KEEP   YOUR BRAIN YOUNG (Robert Rose, 2014, 384 pages, ISBN 978-0-7788-0472-7, $24.95   CAN soft covers) is by Fraser Smith, ND, prominent naturopathic academic, and   Ellie Aghdassi, PhD, RD, dementia researcher and academic in Toronto. It is a   book in line with other self-health books from Rose, covering arthritis, skin,   diabetes, liver, et al. Because we are all growing older, we need to keep our   brains in shape to avoid neurological diseases such as Alzheimer's and   Parkinson's. It is more important than ever to age well. The book deftly   summarizes the issues on age-related diseases, proposes a 12-step healthy brain   diet to help prevent or delay damage, and has 150 recipes done up in Rose style,   with tips and notes and nutrient tables. Recipes come from other Rose books, and   these are noted as to author or authority. Preparations have their ingredients   listed in both metric and avoirdupois measurements, but there is no overall   table of equivalents.  At the end there are periodical and book references   as well as websites and web-pages listed.
  Audience and level of use: those interested in a program to prevent brain   damage.
  Some interesting or unusual recipes/facts: the number of those with   Alzheimer's is expected to triple by 2050. Anti-oxidants from fruits and veggies   can protect the brain against disease. The brain can make new neural connections   in the elderly. 
  Quality/Price Rating: 87.
  4.HOMEGROWN TEA; an illustrated guide to planting, harvesting, and blending   teas and tisanes (St.Martin's Griffin, 2014, 272 pages, ISBN 978-1-250-03941-5,   $23.99 US paper covers) is by Cassie Liversidge, a UK gardener-food writer who   last wrote Grow Your Own Pasta Sauce, about eating home grown food. Here she   looks at tea gardening (backyard, balcony, and window sill). She delves into   growing tea from seeds, cuttings and small plants. She gives details on when and   how to harvest, plus how to prepare and dry the teas for year-long storage.   She's got sections on nutritional and medicinal benefits as well as an   illustrated guide on prepping fresh and dried teabags. Arrangement is by part of   the plant: leaves, followed by seeds, fruits, flowers, and roots. There is also   a plant reference chart, and index of plants, and some recommended sources.   
  Audience and level of use: a book for the tea completist.
  Some interesting or unusual recipes/facts: under sage, she lists varieties   and botanical names, medical benefits, growing, harvesting, making the tea, some   relevant tips for making bag blends – as well as an illustration of the   leaves.
  The downside to this book: no recipes for cooking with teas.
  The upside to this book: good encouragement for tea drinkers.
  Quality/Price Rating: 88.
  6.THE FRENCH COOK: souffles (Gibbs Smith, 2014, 128 
  pages, ISBN 978-1-4236-3612-0, $21.99 US hard covers) is by Greg Patent, a   Bear Award winning author for 2002, a blogger, and radio host. This is the third   in a new series on French cuisine, here dealing with the basics of souffles:   mainly how to beat eggs and how to create the sauces. There are photos and   step-by-step techniques. The basic souffles are here (hot, cold, sweet, savoury,   molded, unmolded) plus more and some variations are noted. The book is set up as   a primer for beginners. Preparations have their ingredients listed in   avoirdupois measurements, but there is a table of metric equivalents.
  Audience and level of use: beginner
  Some interesting or unusual recipes/facts: leek and pancetta souffle;   fennel and salmon; chocolate; vanilla; fresh fruit; almond and praline.
  Quality/Price Rating: 88.
  9.GLUTEN-FREE MADE EASY (Front Table Books, 2014, 268 pages, ISBN   978-1-4621-1408-5, $22.99 US paper covers) is by Christi Silbaugh and Michelle   Vilseck. Silbaugh is an active blogger, with three on the go, plus lots more   food social media interactions; her daughter was diagnosed with celiac disease   in 2009. Vilseck has needed to be gluten-free for the past 11 years or so.   Together they have created more than 150 preps in this book plus the tips and   tricks involved in putting the dishes together. There's a primer (here, called   FAQ) and some resources, plus a glossary and endnotes. The thrust here is on   family cooking, so there are lots of things that kids could make, eat and enjoy.   Preparations have their ingredients listed in avoirdupois measurements, but   there are also tables of metric equivalents.
  Audience and level of use: those who need GF foods.
  Some interesting or unusual recipes/facts: raspberry breakfast bars; peanut   butter power balls; cauliflower pizza crust and cheesy bread; parmesan crusted   halibut; mini-taco salads; flour-free cloud bread.
  The downside to this book: like many other GF books, this one – sadly – has   no "chewy" bread recipe. It's the Holy Grail of GF food.
