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The Cancer-Fighting Kitchen: Nourishing, Big-Flavor Recipes for Cancer Treatment and Recovery Hardcover – August 25, 2009
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The Cancer-Fighting Kitchen features 150 science-based, nutrient-rich recipes that are easy to prepare and designed to give patients a much-needed boost by stimulating appetite and addressing treatment side effects including fatigue, nausea, dehydration, mouth and throat soreness, tastebud changes, and weight loss. A step-by-step guide helps patients nutritionally prepare for all phases of treatment, and a full nutritional analysis accompanies each recipe. This remarkable resource teaches patients and caregivers how to use readily available powerhouse ingredients to build a symptom- and cancer-fighting culinary toolkit. Blending fantastic taste and meticulous science, these recipes for soups, vegetable dishes, proteins, and sweet and savory snacks are rich in the nutrients, minerals, and phytochemicals that help patients thrive during treatment.
Whole foods, big-flavor ingredients, and attractive presentations round out the customized menu plans that have been specially formulated for specific treatment phases, cancer types, side effects, and flavor preferences. The Cancer-Fighting Kitchen brings the healing power of delicious, nutritious foods to those whose hearts and bodies crave a revitalizing meal.
The Cancer-Fighting Kitchen took home double honors at the prestigious IACP 2010 Awards, named a winner in both the Health and Special Diet category and the People’s Choice Award.
- Print length232 pages
- LanguageEnglish
- PublisherTen Speed Press
- Publication dateAugust 25, 2009
- Dimensions8.33 x 1 x 10.28 inches
- ISBN-101587613441
- ISBN-13978-1587613449
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From Publishers Weekly
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“The Cancer-Fighting Kitchen is an incredibly rich and satisfying resource--it is a must for people living with and beyond cancer, and should be mandatory reading for all health care professionals. This great gift will have a profound impact on the health and well-being of all who partake!” --Donald Abrams, MD, chief of hematology and oncology at San Francisco General Hospital, integrative oncologist at the UCSF Osher Center for Integrative Medicine, and coauthor of Integrative Oncology
“The Cancer-Fighting Kitchen elegantly combines the science of healthy nutrition with the wisdom of the heart and soul. This beautiful book illuminates a clear path to nourish the body, and provides clear and inspiring guidance to make the process easy, simple, and joyful. I am delighted to recommend this wonderful resource for people living with cancer and their loved ones.” --Jeremy Geffen, MD, medical oncologist and author of The Journey Through Cancer: Healing and Transforming the Whole Person
“If food is medicine, Rebecca Katz is one of the great healers. The Cancer-Fighting Kitchen is a book for anyone who wants to eat as if their life matters.” --Rachel Naomi Remen, MD, author of Kitchen Table Wisdom and My Grandfather’s Blessings
“There is no substitute for eating healthfully, especially when diagnosed with cancer. This wonderful resource makes nutritious foods easy to prepare, attractive to look at, and tasty to eat. It is the best I have seen.” --Joseph Pizzorno, ND, editor-in-chief of Integrative Medicine and coauthor of Encyclopedia of Natural Medicine and Natural Medicine for the Prevention and Treatment of Cancer
A book to nourish loved ones. The Cancer-Fighting Kitchen: Nourishing, Big Flavor Recipes for Cancer Treatment and Recovery--This is a book I have added to my shelf and it will always be within reach. I think this book could be called many things--a mother's handbook to nourishing your loved ones or cooking to cure. I know my family and friends will benefit from my new favorite book the next time I need to cook something to make them feel better. --Regina Charboneau for The Atlantic.com
From the Publisher
* First cookbook to feature a step-by-step guide to nutritionally preparing for chemotherapy and radiation, and using powerhouse ingredients to create a symptom-fighting culinary toolkit.
* 15 million Americans have been diagnosed with cancer.
About the Author
MAT EDELSON is an award-winning medical, science, and sports journalist and the former director of the Johns Hopkins Health News Minute, a nationally syndicated consumer health radio feature. He lives in Baltimore, Maryland.
