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#1 Posted : Sunday, May 16, 2010 10:29:12 AM(UTC)

If you had to choose one cookbook to cook from for a month, and it had to be healthy food, which book would it be?

#2 Posted : Monday, May 17, 2010 2:40:01 AM(UTC)
Of course different people have different ideas about what is healthy - low-fat, low-saturated fat and high in Omegas, low-salt, based on original 'healthy' eating cultures (Greek, Japanese), high-fiber, raw, vegetarian, low-carb, etc. etc.
I strongly dislike cookbooks that sacrifice taste for 'health', especially as this is usually fad-of-the-day healthy.

But I would choose Mollie Katzen's Vegetable Heaven. It's vegetable-based and vegetarian and reasonably low-fat so I will count that as healthy. But more importantly, the recipes seem 'accidentally healthy', they are not as they are because it's healthy, but because that's what works best. The recipes I've tried taste great and the other recipes look like they do.
#3 Posted : Sunday, May 30, 2010 4:09:11 PM(UTC)

I've been thinking about this while waiting (not so) patiently for the 75,000 new books to be added to EYB. Although we all have different ideas about it and different health issues, most of us probably like to think we eat healthily. I certainly have a lot of cookery books purchased in the hope of achieving this worthy ambition, many of which are little used. My main problem is that fat tastes so good dammit.


Ainsley Harriott's "Low fat meals in minutes" is the "healthy" book festooned with the most favourite recipe post-it notes on my shelves (flagged RI in EYB) However, a local discovery is "Eat well live well with high cholesterol" by Karen Kingham (nutritionist) Murdoch Books, Australia (2007) ISBN 9781740459792 (yet to appear on EYB) What I like about it is that it doesn't just have yummy savoury dishes, but also has various low fat cakes which are surprisingly good.


There are probably lots of books out there that I should hear about though.

#4 Posted : Monday, May 31, 2010 3:02:54 AM(UTC)

Thanks Eurydice for replying. I remember seeing Ainsley Harriott on TV some years back. Always enjoyed him, and happy to hear it is a book that you frequently use.

#5 Posted : Monday, July 26, 2010 8:42:02 PM(UTC)

Jody Vassallo has the great, if not romantically entitled Diabetes cookbook. Not yet indexed, but I'm sure it will be. It's got delicious recipes, and of course, if we all ate like we already had diabetes, we probably wouldn't end up getting diabetes. I've made lots from it for my partner, who thinks looking after himself is a bunch of hogwash, and he unwittingly really enjoyed it.

#6 Posted : Tuesday, August 31, 2010 2:42:43 AM(UTC)
I have been reading EatingWell magazine since their first incarnation back in the 80's. So while I don't own any of their cookbooks I do think highly of their recipes. Fortunately they have many of their recipes online at their website so you could preview and make certain that the recipes are approrpiate for your health needs.
Other than that I tend to like books that teach you interesting things to do with vegetables. I would rather read a cookbook that adds great vegetable based dishes to my diet than one that takes standard recipes and makes them low fat, or sodium etc. I agree with Nick Malgieri in his low fat dessert book, it is much easier to choose a dish that is inherently healthier and cook it well, than to choose a less healthy option and skimp on flavor etc to make it healthier.
During the summer I focused on mediterranean dishes using my favorite summer vegetables. Coming into fall I want to learn more vegetable braises, whole grain dishes, and soup options. At least that is my goal, unfortunately I keep turning to my baking books for fun reading and cooking.
Good luck
#7 Posted : Friday, November 19, 2010 6:25:53 AM(UTC)

Homestyle Cooking by Jeanne Jones! Subtitle: Classic American Favorites made healthy. She truly doesn't sacrifice taste in order to cut calories. My husband and boys always rave & have no idea that I've fed them something healthy. In my hefty collection of cookbooks, it's one of the most beat-up and I love to give copies as wedding gifts. (But don't ask me to give it up after a month!)

#8 Posted : Friday, November 19, 2010 7:26:34 AM(UTC)
For me it would be "Lighthearted at Home" by Anne Lindsay. Many years ago Anne Lindsay partnered with the Canadian Heart & Stroke Association to encourage Canadians to eat heathy, well-balanced, delicious meals. Since that time she's produced a number of cookbooks and then last year she published this "best of" book that includes all her favourite recipes. I've made so many of her recipes over the years and I've never once been disappointed. Her recipes are ethnically diverse, flavourful, family friendly and also suitable for entertaining.

I've also had the pleasure of meeting Anne at fundraising events and cooking demonstrations over the years and she's as delightful as her books with a real passion for her work and cause. She always donates a portion of the profits of her books to the Heart & Stroke Association as well.

If anyone is interested, here's a link to this book (now in softcover):

http://www.amazon.ca/Lig...st-Lindsay/dp/0470160772
#9 Posted : Monday, November 22, 2010 4:39:36 AM(UTC)

Heidi Swanson's Super Natural Cooking (Celestial Arts, 2007) is one of the best cookbooks I know, not just the best healthy cookbooks, the best period.  I'm pretty close to cooking every recipe, and there have been no failures.  Heidi's mantra is adding goodness, not subtracting badness.  Delightful, interesting recipes from hither and yon -- oh, and they happen also to be healthy.


My daughter wrote a witty and informative book report about Super Natural Cooking on a food blog we did for a while.  And Heidi has a new book coming out in April.


xxx, mcvl


 

#10 Posted : Tuesday, November 23, 2010 2:47:47 AM(UTC)
Thanks for the reminder, as I have that book and it is great. As is everything Heidi does or recommends. I am looking forward to her new book.
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