Review by Library Journal Review
This thoroughly revised, updated, and expanded edition of nutritionist Nestle's 2006 book offers a fresh perspective on navigating today's food environment. Nestle (Food Politics) addresses recent shifts, including the boom in the delivery of groceries, the increased number of food options available everywhere, and how supermarkets intentionally display irresistible products for consumers to purchase without thinking twice. She brings to light the inscrutable lists of ingredients on packaged foods and the limitations of food choices in low-income neighborhoods. Furthermore, the book addresses the growing interest in plant-based eating, food origins, and understanding industrially produced foods. Nestle demystifies common nutrition myths on subjects like calories and genetically modified foods, offering insight that can be useful to any reader. Nestle's work deeply explores the social, physical, cultural, economic, and political factors that influence how we access and select food today. The book does not need to be read in order--readers can dive into any chapter for valuable insights. VERDICT This is a must-read for anyone looking to make informed food choices and learn about nutrition. Nestle empowers readers to shop smarter and make healthy decisions when dining out.--Jocelyn Castillo
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Review by Kirkus Book Review
The noted nutritionist offers a deeply researched look into the food that we eat--and why we need to do better. At the outset, updating her 2005 bookWhat To Eat, Nestle acknowledges that her work centers on the politics of food, which means, here, constant agitation against a food system driven by business imperatives "to produce and market highly profitable 'junk.'" Added to this critique of food systems are imperatives of their own, these dealing with global problems: "hunger and food insecurity, obesity and its disease consequences, and climate change." Nestle begins at the epicenter, inside modern supermarkets, where food corporations buy space on shelves at eye level to lure consumers into consuming…mostly junk, and junk that we wind up paying for three times: once at the cash register, once to cover tax deductions the companies take for these expenses, and once for treating the ensuing illnesses. Go to a wealthy neighborhood, and you'll find expensive but abundant produce; go to a poor one, and you'll find mostly highly processed food that is both cheap and deleterious to health, laden with sugars, sodium, and the like. Ironically, Nestle writes, that food system produces, annually, twice as many calories as a healthy adult needs--which Nestle counters with a long, complex discussion of how calories are measured, as well as an admonition: "Don't eat more calories than you need." She couples that discussion with a sobering note that if you walk at a leisurely pace for an hour, you'll burn off the caloric equivalent of only 14 tortilla chips, meaning that any effort to lose weight must involve eating less, which, she notes late in her discussion, "is bad for business." So have a carrot instead of a candy bar, she notes, and eat lower on the food chain, and buy organic--but, she also counsels wisely, "find the joy in food." Essential reading for anyone who cares about how we fuel ourselves. Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.
Copyright (c) Kirkus Reviews, used with permission.