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Loading... French Women Don't Get Fat: The Secret of Eating for Pleasureby Mireille GuilianoSeries: French Women (book 1)
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will love Sign up for LibraryThing to find out whether you'll like this book. http://thenovelworld.com/2009/08/10/f... ( )I think this woman talks a lot of sense. And let's face it, the French women do seem to have a way of staying slim for the most part. Read, enjoy. Another one caves in to media hype. But believe it or not, it's a really interesting book. It helped immensely that I got a lot of her cultural references in regards to food, but it sure made me re-evluate how my eating habits have changed (for the worse) when I moved in with an Anglo male dominated household. I'm not ready to completely change over my eating habits, but I make this choice consciously, and I can live with that. I loved reading this book. I am a sucker for well-written books about eating healthy and living a healthy life, but they have to be written with a fun and informative attitude and this one definitely is. French Women Don't Get Fat, and after reading Mireille Guiliano's book, I now know why. This is a fascinating book on many levels. Part memoir, part diet book, part cookbook, it it a wholly satisfying read. Mireille (meeRAY) was a normal teenager until she came to America as an exchange student. When she returned home after living like an American for a year, she was 20 pounds heavier. Her family was shocked. But her family doctor gave her a simple plan to regain her optimum weight, and the women of her family shared their secrets for maintaining her optimum weight. Now, Mireille shares that plan and those secrets with the rest of us. I cannot wait to try her "Miracle Leek Soup," which sounds divine and can help a woman drop several pounds in just a weekend. Her other recipes sound equally delicious, and her suggestions for desserts will have a special following among women whose sweet tooth is destroying their figures. The little tips and tricks, the idea of "compensations," these are painless adjustments that add up to pounds and inches kept off of the body. Nothing could be better. And from Mireille's explanations, nothing could be easier. Vive la femmes de France! no reviews | add a review
Amazon.com Amazon.com Review (ISBN 0375710515, Paperback)The message of this book could be a blessing or a curse, depending on your perspective. There is no hard science, no clearly-defined plan, and no lists of food to have or have not; instead, you'll find simple tricks that boil down to eating carefully prepared seasonal food, exercising more and refusing to think of food as something that inspires guilt. It's both a practical message and far easier said than done in today's "no pain, no gain" culture.Author Mireille Guiliano is CEO of Veuve Clicquot, and French Women Don't Get Fat offers a concept of sensible pleasures: If you have a chocolate croissant for breakfast, have a vegetable-based lunch--or take an extra walk and pass on the bread basket at dinner. Guiliano's insistence on simple measures slowly creating substantial improvements are reassuring, and her suggestion to ignore the scale and learn to live by the "zipper test" could work wonders for those who get wrapped up in tiny details of diet. She sympathizes that deprivation can lead straight to overindulgence when it comes to favorite foods, but then, in a most French manner, treats them as a pleasure that needs to be sated, rather than a battle to be fought. A number of recipes are included, from a weight-loss enhancing leek soup to a lush chocolate mousse; they read more like what you'd find in a French cookbook rather than an American diet book. Most appealingly, these are guidelines and tricks that could be easily sustainable over a lifetime. If you agree that food is meant to be appreciated--but no more so than having a trim waist--these charmingly French recommendations could set you on the path to a future filled with both croissants and high fashion. --Jill Lightner Amazon Exclusive Video Click here to learn how to create your own reading group around French Women Don’t Get Fat. Stuffed Cornish Hens Hot Chocolate Soufflé (retrieved from Amazon Tue, 05 Jan 2010 12:07:11 -0500) The first test round has been closed. Visit the Open Shelves Classification group for details. |
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