  The upside to this book: I love the large print and the bolding of the   ingredient lists. 
  Quality/Price Rating: 88.
  11.THE GREEK YOGURT KITCHEN (Grand Central Life & Style, 2014; distr.   Hachette, 242 pages, ISBN 978-1-4555-5120-0, $20 US paper covers) is by Toby   Amidor, MS, RD, a top nutrition advisor and consultant to major groups,   including Foodnetwork.com. Here she gives us a basic yogurt cookbook, using   Greek yogurt as the base since it is a trendy power food. And with seven log   rollers. So long as the nutritional benefits of Greek yogurt carry through, then   you can cook with it. Otherwise, it may be best just as it comes out of the   fridge. It's a form of yogurt that has been strained to remove a lot of the   whey, which results in a lower fat content and higher protein content. This also   means that it has lower levels of lactose. If you have to, you could substitute   just about any unflavoured organic yogurt. Whatever you do, you must check the   label to see what is in the yogurt: go for simple, cultured, and unflavoured.   The 133 recipes here are a beginning. They range from traditional breakfast food   through snacks, apps, salads, mains, and desserts. Preparations have their   ingredients listed in avoirdupois measurements, but there is a table of metric   equivalents.
  Audience and level of use: those who are lactose sensitive, health food   fans.
  Some interesting or unusual recipes/facts: crustless mushroom quiche;   buttermilk chicken fingers; mexican-sty6led creamed corn; coconut lemon cookies;   dulce de leche bowl. 
  The downside to this book: the use of "Greek" yogurt is overplayed when   other forms can also be used. 
  The upside to this book: good selection of recipes, including one for   making your own low-fat Greek yogurt by straining out the whey.
  Quality/Price Rating: 87.
  13.THE HUNGRY GIRL DIET (St. Martin's Griffin, 2014, 285 pages, ISBN   978-0-312-67679-7, $26.99 US hard covers) is by celebrity Lisa Lillien, author   and TV personality of a series of Hungry Girl books going back five years – over   2 million were sold. She's got hungry-girl.com (with a free companion app to   create shopping lists and track one's food) and shows on the Food Network and   Cooking Channel. Here she proposes a diet of big portions, big results, and   dropping 10 pounds in four weeks. It has all been vetted by David Grotto, RD.   There are 60 easy recipes, including Hungry Girl classics such as oatmeal bowls,   egg mugs, salads, and foil packs. And the usual tips, tricks, hints, strategies,   how-tos, and food swaps or substitutions. The emphasis, as always, is on lean   protein, fat-free and reduced dairy, fresh fruits and vegetables, and huge   portions for volume. Preparations have their ingredients listed in avoirdupois   measurements, but there is no table of metric equivalents.
  Quality/price rating: 85. 
  19.RAWLICIOUS AT HOME; more than 100 raw, vegan and gluten-free recipes to   make you feel great (Appetite by Random House, 2014, 174 pages, ISBN   978-0-449-01618-3, $29.95 paper covers) is by Angus Crawford and Chelsea Clark,   founders and co-owners of a Rawlicious mini-chain/franchise in Toronto and   southern Ontario (six in all, and one just around the corner from me). This is   an easy cookbook, inspired by their own resto dishes, for home preps. There is a   full ranger here from drinks/smoothies, breakfasts, apps, soups, right through   to desserts. There is even a section of 12 preps for common staples such as   pizza crust, burger buns, tortillas, herb and onion flatbreads, and various   "cheeses" from nuts. A primer covers the "raw life" and pantry/larder.   Preparations have their ingredients listed in avoirdupois measurements, but   there is a table of metric equivalents. Typical recipes embrace a   raw/vegan/gluten-free side of pad Thai, nori rolls, coffee cheesecake, and mint   chocolate chip ice cream. Lots of white space and large type is a good thing   here for the kitchen, but the typeface for the index is smaller than it could   be. Quality/price rating: 87. 
  21.GALE GAND'S LUNCH (Houghton Mifflin Harcourt, 2014, 256 pages, ISBN   978-0-54422650-0, $27.99 US hard covers) is by a Bear Award winner and   co-founder of TRU in Chicago. She has made multiple appearances on Food Network   shows, including hosting Sweet Dreams. She's written seven other cookbooks.   Focusing writer Christie Matthews is a food writer, and coauthor of other food   books, including one other book with Gale Gand. To complete the picture there is   an A-list of log rollers, including Batali, Cat Cora, Moulton, and Dupree. Gand   tries to re-invent lunch, steering people away from a medley of breakfast   leftovers and vending machines and food courts, to some decent and relevant   food. There are 150 heal;thy and homemade lunches here. Some of them are school   lunches, while others are picnics or midday parties. All of it is fine, but it   helps to have kids to partially prepare their own meals, and there is still the   problem of socializing at work. There is a vast difference between eating at   your desk, in a work lunchroom, and in a food court. Although, maybe with social   media, we actually no longer have to talk to anybody over lunch – just text your   way through the meal. Rustic ratatouille tart shines, as does a variety of   veggie and fruit salads. Chipotle cheddar biscuits are filling, and Israeil   couscous with cranberries and toasted pecans is something new. Well worth   looking at, although time can be a problem. Healthwise, lunch should be the   biggest meal of the day, loaded with energy and protein and carbos – to sustain   you.
