Can food be so delicious as to be dangerous? Well, yes, according to a new book, "The End of Overeating" by a former FDA chief. Here, Jacob Sullum in Reason magazine takes on the author and gives us, bless him, a less alarming and more appetizing picture.
But what about those of us who reject Kessler’s ethic of rigidly ordered abstemiousness, which replaces hypereating with hypervigilance? Consider celebrity chef and food writer Anthony Bourdain, who supplied a blurb for this book (“disturbing, thought-provoking, and important”) that suggests he hasn’t read it. As anyone who watches No Reservations, Bourdain’s show on the Travel Channel, can attest, his attitude toward food is about as far from Kessler’s as it’s possible to get. While Kessler says we should be wary of delicious dishes, Bourdain conspicuously consumes all manner of fatty, salty, calorie-packed food in large quantities without apology (and nevertheless keeps a trim figure). Bourdain’s fans see a man who relishes life and refuses to sacrifice pleasure on the altar of health. Kessler presumably would see a victim of conditioned hypereating who desperately needs a course of Food Rehab™.
1 comment:
Hello, Sir...Speaking of dangerous food: Wondering if anyone has ever made a study of the eating habits of the Jewish people, Muslums, or Christians who follow biblical food laws, against people who don't, in relation to diseases, such as cancer, heart problems, etc?
I just found your blog, and am enjoying.
Thanks for your time,
jim Peterson
Gardnerville NV/Bacubirito Mexico
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