Excerpt. © Reprinted by permission. All rights reserved.
If you’ve picked up this book, it’s probably because you or someone very close to you is going through a difficult time. A cancer diagnosis and the prospect of cancer treatment is scary, even for the most upbeat soul. There are probably a million questions and thoughts running around your head, and while I can’t address them all, I can speak to one: Am I going to enjoy eating during treatment? Heck, am I going to be able to eat at all?
This book is all about enhancing your appetite during treatment, and much more. For me, the key concept is something I think of as “the power of yum,” a phrase I’ve used throughout my career as a “culinary translator,” if you will. I work with oncologists, nutritionists, and cancer wellness professionals to help their patients stay well fed during treatment by translating nutritional recommendations into delicious, nourishing meals. To me, this was always the power of yum in action: showing people that great nutrition and great taste could join together joyously on the same plate. Working with cancer patients for the past decade, I’ve seen heartening results. People who had truly disconnected from food could be brought back to the table and nourished, so long as the food was appealing to all the senses; was presented in a manner that fit their often shifting tastes and appetite (think small, nutrient-dense portions that are easily stored and reheated); and could easily be shopped for, prepped, and cooked by either the patient or their caregivers.
If that was all there was to the power of yum, I’d be eternally grateful. It turns out that this is only half of the story. Over the past five years, the study of nutrition has expanded, exploded really, especially when it comes to understanding the many incredible properties foods have to fight cancer and limit the side effects of treatment. This isn’t fly-by-night science either; it’s the result of thousands of credible studies done by the country’s finest academic research institutes and presented in first-rate peer-reviewed scientific journals such the New England Journal of Medicine and the Journal of the American Medical Association.
As a chef, I’ve been awed by this data and, truth be told, a little intimidated. I intuitively and experientially understood how taste and flavor could positively affect the people I worked with. It had long been known that as many as 80 percent of cancer patients were malnourished, in some cases leaving them too weakened to withstand ongoing treatment. By keeping them nourished with healthy foods, both the patients and I knew they stood a better chance of making the transition from patient to survivor.
Still, it seemed like a new study was coming out every week on this food or that, and all of this nutritional data was a bit confusing to me. And from the conversations I had with clients, I knew it was confounding to them at times. Yet this information held such promise that I decided I’d better learn to talk the talk. I was excited at the prospect of being able to make dishes that not only tasted great, but could make someone with a specific side effect feel better.
So I went and got a masters in nutrition, not to impress my clients, but to be able to converse with those doctors and scientists working in the trenches with these foods to get a feel for where the research and the cancer-food connection was strong and where it wasn’t, and so I could translate all that information into more outrageously scrumptious dishes to lure people in treatment back to the table.
The result of this melding of science and taste is the cookbook and resource you hold in your hands. It’s the culmination of conversations with what I think of as my counsel of experts: more than a dozen of the best minds in medical and cancer wellness in the country. Each of these individuals sees nutrition and food as a vital, complementary part of their healing arsenal, a tool that patients themselves can use to keep their bodies and minds in optimal shape while enduring treatment.
That last point is so crucial. A cancer diagnosis is shocking, disorienting, and capable of scrambling anybody’s mental GPS. To find a stabilizing force, a grounding activity such as cooking and eating well can provide more than nourishment; it can offer a huge psychological boost.
Jeanne Wallace, PhD, a researcher and expert in cancer nutrition, articulates this idea of sustenance beautifully. Jeanne’s voluminous, meticulously researched, personalized action plans for her clients in treatment include numerous food recommendations to combat their cancer. She says, “When you get a cancer diagnosis, suddenly you become a very powerless person. You’re traipsing through the hospital as a name and number, people do all kinds of procedures to you, and you have a life-threatening condition, which many doctors maintain you have no control over. So when I’m handing someone their plan, saying, ‘You could make some changes with your diet and it would give you some sense of empowerment,’ many of my clients are so willing to do that. They embrace the sense of not being powerless, that even though they might not have total control over the cancer, they do have some influence.”