  Preparations have their ingredients listed in avoirdupois measurements, but   there is no table of metric equivalents. Quality/price rating: 86.
  22.TEA & TREATS; perfect pairings for brews and bakes (Ryland Peters   & Small, 2014; distr. T. Allen, 144 pages, ISBN 978-1-84975-497-2, $24.95 US   hard covers) is by Liz Franklin, a finalist in the BBC Masterchef competition,   BBC food host and producer, and now cookery school owner and food writer. She's   written two other cookbooks. Here she offers us ideas on tea time. She has 60   recipes matching tea and sweet treats. She defines the types of teas and then   proposes a small baked good. So for white sweet tea (pai mu tan), there is   cardamom shortbread; for fennel tea, there is lemon and almond financier. For   teas you don't like, you can always make the treat and have them with something   comparable. The major arrangement is by class: breakfast tea, calming tea,   different tea, afternoon tea, and dinner party tea. It is a great gift book for   a tea lover. Preparations have their ingredients listed in avoirdupois   measurements, but there is no table of metric equivalents. There is also a   sources list (UK and US only). Quality/price rating: 85. 
  33.THE WHOLE LIFE NUTRITION COOKBOOK; a complete nutritional and cooking   guide for healthy living (Grand Central Life and Style, 2014; distr. Hachette,   449 pages, ISBN 978-1-4555-8189-4, $26 US paper covers) is by Alissa Segersten   (once a personal chef and now cooking instructor) and Tom Malterre (an academic   nutritionist). Together they also run the Whole Life Nutrition website. Here are   over 300 "whole foods" recipes, including gluten-free, dairy-free, soy-free, and   egg-free dishes. Almost something for everyone. It was originally published in   2008, and it is now updated into virtually a brand-new book. Even the   bibliography is current: there are references to 2014 works. It is thorough and   comprehensive, beginning with a primer on diet sensitivities, the need for whole   foods, the larder, the equipment, the cooking techniques. The recipes are   arranged by courses, from soups to desserts, with diversions to smoothies,   bacteria-cultured foods, whole grains, dips and sauces, snacks and beverages.   All with large type, easy to use instructions, and tips/tricks. There is also a   web resources listing; there's more at www.wholelifenutrition.net(recipes,   courses, newsletters, blogs). Various diets are discussed as there is some   benefits in every one of them. I could not find any discussion on alcoholic   beverages, not even through the index. While there is a table of US equivalents   (weights and volumes), preparations have their ingredients listed in avoirdupois   measurements, but there is no table of metric equivalents. Quality/price rating:   88. 
  34.TRUE FOOD; season, sustainable, simple, pure (Little, 
  Brown, 2012, 2104, 255 pages, ISBN 978-0-316-12940-4, $19 US 
  paper covers) is by Andrew Weil and Sam Fox, with Michael 
  Stebner. Weil is well-known for his books and columns on 
  alternative health practices and issue (including many food 
  recipes). He is partner with Sam Fox in the True Food 
  Kitchen chain. Stebner is the executive chef of these 
  restaurants. The work comes heavily endowed with log 
  rollers Alice Waters and Marion Nestle. This is the 2014
  paperback reprint. It's a book based 
  on SLOFE principles (seasonal, local, organic, fast, and 
  easy); there are about 150 recipes adapted from the six 
  restaurant chain. The important thing you need to know 
  about Andrew Weil is that the guy is completely 
  trustworthy: he has impressed me for over 20 years. Other 
  than that, this is good food with plenty of explanations 
  from Weil and a pantry to start up. You cannot go wrong 
  here. There are good illustrations and sufficient white 
  space in the book's layout. The chapters follow a daily 
  meal, with breakfast, appetizers, salads, soups, mains, 
  pasta, veggies, desserts and drinks (only a few with 
  alcohol). This is a good book for the struggling dieter – 
  you will get your appetite sated. Dishes include chocolate-
  banana tart, stir-fried long beans with citrus-sesame 
  sauce, bibimbap, bison umami burger, and halibut with 
  fingerling potatoes. There are no tables of nutritional 
  sources. Preparations have their ingredients listed in 
  avoirdupois measurements, but there is no table of metric 
  equivalents, which is a shame for international sales.
