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-   -   New Book by Diana ROgers and Robb Wolf (http://forum.lowcarber.org/showthread.php?t=483938)

cotonpal Thu, May-07-20 05:18

New Book by Diana ROgers and Robb Wolf
 
New book available for preorder

Quote:

Over the last five years, I’ve been talking about writing a book with my good friend Robb Wolf about sustainability and how the most nutrient dense diet for humans is actually food produced in a way that improves the land. Not a super sexy topic, I know... But the recent world events have made this topic more important than ever before. Our industrial food system is making people, and the planet, sick.

What is Sacred Cow?

People are concerned about their health, the environment and about how we treat animals in our current industrial food system, and rightly so. Beef is framed as the most environmentally destructive and least healthy of foods, but while many argue that greatly reducing, or even eliminating it from our diets, we take a more critical look at the assumptions and misinformation presented about meat.

After spending years analyzing the science, we present a solid case that:

Meat and animal fat are essential for our bodies
A sustainable food system cannot exist without animals
A vegan diet may destroy more life than sustainable cattle farming
Regenerative cattle ranching is one of our best tools at mitigating climate change
Sacred Cow is our attempt to vindicate red meat and propose a new way to look at sustainable diets. We take a deep dive into the nutritional claims against meat, why cattle raised well are actually good for the environment, and address the ethical considerations surrounding killing animals for food. The truth is, you cannot have life without death, and eliminating animals from our food system could cause more harm than good.

But even if this way of raising animals is better than our current system, surely you can’t feed the world this way, right? Yep, we tackle that too!

You’ll also find practical guidance on how to support sustainable farms and a 30-day challenge to help you transition to a healthful and environmentally conscientious diet (that includes red meat).

This book is big: it will challenge everything we’re currently hearing about healthy, sustainable diets. We’re bombarded by the media, vegan propaganda films, and many health professionals that we must stop eating meat if we are to be good citizens. So, if you’re looking for a better answer, and want to know the science that backs it up, this book is for you.

Where can you get it?

Sacred Cow is available now for pre-order everywhere books are sold.

Pre-order from Amazon​

Pre-order from IndieBound​

Pre-order from Barnes & Noble​

Pre-order from Powells.com​

Pre-order from Books A Million​

I’ll be sending out more emails soon with information on what’s in the book, and also to tell you about the companion documentary film in the works, expected to release this fall. I hope you’ll help me transform our food system!

Will you join me?



Diana


Demi Thu, May-07-20 05:42

Sacred Cow
 
The following is from an email newsletter:

Quote:
Over the last five years, I’ve been talking about writing a book with my good friend Robb Wolf about sustainability and how the most nutrient dense diet for humans is actually food produced in a way that improves the land. Not a super sexy topic, I know... But the recent world events have made this topic more important than ever before. Our industrial food system is making people, and the planet, sick.

What is Sacred Cow?

People are concerned about their health, the environment and about how we treat animals in our current industrial food system, and rightly so. Beef is framed as the most environmentally destructive and least healthy of foods, but while many argue that greatly reducing, or even eliminating it from our diets, we take a more critical look at the assumptions and misinformation presented about meat.

After spending years analyzing the science, we present a solid case that:
  • Meat and animal fat are essential for our bodies
  • A sustainable food system cannot exist without animals
  • A vegan diet may destroy more life than sustainable cattle farming
  • Regenerative cattle ranching is one of our best tools at mitigating climate change
Sacred Cow is our attempt to vindicate red meat and propose a new way to look at sustainable diets. We take a deep dive into the nutritional claims against meat, why cattle raised well are actually good for the environment, and address the ethical considerations surrounding killing animals for food.

The truth is, you cannot have life without death, and eliminating animals from our food system could cause more harm than good.

But even if this way of raising animals is better than our current system, surely you can’t feed the world this way, right? Yep, we tackle that too!

You’ll also find practical guidance on how to support sustainable farms and a 30-day challenge to help you transition to a healthful and environmentally conscientious diet (that includes red meat).

This book is big: it will challenge everything we’re currently hearing about healthy, sustainable diets. We’re bombarded by the media, vegan propaganda films, and many health professionals that we must stop eating meat if we are to be good citizens. So, if you’re looking for a better answer, and want to know the science that backs it up, this book is for you.

Where can you get it?

Sacred Cow is available now for pre-order everywhere books are sold.


Diana Rodgers


https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1948836912/
https://www.barnesandnoble.com/w/sa...n=9781948836913


Ms Arielle Thu, May-07-20 10:17

Im on board already.

