Got Milked?
-
- 11,99 €
-
- 11,99 €
Descrizione dell’editore
For more than a generation, we’ve been taught that milk does a body good, but in Got Milked? Alissa Hamilton dispels common misconceptions about milk and looks behind the marketing, examining the enormous influence the milk industry has over our diets. Separating science from advertising, Hamilton uncovers the inside story behind how milk became a dietary staple, stripping away years of conventional assumptions about diet to reveal the ways in which milk interferes with everyday health.
But more than just a sobering look at how milk is not the wonder food that it has been made out to be, Got Milked? also demonstrates how going milk-free can revolutionize your diet and your well-being. Attacking decades of accepted wisdom about milk, Got Milked? will make you rethink the way you consume milk and empower you to eat better. Hamilton also offers delicious dairy-free recipes and full meal plans that deliver the same nutrients found in dairy products, without all the sugar or negative side effects.
At once provocative and transformative, Got Milked? challenges many of the myths surrounding milk and will leave you prepared to take charge of your health. Not only will you find it easy to drop milk from your diet, you will thrive without it.
Three myths you don’t want to swallow
Myth #1: Milk protects your bones and prevents osteoporosis Untrue. The calcium in milk, claimed by milk marketers as the best way to avoid diseases like osteoporosis, is actually harder for our bodies to absorb than the calcium found in vegetables like broccoli, bok choy and kale. In fact, the record high calcium recommendations in North America may be doing our bones and bodies more harm than good.
Myth #2: Milk is an essential part of a healthy diet Untrue. Claims that milk is a good source of protein and other essential nutrients fly in the face of modern medical science. And although low-fat milk is fortified with vitamin D, vitamin D is fat-soluble and therefore not the best source of the nutrient. Further most people cannot digest lactose, the sugar in milk. Even those who can have good reason to avoid it. Lactose breaks down during digestion into a highly inflammatory sugar that can accelerate aging and lead to disease. The picture only gets worse when sugar-laden, flavored milk products are lumped in with milk marketing.
Myth #3: Milk is pure and simple Untrue. Regular use of antibiotics and growth hormones means that modern milk is anything but natural. Some of the essential nutrients in milk are added in the same way that Kellogg’s fortifies Fruit Loops with vitamins and minerals. And the industrialization of milk has allowed dairy processors to mix large batches of milk from different farms to create a uniform product that lasts longer, but may also cause more allergies. Modern milk is making us sick, yet milk and sugary milk products – some with sugar levels as high as soft drinks – are served to children in schools across North America.
PUBLISHERS WEEKLY
Hamilton, whose previous book (Squeezed) took on orange juice, here challenges the USDA's MyPlate dairy recommendation of three servings of dairy per day and its emphasis on fluid milk as the perfect version of that requirement. According to her, the Recommended Dietary Allowance (RDA), Adequate Intake (AI), and Upper Intake (UI) numbers set by various panels of doctors and government agencies are used by food marketers (often also funded directly and indirectly by the dairy industry) to make milk seem like the superfood it is not. Hamilton asserts that milk is not the only source of all-important nutrients: the vitamins D, K, B, and calcium at the core of health claims about milk can also be found in superfoods like amaranth and chia. The book includes a selection of recipes for these healthful foods, which Hamilton presents as viable alternatives currently making inroads beyond health food store devotees. She especially highlights the pressure on parents to follow USDA nutritional guidelines. The cost of dairy's dominance may be the weight and health of America, with one study finding that 90% of Asian-Americans and 75% of African-Americans, Mexican-Americans, and Jews are lactose intolerant. Hamilton triumphs with this resounding critique of lobbyist influence on nutritional guidelines.