CHECK IT OUT
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If your resolve has slipped a bit since vowing to eat right and get
healthy, there’s still plenty of time to get a grip in 2002 with help
from new library resources.
For sugar-sensitive souls, Kathleen DesMaisons outlines a strategy for
controlling cravings in her just-published “Your Last Diet: The Sugar
Addict’s Weight-Loss Plan.” Maintaining that some folks have a body
chemistry that does not respond to the eat less, exercise more
prescriptive, the author of “Potatoes Not Prozac” offers tips for losing
weight and elevating mood through a “no white food” diet.
Miriam Nelson takes a more moderate approach in “Strong Women Eat
Well,” a common-sense guide for choosing among the 40,000 food items sold
in the average supermarket. In addition to informing readers about what
edibles improve health and prevent disease, the Tufts University
nutritionist throws in 50 recipes for such delicacies as soyful succotash
and edamame salad in her program for a healthy mind and body.
From other Tufts researchers comes “The Color Code: A Revolutionary
Plan for Optimum Health.” Basing their advice on the premise that the
natural pigments in fruits and vegetables can prevent illness, James
Joseph, Daniel Nadeau and Anne Underwood reveal exactly which ones to eat
to preserve eyesight, protect the brain and fight arthritis.
Numerous new volumes are available to help put their advice into
action. In Jeanne Lemlin’s “Vegetarian Classics,” find 300 recipes for
such meatless wonders as crunchy Thai noodle salad and curried butternut
squash soup. Round out your repertoire with simple dishes like chickpea
salad with roasted peppers, featured in Nava Atlas’ “The Vegetarian
5-Ingredient Gourmet.”
Other recent additions to the collection focus on cooking for those
with special medical needs. Whether or not you have diabetes, Bonnie
Sanders Polin and Frances Towner Gied reveal how you can benefit from a
high-carbohydrate meal plan that’s low in animal proteins and saturated
fat in “The Joslin Diabetes Healthy Carbohydrate Cookbook.”
Also sure to improve your health, even if you’re not one of the 50
million Americans who suffer from high blood pressure, are meal plans in
“The DASH diet for Hypertension.” Developed by the medical school staffs
of Harvard, Duke, Johns Hopkins and Louisiana State University, this
program for reducing blood pressure and cholesterol through diet alone
promises to decrease your chances for coronary heart disease and strokes
in just two weeks.
If a sometimes undisciplined duchess can lose weight and feel great,
so can you, maintains Sarah Ferguson in “Energy Breakthrough.” In this
sensible approach based on the Weight Watchers Winning Points plan, the
spokeswoman for the popular program offers hundreds of lists, quizzes and
profiles of folks who have successfully trimmed down. There’s nothing
really new here, but it’s all delivered with the cheery optimism for
which Fergie is known.
* CHECK IT OUT is written by the staff of the Newport Beach Public
Library. This week’s column is by Melissa Adams, in collaboration with
June Pilsitz. All titles may be reserved from home or office computers by
accessing the catalog at www.newportbeachlibrary.org.
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