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Posted by admin on June 19, 2012

Paleo Cookbook Recommendation: Paleo Comfort Foods: Homestyle Cooking for a Gluten-free Kitchen

Posted under paleo cookbooks, paleo diet, paleo dieting, paleo ebooks, primal diet

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Being from the south (I’m a Texas girl), I was born and raised on comfort food. We Southerners have fried chicken and mashed potatoes in our veins, and the waistlines to prove it. It wasn’t always that way. Cowboys ate the same diet, but I guess the average person doesn’t consider the fact that cowboys and farmers always worked 15 hours a day in the heat and sun worked that cornbread off. As our lifestyles have changed and become more sedentary, our diets have stayed the same, so the old saying “Everything’s bigger in Texas” now mostly applies to our posteriors. Of course that mentality isn’t limited to south. Comfort food has migrated to all parts of the country (because it’s delicious!) and when the word “diet” is thrown around, comfort food’s very existance is threatened. The idea that it could ever be considered healthy and actually taste good, is a hard one to wrap your head around.

And as we all know, people in general tend to buck at the idea of switching to any diet or lifestyle that requires them to give up those things that they love. We cling to our unhealthy favorite foods like a childhood saftey blanket. The great thing about “Paleo Comfort Foods” is that it eliminates that barrier. It introduces the paleo diet (one that usually intimidates people) in a way that is familiar, by tweaking typical comfort food dishes to make them conform to paleo and gluten-free rules (similar to “Make it Paleo” by with a tighter niche audience). paleo cookbooks

The recipes in the book are delicious and photos are mouth-watering, like you’d expect from any good cookbook. You also won’t find ingredient lists that are miles long, which a big bonus. Cooking tasty meals shouldn’t break the bank. 

paleo cookbooks

The only complaint that I’ve heard so far is that the index isn’t the most navigatable. Each recipe is listed by the name of the dish, so if you don’t know that the guacamole is called “Chunky Guacamole”, you’d have to thumb through the whole book, and it’s a pretty large book. Other than that, everyone agrees that it’s a top-notch cookbook for anyone on a paleo/primal/gluten-free diet.

 



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Posted by admin on May 2, 2012

Paleo Cookbook Recommendation: Make It Paleo: Over 200 Grain-free Recipes for Any Occasion

Posted under paleo cookbooks, paleo diet, paleo ebooks, primal diet

 

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Make it Paleo is perhaps one of the most highly recommended paleo cookbooks on the market. It was written by authors, Bill Staley and Haley Mason, bloggers for the extremely popular website, The Food Lovers Kitchen (a blog that I follow religiously. I LOVE their new paleo grocery list app, “My Kitchen”!). 

“Make It Paleo” contains over 200 paleo and primal recipes with beautiful photographs and helpful tips. Many of the recipes are familiar to anyone on the paleo diet, but you’ll also find some great innovations.

paleo cookbooks

Not only will you find your standard breakfast, lunch and dinner chapter, with both classic and cleverly executed contemporary dishes, but the real highlight of Make It Paleo is the dessert chapter. It’s packed with recipes for everything from cookies to ice cream, all made grain-free and paleo friendly. 

paleo cookbooks

 

You can find “Make It Paleo: Over 200 Grain-free Recipes for Any Occasion” in paperback or Kindle edition in our Recommended Cookbooks section below.



 

 

 

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Posted by admin on April 15, 2012

Paleo Cookbook Recommendation: The Primal Blueprint

Posted under paleo cookbooks, paleo diet, paleo ebooks, primal diet

If you read any of the forums online that discuss paleo cookbook recommendations, you’ll quickly discover that the most commonly mentioned book is The Primal Diet by Mark Sisson.

There’s a good reason for this. Mark Sisson created more than just a diet when he wrote it; he created a lifestyle, and for most paleo dieters, that what it is, a lifestyle choice. It’s not something that they do for a few weeks or even a few months. When they see the benefits of paleo eating, it becomes a permanent lifestyle choice. 

He based his diet on the evolutionary habits of both historical and contemporary hunter-gatherers, and applies those diets to our modern lives. What you eat in nature, you eat in his diet, and it’s not as hard as you’d think to do.

In The Primal Blueprint, Mark advocates eating meats (even organs), seafood, eggs, nuts, lots of vegetables and fruit. He suggests avoiding grains, legumes, dairy, all processed foods and limiting carbohydrates to less than 150 grams per day. 

He also gives advice for nutritional supplementation, exercise, sleep and stress management. 

After publishing The Primal Blueprint, Mark followed up with the incredibly handy The Primal Blueprint Cookbook, which is a must-have for anyone following a paleo-esque diet. Not only does it have a section on primal substitutes for your favorite non-paleo recipes (which is awesome), but there are sections for beverage recipes, dessert recipes and even a section on offal! For those non-foodies, offal are animal organs -liver, kidneys, brains etc.

Whether you’re new to primal dieting or a seasoned vet and just looking for some new paleo cookbooks, definitely check out The Primal Blueprint series by Mark Sisson, which is available in both book and Kindle form from Amazon. You can get the links below.


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