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Nina Planck (Writer) |
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http://www.ninaplanck.com Profile created January
8, 2009 |
Real Food for Mother and Baby: The
Fertility Diet, Eating for Two, and Baby's First Foods
(March 31, 2009 release)
Nina Planck, one of the great food activists,
changed the way we view old-fashioned foods like butter with her
groundbreaking Real Food. T hen she got pregnant. Never one to accept
conventional wisdom blindly, Nina found the usual advice about pregnancy
and baby food riddled with myths and misunderstandings. In Real Food
for Mother and Baby, Nina explains why many modern ideas about
pregnancy and infant nutrition are wrongheaded and why traditional foods
are best. While Nina can be controversial—her op-ed in the New York Times
on vegan diets for infants was one of the paper’s most e-mailed articles—
she’s no contrarian. Readers applaud her candor; they also trust her
research and welcome her advice.
Nina’s basic premise hasn’t changed—whole foods are best—but some of the
details are surprising. Pregnant women need meat and salt, not iron
supplements. Nursing will be easier if you act like the mammal you are.
Delaying the introduction of certain solid foods doesn’t prevent
allergies. Cereals are not the best foods for tiny eaters; meat and egg
yolks are better. From conception to two years, the body’s overwhelming
needs are for quality fat and protein, not for carrots and low-fat dairy.
Even as she casts a skeptical eye on the conventional wisdom, Nina is
reassuring. She shows you how to keep your baby healthy on good, simple
food. Real Food for Mother and Baby will be the new classic on
eating for two.
Real Food: What to Eat and Why
(2006)
Everyone loves real food, but they’re afraid butter
and eggs will give them a heart attack—thus the culinary abomination known
as the egg-white omelet. Tossing out the yolk, it turns out, isn’t smart.
Real Food reveals why traditional foods are actually healthy: not only egg
yolks, but also cream, butter, grass-fed beef, wild salmon, roast chicken
skin, and more.
Nina Planck grew up on a vegetable farm in Virginia and learned to eat
right from her no-nonsense parents: lots of fresh fruits and vegetables,
along with beef, bacon, fish, dairy, and eggs. Later, she wondered: was
the farmhouse diet deadly, as the cardiologists say? Happily for people
who love food, the answer is no.
In lively, personal chapters on produce, dairy, meat, fish, chocolate, and
other real foods, Nina explains how ancient foods like beef and butter
have been falsely accused, while industrial foods like corn syrup and
soybean oil have created a triple epidemic of obesity, diabetes, and heart
disease. Real Food upends the conventional wisdom on diet and health and
explains our taste for good things.
The Farmer's Market Cookbook
(2001)
Farmers' markets are springing up all over the UK.
The basic idea - of local farmers selling their own produce - has been
enthusiastically taken up by shoppers who value fresh, local produce at a
reasonable price. Nina Planck, who has orchestrated the renaissance in
London, is passionate about fresh, seasonal food. Her Farmers' Market
Cookbook aims to remind those of us numbed by the supermarket shopping
experience about what is available in each season, what to expect and look
for at the market, and suggests simple, delicious recipes such as Pork
Chops Stuffed with Apple and Horseradish and Raspberry Buttermilk
Pancakes. With a foreword by Nigel Slater, this beautiful cookbook is
destined to become a British classic.
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Nina Planck Is Listed As A Favorite Of (Alphabetical Order By First Name)
Jimmy Moore
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