You know that balancing the calories you take in and burn off is the foundation of weight control. But actually achieving that balance between eating and exercise is a daily challenge for most of us. Now, The Calories In, Calories Out Cookbook provides a fresh, sane approach for everyone seeking good health--and great food.
Here is an essential repertoire of 200 smart recipes--nutrient-rich, delicious, foolproof, and ideal for busy individuals and families. Every recipe tells you its calorie count--and also tells you how many minutes of walking or jogging it takes for a woman or man to burn those calories off, so you'll be able to visualize what calories mean as never before. All the recipes are below 400 calories per serving--and most are below 200!
The Calories In, Calories Out Cookbook also delivers:
- An introduction to the world of calories--what they are, how our bodies use them, and why we don't have to exercise off every last calorie we eat--by distinguished Cornell nutrition professor and author Malden Nesheim, PhD
- A guide to determining your daily calorie and exercise needs
- Helpful nutrition stats (including diabetic exchanges) for every recipe
- "Calorie combo"and "calorie cut" suggestions that help you formulate daily and weekly menus that fit your calorie needs
- Plenty of vegetarian and gluten-free options
- Dozens of tips on ingredients, equipment, prep, and cooking
- An extensive appendix of nearly 1,000 popular foods and drinks with their calorie values and nutritional info--and much, much more!
Author: Catherine Jones, Malden Nesheim, Elaine Trujillo
Binding Type: Paperback
Publisher: Experiment
Published: 07/08/2014
Pages: 432
Weight: 2.86lbs
Size: 9.90h x 7.70w x 1.10d
ISBN: 9781615191048
About the AuthorCatherine Jones is an award-winning cookbook author, app developer, and blogger on the Calories In, Calories Out website. She has written numerous cookbooks, including
Eating for Pregnancy with Rose Ann Hudson, RD, LD, and
Eating for Lower Cholesterol with Elaine Trujillo, MS, RDN. She is the founder of the nonprofit Share Your Calories, created to build the first-ever weight-loss app with a social-giving component. She promotes calorie awareness, energy balance, and wellness at every opportunity. Catherine lives with her family in Bethesda, MD. She is a graduate of Connecticut College and La Varenne Culinary School in France.
Elaine Trujillo, MS, RDN, is a Registered Dietitian Nutritionist and works at the National Cancer Institute, National Institutes of Health. She is passionate about nutrition and its role in health promotion. She uses a variety of approaches to share her views and findings about nutrition, including co-authoring, with Catherine Jones,
The Calories In, Calories Out Cookbook and
Eating for Lower Cholesterol. In addition to authoring the textbook,
Nutritional Support in the Care of the Critically Ill, she has written various nutritional science-related journal articles and book chapters. She received a BS degree from the University of Delaware, and a MS at Texas Woman's University. She is Past Chair of the Oncology Nutrition Dietetic Practice Group of the Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics, and in 2013 co-edited the book,
Oncology Nutrition for Clinical Practice. She formerly served as Chair of Education and Research for the Maryland Academy of Nutrition and Dietetics. She and her husband live in Maryland. She has two children in college.
Malden Nesheim, PhD, coauthor of
Why Calories Count, is Cornell University Professor of Nutrition Emeritus and Provost Emeritus. He joined the Cornell faculty in 1959 and in 1974 he was named Director of the Division of Nutritional Sciences, a post which he held until the summer of 1987. He has received the Conrad A. Elvehjem Award for public service from the American Institute of Nutrition and in 1995 was elected to the American Academy of Arts and Sciences. He was elected a fellow of the American Society of Nutritional Sciences in 1997. He earned a B.S. in agricultural science and an M.S. in animal nutrition from the University of Illinois followed by a Ph.D. in nutrition from Cornell. His research interests have been aspects of nutritional biochemistry and more recently, the relationship of parasitic infections to nutritional status.