Defining that potential influence is fascinating. Can what you eat really affect cancer? Professor Jim Gordon, MD, founder and director of the Center for Mind-Body Medicine in Washington, DC, sponsors several annual symposia that address the issue. His Cancer Guides training and Food as Medicine programs attract hundreds of doctors from across the country, including top integrative oncologists, internists, and other cancer wellness professionals. Gordon, a pioneer in the use of nutrition to impact cancer, uses a bit of scientifically informed common sense when asked if what he teaches makes a difference. “People with cancer are told by their oncologists, ‘This is the treatment: surgery, chemotherapy, radiation, maybe even immune therapy. Everything else is regarded as, at worst, unnecessary, peripheral, or, at best, complementary. . . . ’I think that’s a major misconception. The data in standard textbooks on nutrition and cancer is that cancer is related in some way to nutrition. It stands to reason that if nutrition is a significant factor in the development of cancer, you would want there to be to a focus on nutrition as part of the treatment and the prevention of recurrence in cancer.” Gerry Mullin, MD, a contributing editor to Nutrition in Clinical Practice, agrees: “Cancer is a consequence of the complex interplay of genes and environment on the immune system, and diet, as part of the environment, plays a role that can influence cancer’s development and treatment.”
A key area of nutritional research is looking at the environment in which tumors function within the body. Part of what makes cancer such a difficult foe is its ability to send out signals that divert vital resources, such as blood and energy, for its own nefarious purposes. Researchers are now looking at how various nutrients in food--especially plant-based foods, spices, and herbs, with their abundant phytochemicals--can block cancer’s communication. If we can cut off this internal dialogue, tumors may become much more vulnerable to treatment.
Integrative oncologist Donald Abrams, director of clinical programs for the Osher Center for Integrative Medicine at the University of California, San Francisco (UCSF), tells his patients by way of analogy that when it comes to cancer, it’s perfectly acceptable to be a bad host. In fact, it’s encouraged. “I tell them that cancer is a weed, you’re the garden, and our job is take make your soil as inhospitable as possible to further growth and spread of the weed. The first approach I take is through diet and nutrition.”
The wonderful aspect of this work is that so many common foods--everything from broccoli to blueberries--have multiple cancer-fighting properties, including controlling blood sugar so you avoid insulin issues and obesity, which are major secondary risk factors for cancer. Similarly, everyday herbs and spices ranging from ginger to cinnamon to turmeric can help quell side effects ranging from nausea to fatigue. If you’d like to learn more about these properties, see the Culinary Pharmacy, page 28, where we’ve detailed the beneficial properties of most of the foods used in the recipes in this book. We’ve included the science because many of my clients get interested in the particulars once they realize how much better they often feel as they become well nourished. Still, others couldn’t care less about the science; they just want to be able to eat something, anything, because during treatment, their appetite has left the building.
First and foremost, I’m a chef and a teacher who believes everyone has the ability to nourish themselves, even in the most dire of circumstances. This book was designed to meet you wherever you are in your treatment journey. If you just want to eat without giving a second thought to nutrition, worry not; every recipe in this book was created to be a nutrient-dense, delicious powerhouse, full of what your body needs to support your immune system, which is called upon to do yeoman’s work during treatment.
The Cancer-Fighting Kitchen emphasizes what’s known as a whole foods approach. As the name suggests, whole foods come straight from the farm to the table with their nutrients intact, unlike refined and processed foods, such as white flour and sugar, which are stripped of so much of their nutritional value. (I call them empty calories).
In addition to offering the broadest range of nutrients, the whole foods approach serves another purpose. People often ask me, “If science knows specific foods that fight cancer, why don’t I just eat those?” Ah, if only a single food had such abilities. But that’s not the way it works . . . at least not yet. Eating a wide variety of foods allows you to hedge your bets, as each of us absorbs nutrients differently. Since we haven’t gotten to the point yet where we can identify which specific foods work best for each individual, a wide-ranging diet is the only way to guarantee you’ll get the nourishment you need.
