French Women Don't Get Fat Diet Review
It's
a diet based on eating for pleasure and portion control. Experts explain how it
works
By Kathleen M. Zelman, MPH, RD, LD
WebMD Expert Review
WebMD Expert Review
Reviewed
by Brunilda Nazario, MD
French Women Don’t Get
Fat: What It Is
If you have ever wondered
how the French manage to eat cheese, butter, baguettes, and drink wine while
staying slim, then French Women Don't Get Fat: The Secret of Eating for
Pleasure, by Frenchwoman Mireille Guiliano, may be the book for you.
French Women Don't Get Fat
is actually a non-diet book, loaded with pearls of wisdom from the chic and fit
Mireille Guiliano, also CEO of the champagne company, Veuve Clicquot.
As a teenager, the author
came to the U.S. for school and returned home 20 pounds heavier than when she
arrived, blaming large portions and too many sweets. Upon embracing the eating
habits of French women, she restored her shape with a new understanding of
food, drink, and lifestyle that she shares in her book.
The basic premise of French
Women Don't Get Fat is that you should eat only good food of very high quality,
eat it in small portions, and savor every bite.
From chocolate to
champagne, eat slowly, with all your senses, and make every dining experience
pleasurable so you will be satisfied with smaller portions of delicious food.
No food is off limits, only large portions. No counting calories, no skipping
meals -- just control what you eat.
Not a quick fix or fad
diet, French Women Don't Get Fat is a three-month plan meant to reset your
"body's dials" for a lifetime of healthy weight through slow, gradual
weight loss.
Many will love the fact
that this plan does not include fitness classes but instead just plenty of
daily physical activity and lots of walking. The author shows how women can
adopt the French style of eating, drinking and moving as the winning formula
for weight control.
French Women Don’t Get
Fat: What You Can Eat
A two-day leek soup fast
jump-starts the French Women Don't Get Fat plan, followed by meat or fish,
vegetables, and a piece of fruit. During the initial phase, dieters are asked
to evaluate their diets by keeping a food journal to identify where excess
calories are coming from so they can make adjustments. "You can still have
your favorite foods, but try to reduce how often or how much," says
Guiliano.
After monitoring their
eating habits, dieters are advised to make small healthy improvements, such as
drinking more water all day long to stay hydrated and flush out toxins.
Throughout French Women
Don't Get Fat, Guiliano describes the lifestyle of French women that leads to a
trim waistline without denial or guilt. She offers a positive approach to
weight control that includes wine, chocolate, and the oft-shunned white bread
excluded in most diet books. She encourages readers to enjoy food and drink to
the fullest while keeping portions in check. Fresh, wholesome, and seasonal
ingredients are highly recommended.
Guiliano
also recommends eating a wide variety of healthy foods to be more satisfied
without feeling deprived. "Eating the same foods is a bad habit," the
author maintains, and she suggest trying new recipes, flavors, and herbs. There
are no forbidden foods in the French Women Don't Get Fat plan, as long as the
portions are kept in check.
Have a sweets craving?
Satisfy it with a few bites or a small portion of the food you crave. Love
wine? Enjoy it, Guiliano tells WebMD, but keep it to one glass. Slowly reduce
portion sizes over time so you won't realize you are eating less.
It is inevitable that there
will be splurges and when that happens, Guiliano recommends eating yogurt.
"Yogurt is the perfect food, full of calcium, and French women eat 1-2
servings a day, especially after a night of too much, it is the perfect
breakfast," she says. Guiliano includes a recipe for homemade yogurt and
also recommends it as a great snack.
French Women Don’t Get
Fat: How It Works
The fundamental premise of
the French Women Don't Get Fat non-diet plan is learning to enjoy the pleasure
of eating delicious food in a relaxed environment.
Guiliano believes that
American women would benefit if they slowed down, stopped speed eating and
eating on the run, and took more pleasure in the dining experience, much like
French women.
Eat with all of your senses
and be more mindful of every bite so you taste and savor the food and recognize
when you are full. "Three bites of food are all you need to really enjoy
it," Guiliano says. Sit down, slow down, chew thoroughly, and eat without
distractions – turn off the television, put down the book, and focus on eating.
With French Women Don't Get
Fat, the aim is to forget our food guilt and substitute it with pleasure.
First of all, let's
get one thing straight, French women do get fat and the obesity rate in France
is growing quickly, says ADA spokeswoman Katherine Tallmadge. "French
Women Don't Get Fat, like many other diet books, is a frustrating blend of real
insight, shaky science, and sheer speculation."
Tallmadge, a weight loss counselor in
Washington, D.C., points out that Guiliano is not a nutrition or weight loss
professional and even though she doesn't claim to be, bases her advice on
personal experiences and observations of life in France.
Some recommendations
in French Women Don't Get Fat are right on target, like walking for exercise,
weight training for women over 40, and eating vegetable soup. "Eating soup
with lots of vegetables has been found to help reduce calorie intake
naturally," says Tallmadge, author of the diet book Diet Simple. However,
Tallmadge notes scientific evidence does not support the author's claim that
leeks have a magical quality to cause weight loss, nor does chocolate contain
serotonin, the feel-good neurotransmitter.
"I disagree with
the recommendation to start dieting through a semi-fast of primarily leek soup
because, while it will cause weight loss, it is not nutritionally adequate and
it is not a solution to help people learn about habits that can be sustained
long term," Tallmadge says.
Additionally, some
experts suggest that the real reason many French women may be thin is because
they smoke cigarettes to curb their appetite.
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