Pretty smile, healthy message — a great way to start the day

"Big Blue" formally debuts tomorrow

As the “big picture” guy, our book is all about an examination of the many categories of reasons that support the shift to a whole-foods, plant-based diet. We give you all you need to get you started on your journey and we recommend many other books that complement our message, provide more detail information and help to make your journey as effortless, enjoyable and as successful as possible. This is one of those books.

Recently I learned about a new best-selling book that is the perfect companion to ours. It is the The Complete Idiot’s Guide to Plant-Based Nutrition by Julieanna Hever. Her book is selling so well that it is currently out of stock on Amazon. When they get back in stock, I will be writing a review for you right here. Meanwhile, you can meet this talented registered dietitian, Julieanna Hever, right now in this video.

As I’ve mentioned many times in this blog and in our book, the vast “system” responsible for training our medical doctors and registered dietitians comes up way short when it comes to teaching them exactly what we should be eating to promote vibrant health, reverse heart disease and so much more. But there’s some good news.

Loaded with information that will make your journey easier

Fortunately, many enlightened MD’s and RD’s have discovered the simplicity of vibrant health on their own and are doing their best to share that life-changing information with you now. Julieanna Hever is one of those people. And like us, her emphasis is on maximizing the healthiest foods — whole plants — not just focusing on what you’re avoiding.

I have already added her book to our online BookStore or you can order it now by clicking on the link below. While visiting her book’s page on Amazon, you may want to take a look at the Table of Contents. This is a serious book with lots of great information about vitamins, shopping, food preparation, exercise and more. At over 300 pages, this is a book that you’re going to want to have in your library as you begin the exciting journey of taking charge of your health.

 Click here to buy Julieanna’s book on Amazon

J. Morris Hicks, author and activist. Working daily to promote health, hope and harmony on planet Earth.

If you like what you see here, you may wish to join our periodic mailing list. Also, for help in your own quest to take charge of your health, you might find some useful information at our 4-Leaf page. From the seaside village of Stonington, Connecticut – Be well and have a great day.

If you’d like to order our book on Amazon,  visit our BookStore now.

—J. Morris Hicks…blogging daily at HealthyEatingHealthyWorld.com

SHARE and rate this post below…One more thing, occasionally an unauthorized ad may appear beneath a blog post. It is controlled by WordPress (a totally free hosting service). I do not approve or personally benefit whatsoever from any ad that might ever appear on this site. I apologize and urge you to please disregard.

Posted in Book Promotion, Recipes & meals | 1 Comment

Bittman’s “Junk Food” Article: Confusion or Clarity?

Mark Bittman -- New York Times

Did you see the Mark Bittman article about junk food in the SundayReview section of the New York Times? (link below) His motives were good and his piece may convince a few people to prepare more of their food at home, but (like most items in the news) the overall message lacked clarity. Entitled “Is Junk Food Really Cheaper,” he began with:

The “fact” that junk food is cheaper than real food has become a reflexive part of how we explain why so many Americans are overweight, particularly those with lower incomes. I frequently read confident statements like, “when a bag of chips is cheaper than a head of broccoli …” or “it’s more affordable to feed a family of four at McDonald’s than to cook a healthy meal for them at home.” This is just plain wrong. In fact it isn’t cheaper to eat highly processed food.

Mark Bittman's Three Meals, including two cheaper alternatives to the "junk food" on top

He then goes on to explain how a typical meal for a family of four at the NYC-based McDonald’s near his home will cost $28 — much more than two meals that he prepared at his home. This is where the lack of clarity comes in.

Roasted Chicken – $14: “You can serve a roasted chicken with vegetables along with a simple salad and milk for about $14, and feed four or even six people.”

Rice & Beans – $9:  “Canned beans with bacon, green peppers and onions; it’s easily enough for four people.”

Bacon, Chicken, Milk? Didn’t Bill Clinton quit eating that stuff to enable his body to heal itself?

Hey Mark. Here’s what I’ve got to say to you, “Just because you prepare the meal at home doesn’t necessarily mean that it is healthy. Are you really telling people that you think chicken, bacon and dairy products are what they should be eating? I am sure that your readers are confused.

