For The Love of Food

For The Love of Food
Welcome to Friday’s For The Love of Food, Summer Tomato’s weekly link roundup.
Diets are dying, the faulty vaccine-autism paper was retracted and yet another study shows low-fat diets are bad for heart disease. Could this week get any better?
And in case you missed it, definitely check out the video of Michael Pollan’s talk at the Ferry Building in San Francisco.
I read many more wonderful articles than I post here each week. If you’d like to see more or just don’t want to wait until Friday, be sure to follow me on Twitter (@summertomato) or the Summer Tomato Facebook fan page. For complete reading lists join me on the social bookmarking sites StumbleUpon and Delicious. I’m very active on all these sites and would love to connect with you there. (Note: If you want a follow back on Twitter introduce yourself with an @ message).
Links of the Week
- Eat, Drink & Be Healthy: Dieting vs. newer approaches to losing weight <<Is healthstyle catching on? Cross your fingers for the end of diets…. (The Washington Post)
- Vaccine-Autism Study Is Retracted <<BS of the week. Don’t get me wrong, I’m happy this paper has been retracted. What I’m calling out is that it ever got published in the first place. This is an example of bad science that endangered children’s lives. How was this ever okay? (New York Times)
- The Miracle of Vitamin D: Sound Science, or Hype? <<I recommend taking vitamin D supplements, but that doesn’t stop me from being a skeptic. I still try to get enough from natural sources like sunlight and oily fish. (New York Times)
- Moderate-Fat Diet May Be Better at Reducing Heart Risks <<This is not news, but it is worth repeating. I love fat. Fatty, fat, fat. Here it goes down, down into my belly. (HealthDay)
- Corned beef for breakfast? Try it, you might lose weight <<The newest diet trend seems to be eating a big breakfast. This doesn’t involve deprivation, so I’m interested to see how it works for people. (Los Angeles Times)
- Eating Too Fast? <<Dr. Weil discusses a new study linking eating speed to hunger. This is just one more reason to learn to eat slowly and mindfully. You’ll enjoy your food more as well. (Dr. Weil’s Daily Blog)
- Reliable health information on the go <<One of my favorite resources for health information, Medline, now has a mobile version of their website. (Los Angeles Times)
- Sardines and Avocados <<I’m not the only skinny foodie out there. In fact, there are a bunch of us and we all pretty much do the same things to be healthy. We eat real food, we don’t shun fats, and we hit the gym. Allison Arevalo discusses food, body weight and Alton Brown (Local Lemons)
- Bound By Love and Honor. And Mayo. <<Love this broccoli crunch salad recipe (and philosophy) over at Matt Bites.
- Michael Pollan on Food Rules: An Eater’s Manual <<Michael Pollan recently spoke at my favorite farmers market about his new book, Food Rules. Here’s the video.
http://fora.tv/embedded_player
What inspired you this week?
I always look forward to Fridays to read this round-up! Saves me lots of time and I always learn something new.
Thanks Darya!
Glad you enjoy them! Thanks for stopping by Dinneen!!
Mmmm, corned beef for breakfast. I love eating big breakfasts….eggs, bacon, cheese, toast (or polenta!), some spinach worked in somewhere or fruit on the side. It definitely lets me completely eliminate snacking during the day and I eat a much smaller lunch. And I think it helps me focus at work, too. Not sure if affects the size of my dinner….
The only problem is having the time to cook it….I have enough trouble sparing 10 minutes to make the oatmeal that I then bring to work to eat because I don’t have time to eat it at home.
Also, love the Local Lemons post on sardines and avocados. I’ve already eaten two sardine sandwiches for lunch this week because I couldn’t wait until Saturday to get an avocado!
while i like to eat sardines, they are being put on the ‘endangered species list’ in europe :/
the one from the atlantic is awfully expensive though
btw, since you mention the gym, what are you doing there?
The BS of the week should be the mainstream media’s usual pro-vaccination, pro-pharma bias. And the bad science that goes into research into pharmaceuticals in general. The NY Times is not exactly a trusted source of news…
Good health comes from good nutrition, not from drugs or vaccination.
[link removed – sorry dude]