Title | : | The Fat Chance Cookbook: More than 100 Recipes Ready in Under 30 Minutes to Help You Lose the Sugar and the Weight |
Author | : | |
Rating | : | |
ISBN | : | 1594632944 |
ISBN-10 | : | 9781594632945 |
Language | : | English |
Format Type | : | Hardcover |
Number of Pages | : | 352 |
Publication | : | First published December 31, 2013 |
Fat Chance became an instant New York Times bestseller. Robert Lustig’s message that the increased sugar in our diets has led to the pandemic of chronic disease over the last thirty years captured our national attention.
Now, in The Fat Chance Cookbook , Lustig helps us put this information into action for ourselves. With more than 100 recipes as well as meal plans, nutritional analyses, shopping lists, and food swaps, he shows us easy ways to drastically reduce sugar and increase fiber to lose weight and regain health – both for ourselves and for our families. Lustig also shows us how to navigate the grocery store with handy lists for stocking the pantry as well as how to read a food label in order to find hidden sugars and evaluate fiber content.
Accessible, affordable, and geared toward lasting results, The Fat Chance Cookbook will be a fun and easy roadmap to better health for the whole family.
The Fat Chance Cookbook: More than 100 Recipes Ready in Under 30 Minutes to Help You Lose the Sugar and the Weight Reviews
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Our new internist recommended watching Dr Robert Lustig on YouTube and we've learned so much! He believes that 'a calorie is not a calorie,' because sugar is easily turned to fat by our liver and is the culprit in the current obesity epidemic in this country. And unfortunately sugar is in most every processed food on the grocery shelves.
Many health experts and doctors give the advice to eat real food, especially fruit, vegetables and fiber, and to cut out the sugar, salt and processed food. This book gives you the tools and recipes to do that.
Teaming up with Chef Cindy Gershen, they've created more than 100 recipes to lose the sugar and the weight. However, this is NOT a diet book; it's a plan for healthy cooking and eating FOR LIFE.
*Notes from the trenches: lately I have planned our weekly menus with these recipes. A meal ready in 30 minutes? You can't beat that! Most have been delicious:
Breakfast:
-Whole-grain Yogurt Pancakes with Berry Compote (we didn't miss the maple syrup!)
-Lox and Egg Scramble
-Joe's Scramble with homemade 'sausage' + variations
-Homemade Muesli
-Tutti-Frutti (yogurt, fruit, nuts and muesli)
-Baked Fruit Oatmeal
Lunch:
-Quinoa and Black Bean Burrito Bowl (a favorite!)
-Quinoa and Vegetable Chili (chockfull of veggies and fiber!)
-Vegetarian Bean Chili (spicy!)
-Quick Enchiladas
-Nana's Italian Vegetable Stew (I added a can of cannellini beans and a quart of vegetable broth to make minestrone.)
-Lentil Stew
-Split Pea and Vegetable Soup
-Chicken Salad
-Newell Dual (tuna salad with hard-boiled eggs)
Dinner:
-Quick Chicken Tikka Masala
-Chicken Braised with Onions and Tomatoes Five Ways--I've made these two:
Italian-Style Chicken Cacciatore
Mexican Chicken with Peppers and Onions
-Quinoa Turkey Casserole
-Simple Turkey Meatballs
-Salmon Milanese
-No-Guilt Fish Tenders
-Pork Loin with Apples and Onions (I'd make this again but cut way back on salt and pepper)
-Old-Fashioned Beef Stew and Vegetables
-Stuffed Bell Peppers (I made the variation that suggested adding 1 pound of browned ground beef to the spinach-cheese mixture. Delicious!)
Homemade sauces and rubs:
-Marinara sauce
-Enchilada sauce
-Barbecue Sauce (no sugar)
-Barbecue Rub (no sugar)
Side dishes:
-Ratatouille (would be great on pasta too)
One epic fail:
-Power Muffins (We just didn't care for these and unfortunately the recipe made a lot.)
I like how Cindy has variations and suggestions to change each recipe a little to fit your own personal tastes. Some things I would change about this cookbook in a perfect world? Color photos with the recipes and a binding that would allow the book to lie flat when you are using it. At first, I checked out this book from the public library, then decided I really needed my own copy. So I now own it and I'm glad I do!