I realize I’ve just put a lot on your plate. Now let me put your mind at ease. I understand that stepping into the kitchen to cook for someone with cancer (whether that’s you or someone else) takes a lot of courage. You so want them to like the food so they’ll eat. I’m here to let you know I’ll be holding your hand all the way. Life is serious enough for you and your loved ones right now. Although this book deals with a difficult topic, it comes at eating from a stance of joy and fun. Believe me, when you see the results--and the healing effect they have on all who partake--your motivation to get into the kitchen will take a quantum leap.
When people ask me what I enjoy most about my work, I tell them I love being what I call a culinary translator. To me, that means really listening to my clients’ hopes and dreams for eating well, and then, using my culinary experience and education, helping them to develop the practical kitchen skills, nourishing recipes, and support systems (like learning how to shop a farmers’ market without fear) that make their desires a reality. It’s a role I relish and that I’ve brought to the fore in this book. Similarly, my coauthor, Mat Edelson, is a whiz at taking complex medical topics and explaining them in language that’s informative, entertaining, and easy to understand.
It’s not only our voices you’ll hear in this book, but that of experts who have dedicated their careers to helping patients to live and eat well during treatment. You’ll also see tips from the real voices of experience, those who have personally dealt with cancer and want to share what they’ve learned about eating and other ways to stay well during treatment. Like me, they all believe in the power of yum. I’m hoping that as you read and use this book, you’ll come to believe in it too.
How to Use This Book
The most important advice I have on how to use this book is to have fun. So many things following a cancer diagnosis are chores; eating from this book shouldn’t be one of them. There are probably going to be days when swallowing a few sips of broth is going to be an accomplishment. By all means, celebrate that nourishment. Don’t beat yourself up for the meals you miss. When you accentuate the positive, your connection to food will remain intact during treatment and even build upon itself.
Think of this book as a toolbox, full of great ideas that can entice you to eat with a minimum of stress in the kitchen for whoever is cooking. Will you utilize every tool in the box? Perhaps--but it isn’t necessary. I’ve tried to be all-inclusive because I want to give you ways to address issues that commonly crop up during treatment.
Chapter 1, Cancer-Fighting Tool Kit, is a guide to scrumptious foods, recipes, and kitchen techniques that can lessen the impact of side effects, improve appetite and immunity, and overcome changes in the sense of taste or impaired taste buds, which is a common consequence of treatment. It includes very specific suggestions on what to eat before, during, and after chemotherapy. I’ve also included a questionnaire that’s a simple way to figure out people’s food preferences--your own or, if you’re a caregiver, someone else’s. Treatments can throw people’s tastes for such a loop that old favorites may not be appetizing. When that’s the case, knowing more about the person’s inherent preferences is valuable information. Chapter 1 also includes information on what I call global flavorprints--lists of herbs and spices that characterize different cuisines--and an introduction to the powerhouse foods used in the recipes, including their amazing cancer-fighting properties and other nutritional effects. I call this the culinary pharmacy, and it’s an incredibly powerful prescription for both health and appetite.
Chapter 2, Strategies for Thriving during Treatment, sets out a game plan for making sure that everyone is on the same page and that as many people as possible get involved in the process. Cancer is such an emotional experience that the joy of caregiving can be jeopardized if organization and communication aren’t brought to the process. I’ll show you how to organize a culinary support team to cover shopping and cooking tasks, and how to clearly define roles so people don’t step on each other’s toes--and, most importantly, the patient’s. The guidance in chapter 2 will allow everyone to contribute in a way that’s desired and appreciated. On a practical level, this chapter will show you how to make sure a wide variety of healthy, yummy meals and snacks are available whenever hunger hits, even in settings outside the home, such as at work, in the hospital, or during treatment sessions. Eating small portions often is the best route for delivering nourishment to the body during treatment. And it gives detailed instructions on various food preparation techniques, and advice on storage and reheating.