First of spring lambs arrived this morning. Two black ram lambs.

s93uv3h Thu, May-07-20 10:42

July 14 release.

GRB5111 Thu, May-07-20 12:56

Definitely something that I want to read. Thanks, Jean.

cotonpal Thu, May-07-20 13:02

Quote:
Originally Posted by GRB5111
Definitely something that I want to read. Thanks, Jean.


I pre-ordered

s93uv3h Thu, May-07-20 23:53

Maybe (fingers crossed) the library will open by then. Hope springs eternal.

cotonpal Fri, May-08-20 03:28

My library just started a curbside pick-up program. Elaborate pickup procedure in place. Call in your books, wait for a call back in 24 hours, set up a pickup time, wait at library door with name sign. Call to announce your arrival. Step back from the door. Book will be placed outside in a paper bag, wait for person to go back inside, take book and leave. Returns in outside return box only.

WereBear Fri, May-08-20 12:23

This book sounds like a fantastic counter to the vegan propaganda. Even more pertinent now!

Demi Wed, Jul-01-20 02:00

Let’s Have Better Meat, Not No Meat: An Open Response To The Guardian
https://www.sacredcow.info/blog/an-...to-the-guardian

GRB5111 Wed, Jul-01-20 06:52

Like others here, because I pre-ordered the book, I'm receiving emails from Diana Rodgers. The most recent offer is to submit the receipt from the book pre-order and reap some early benefits such as eBooks: an advanced chapter from the book due out on 14 July, recipe book from Robb Wolf, detailed video interviews with people like Sarah Hallberg, Aseem Malhotra, and others, an early preview link to the movies that's is in production, and a variety of discount coupons to lc and keto-friendly companies. I simply sent a pdf of my amazon receipt and was provided with a password to access all of the above and more.

Merpig Wed, Jul-01-20 14:36

I just pre-ordered too - the hardcover even though the kindle is cheaper.

I love the library, and mine is now open with various limiting restrictions. But for books like this I prefer owning a copy rather than reading from the library.

Ditto for kindle. I have a kindle and read on it all the time. But mainly for novels where I start at the beginning and read to the end. For books I read for reference, and which I might want to refer to sections more again, I still love a good hardcopy.

deirdra Wed, Jul-01-20 18:42

If you click on https://www.amazon.com/gp/product/1948836912/

It says it is the "#1 New Release" "in Vegetarian Diets"

Maybe they didn't read past the second sentence in the description "We’re told that if we care about our health—or our planet—eliminating red meat from our diets is crucial. That beef is bad for us and cattle farming is horrible for the environment. But science says otherwise."

Ha! Maybe it will improve some vegetarians' lives, like the person on the Macdougall website forum who suggested to me "maybe you should try Protein Power" when I wasn't doing well on Macdougall's carby diet.

Demi Mon, Jul-13-20 00:14

Why eating meat is good for your health... and the planet

The authors of a new book against veganism argue that eating meat can be beneficial – depending on where it comes from


https://www.telegraph.co.uk/health-...-health-planet/

Quote:
Weight loss, clear skin and reduced risk of diabetes and cancer: according to animal rights’ groups, a vegan diet is a panacea for many ills. But a new book is making the opposite case, saying that meat, if carefully raised, can be good for you and the planet. According to Diana Rodgers and ex-vegan Robb Wolf, authors of Sacred Cow: The Case for (Better) Meat, the real problems stem from factory farming and processed food.

Their argument begins by looking at what humans are designed to eat. We did not evolve to be vegan, they say: our teeth can break down both vegetation and meat, and compared to other primates, we have smaller colons, the part of the gut that breaks down fibre.

So, although a gorilla thrives on eating just plants, we may run into some health issues if we try it. To start with, cutting out meat can make it difficult to get enough of some nutrients like iron. A woman of menstruating age would need to eat 510g of cooked chickpeas, or two entire tins, a day to get enough – or just 80g of pork liver.

Even eating this quantity of chickpeas could leave that woman with a deficiency, though, as your body can only absorb up to 4.7 per cent of the iron in plants, compared to 20 per cent in red meat. It is a similar story for other minerals, like calcium and omega-3, which are also denser and more absorbable in animal foods. “Animal protein is healthy, and it needs to be consumed”, says Rodgers.

The pair also say the high level of protein in meat is beneficial, since many of us, particularly older adults, aren’t getting enough. A study from last year found up to 46 percent of Americans over 50 weren’t meeting targets, and those eating less protein were physically weaker and less likely to be getting enough of other nutrients.
Quote:
My nails crumbled away when I went vegan and my skin broke out - now I’m ‘veganesque’

When I first went back to eating fish – a salmon salad – after a year spent being a strict vegan, I noticed the effect quite fast.

