Anthea wrote:Piling wrote:I have just finished to read it, interesting :
https://www.amazon.co.uk/Sweet-Nothing- ... 140915484X
I feel lucky to not 'crave' by cutting sugar.
Just read the intro and it seems funny think I will read the book
I will not reading it because the writer doesn't have a clue about fruit benefits. Read the following review:
I applaud the processed sugar free message - but don't demonise one of nature's best gifts to us - wonderful fresh fruit! By Lee-Anne on 5 Jun. 2015
Format: Paperback
An enjoyable and interesting read on a timely subject, and it was great reading for me at a time when I too was at the beginning of my sugar-free journey. However... I winced in dismay every time the author categorised fresh fruit as one of the sugary foods to be avoided. I heartily disagree. On my up and down quest for a healthier diet I found that while eating processed sugar or anything with refined carbs (bread, pastry, pasta) I would be overwhelmed with sugar cravings, even if I hadn't had sugar for a couple of weeks, yet I never get cravings for chocolate and carby foods when I eat whole fruits. When I was a Cadbury bar-a-day girl (the big 200g size) I didn't want fruit - it didn't hit the spot and it didn't taste sweet enough - I wanted chocolate and hobnobs. But now I'm weaned off the white stuff, fruit tastes delicious but without all the cravings, guilt trips and blood sugar blues.
Whole fruits are one of the best foods we can put in our bodies - biologically it is the easiest food source for us to make nutritional use of. To paraphrase Douglas N Graham, 'no one got fat, diabetic, or candida from eating fruit'. Fruit in it's whole form is so full of fibre that the small amount of natural fructose does not cause harm. It is the processed fructose we need to avoid. I eat lots and lots of fruit as part of my now plant based, processed-sugar free diet, and have no problem maintaining a size 8 figure at 40+ years old and having had 4 children, and I don't get ill - the viruses, colds and bugs that do the rounds all pass me by these days. So I know that eating lots of whole fruit does not make you fat and sickly. Eating processed fructose does.
I applaud the processed sugar free message - but don't demonise one of nature's best gifts to us - wonderful fresh fruit!