For those without easy access to a farmers’ market or well-stocked grocery stores, the Resources section provides online sources for many of the ingredients in the recipes. It also includes information on cancer support groups and medical information. The extensive bibliography documents sources for the information used in this book.
As for the recipes and variations that are the heart and soul of the book, they have been tried and tested more times than I can count, by a battery of tasters who refused to be satisfied until they were moaning with delight. You’ve paid for a cookbook with the expectation that every recipe will deliver in terms of both taste and nutrition; my team and I have done the utmost to meet, and hopefully exceed, those expectations.
Throughout the recipes, you’ll find suggestions on substitutions for common food sensitivities. For those who want to avoid dairy, you can generally use soy or rice milk--just be sure to use an unsweetened variety. Folks with gluten intolerance will find substitutions for wheat, as well.
Whenever possible, I suggest eating organic for all of my clients, and that’s especially important for people in treatment, particularly when it comes to meat and dairy. I realize organics can cost a bit more across the board, but consider that undergoing treatment means you’re already dealing with plenty of toxins in your body. It makes sense to me that you don’t want to introduce more, in the form of pesticides, hormones, antibiotics, and other drugs, in your food. Plus, organically grown produce raised outdoors without pesticides produces phytochemicals to protect itself from the environment, and one school of scientific thought holds that many of these same chemicals offer chemoprotective benefits in the body. Either way, here’s one thing I can tell you for sure: organic, fresh-picked produce, pasture-raised chicken, and fish caught in the wild are absolutely delicious, offering the finest flavors that can land on your plate. Speaking as a chef and the little pixie in your ear, why would you settle for anything less?
Product details
- Publisher : Ten Speed Press
- Publication date : August 25, 2009
- Edition : 1st
- Language : English
- Print length : 232 pages
- ISBN-10 : 1587613441
- ISBN-13 : 978-1587613449
- Item Weight : 2.4 pounds
- Dimensions : 8.33 x 1 x 10.28 inches
- Best Sellers Rank: #370,943 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)
- #84 in Cancer Cookbooks
- #656 in Cooking Encyclopedias
- #2,415 in Other Diet Books
- Customer Reviews:
About the authors
Rebecca Katz, M.S.
I've spent more than 16 years motivating people to eat well.
My primary tool is flavor, as I show people how great taste and great nutrition can joyfully coexist at the dinner table.
I have faith in the allure of the kitchen and promise that if you're inspired by the results, you'll find yourself wanting to cook more and more. Creating meals that enhance your health and well-being while caressing your taste buds is irresistible.
A myriad of food related experiences, including a sojourn to Italy, where I studied Mediterranean cuisine with chefs and signoras from Florence to Sicily, shaped my philosophy that health-supportive food must taste great in order to be nourishing and healing.
Now, I get to play nutrition detective (I have a Masters of Science in Nutrition) and healthy cook (I received my chef's training at the Natural Gourmet Institute for Health and Culinary Arts) to my heart’s delight through my books; One Bite at a Time (2004,2008) the award winning Cancer-Fighting Kitchen (2009, 2017), The Longevity Kitchen (2013), The Healthy Mind Cookbook (2015), and Clean Soups (2016).
Recently, I've co-created online culinary/nutrition courses that translate nutritional science to the plate, and have founded the non-profit Healing Kitchens Institute. HKI is dedicated to educating communities and healthcare professionals about the power of food as medicine and nourishment.
I live in the San Francisco Bay Area with my husband and two canine companions, Lola and Blossom.
For more information visit rebeccakatz.com
http://www.facebook.com/pages/Rebecca-Katz/274759209292766
Twitter: @RebeccaKatzYUM
Instagram: @rebeccakatzyum
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Learn more how customers reviews work on AmazonCustomers say
Customers find the cookbook's recipes tasty and easy to follow, with extensive information provided for each one. Moreover, the book receives positive feedback for its health benefits, particularly in preventing and fighting cancer, and its effectiveness in managing treatment side effects, especially nausea. Additionally, customers appreciate the beautiful close-up photos and clear writing style. However, the taste aspect receives mixed reviews, with some customers finding the recipes lacking flavor.
