The Dorito Effect: The Surprising New Truth About Food and Flavor
The Dorito Effect: The Surprising New Truth About Food and Flavor
Hero image 0 of The Dorito Effect: The Surprising New Truth About Food and Flavor, 0 of 1

The Dorito Effect: The Surprising New Truth About Food and Flavor

|1 rating

Key item features

A lively and important argument from an award-winning journalist proving that the key to reversing America’s health crisis lies in the overlooked link between nutrition and flavor.

In The Dorito Effect, Mark Schatzker shows us how our approach to the nation’s number one public health crisis has gotten it wrong. The epidemics of obesity, heart disease, and diabetes are not tied to the overabundance of fat or carbs or any other specific nutrient. Instead, we have been led astray by the growing divide between flavor—the tastes we crave—and the underlying nutrition.

Since the late 1940s, we have been slowly leeching flavor out of the food we grow. Those perfectly round, red tomatoes that grace our supermarket aisles today are mostly water, and the big breasted chickens on our dinner plates grow three times faster than they used to, leaving them dry and tasteless. Simultaneously, we have taken great leaps forward in technology, allowing us to produce in the lab the very flavors that are being lost on the farm. Thanks to this largely invisible epidemic, seemingly healthy food is becoming more like junk food: highly craveable but nutritionally empty. We have unknowingly interfered with an ancient chemical language—flavor—that evolved to guide our nutrition, not destroy it.

With in-depth historical and scientific research, The Dorito Effect casts the food crisis in a fascinating new light, weaving an enthralling tale of how we got to this point and where we are headed. We’ve been telling ourselves that our addiction to flavor is the problem, but it is actually the solution. We are on the cusp of a new revolution in agriculture that will allow us to eat healthier and live longer by enjoying flavor the way nature intended.
Price when purchased online
Not Available

How do you want your item?

How do you want your item?
Not available
Report an issue with this seller

About this item

Product details

Specifications

Customer ratings & reviews

5 out of 5 stars
stars1 rating1 review
How item rating is calculated
Filtered and sorted results would be available on the new 'Customer ratings & reviews' page.
Sort by |

Showing 1-1 of 1 review

Jul 8, 2015
chex06
5 out of 5 stars review

Amazing - what is in the food we are eating

This is easy to read and the tales about the development of trends in the food industry over the past 40 years is incredible, understandable but frightening. Really lays out why processed food is junk in spite of the great taste.

Helpful?4QTPWDSFT8Y039789406