Recipe demonstration with Cindy Gershen and Dr Robert Lustig explaining the health and medical benefits of eating real:
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=3BTTd... -
The recipes are not challenging or complicated, every recipe has nutritional information listed, and most of the recipes' ingredients I am easily able to find. I don't have to find squid ink or use an ice cream maker - hooray! The authors provide suggestions for sides or meals at the end of each recipe. This book really has helped me eat healthier.
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not the kind of recipes I was looking for
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%40 of the book is about healthy food. The ideas and even the very similar sentences were not unfamiliar to me since I've already read Lustig's last book; Metabolical. Lustig is my man. He convinced me enough so I've could given up sugar. That was a huge thing for me. I will try the recipes for sure. But this is not a diet book, this is healthy food book. It consists of every kind of recipes and yes desserts too.
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I think that he’s doing some great work on obesity and helping avoid metabolic disorders. I think if we all moved to a Whole Foods plant-based diet would be in much better health!
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Might be worth peeking at if you're a fan of Dr. Lustig's work over other mediums, but while an ambitious prospect, the execution falls short. The introduction is well communicated, though it of course is only a summarizing of Lustig's arguments made elsewhere advocating for a healthier diet. As a cookbook the recipes left a little to be desired in both breadth and depth. Still, I've added one or two stand outs to my catalog. It's not what it could have been, but if you can find it on sale and really want to see what a Lustig cookbook might look like you could consider picking it up. My recommendation, though, would be to read Metabolical and then use that awareness to customize recipes that you find elsewhere.
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I don't think I have ever enjoyed looking at a cookbook more than this one. It helps you eat healthier without the pain.
I was not expecting the explanation on healthy eating at the beginning of the book. My previous reading had already informed me on what was said here. However, for those wanting to read about sugar, nutrients in food, fiber, etc. This is a condensed, easy-to-read guide to what to eat and not to eat.
The recipes I perused here looked really tempting and, even better, easy to make. -
Lustig's Fat Chance is for everyone who can read who eats food.
This unfortunate book, however -- part science review; part pantry-stocking, meal-planning, recipe-making guide -- is not. -
I have been "eating clean" for a few years, and I am always on the lookout for other recipes.
I really like the introduction to this book. I try to explain the science behind this way of eating to my family...most of whom prefer not to listen to what I have to say. The early chapters of the book provide a succinct explanation that I will share with my loved ones. -
Not a low carb cookbook!!!
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Has a number of typos, and neglects to give serving sizes for some recipes, but overall a good companion to the original Fat Chance book, and provides some great, healthy ideas for low sugar meals.
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I really enjoyed how the recipes were laid out, even though the yellow titles were a little hard to read. I found quite a few recipes that I will definitely be trying out.
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A good collection of keto-friendly recipes.
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I've read both this book and the other Fat Chance book.
There are some great recipes here and I will definitely use them as a reference. I say reference as although 95% of them had no added (granulated) sugar they still had plenty of natural sugar.
Just one of a few examples was the amount of dried fruit that was used. Although dried fruit is still fruit, it enables you to eat say 12 apricots which you wouldn't necessarily eat still has the same calories.
Plus as my dentist has always been quick to remind me raisins etc are very very bad for your teeth.
As I said I found some very good recipes that I will definitely keep and try out, but although I don't obsess about my weight if I ate these foods recommended all the time I'd probably end up the size of a small barn. Although I'm pretty average myself, I wouldn't want to gain weight in case it limits my activity in general life.
I'd also be interested to hear about these children he speaks of, yes they obviously do lose weight rapidly (cutting out that amount of sugar would!) but are they of average weight now or are they still over. I'm not saying its not ok to carry a little extra, I know I do! But carrying even a little extra weight will make say running for a football or playing games like skipping etc less fun when (in my case) your substantially smaller (from having my George) muffin top running along in front of you ;)
But there was lots of interesting information and recipes, the explanation on what a whole grain is where to find them and how to cook them will be invaluable for me as I find the whole cracked, whole wheat, whole grain thing very confusing!