AI Generated from the text of customer reviews
Customers enjoy the recipes in this cookbook, finding them tasty and authentic, with one customer specifically praising the rockin' black bean soup.
"...So from this amazing recipe book, I have taken away a passion for cooking with the bonus of better health for both my husband and myself...." Read more
"...She offers up creative recipes that are simple and basic but yummy, like Basil Broccoli and a beautiful Shredded Carrot and Beet Salad...." Read more
"...The more we cook quality foods, the more and maybe affordable it can be...." Read more
"...Almost too much. I found the book a little overwhelming. A good number of recipes, although not many of them seem family friendly, which is..." Read more
Customers find the book's information quality excellent, with a plethora of helpful content and extensive information provided with every recipe.
"...Cookbook to me blows the others ou of the water, the information just on the different foods and how they help fight cancer is more extensive than..." Read more
"...The information in the initial chapters is interesting and easy to read and very well organized.. It lays out the building blocks for the patient..." Read more
"...to know the food and understand the processes, mixtures and compatible ingredients...." Read more
"...The beginning of the book has a plethora of helpful information about staying ahead of the downsides of chemo, ahead of the nausea, ahead of the..." Read more
Customers appreciate the book's health benefits, noting it provides useful nutritional information to prevent and fight cancer, and helps thoroughly nourish the body.
"...Eating will become enjoyable again and you will feel empowered!" Read more
"...recipe book, I have taken away a passion for cooking with the bonus of better health for both my husband and myself...." Read more
"...the days when "the-tireds" hit, and it just packs a wallop of nutrition for the body (any body, but especially the fighting body)...." Read more
"...She makes great use of herbs & spices & ingredients that are generally staples in the kitchen, e.g., paprika, cumin, cinnamon, garlic, vanilla,..." Read more
Customers find the recipes easy to follow and understand, with great tips and tricks provided.
"...It is fun to get to know the food and understand the processes, mixtures and compatible ingredients...." Read more
"...She offers up creative recipes that are simple and basic but yummy, like Basil Broccoli and a beautiful Shredded Carrot and Beet Salad...." Read more
"...and quickly found that beyond the recipes this book is a wonderful step-by-step guide to how one can put the kitchen to work in healing and the..." Read more
"...with real sensitivity and compassion, as well as a clarity and straightforwardness that makes it easy and interesting to read...." Read more
Customers appreciate the beautiful pictures in the book, which feature close-up photos of colorful dishes.
"...We were drawn in by how delicious the recipes sounded and looked throughout, and quickly found that beyond the recipes this book is a wonderful step..." Read more
"...I own many cookbooks and they look beautiful on a book shelf...." Read more
"I love all of the wonderful pics in this cookbook and all of the recipes look well thought out...." Read more
"...I plan to prepare more of the recipes for my family because they seem appealing and relatively easy to follow...." Read more
Customers find the book helpful for managing treatment side effects, particularly nausea, and appreciate that it provides recipes tailored to specific symptoms.
"...developed for cancer patients, I have been able to minimize some of the worst of my side effects... I have been able to bring my body back to life..." Read more
"...information about staying ahead of the downsides of chemo, ahead of the nausea, ahead of the drain to the body, prepared for the days when "the-..." Read more
"...can affect the body, and offers many food choices that may help alleviate side effects and keep a person feeling as well as possible...." Read more
"...Tool kit (chapter 1) I love your side effects list. Much appreciated. Would be more helpful as a chart. **..." Read more
Customers praise the writing quality of the book, describing it as excellently and well done, with good content on every page. One customer notes that the author makes tough topics sound doable, while another mentions the engaging notes throughout.
"...and it is written with real sensitivity and compassion, as well as a clarity and straightforwardness that makes it easy and interesting to read...." Read more
"...Also, gives good detail on how and why certain ingredients are so helpful. Your crazy to pass this book up!..." Read more
"...In this book, the author makes tough things sound doable, which I think is part of her compassion and sensible-ness." Read more
"...This is the best kind of translation - one that you don't have to struggle with to make sense...." Read more
Customers have mixed opinions about the taste of the recipes in the book, with some enjoying them while others find them lacking flavor.
