Monday, January 10, 2011

#1 "Food Rules: An Eaters Manual" by Michael Pollan






















Read Jan 7, 2011
112 Pages

This hardly seems fair.  "Food Rules" is an itty-bitty (tiny, minuscule) hardly-qualifies-as-a-book-so-I'll-call-it-a-booklet, manual for healthier eating which was delivered to me at work on Friday at about noon and whose every word I had read by about 1:15.  At work.  It seems like a lame and even a bit auspicious way to start this year of high density reading (so much so that I considered leaving it out altogether) but in the end I figured: a) it *is* a book and I *did* read it, b) I'm behind a bit on "Kavalier and Clay" so I needed something to review for week #1 lest I fall behind before I even begin, and c) I'm going to take a book where I can get it!  52 books in 52 weeks is a lot!

And, I liked it.  It's nothing much new, really, but it is easy to read and easy to digest and makes a compelling and succinct argument for eating a cleaner, simpler diet.  As it stands, I eat pretty well - almost entirely vegetarian, very little non-plant based sweets, virtually nothing fried, tons of whole grains, etc etc - but there's always room for improvement (alcohol, for me, is one place) or at the very least room for more knowledge. 

The basic premise, famously, is "Eat Food.  Not too Much.  Mostly Plants." upon which Pollan expands further into 64 "rules" for better eating. 

A few struck me as particularly interesting or, maybe most importantly, relevant to my life:
  • Avoid foods that are pretending to be something they're not, i.e. mock meats (which I eat once or twice or so a month.)
  • "Flexitarians" - those that eat meat a couple times a week - are just as healthy as vegetarians.  (I eat meat RARELY... very, very rarely.  But I ate quite a bit of it while I was in China a few months ago and I've had some health guilt about it since.  This made me feel, well, better.  I don't plan, still, on making meat a regular part of my diet but this does further confirm that I *can* eat meat sometimes, should I want to, without ruining my health.)
  • Don't overlook the oily little fishes.  Avoid tuna, swordfish, etc which are overfished and high in mercury and eat macherel, sardines, anchovies and herring instead.  (I love the "oily little fishes" but more often than not forget about them.  I've just bought some smoked herring at the store today!)
  • Eat all the junkfood you want so long as you make it yourself. 
  • Eat when you're hungry, not bored.  If you're not hungry enough to eat an apple, then you're not hungry.  (This is a gem which I have already implemented.)

Thursday, January 6, 2011

And so it begins.

Ever the bibliophile, I've spent a lifetime reading basically anything I could get my hands on - fiction (mostly), nonfiction, essays, books of essays, and on and on.  I've challenged myself to read better books, different types of books and more and more and more books, and this project (52 books in one calendar year) will be my greatest undertaking yet.  A book a week?  It sounds incredibly daunting.  And fun. 

For the last two years I've been keeping track of the exact books I've read and when.  In 2009 I completed 27 novels (all fiction) and in 2010 I increased that number to 36 (4 of which came via plane rides to and from China).  It felt like I always had my nose buried in a book!  And yet this year I'll try to read 16 more (!!!).  My hope is - beyond the obvious entertainment, enrichment and educational opportunities inherent in this enterprise - that making my reading such a structured and goal-driven affair will lead me to read a more diverse selection of literature and also to keep my face away from a television set and my butt off a bar stool... although I do quite like reading in the corner of a quiet bar, so we'll just have to see about that one. 

I'll be keeping track of my literary journey here.  Follow along if you like.