Notice that both of the alternative meals contain meat and/or oil — and both have cow’s milk as the beverage of choice. So, is he saying that these two meals are just cheaper? Or are they also healthier? As a reader, I am thinking that he must mean both.

But as a Mark Bittman fan of sorts, I read just about everything he writes these days, and it disturbs me when he fails to be real clear with the public about what they should be eating. Mark Bittman probably has a better understanding of what we should be eating than over 95% of all media professionals. The problem is that even though he has the knowledge, he oftentimes comes up way short when it comes to embracing CLARITY over confusion in his articles.

In the 20-minute video below, he describes the “big picture” about food in much the same way that we do in our book. He describes our typical western diet as the harmful, grossly inefficient and unsustainable monster that it is — but yet he continues to include all sorts of animal foods in his cookbooks like “How to Cook Everything.”

Affordable Poison for your children -- and always available

The article went on to describe other problems with fast food, “The core problem is that cooking is defined as work, and fast food is both a pleasure and a crutch.” He also cites the ubiquitous locations of fast food, their attractive pricing, and the $4.2 billion that the industry spent — JUST on advertising – in 2009. He also touched on another dark secret:

The engineering behind hyperprocessed food makes it virtually addictive. A 2009 study by the Scripps Research Institute indicates that overconsumption of fast food “triggers addiction-like neuroaddictive responses” in the brain, making it harder to trigger the release of dopamine. In other words the more fast food we eat, the more we need to give us pleasure; thus the report suggests that the same mechanisms underlie drug addiction and obesity.

This addiction to processed food is the result of decades of vision and hard work by the industry….They created a food carnival, and that’s where we live. And if you’re used to self-stimulation every 15 minutes, well, you can’t run into the kitchen to satisfy that urge.”

Still no clarity. After describing an incredibly complicated mess known as fast food in this country, Mr. Bittman comes up way short in his final call to action — urging people ot eat grilled cheese, chickens and eggs — at home. See for yourself:

Real cultural changes are needed to turn this around. Somehow, no-nonsense cooking and eating — roasting a chicken, making a grilled cheese sandwich, scrambling an egg, tossing a salad — must become popular again, and valued not just by hipsters in Brooklyn or locavores in Berkeley. The smart campaign is not to get McDonald’s to serve better food but to get people to see cooking as a joy rather than a burden, or at least as part of a normal life.

What about the children? As Mark says, “As with any addictive behavior, this one is most easily countered by educating children about the better way. Children, after all, are born without bad habits. And yet it’s adults who must begin to tear down the food carnival.”

The first step in tearing down that carnival is for the media to get real clear and real consistent about EXACTLY what we should be eating in order to maximize our health. Even with clear and consistent information, it would tell take decades for the masses to move in the direction of a whole foods, plant-based diet. But, clear information coupled with rapidly rising energy prices will eventually get the job done. After all, as Mr. Bittman and I have said many times, “What we have today is grossly unsustainable.”

Below my signature, you can read Mark’s entire “Junk Food” article. Or you can watch this 20-minute video. Personally, I like the straight-shooting Mark Bittman in the video better than the one that wrote the article in the SundayReview. Below the video, I have also provided links to some of my earlier posts featuring Mr. Bittman.

Mark Bittman on what’s wrong with what we eat | Video on TED.com.

NY Times Columnist Mark Bittman “gets it” about food

NY Times…getting it right when it comes to the cost of “disease care”

“Good News” about food from Mark Bittman…may breed complacency

J. Morris Hicks, author and activist. Working daily to promote health, hope and harmony on planet Earth.

The Bottom Line. Confusion over clarity is preferred by the powerful members of our our food supply chain. As long as you’re sufficiently confused, you’ll eat almost anything. A few more blog posts on that topic:

“Men’s Health,” A champion in the game of confusion

Oz takes “confusion over clarity” to a new level – TIME

If you like what you see here, you may wish to join our periodic mailing list. Also, for help in your own quest to take charge of your health, you might find some useful information at our 4-Leaf page. From the seaside village of Stonington, Connecticut – Be well and have a great day.

If you’d like to order our book on Amazon,  visit our BookStore now.