"...To my surprise, the food was not just healthy, but excellent taste and well balanced...." Read more
"...marathons, I would find this book tedious, overly complicated, and exasperating...." Read more
"...What I also love is that the food doesn't just taste good but they have meshed it with the science of what someone needs nutritionally to fight..." Read more
"...To that end, this book falls short. The recipes contain sweeteners, "white" carbohydrates instead of whole grain complex carbohydrates,..." Read more
Top reviews from the United States
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- Reviewed in the United States on January 20, 2012Format: HardcoverVerified PurchaseI purchased this book after my sister sent me info on Rebecca Katz' web site. I was diagnosed with stage 3B cervical cancer in July 2010, and had had the cancer metastize to my lymph nodes in the neck and para aortic region. I had changed my diet during my first battle however when I had the reoccurrence I did more researche and decided to go more plant based and purchased many "cancer cookbooks"
The Cancer Fighting Cookbook to me blows the others ou of the water, the information just on the different foods and how they help fight cancer is more extensive than other books.
One of the side effects I had problems with was from a drug called neulasta which was given to help my body keep my white blood cell count up, this drug caused intense bone pain, and had me feeling like I could not keep fighting, that it was too hard. While this lasted only a day, it was horrible.
I made a couple of the recipes from this book one a tea made from ginger,clove,cinnamon, coriander and cardamom . It did not sound like something I was going to like as I do not like flavored teas or chai. I love this drink and according to the author it is good for fatigue and building white cells as is her almond mini muffins for which she includes variations for orange chocolate ect. My oncologist allowed me to skip my shot on one treatment as I had plans to go away for a few days as long as I came in to have blood work to check my levels the next week. Call it condicence if you want but I drank this tea 1-2 glasses everyday and ate a couple of mini muffins which are yummy, I did not need the booster shot and have not had to get one since September 2011.
I have made many recipes from this book and have enjoined them, I make things and freeze them so that during times when I am too tired/sick to cook all I need to do is thaw and if needed heat.
The information at the beginning of the book is worth the price even if you can't or don't make the items. Don't count the recipes out because the ingredients don't sound good, you may be surprised.
Ms Katz has some recipes posted on her web site check those out the flour less almond torte is wonderful.
As far as people feeling as if the recipes are too complicated or having bizarre or hard to find ingredients, for me it is my health so it is not to complicated, on bad days it may take me longer to get it done or I will prep some then go rest, but on good days I do not feel the recipes are complicated. Here in Southern California I can find the ingredients at Whole Foods, Trader Joes, and Ralph's. If you are not in an area where you can find the items, ie almond meal, spelt flour it can be ordered.
For those not strong enough to stand and make the items, next time someone says what can I do to help, ask them to make some tea, soup,ect, for those who don't know how to help someone with cancer, get the book, make them some muffins, tea, soup anything they will appreciate it.
- Reviewed in the United States on November 18, 2012Format: HardcoverVerified PurchaseA close friend told me about this book. I had been casting about for some good solid support and advice on how I could use nutrition and food to help support my body during the months of chemo.. And even though I have a great medical team at one of the top cancer centers in the U.S., no one had really focused in nutrition as something that is within my control and that I can use to help minimize side effects and also strengthen my body and help it to combat the toxic effects of chemotherapy.
So when my friend told me about this book, I came to Amazon and I read about it and the author, and I did some online research, and I figured it would not hurt to try it out.... I even bought the follow up book for survivors and their families.... Since then my life has CHANGED in more ways than I can describe... More than anything, I have noticed that By eating certain things that Chef Katz has developed for cancer patients, I have been able to minimize some of the worst of my side effects... I have been able to bring my body back to life when my fatigue kicks into overdrive... I've learned how to combat nausea and I've learned that some foods are not good for my cancer, while others replenish my body's minerals that the chemo strips out....