I felt more alert and aware, as though someone had woken me up. My experience replicated that of actor Anne Hathaway, who said she felt like her brain had “rebooted” when she returned to eating fish after some years eschewing all meat and fish for a plant-based diet.

Nor are we recovering vegans alone. Ellen DeGeneres has added fish and eggs into her formerly strict diet. Tim Shieff, a vegan YouTuber and influencer, has admitted adding meat back on to his plate as a tonic for symptoms such as “digestion issues… fatigue, brain fog, depression, lack of recovery, lack of energy, yawning all the time”, and “waking up stiff”.

And the new BMJ report warning that vegans may be risking serious nutritional deficiency and storing up a litany of health problems could be a wake-up call for the estimated 600,000 Britons who, according to the Vegan Society, now follow a plant-only diet.

I gave up fish, dairy and eggs in a moment of desperation. Having suffered merciless irritable bowel syndrome (IBS) for years, I wanted to see if being vegan could end the unpredictable but regular bouts of spasms. Having already experimented with anti-spasmodic drugs, hypnotherapy, peppermint pills and so much more, this was about the only thing I hadn’t tried.

So I played around with various “milks” made of almonds, hazelnuts and cashews until I found Oatly (made from oats), which suited my tastebuds. I liked its sour cream substitute, too.

My grocery basket filled up with marinated tofu and quarter-pound vegan burgers from the Linda McCartney’s range, and sacks of kale and spinach. And I tapped into a vegan network online where you learn what treat foods you can eat: salt-and-vinegar Pringles, Bourbon biscuits and Fry’s chocolate creams, since you ask.

My family were, for the most part, content. I swapped the macaroni cheese, Spanish omelettes and creamy fish pies for Thai green curries with cashews, Mexican three-bean chillis and pasta with aubergines and courgettes.

At first, I lost weight. And I noticed my IBS was improving. But my skin was not happy, with regular breakouts, and my nails crumbled away. I added in a vitamin B spray and ate vegan calcium tablets and kept going.

Around the time the boredom kicked in – Christmas, somewhat inevitably – I realised I wasn’t losing weight any more and indeed, the pounds were creeping back on. This seemed like the breaking of an unwritten contract that if you restrict your diet in such a draconian way, you can sneakily diet without having to think about it.

I looked at my overall eating habits and realised I was becoming hugely bread and peanut butter-reliant. Calories, it seems, don’t care if you are vegan or not.

Now I’m ‘veganesque’. The meat-free family meals we enjoyed – the chillis and curries – are still on the menu. I’ve probably upped my fruit and veg intake to seven or eight portions a day with ease.

But I no longer have to pretend that vegan “cheeses” are edible. Sorry, they’re not. Pass the comté.

Victoria Lambert
Of course, while plant foods like beans and nuts contain protein, they don’t have as much per calorie as meat, which can make it more difficult to eat enough while keeping your calories down, write Rodgers and Wolf. For example, to get 30 grams of protein, you need to eat 137 calories of fish or 640 calories of beans.

Wolf and Rodgers were drawn to the benefits of meat after suffering from health issues. Two decades ago, Wolf suffered from ulcerative colitis, or irritation of the bowels, while following a vegan diet. “I’m about 175lbs (12st 7lbs), but then I was so bad that I was down to 130lbs (9 st 4lbs) from malabsorption issues. My hair was falling out and my nails were split”, he recalls. He repaired his health with a diet of whole, unprocessed foods including meat.

Rodgers also suffered from digestive issues. After a diagnosis of coeliac disease, she began eating lots of gluten-free packaged foods. This did not make her feel well: “I had to constantly eat every hour or two, or else I would be sweating and have tunnel vision”, she says. After changing to a diet of “whatever meat and vegetables I have in the house”, her hunger levels have stabilised and she is no longer “obsessing over food”.

They are now passionate about warning people of the “horrors of the modern industrial food system”, which is damaging our health and environment. Over half of calories in British diets are now from “ultra-processed foods” such as breakfast cereal, sweetened yoghurt and crisps. Young people eat even more of it, with children getting three-quarters of their calories from these foods, and teens getting 82.9 percent.

Ultra-processed food isn’t as nutrient-dense as “whole” foods like meat, eggs, and vegetables. Furthermore, ultra-processed food is easy to overeat: “It tastes really good because it’s been engineered to bypass the neuro-regulation of appetite”, says Wolf.

