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Added by: lucius5 | Karma: 1660.85 | Non-Fiction, Other | 11 March 2009
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In this era of McDiets and packed schedules, it's never been harder to incorporate homemade wholesome food into our daily lives. The foods your child eats will not only influence his well being in crucial growing years but will form a pattern of healthy eating for adulthood. The main problem, of course, is time. Factor in finicky eating, cost, and cooking skills (or a lack thereof) and you have a generation of kids brought up on microwaved hot dogs and frozen pizza. But it doesn't have to be this way.
Canadian Living and our French counterpart, Coup de Pouce, have teamed up with Weetabix cereal to offer a great new resource for simple, healthy eating. Introducing the "Healthy Eating for Life" cookbook, containing over 125 good-for-you recipes developed in the Canadian Living and Coup de Pouce Test Kitchens. Simple, tasty recipes for weeknight entrees plus wonderful appetizers, soups, salads, vegetables, grains, drinks, desserts and more are featured -- all tested 'til perfect for taste and quality!
The actor and writer reads the account of his third and most ambitious world adventure: an anti-clockwise circumnavigation of the world's largest ocean, the Pacific.
With tales of head-hunters in Borneo and eating maggots in Mexico, Palin evokes the full colour and richness of the Pacific Rim.
In this debut book, Glenny (Ph.D., English literature), a former anorexic, attributes the "omnipresence" of food in the writing of Virginia Woolf to her "premature weaning" (at ten weeks), the early death of her mother, and, most significantly, sexual abuse by her half-brother. While this densely written study breaks new ground in Woolf scholarship, Glenny goes too far by becoming an apologist for anorexia. Instead of simply showing how important food was as a metaphor for Woolf, Glenny makes disturbing comments such as "anorexia can, at its most positive, function as a bell-jar in which personal and political change is fermented."