The information in the initial chapters is interesting and easy to read and very well organized.. It lays out the building blocks for the patient and food preparer to use to create a customized plan for per and post chemo meals... the Magic Mineral Broth is the best thing ever invented... We make it in huge quantities and very slow cooked and concentrated to get as much out of the veggies as possible... Tis broth can be drunk hot like a tea.. I add lemon and some sea salt or organic bouillon for flavor... And we use it as a base for soups, adding roasted veggies like collards, cauliflower, butternut squash, kale, etc,...
It is sooooo amazingly good!
Every cancer patient should have this book and a caregiver who can help make the important foods that will help the patient to take control of a small part of their personal fight against cancer. Eating will become enjoyable again and you will feel empowered!
Top reviews from other countries
- Zaiga VReviewed in the United Kingdom on August 13, 2016
5.0 out of 5 stars A book for life.
Format: HardcoverVerified PurchaseThe recipes are all based on using fresh, healthy ingredients in a tasty way. During chemo I didn't lose my appetite so was able to cook every day. But there were days when I felt I needed an extra boost and turned to Magic Broth. The book is informative about the value of different fruits, vegetables, and proteins when you have cancer, or are working hard at helping to prevent a reoccurrence. Many of the recipes demand a bit of time at the stove for the patient or the caregiver - but so worth it if you want to give your body the best chance of dealing with cancer and it's treatment.
- M. SchochReviewed in Canada on October 9, 2015
5.0 out of 5 stars Excellent
Format: HardcoverVerified PurchaseVery good book, recipes are simple and taste great. All the recipes I tired tasted good and were quick to make. I'm very impressed by this book and how its organized and with the Recipes. Lots of helpful tips if you are cooking for someone with Cancer. There are drinks for when someone is on Chemo that help with the discomfort and just general tip on simple things that make a difference. The Avocado dressing recipe is so simple that when I'm pressed for time I just make a batch and store it the Fridge. The various Dip recipes can be made with Canned Beans or You can soak and cook the beans yourself. One thing that impressed me is that the food is not boring or bland, it has spices in it and has flavor so it can be enjoyed.
- saffronReviewed in the United Kingdom on December 7, 2014
5.0 out of 5 stars fantastic and easy to prepare recipes
fantastic and easy to prepare recipes. Many of the foods I generally love. However, making the broth was fantastic recipe. Even though I had no actual hunger or fancy for this broth, once I tasted it, I wanted to eat it.
Thankyou Rebecca Katz, however, I have downloaded to my kindle which I now wished I had got the hard copy.Shall have to look at cost of getting physical book. But well done for some very good tips a nd recipes. I would recommend this book to anyone who is on chemo and have recommended it.
thankyou xx Laura Bryant
- suemacReviewed in Canada on December 18, 2016
5.0 out of 5 stars It has many good recipes and ideas and although I have not tried ...
Format: HardcoverVerified PurchaseI have purchased several copies before and shared my copy that is being paid-forward for family and friends who have been diagnosed and receiving treatment for cancer. Back in 2012 when I was searching for immune boosting health ideas for my own family, I came across this book in my search and ordered it. It has many good recipes and ideas and although I have not tried them all the wisdom in its pages is comforting and the best recipe I use over and over again is the nourishing Bone Broth Soup and its variations. It makes 12 500 ml mason jars of soup that I can put in the freezer and pull out, as required, and is an easy way to deliver to friends who can pull out some nourishment without having to prepare.
I can't wait for the new edition to come out in 2017!
- DasReviewed in Canada on March 11, 2013
5.0 out of 5 stars Packed with information!
Format: HardcoverVerified PurchaseThe book is easy to use, has great recipes and I love the pictures of the tasty food. I have used the recipes as they are and also have changes them to suit what ingredients I have on hand, easy to use. I was pleased with all the information contained in this book as well. It helps to understand why certain foods are so important in the fight against cancer. I wish I had found this book years ago, perhaps I would be using it to prevent instead of fight cancer.