Read Hope's Edge: The Next Diet for a Small Planet Online
Authors: Frances Moore Lappé; Anna Lappé
Tags: #Health & Fitness, #Political Science, #Vegetarian, #Nature, #Healthy Living, #General, #Globalization - Social Aspects, #Capitalism - Social Aspects, #Vegetarian Cookery, #Philosophy, #Business & Economics, #Globalization, #Cooking, #Social Aspects, #Ecology, #Capitalism, #Environmental Ethics, #Economics, #Diets, #Ethics & Moral Philosophy
Diet For A Small Planet
If you’ve never read DIET FOR A SMALL PLANET you’ll find it a warm, caring, human philosophy of how the way we eat affects not only ourselves but our world.
This amazing book is also a complete kitchen guide, filled with tips, suggestions, and delicious recipes—a total guide to eating well.
Also by Frances Moore Lappe
Published by Ballantine Books:
GREAT MEATLESS MEALS
FOOD FIRST
WHAT TO DO AFTER YOU TURN OFF THE TV
REDISCOVERING AMERICA’S VALUES
A Ballantine Book
Published by The Random House Publishing Group
Copyright © 1971, 1975, 1982, 1991 by Frances Moore Lappé
All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. Published in the United States by Ballantine Books, an imprint of The Random House Publishing Group, a division of Random House, Inc., New York, and simultaneously in Canada by Random House of Canada Limited, Toronto.
Ballantine and colophon are registered trademarks of Random House, Inc.
Library of Congress Catalog Card Number: 82-1655
eISBN: 978-0-307-75453-0
v3.1
For Betty Ballantine, whose foresight, thank
was better than mine!
Contents
Diet for a Small Planet Twenty Years Later—An Extraordinary Time to Be Alive
BOOK ONE: DIET FOR A SMALL PLANET
Part I. Recipe for a Personal Revolution
1. An Entry Point
2. My Journey
Part II. Diet for a Small Planet
1. One Less Hamburger?
2. Like Driving a Cadillac
3. The Meat Mystique
4. Democracy at Stake
5. Asking the Right Questions
Part III. Diet for a Small Planet Revisited
1. America’s Experimental Diet
2. Who Asked for Fruit Loops?
3. Protein Myths: A New Look
4. Protein Complementarity: The Debate
Part IV. Lessons for the Long Haul
1. What Can We Do?
2. How to Plug In
BOOK TWO: EATING WELL ON A SMALL PLANET: COMPLEMENTARY PROTEIN RECIPES, MENUS, TIPS
Part I. Tips for Making Meals Without Meat
1. What Is a Meal Without Meat?
2. “But It Takes Too Much Time …”
3. Understanding Protein Complementarity
Part II. Meatless Meals in a Dish
1. Sauces That Make a Meal
2. Something from the Oven
3. International Meals from the Top of the Stove
4. Pie-in-the-Sky Suppers
5. The Universal Favorite: The Sandwich
6. A Meal in a Soup Pot
7. A Meal in a Salad Bowl
Part III. Meatless Menus for Special Occasions
1. The Indian Feast (Version One)
2. The Indian Feast (Version Two)
3. Middle Eastern Specialty
4. Brazilian Evening
5. Greek Gala
6. Mexican Banquet (Version One)
7. Mexican Banquet (Version Two)
8. Dinner in Italy
9. Oriental Specialty
10. Harvest Dinner
11. Pizza Party
1. Snacks, Appetizers, and Candies That Count
2. Start-Right Breakfasts
3. Baked-In Protein
4. Protein for Dessert
A
. Education for Action: Recommended Books and Periodicals
B
. Basic Cooking Instructions for Beans, Grains, Nuts, and Seeds
C
. Protein-Calorie Guidelines for Evaluating Foods
D
. Protein Tables and Tips for Complementing Proteins
E
. Cost of One Day’s Protein Allowance
F
. Whole Wheat Flour Compared to White Flour
G
. Brown Rice Compared to Other Types of Rice
H
. Sugars, Honey, and Molasses Compared
I
. Food Additives: What’s Safe? What to Avoid?
J
. Recommended Paperback Cookbooks
List of Figures
1. A Protein Factory in Reverse
2. Calories of Fossil Fuel Expended to Get 1 Calorie of Protein
3. Amount of Water to Produce 1 Pound of Protein from Various Food Sources
4. Impact of the Experimental American Diet
5. Sodium in Fresh versus Processed Foods
6. Fiber in 4 Slices of Bread and Other Foods
7. Control of Our Food by Shared Monopolies
9. Who Owns the Fast Food Giants
10. Hypothetical All-Plant-Food Diet (Just to Prove a Point)
11. Hypothetical Mixed Plant and Dairy Diet (Just to Prove a Point)
12. The Problem of a “Limiting Amino Acid”
14. The Food/Protein Continuum
15. Demonstrating Protein Complementarity
16. Summary of Complementary Protein Relationships
17. Calorie “Cost” per Gram of Usable Protein