Somewhat surprisingly, Wolf and Rodgers acknowledge that turning vegan can, in fact, be good for the health of some people, if it encourages them to stop eating processed food. “By simply cutting out nutrient-poor, ultra-processed foods that stimulate us to overeat, people will naturally lose weight”, they write.

Even if there is a nutritional case for meat, many of us still prefer to steer clear of it for ethical and environmental reasons. Wolf and Rodgers acknowledge both of these, but believe the impact can be mitigated by returning to traditional husbandry practices.

Rodgers is a proponent of “regenerative agriculture”: a set of practices that claim to suck carbon out of the air and store it in soil. She practises this on her organic vegetable farm in rural Massachusetts, which uses the urine and faeces of grazing sheep, goats and chickens to add nutrients to the soil. “We realised that we needed animals to provide fertility for the kale”, she says. “Soil needs blood and guts.” She brings the animals to graze after crops are harvested to clear away leftovers while adding nutrients and microbes to the soil for the next growing season.

On regenerative livestock farms, ruminants are regularly moved from field to field of grassland, where they can add nutrition to the soil, without stripping it bare of vegetation. Healthy grasses can draw carbon from the air and send it to their roots in the form of sugars, which feed microorganisms that provide the plant with the nutrients it needs. Some of this carbon is then sequestered into the soil.

Rodgers and Wolf point to a study from 2018 which shows that cows which spend their entire lives on pasture can more than offset their carbon emissions through the amount of carbon they help to put into the soil in this way. However, not all beef is equal – the conventionally raised kind produces about 10 times as much carbon dioxide per kilogram than soybeans.

Cows can offset their carbon emissions Credit: Alan Hopps/Moment RF
Rodgers and Wolf also demonstrate we could do away with a lot of the land used to grow grain to feed to livestock. For example, at present, pigs are largely kept in indoor pens, where they are quickly fattened on grain. This is radically different from the pigs of the past, which ate leftovers including kitchen scraps, and even human excrement. Since a third of food is wasted in the UK each year, with better management we could use this to feed livestock, as we did in the past.

So what should we eat, to nourish ourselves and the planet, according to Wolf and Rodgers? If you can, buy sustainably-sourced protein like grass-fed beef or lamb and wild fish. Eat more offal, which is more affordable and packed with nutrients. Add fats like free-range eggs, olive oil and lard from pastured animals. Eat plenty of fruit and vegetables, which should be locally-grown and organic where possible.

For Rodgers, a typical breakfast is a bowl of berries with an omelette made of three free-range eggs with spinach. For lunch, she has a salad with pumpkin seeds and around 150g of wild salmon. Dinner is 150g of grass-fed steak with sweet potato and roasted broccoli.

Rodgers and Wolf believe we should be very concerned about climate change. They just don’t think that all the blame should be placed on well-raised meat when other human activities are damaging the planet too. “Better than swapping steak for salad would be buying less single-use ‘stuff’”, they write, so cut out buying gadgets you don’t need and poor-quality fast fashion.

Their overall message is pretty simple: “It’s not the cow, it’s the how.”

Life of a conventional vs high welfare pig

Sources: Compassion in World Farming, Viva!, RSPCA, Soil Association

Conventional

Half of British sows are kept in cages after giving birth, which are so small that they can't even turn around, let alone engage in natural behaviours like building a nest for their piglets or foraging for food.

93 per cent of growing pigs are kept entirely indoors in the UK. Without proper management, pigs attack and eat each other in this cramped and stressful space. Around 80 per cent of pigs have their tails cut off, to prevent other pigs biting them.

Only 3 percent of British pigs spend their entire lives outside living naturally.
Some pigs are routinely given antibiotics even when not unwell, to encourage them to put on weight faster. Drugs that are crucial to human health are allowed to be given to pigs, under EU law, which can increase the likelihood of generating antibiotic-resistant bacteria.

Organic

Cages are banned.

Pigs are kept outdoors for their entire lives.

Tail cutting is not allowed and not necessary, as animals have space to roam freely.

Piglets are weaned at 40 days, not 21 which is the minimum for non-organic pigs.

Routine use of antibiotics is banned.

Levels of omega-3 in the meat are 291 per cent higher than in intensively reared pork.

In free-range pork, levels of vitamin E are up to 204 per cent higher, and iron levels are three times higher.


WereBear Mon, Jul-13-20 05:40

Sounds like an excellent resource. May it be super-popular!


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