The Color Code: A Revolutionary Eating Plan for Optimum Health
James A. Joseph. Hyperion Books, $19.95 (320pp) ISBN 978-0-7868-8621-0
The very pigments that make produce so vibrant are often what make it so beneficial, say the authors to this guide to eating by the color wheel; the red in tomatoes may protect against prostate cancer, for instance, while the yellow in turmeric seems to help ward off colon cancer. Joseph, a lead scientist at the USDA Human Nutrition Center on Aging, and Nadeau, clinical director of a diabetes center and a Tufts assistant professor, have teamed up with Newsweek reporter Underwood to offer readers an encyclopedia of richly hued foods. After a brief overview (e.g., what the authors eat to stay healthy and""What Phytochemicals Mean to You""), the authors plunge into the foods themselves, offering the low-down on everything from apples to yams. Eat 9-10 servings of vegetables a day, keep a color counter and buy organic, the authors suggest; recipes such as Sweet Pepper Vegetarian Chili and Buckwheat Pancakes with Blueberry Sauce (blueberries are a""virtual storehouse of antioxidant and anti-inflammatory compounds"") round out the offerings in this accessible and encouraging paperback reprint.
Details
Reviewed on: 03/17/2003
Genre: Nonfiction
Hardcover - 308 pages - 978-0-7868-6721-9