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An Apple A Day
 
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An Apple A Day [Hardcover]

Joe Schwarcz
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (4 customer reviews)
List Price: CDN$ 32.95
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Review

Publishers Weekly

“Readers will not need a PhD in chemistry to follow along; Schwarcz wisely limits technical terms to the minimum while adequately explaining the chemistry involved in digestion.”


Library Journal
Rachel M. Minkin

“… an entertaining guide through the tangle of conflicting research studies, advertising claims, special interest groups, age-old myths and popular opinion that make diet a cloudy subject. … leaves readers with a rational framework for evaluating the complex nature of foods and how they affect health.”


ForeWord Magazine

"An Apple a Day hashes out hype and irrational panic one chemical compound and one foodstuff at a time. Between ubiquitous cover-ups and endemic hysteria about what’s in our food and our bloodstreams, there’s nothing more helpful than a clear-speaking and apparently non-aligned food chemist who is willing to identify the real risks and defuse the rampant bad information out there. Addressing allegations that companies like Monsanto and Novartis intentionally poison consumers, Schwarcz urges skepticism, because “no company wants to undermine its existence or its profits by marketing a dangerous substance.” Discounting unfounded rumors, Schwarcz identifies a handful of foodstuffs and practices that should cause real concern. The most serious are the rampant use of antibiotics in livestock and indications that trans fats may do serious harm to people’s memories."

--This text refers to an alternate Hardcover edition.

Book Description

Eat salmon. It's full of good omega-3 fats. Don't eat salmon. It's full of PCBs and mercury. Eat more veggies. They're full of good antioxidants. Don't eat more veggies. The pesticides will give you cancer.

Forget your dinner jacket and put on your lab coat: you have to be a nutritional scientist these days before you sit down to eat - which is why we need Dr. Joe Schwarcz, the expert who's famous for connecting chemistry to everyday life. In An Apple a Day, he's taken his thorough knowledge of food chemistry, applied it to today's top food fears, trends and questions, and leavened it with his trademark lighthearted approach. The result is both an entertaining revelation of the miracles of science happening in our bodies every time we bite into a morsel of food, and a telling exploration of the myths, claims and misconceptions surrounding our obsession with diets, nutrition and weight.

Looking first at how food affects our health, Dr. Joe examines what's in tomatoes, soy and broccoli that can keep us healthy and how the hundreds of compounds in a single food react when they hit our bodies. Then he investigates how we manipulate our food supply, delving into the science of food additives and what benefits we might realize from adding bacteria to certain foods. He clears up the confusion about contaminants, examining everything from pesticide residues, remnants of antibiotics, the dreaded trans fats and chemicals that may leach from cookware. And he takes a studied look at the science of calories and weighs in on popular diets.

An Apple a Day is a must-read book for anyone who looks forward to digesting the truth about what we eat.


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Customer Reviews

4 Reviews
5 star:
 (3)
4 star:    (0)
3 star:
 (1)
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Average Customer Review
4.5 out of 5 stars (4 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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7 of 7 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars The truth is out there (well, in here actually), Jun 26 2008
By 
Livestrong (Victoria, BC, Canada) - See all my reviews
This review is from: An Apple A Day (Hardcover)
What a wonderfully refreshing change this book is. In an age where foods or supplements are deemed essential for life one day, then toxic the next, or both at the same time, the author Joe Schwarcz explains with clarity and scientific authority just what is really going on. He cuts through the latest 'miracle food' marketing hyperbole, 'astounding' research results, and explains what the substance actually is, how it operates, and the current scientific understanding of its effects on the human system. Perhaps even more importantly, he is not trying to sell you anything, not trying to convert you to some radical 'fad' or lifestyle. All he is doing is cutting through swathes of near-hysterical media bandwagons to promote common sense backed by sound scientific evidence.

In some instances, such popular myths can acutally cause harm. The take-up of pollutants in some oily fish, for example, have been shown to occur in minuscule amounts. But detrimental health effects can occur if consumers cut out such foods since the scientifically established health benefits massively outweigh any risk that such pollutants may pose. Another concern is that all our food today is contaminated with 'chemicals'. As the author states, such statements are meaningless without appropriate context. Take the eponymous apple of the book's title. Apples contain nail polish remover (acetone), rubbing alcohol (isopropanol), and cyanide. Should we be worried about eating apples? Of course not. Context is everything. The amounts of these, and over 300 other chemicals found in apples, are too small to be of any consequence. Whatever effect the fruit has on our health is a reflection of all of these naturally occurring substances.

The material is presented logically in three main parts: "Naturally occurring substances in our food supply", "Manipulating our food supply", and "Contaminants in our food supply". You can read from beginning to end, or dip into specific chapters at random. I suspect, though, that you will have the book read in very short order. It is gripping, with each easy to read chapter being only a few pages long.

Sections such as those describing the artificial sweetener 'debate', for example, are fascinating and the results not what I was expecting at all. The author reserves particular outrage on our behalf at the 'scientific' results of so-called media-friendly 'doctors'. One, for example, fools us with her 'Dr.' status which turns out to be an honorary doctorate in humanities from an unaccredited religious institution. And yet she is influencing policy through media pickup and sensationalism, while proper controlled scientific studies graft away in the background, rarely making news unless a genuine breakthrough really has been discovered. I felt mounting outrage while reading through this, and many other chapters.

Typical of Schwarcz's concluding section is the subject of 'detox'. As the author puts it:

"Even if detox diets do result in improved feeling of well-being, their concept is flawed. The message is that our body will forgive our dietary sins if we periodically undergo a cleanse. That's not what sound nutrition is all about. Focus should be on eating in a healthy fashion all the time, not on making some dramatic alteration when a problem arises. But that idea doesn't sell nearly as well as claims of miraculously restored health by a short-term change in diet."

I couldn't agree more. If, like me, you are confused about what to believe in the field of nutrition today, how we are being massively manipulated, you absolutely must read this book. The author gives you the tools to make your own informed decisions based on genuine scientific research. Oh, and he does conclude with what he personally considers a good, healthy eating lifestyle.

I thought I was well-informed at a culinary level, not blinded by myth and rhetoric. How wrong I was. The author is to be congratulated on this superlative exposition.
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5 of 6 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Fabulous, and easy reading, Aug 6 2008
By 
D. Davies (Toronto, Ontario Canada) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: An Apple A Day (Hardcover)
I've recommended this book to many of my friends. The chapters are all about 4 pages so you can put it down anytime without losing the flow. His writing style is very good: easy to read, factual, with a bit of humour to make it enjoyable. Buy it - you won't regret it.
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0 of 1 people found the following review helpful
5.0 out of 5 stars Pleasure to read..., Mar 5 2009
By 
Anny Chung "qteestuff" (Richmond, British Columbia Canada) - See all my reviews
(REAL NAME)   
This review is from: An Apple A Day (Hardcover)
I really enjoy this book. It is very easy to read, the chapters are short so that you won't loose the flow. I read this while having lunch at work and it's very enjoyable. Highly recommended.
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