3.INTERMITTENT FASTING DIET; guide + cookbook (Alpha Books, DK Publishing,   2020, 224 pages, ISBN 978-1-4654-9766-6 $25.99 paperbound) is by Becky   Gillaspry, creator of www.drbeckyfitness.com. She's a chiropractor with two   YouTube channels and teaches a range of college medical courses. This is advice   and tips on fasting strategies with more than 50 food preps and four flexible   meal plans. The major idea is to shift the eating window to allow for proper   balance in fasting for nutritional increases. You'll want to avoid gaining   weight or slowing metabolisms. Gone, for the moment, are the three meals a day   AND the six meals a day food patterns. These are replaced by time-restricted   eating such as the proportions of 12:12 or 16:8 or 20:4, where you can fast   safely for 12 hours, or 16 or 20. In our family, 16 hours fasting (which   includes 8 hours sleep) seems to work best. This is easy to accomplish: a late   breakfast or brunch at 10:30 or so followed by an early dinner at 5:30 or 6. She   discusses all of these, along with caveats (e.g., diabetes) that should be   looked at with the guidance of physicians. Some of the best meal plans may be   low-carb meals, or a ketogenic diet, or dairy-free, or vegetarian. Gillaspry   lays it all out, and you the reader gets to decide. It's all very effective.   Every recipe is loaded with nutritional data. The book could have been improved   if it also used metric in the recipes, or at least had a metric conversion   chart. Quality/price rating: 91.
  4.MEDITERRANEAN DIET COOKBOOK FOR BEGINNERS; meal plans, expert guidance,   & 100 recipes to get you started (Alpha Books, DK Publishing, 2020, 192   pages, ISBN  978-1-4654-9767-3 $25.99 paperbound) is by Elena Paravantes, a   registered dietitian and expert on the Mediterranean diet, active as a writer,   consultant, hanging out at her website www.olivetomato.com. It is all pretty   basic stuff, but it does "get you started". The principles and rationales are   nicely explained for the "authentic" Mediterranean diet, which started as wine,   bread and olives centuries ago. But a 1948 study of Crete produced evidence of a   strong nutritional setting for wild greens, beans, vegetables, fruits, bread,   homemade wine, and olive oil. In the 1950s, the focus shifted to southern   Europe. By 1993 Oldways had created a food pyramid based on Crete, and the rest   is (as they say) history. So she carefully explains what to eat and how often to   eat it, proposing a two-week getting started Mediterranean diet meal plan, The   come the preps in cookbook order: breakfasts, veggies and beans,   pasta/rice/savoury pies, seafood and some meat, salads, snacks and desserts.   There's briami (sheet pan roasted veggies), Mediterranean black-eyed pea stew,   caponata (Sicilian eggplant), tiropita Greek chese pie), kagianas (scrambled   eggs with feta and tomatoes), gigantes (roasted butter beans),  and   fakorizo (lentils with veggies and rice). Not surprisingly, many of the preps   are Greek and Sicilian or south of Italy. She concludes with a bibliography for   more reading. Preparations have their ingredients listed in avoirdupois   measurements, but there is no table of metric equivalents. Quality/Price Rating:   88.
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  Your health depends on my health. We cannot escape one another in these perilous times.
Chimo! www.deantudor.com
 
 

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