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Ratatouille Nicoise, food posters, cuisine prints, beer posters, food pictures, cuisine posters, wine posters, food images, food photos, cafe photos, cafe posters
Ratatouille Nicoise
Hanin, Sophie
10 in. x 12 in.
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Bouillabaise
Bouillabaise
Hanin, Sophie
10 in. x 12 in.
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Meat and Potatoes
Meat and Potatoes
17 in. x 11 in.
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Bucatini all' Amatriciana
Bucatini all' Amatriciana
Hanin, Sophie
10 in. x 12 in.
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Pizza Margherita
Pizza Margherita
Hanin, Sophie
10 in. x 12 in.
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Ravioli, food posters, cuisine prints, beer posters, food pictures, cuisine posters, wine posters, food images, food photos, cafe photos, cafe posters
Ravioli
Overton, Nancy
11 in. x 14 in.
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Soupe a L'oignon
Soupe a L'oignon
Hanin, Sophie
10 in. x 12 in.
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Bouillabaise
Bouillabaise
Hanin, Sophie
10 in. x 12 in.
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Salad Nicoise
Salad Nicoise
Overton, Nancy
11 in. x 14 in.
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Princess Cafe, Rochester,Minnesota
Princess Cafe, Rochester,Minnesota
17 in. x 11 in.
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Spaten Brau
Spaten Brau
Hohlwein, Ludwig
32 in. x 44 in.
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Fresh Strawberries
Fresh Strawberries Art Print
Poloson, Kimberly
12 in. x 12 in.
Framed | Mounted

 

 

Eating Meat

Meat. Should you eat it or not? What about red meat--is it any worse for you than white meat? Let's look at the issues in an intellectually honest way.
  • Meat is high in saturated fat--but it's also high in protein, as well as a host of micronutrients (such as creatine) that are very hard to obtain on a vegetarian diet.
  • Meat is low in fiber, but so is water!
  • Meat is a completed protein (contains all the essential proteins your body cannot manufacture), while getting a completed protein on a vegetarian diet means eating many of the same things (such as beans and rice) over and over.
  • Your digestive tract is too long for a diet high in meat, but your teeth are those of an omnivore--not the flat teeth of a vegetarian creature.
  • On the one hand, meat is wasteful. It takes a great deal of grain and water to produce an animal for consumption. On the other hand, meat is efficient. Meat is a dense source of many hard-to-get nutrients.

 

Looking at these facts, is meat good or bad for you to eat? The answer is yes to both. Humans do best with some meat in their diets. How much is too much? That depends on many individual factors. A rule of thumb is the amount of meat you eat at any meal should be no larger than the palm of your hand (assuming a half-inch thickness). If your stool smells especially bad, that's a hint you may have too much meat in your diet (it could be a hint of something else, so see if cutting back on meat improves the odor within a week or so). In any case, the traditional 12-oz steak is far too large.

Think back to the earliest days of humans. When a hunter caught a rabbit or other small animal, how much meat was there, really? By the time everyone got their share of the meat, there wasn't a whole lot left. As humans got better at making tools and weapons, they began eating more meat. But, the human body has not kept pace with technology (which is one reason computer-generated IRS notices cause so many heart attacks!).

Eat meat as a side dish, not the main dish, and you will be fine. Eat mostly vegetables--don't eat highly-processed grains (this includes most flour products) at all. When you do eat meat, trim the fat from it. Never eat anything that is deep-fried, breaded and fried, or cooked in hydrogenated oil (because these fats all go straight to your artery walls, and the breading makes your insulin level skyrocket, which makes your body store fat).

The best time to eat meat? Breakfast or lunch, but not supper. You want to get your protien early in the day, and meat is an excellent source of protein. You also want to give your body time to work on that saturated fat before you sleep--while you are awake, conditions are better for burning it off.

A final note on meat. The typical American man has, at the age of 53, six pounds of undigested red meat in his lower bowel. This is gross. The jokes about men and their farting are related to this fact, because that meat is fermenting. In fact, it's loaded with gas-producing bacteria. It forms a thick black tarry substance that many experts believe is a major factor in many illnesses, including bowel and prostate cancers. They believe this because they can look at who has cancer in the tarry group and who has cancer in the group with clean bowels, and they can see a lot more men with tarry bowels have cancer. Eating meat does not make for tarry bowels--eating too much meat or not enough fiber for the amount of meat you do eat causes tarry bowels.

Eat your meat, but skip the pudding. Have an apple, instead.

 

 

 

 

 

Cooking Appliances and Devices

More Cooking Information:

Regional & International Cooking Books:

African recipe books  Asian recipe books  Canadian recipe books  Caribbean & West Indian recipe books  European recipe books  International recipe books  Latin American recipe books  Mexican recipe books  Middle Eastern recipe books  Native American recipe books  U.S. Regional recipe books 

 

Recipe books samples:


Asian Cooking:
My Bombay Kitchen: Traditional and Modern Parsi Home Cooking by Niloufer Ichaporia King
Revolutionary Chinese Cookbook by Fuchsia Dunlop
The Seventh Daughter: My Culinary Journey from Beijing to San Francisco by Cecilia Chiang with Lisa Weiss

Baking and Dessert:
A Baker's Odyssey by Greg Patent
Peter Reinhart's Whole Grain Breads: New Techniques, Extraordinary Flavor by Peter Reinhart
Pure Dessert by Alice Medrich

Cooking from a Professional Point of View:
Bistro Laurent Tourondel: New American Bistro Cooking by Laurent Tourondel and Michele Scicolone
The Fundamental Techniques of Classic Cuisine by The French Culinary Institute with Judith Choate
Morimoto: The New Art of Japanese Cooking by Masaharu Morimoto

Entertaining:
Dish Entertains by Trish Magwood
Great Bar Food at Home by Kate Heyhoe
Welcome to Michael's: Great Food, Great People, Great Party! by Michael McCarthy

Americana:
The Glory of Southern Cooking by James Villas
A Love Affair with Southern Cooking by Jean Anderson
Rosa's New Mexican Table by Roberto Santibanez

General:
Chez Jacques: Traditions and Rituals of a Cook by Jacques Pépin
Cooking by James Peterson
How to Cook Everything Vegetarian: Simple Meatless Recipes for Great Food by Mark Bittman

Healthy Focus:
The EatingWell Diet by Jean Harvey-Berino with Joyce Hendley and the Editors of EatingWell
Super Natural Cooking: Five Ways to Incorporate Whole & Natural Ingredients into Your Cooking by Heidi Swanson
The Wine and Food Lover's Diet: 28 Days of Delicious Weight Loss by Phillip Tirman

International:
The Country Cooking of France by Anne Willan
Lidia's Italy: 140 Simple and Delicious Recipes from the Ten Places in Italy Lidia Loves Most by Lidia Matticchio Bastianich and Tanya Bastianich Manuali
Two Meatballs in the Italian Kitchen by Pino Luongo and Mark Strausman