  Quality/price rating: 88.
  35.CROHN'S & COLITIS DIET GUIDE. 2D ed (Robert Rose, 2008, 2014, 336   pages, ISBN 978-0-7788-0478-9, $24.95 CAN soft covers) is by A. Hillary   Steinhart, MD, Mount Sinai Hospital, and Julie Cepo, RD. It accompanies Dr.   Steinhart's Crohn's & Colitis Understanding & Managing IBD (also in a   second edition). The major part of the book, here revised since its 2008   publication date, is a FAQ about food and IBD, along with a primer on causes,   symptoms and therapies. These are proven dietary strategies for managing IBD,   with menus and meal planning, tips on maintaining good nutrition, and 175   recipes. Over 25 new ones have been added, to take into account new foods such   as banana cinnamon quinoa waffles, or new techniques such as slow cooker squash   couscous. The preps largely come from two dozen Rose cookbooks, which have been   vetted, of course, for their IBD relationship. Preparations have their   ingredients listed in both metric and avoirdupois measurements, but there is no   overall table of metric equivalents. Each recipe has been noted as vegetarian or   vegan, low cal, low fat, high protein, lactose, fibre, sodium, and others. Lots   of tips for following a low fibre diet. Quality/price rating: 87.
  36.THE GLUTEN-FREE TABLE; the Lagasse girls share their favorite meals   (Grand Central Life & Style, 2012, 2014, 230 pages, ISBN 978-1-4555-1687-2,   $17 US soft covers) is by Jilly and Jessie Lagasse, daughters of Emeril Lagasse.   It was originally released in hardback in 2012, and this is the paperback   release. In 2004 Jilly was diagnosed with celiac disease. Jessie, at some point,   needed to follow a gluten-free diet. Both of course have been food-inspired by   their upbringing, so it seemed to be a no-brainer that a gluten-free cookbook   was in the shaping. They have taken their fave preps from childhood and family   and redeveloped them into tasty, celiac-friendly alternatives. 
  There's about 100 recipes, of family favourites, Southern classics, and   
  ten original preps from Emeril himself. It's all arranged by course, 
  from apps to sweets. Preparations have their ingredients listed in 
  avoirdupois measurements, but there is no table of metric equivalents.   
  There's a concluding list of resources and website. Some interesting or   unusual recipes redefine Southern food: cornbread and Andouille stuffed pork   chops; baked halibut with creole tomato and Vidalia onion vinaigrette; cheesy   shrimp and crab grits; mini goat cheese and fig pizzas. Quality/Price Rating:   88.
  38.DELICIOUS DIABETES COOKING FOR ONE OR TWO PEOPLE (Robert Rose, 2014, 144   pages, ISBN 978-0-7788-0476-5, $19.95 CAN paper covers) is by Michelle   Berriedale-Johnson, founder of the Free From Food Awards (food   allergy/intolerance). It was originally published in 2013 in London by Grub   Street. These preps have been specifically designed for one or two (they can be   scaled upwards), and can be used by anyone who needs low-sugar restrictions.   With some modifications they can also be used for managing dairy or gluten   allergies. Everything is fairly easy. Each prep has full nutritional analysis,   larger type face, and tips. Preparations have their ingredients listed in both   metric and avoirdupois measurements. Arrangement is by course, from apps and   soups to baked goods and desserts. Typical are herb frittata, moules marinieres,   pasta and broccoli gratin, and cod with chilies. Quality/price rating: 87.   
  43.BLOOD SUGAR: quinoa & healthy living (New Holland, 2013; distr.   T.Allen, 128 pages, ISBN 978-1-74257456-1, $19.99 US paper covers) is by Michael   Moore. It is a collection of previously published recipes from his Blood Sugar   cookbook series, with some additional new preps using quinoa. Moore has owned or   managed numerous restaurants in London and Sydney, including the Ritz Hotel   London and the Bluebird London. He is currently the chef and owner of O Bar and   Dining in Sydney. This is basically a diabetic book (Moore is a diabetic) but   also one for clean, healthy living. It is divided into meals, with breakfast,   light meals and snacks, mains and desserts. He's got figs on toast with ricotta,   hot milk and barley porridge, homemade breakfast bars, plank-roasted salmon with   quinoa tzatziki, strawberry quinoa custard pie, and more. Preparations have   their ingredients listed in avoirdupois measurements, but there are tables of   metric equivalents. Quality/price rating: 85. 
  ----------------------------------------------------
  Chimo! www.deantudor.com
 
 

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