Just Eat - One Reporter's Quest for a Weight-Loss Regimen that Works by Barry Estabrook

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$26.00

The New York Times bestselling author of Tomatoland test drives the most popular diets of our time, investigating the diet gurus, contradictory advice, and science behind the programs to reveal how we should and shouldn't be dieting. Essential reading this will completely change your ideas about what you should be eating. Ruth Reichl, author of Save Me the PlumsInvestigative journalist Barry Estabrook was often on the receiving end of his doctor's scowl. Realizing he had two options take more medication or lose weight. Estabrook chose the latter, but was paralyzed by the options. Which diet would keep the weight off. What program could he maintain over time. What diet works best or even at all. Over the course of three years, Estabrook tried the regimens behind the most popular diets of the past forty years from paleo, keto, gluten-free, and veganism to the Master Cleanse, Whole30, Atkins, Weight Watchers examining the people, claims, and science behind the fads, all while recording his mental and physical experience of following each one. Along the way, he discovered that all the branded programs are derived from just three diets. There are effective, scientifically valid takeaways to be cherry-picked and the rest is just marketing.

  • Suggested age range - Adult
  • Format - Hardcover
  • Dimensions - 5.6" W x 8.4" H x 1.1" D
  • Genre - Diet, Health & Fitness
  • Publisher - Clarkson Potter, Ten Speed, Publication date - 02-02-2021
  • Page count - 256
  • ISBN - 9780399580277

Web ID: 17693470

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4 years ago
from Kansas City

losing the weight, losing the diets

When Barry Estabrook’s doctor told him that he needed to lose 40 pounds in order to take care of his health, he knew it was time to take it seriously. As a journalist, his forte is research and reporting, not dieting. But, he thought, what if he used his journalistic chops to find the best diet? So he set about to find the best way to lose weight in an informed and methodical fashion. He started with the Whole30. It’s not so much a diet as it is a way to cleanse your system and reset, eliminating all potentially problematic food groups for 30 days and then slowly adding them back in to your normal diet, so you can see which food groups cause you problems. It’s a tough regime—you have to give up all sugar, dairy, alcohol, and grains/legumes. And there is no room for error. Any small slip-ups in those first 30 days, and you have to start al over. He did lose 12 pounds on the Whole30, but he suffered sleepiness, dizziness, and gastrointestinal distress. Next he went for the Master Cleanse, which involves 40 days of no solid food. You simply drink 6-12 glasses of lemonade a day, spiked with cayenne pepper, and an herbal tea laxative. It worked for Beyonce, but it did not work for Barry E. He lost some pounds, but he felt faint and was afraid to be far from a bathroom. But after his, he did decide to lose the fad diets. From there, Estabrook took a deep dive into the diet world. Researching this, he discovered that despite the time and energy millions of people put into dieting, despite the billions of dollars that dieters spend ($72 billion in 2019 alone), 83% of dieters gain the weight back in two years, often with extra pounds. He goes back through the long history of dieting in the United States, to talk about Horace Fletcher, who touted chewing food until it was liquified. Or James Henry Salisbury, whose daily diet was made up of 3 pounds of rump steak, 1 pound of codfish, and 3 quarts of hot water. The Hollywood diet had housewives all over eating grapefruit and little else. Modern dieting, though, really comes down to 3 diets. There is the diet that restricts carbohydrates (like Atkins, Paleo, South Beach, Keto), the diet that restricts proteins (like Ornish, Pritikin, Seventh Day Adventists), and the diet that restricts calories (like Weight Watchers). Estabrook tried all three with mixed results but eventually realized none of them were quite right for him. Where to next? To Greece, if you can. Estabrook traveled to Kea to find out more about how the other half of the world eats. After eating a delicious meal made entirely of fresh vegetables cooked well in good olive oil, he discovered just how delicious the Mediterranean diet can be. And then it’s off to France to see how a country that is so enamored of its food, even breads and cheeses and wines, can still be healthy. And he found that a lot of the health benefits of French food come with the lifestyle. They enjoy eating. They set everything else aside to enjoy the moments they eat. There are no phones, no televisions, just family and friends and joy. In the end, Estabrook takes the parts of each diet that resonated with him and fashioned a way of eating for himself that was healthier but also filled with joy. He limited meats, choosing more seasonal vegetables and preparing them with the olive oil and herbs of the Mediterranean. He took note of his “Big Sins'“ (a term from Weight Watchers, where a dieter’s “Big Sins” were the foods that were most likely to cause them to fall off their plans), and tried to restrict cheese and alcohol to smaller, more flavorful portions. In short, Estabrook went on a variety of different diets to see what they were like. He did all that, so that we don’t have to. We don’t have to fail over and over to find out what works—we can use Estabrook’s failures and successes to help us plot our own best meal plan. In the end, he found the best advice was simple—Just Eat. With some smart choices, we can all find ways to add in healthy eating habits and lose some Big Sins without forgetting that eating is not just about sustenance. It’s about happiness and community and living your best life. I was fascinated by Estabrook’s journey. As a woman growing up in America, I have heard about dieting since I was young. I have seen people diet, I’ve been told I should go on a diet, I’ve tried dieting, I’ve failed at dieting. It’s easy to give up and feel like there’s too much information to wade through, and too much commercialization to all of it. But I found Just Eat to be smart, exceptionally well researched, and balanced. Estabrook doesn’t tell us how to lose weight. He just shares his journey with us and lets us figure it out for ourselves. He’s lost 26 pounds, is off his blood pressure medications, has normal cholesterol, and exercises regularly in ways he enjoys. He is happy as well as healthy. And I can’t think of a better example of a successful diet than that. Egalleys for Just Eat were provided by Lorena Jones Books through NetGalley, with many thanks.

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Customer review from barnesandnoble.com

4 years ago
from Florida

Factual yet entertaining

Just Eat by Barry Estabrook If you’re looking for the right diet, author Barry Estabrook has done all the footwork for you. Don’t have a weight problem? Then read this book for someone you know who does. Being a tad overweight himself, Estabrook was on a mission. For himself and this book. It all comes together in a factual, yet entertaining way. You will never be bored by these facts, but you will will look at your own eating habits and say, if he can do it, so can I. The author researched at least ten popular diets, all of which you’ll be familiar with, and interviewed a long list of dieticians, chefs, medical doctors and diet book authors. Which is the best? Well, Estabrook came to a brilliant conclusion. (I won’t tell you though. Read the book!) You will learn why “bad foods” are bad, and why you should keep away. You’ll learn how your body metabolizes food, particularly sugar, and how to be a better eater. I’ll give this fun and factual book 5 stars as I head to the kitchen to throw away some treats I no longer want.

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Customer review from barnesandnoble.com

4 years ago
from Sedona

Tour the nooks and crannies of diet land!

JUST EAT provides a world tour and history lesson in the art and science of dieting. Although clearly some of the diets are the result of happenstance and wishful thinking, author Barry Eastabrook takes his reporter’s curiosity and his desire for a smaller waistline into the nooks and crannies of diet land. The tour is fascinating, although well-covered in part in other books, for other reasons. The author finds some success at the end of his journey. Will it work for others? Ah, there’s the rub. As the author notes, the journey is always a personal one. But this book provides enormous information for the traveler. I received my copy from the publisher through NetGalley.

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Customer review from barnesandnoble.com

4 years ago
from Baton Rouge LA

Informative

Packed with more information than you ever knew you needed about a number of today’s most popular diets. Do they work? You’ll have to read this book to find out. It will certainly answer all of your questions and make you think about how the diet industry works.

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Customer review from barnesandnoble.com