some of your own food have to do with repairing your relationship to food and eating? Everything. To take part in the intricate and endlessly interesting processes of providing for your sustenance is the surest way to escape the culture of fast food and the values implicit in it: that food should be fast, cheap, and easy; that food is a product of industry, not nature; that food is fuel rather than a form of communion with other people, and also with other species - with nature. On a more practical level, you will eat what your garden yields, which will be the freshest, most nutritious produce obtainable; you will get exercise growing it (and get outdoors and away from screens); you will save money (according to the National Garden Association, a $70 investment in a vegetable garden will yield $600 worth of food); and you will be that much more likely to follow the next, all important rule.

*****

Eat food. Not too much. Mostly plants.

Friday, April 13, 2012

FOOD RULES - RULE #61

from, "Food Rules: An Eater's Manual," by Michael Pollan

*****

PART III: How Should I Eat? (Not too much.)

Rule #61 - Leave something on your plate.

Many of us were told by our parents while growing up that we should always clean our plates - an instruction that later in life we have perhaps taken a little too much to heart. But thee is an older and healthier tradition that holds it is more genteel not to finish every last morsel of food: "Leave something for Mr. Manners," some children once were told, or, "Better to go to waste than to waist." Practice not cleaning your plate; it will help you eat less in the short term and develop self-control in the long.

*****

Eat food. Not too much. Mostly plants.

Monday, April 9, 2012

FOOD RULES - RULE #60

from, "Food Rules: An Eater's Manual," by Michael Pollan

*****

PART III: How Should I Eat? (Not too much.)

Rule #60 - Treat treats as treats.

There is nothing wrong with special occasion foods, as long as every day is not a special occasion. This is another case where the outsourcing of our food preparation to corporations has gotten us into trouble: It's made formerly expensive or time-consuming foods - everything from fried chicken and french fries to pastries and ice cream - easy and readily accessible. Frying chicken is so much trouble that people didn't use to make it unless they had guests coming over and a lot of time to prepare. The amount of work involved kept the frequency of indulgence in check. These special occasion foods offer some of the great pleasures of life , so we shouldn't deprive ourselves of them, but the sense of occasion needs to be restored. One way is to start making thee foods yourself ; if you bake dessert yourself, you won't go to that much trouble every day. Another is to limit your consumption of such foods to weekends or social occasions. Some people follow a so-called S policy: "no snacks, no seconds, no sweets - except on days that begin with the letter S."

*****

Eat food. Not too much. Mostly plants.

Friday, April 6, 2012

FOOD RULES - RULE #59

from, "Food Rules: An Eater's Manual," by Michael Pollan

*****

PART III: How Should I Eat? (Not too much.)

Rule #59 - Try not to eat alone.

Americans are increasingly eating in solitude. Although there is some research to suggest that light eaters will eat more when they dine with others (perhaps because they spend more time at the table), for people prone to overeating, communal meals tend to limit consumption, if only because we're less likely to stuff ourselves when others are watching. We also tend to eat more slowly, since there's usually more going on at the table than ingestion. This is precisely why so much food marketing is designed to encourage us to eat in front of the TV or in the car: When we eat alone, we eat more. But regulating appetite is only part of the story: The shared meal elevates eating from a biological process of fueling the body to a ritual of family and community.

*****

Eat food. Not too much. Mostly plants.

Monday, April 2, 2012

FOOD RULES - RULE #58

from, "Food Rules: An Eater's Manual," by Michael Pollan

*****

PART III: How Should I Eat? (Not too much.)

Rule #58 - Do all your eating at a table.

No, a desk is not at a table. If we eat while we are working, or while watching TV or driving, we eat mindlessly - and as a result eat a lot more than we would if we were eating at a table, paying attention to what we're doing. This phenomenon can be tested (and put to good use): Place a child in front of a television set and place a bowl of fresh vegetables in front of him or her. The child will eat everything in the bowl, often even vegetables he or she doesn't ordinarily touch, without noticing what's going on. Which suggests an exception to the rule.: When eating somewhere other than at a table, stick to fruits and vegetables.

*****

Eat food. Not too much. Mostly plants.