The Washington Post Book Review: “Chew on This” by Jonathan Yardley

This article on Nina Planck by Jonathan Yardley was published in The Washington Post on July 11, 2006.

… In other words, she's a cross between Alice Waters and Martha Stewart -- genuinely committed to healthy, organic food but no less genuinely committed to making a buck off it. What she's selling is basically old-fashioned food, what she calls "real food," which she defines as "foods we've been eating for a long time -- in the case of meat, fish, and eggs, for millions of years." About these ‘traditional’ foods she writes:

‘To me, traditional means “the way we used to eat them.” That means different things for different ingredients: fruits and vegetables are best when they're local and seasonal; grains should be whole; fats and oils unrefined. From the farm to the factory to the kitchen, real food is produced and prepared the old-fashioned way -- but not out of mere nostalgia. In each of these examples of real food, the traditional method of farming, processing, preparing, and cooking enhances nutrition and flavor, while the industrial method diminishes both.’

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The Los Angeles Times Book Review: “A Convincing Case for Getting ‘Real’” by Hannah Wallace

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The New York Times Style Magazine Book Review: “The New Puritans” by Holly Brubach