On Mon, 29 Jan 2007 20:59:26 -0700, Philip <[log in to unmask]> wrote:
> Tom Bri:
>> http://www.nytimes.com/2007/01/28/magazine/28nutritionism.t.html?_r=2&
>> ref=magazine&pagewanted=all&oref=slogin
>>
>> AN excellent article on food. The guy has some odd notions about meat
>> eating, but otherwise is spot-on.
>>
>
> Pollan makes a lot of the same points as T. Colin Campbell. Both Pollan
> and
> Campbell criticize "nutritional reductionism" and advocate a similar
> diet:
> whole foods--lots of fruits, vegetables (including legumes) and whole
> grains--and very little animal foods (none in the case of Campbell). The
> language and philosophy and the type of diet advocated are very similar
> to
> the macrobiotic philosophy and diet.
I read the article, and I do think he has a lot to say. In a nutshell,
his rules:
1. Eat Food (natural, unprocessed; foods your great-grandmother would
recognize)--I
think we all agree with that
2. Avoid food products with health claims--good point
3. Avoid food products with HFCS, lots of ingredients, unpronounceable
ingredients--yes
4. Get out of the supermarket when possible--yes
5. Pay more, eat less. In other words, buy quality foods, eat smaller
portions--I think
most of us agree on the quality foods, at least. And eating less of
high-quality
foods is basically good advice for most of us, within reason.
6. Eat mostly plants, especially leaves--that's farther than I or most of
us would go,
though many believe eating more leaves, without compromising basic
nutrition, is good
7. Eat more like the (you name it: traditional cuisine)--and less like a
lab rat. All
strong traditional cuisines have been tested through centuries, even
millenia.
(And all strong traditional cuisines, except perhaps for Hindu, are NOT
vegetarian).
Paleos just carry it further, eating more like a hunter-gatherer, as
much as can be
done these days.
8. Cook, and plant a garden if possible.--yes; I don't believe you can be
healthy
without cooking, by eating only packaged foods and restaurant meals.
Take
responsibility for your food.
9. Eat like an omnivore. Add greater diversity to your diet in terms of
species.--yes;
this directly follows what we know of H-G and paleo eating.
So, in a nutshell, most of this is not contradictory to Paleo eating.
Rules 5 and 6
need a little reinterpretation, though not a lot. And I think this
approach is where Atkins, as presently constituted, fell off the wagon.
Eating tons of highly-processed meats and pseudofoods made to look and
taste like carbs CAN'T be good for you.
Lynnet
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