—J. Morris Hicks…blogging daily at HealthyEatingHealthyWorld.com

Bittman’s article: Is Junk Food Really Cheaper? – NYTimes.com

SHARE and rate this post below…One more thing, occasionally an unauthorized ad may appear beneath a blog post. It is controlled by WordPress (a totally free hosting service). I do not approve or personally benefit whatsoever from any ad that might ever appear on this site. I apologize and urge you to please disregard.

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COMPLICITY — Billions of animals suffering in factory farms

Warning. While this blog is necessary, it’s not altogether pleasant.

After 225 consecutive daily blogs, I have only devoted two of them to the disgusting topic of animal suffering. Now there will be three. In our book, we cover five categories of reasons supporting a plant-based diet: health, environment, energy conservation, world hunger and suffering of animals. I began my own journey to a plant-based diet for health reasons, but after eight years of eating this way, I am now perhaps even more passionate about those other four categories of reasons — especially this one.

We need a few billion more people on our team of promoting health, hope and harmony on planet Earth.

Driven by the availability of cheap energy, we have simply been consuming the wrong food (for our species) in great quantities for the past fifty years — and we’ve inflicted great damage to our own health and to the health of the planet in the process.

While disrupting the precious harmony of nature with our food choices, we’ve also been complicit in a violent process of bringing animals to market — a process that can never be a part of the inevitable restoration of harmony on planet Earth. And, if we can’t figure out a way to get it done, we’ll leave Mother Nature no other choice but to do it herself.

There are eleven chapters in our book and one of them is devoted to the suffering of the animals that we raise for our dinner tables. It is entitled “Hell on Earth” and it is titled appropriately. Not very many people have ever seen the inside of a factory farm and the meat, dairy and egg industry would like to keep it that way — because they are very much aware that opening their doors for public tours would be very bad for business.

So, I have arranged for you to have a brief tour of a factory farm that produces pork. When I found this video yesterday, I was required to sign in with my gmail account, then confirm that I was over 18 years of age. A short video at 2:41, I can honestly say that I didn’t make it past the first minute. The sound alone made me want to scream. Maybe I could’ve made it without the sound, but I simply decided that I didn’t want to see it and I didn’t need to see it.  But the vast majority of our population does need to see it — because without their own complicity, this kind of process would not be happening — without them ordering sausage on their Domino’s pizza.

When we consume a product, we are complicit in every process that is required to bring that product to market. We may not know what all of those processes are, but as the ultimate consumer, we play a very important role in all of them. In a country where almost everyone claims to love animals, our out-of-sight, out-of mind attitude about what we’re eating is maddeningly unconscionable.

J. Morris Hicks, author and activist. Working daily to promote health, hope and harmony on planet Earth.

The Bottom Line. The world currently produces 60 billion animals per year in this kind of environment in order to feed just the wealthiest 2 billion people. Unless we reverse the current trend of a steady move to this woefully harmful, wasteful and cruel diet-style, that number will soon grow to 100 billion, then 200 billion.

Where does it end? Who can stop the madness? We can; by simply taking charge of our own health, we can become part of the solution — of promoting health, hope and harmony on planet Earth.

Oh, some will say that pigs suffer more than the other animals. Think that beef cattle have it pretty good? Consider this; when you’re talking about castration without anesthetic, there is simply no “humane” way to get that done. My two earlier blogs are provided here here for your convenience.

“Earthlings” — A documentary that we all NEED to see

Suffering of Animals — Remember Michael Vick?

If you like what you see here, you may wish to join our periodic mailing list. Also, for help in your own quest to take charge of your health, you might find some useful information at our 4-Leaf page. From the seaside village of Stonington, Connecticut – Be well and have a great day.

If you’d like to order our book on Amazon,  visit our BookStore now.

—J. Morris Hicks…blogging daily at HealthyEatingHealthyWorld.com

SHARE and rate this post below…One more thing, occasionally an unauthorized ad may appear beneath a blog post. It is controlled by WordPress (a totally free hosting service). I do not approve or personally benefit whatsoever from any ad that might ever appear on this site. I apologize and urge you to please disregard.

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