All in all a good and healthy cookbook. -
Lustig has some recipes that I'll never make (I'm sorry--I don't care how much sugar there is in ketchup, I'm not making my own) but overall I like it. I wanted to try it because I'm trying to eat more whole grains and vegetables. I like whole grains and vegetables, but too many cookbooks have very fancy recipes and I'm not a chef. I just want reasonably healthy and fairly easy recipes. He also suggests side dishes (recipes for which can be found in the book) and I like that. I'm crap at meal-planning which is bad because I make most of my meals from real ingredients (not processed packaged food) and that's time-consuming enough without having to think of what healthy grain/veg dish will go with whatever the main dish is. I made cilantro lime brown rice last week and that was very good. Easy too. So, yah!
Obviously this is a cook book and I haven't read every single page, but I'm going to count it as read. -
I think this is a great companion to Lustig's book, Fat Chance. If you read Fat Chance and were left wondering, "Well, what do I eat to keep from triggering insulin resistance?" this book is for you. It is not ground breaking recipes, but it makes changing your diet a lot simpler. Each recipe tells you why it good for you, how you can alter and change it up, and how you can store it for easy, work-night preparation.
I've had this book since the first of the year and I find myself referring to it at least once a week. I like to browse it while I make my grocery shopping list. I plan our dinners according to the principles of Fat Chance, and this book makes that process really easy. And the recipes are delicious! No one has complained, or even guessed that I am cooking "diet" food.
If you are looking for a way to sneak more vegetables into your diet, the Fat Chance Cookbook is a great place to start. -
Five stars because I want everyone to get the message that fructose is unhealthy (unless is comes with fiber--like in fruit). As a cookbook it's great if you already play with recipes. It's way more of a guide. There are suggestions of things that go well together but I would like suggested meal plans. The recipes make a lot of food. If you are cooking for one or two people they need to be modified. There are very few vegetarian recipes so I have several friends who will not find this book useful at all. Finally I bought this as a Kindle book so I have quite the task ahead of me to add the recipes to My Recipe app (which is the best cookbook app ever and the whole reason we got an iPad.)
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I started casually flipping through this cookbook last night, and was so inspired that today I made FOUR recipes! In the interest of full disclosure, I gave up eating added sugars 3 1/2 weeks ago, so I was super excited to get this reserve in. Robert Lustig is the medical guru behind how fructose is causing widespread metabolic syndrome. Anyways, I thought I'd be miserable without baked goods and candy and coffee, but mostly it's been painless. I *did* have a serious chocolate ice cream craving one night, but it passed. Today I made oatmeal whole wheat sandwich bread, roasted chickpeas seasoned with garam masala, muesli and a quinoa/turkey/brussels sprout casserole and ALL of them were delicious. I have at least 5 more recipes flagged for the near future.
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I've had to adjust all of these recipes just a little bit to make them work. So far, I've only used/made work about 5 recipes and don't have much interest in others, such as "cook some quinoa for breakfast" (I'm paraphrasing), which doesn't really seem like a recipe.
UPDATE: Things are getting easier, and many of these dishes are quite good. Each dish comes in large quantities so you can freeze some. Beware the "more than 100 recipes ready in under 30 minutes..." subtitle, as this is assuming you've already chopped every last fruit, vegetable, etc. -
Great read about how to eat. I am thinking this is a lasting lifestyle change that I could stick to. If I was debating between this and the Fat Chance book, I would pick the cook book as it summarizes the other in the first part of the cookbook, plus it has all the recipes to help you begin your healthy journey.
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This has been a great resource for me in my family's quest to cut out added sugars, avoid processed foods and eat more healthy. The first part of the book summarizes the science behind why sugar is so bad for us and the second half is full of recipes that are simple to prepare and delicious to eat!
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Nice companion to the book of the same name. Appreciated the abbreviated science - if you want that, read Fat Chance. The science is broken down into language that is easy to understand. Good reference lists and portion suggestions. The recipes aren't complex and "gourmet", but they are a good starting point.
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Interesting ideas. Ordinary cookbook.