Skip to main content

My Review of "Supermarket Healthy"

Supermarket Healthy by Melissa d'Arabian is a wonderful book for those of us who are beginning to create new, healthy eating habits.  In it, she shares recipes and kitchen ideas for eating well without spending a fortune. 

There are more than 130 recipes here, something that will satisfy the taste of every person, no matter your food flair.  I was particularly drawn to her recipes for Almond Waffles with Raspberry-Basil Sauce, Kale and White Bean Caesar Salad in a Jar, Rigatoni with Turkey Meatballs and Oven-Baked Crab Cakes with Tangy Yogurt Sauce. 

My husband and I have begun to be health-conscious.  We're concerned about what we're putting in our bodies for health reasons, sure, but even more so for religious reasons.  But we're also having to cook on a budget, so cooking healthy has been a struggle.  Now with Supermarket Healthy we don't have to worry, and have enough guidance to begin creating recipes of our own.

Like most other families, we don't have unlimited money to spend on groceries.  But Supermarket Healthy proves we don't need all that money.

This is a great book and I can already see it making a huge difference in our own lives.

I received this book free, from the Blogging for Books program, in exchange for my honest review.

Read more here: http://www.star-telegram.com/news/local/community/keller-citizen/article5238411.html#storylink=cpy

Read more here: http://www.star-telegram.com/news/local/community/keller-citizen/article5238411.html#storylink=cpy.

Comments

Popular posts from this blog

My Review of "Home on the Range"

Ruther Logan Herne's Home on the Range is a novel about the Double S Ranch and Nick, who is raising his two daughters by himself.  I found the characters to be very realistic.  The setting is wonderful and I loved to read all the struggles of each person.  It makes it more realistic and easier to read and believe. Elsa is a wonderful character.  I love that her past is a secret until the end of the book -- which, itself, is very well written.  I was very pleased with this contemporary cowboy read. I received a free copy of this book as part of the Blogging for Books program in exchange for my honest review here.

My Review of "Roadfood"

Jane & Michael Stern's Roadfood gives us another (this is the 10th edition!) gastro road trip across the US.  Roadfood is like a road map through backroads and interstates for some of the best food in each state and region in the US. Roadfood celebrates venues most travelers would never venture near, let alone enter.  Most of the state-by-state listed restaurants are, however, for dining on the cheap.  Like Litton's in Knoville, TN -- which really does have amazing burgers. While one could hardly map a road trip by the Sterns' restaurant finds -- some cities, like Chicago, are overrepresented, while the rest of Illinois is all but ignored -- this fun and fanciful volume is pure pleasure. I received a free copy of this book as part of the Blogging for Books program in exchange for my honest review here.

My Review of "Misfit Faith"

Jason Stellman's Misfit Faith:  Confessions of a Drunk Ex-Pastor was not quite the book I had expected it to be.  It was so much better! Jason Stellman was a Presbyterian pastor, but he became a Roman Catholic.  I expected Misfit Faith to be, therefore, a semi-autobiographical work of Catholic apologetics.  I read of Scott Hahn's mentorship of Stellman, and expected Misfit Faith to be a new, milder version of Hahn's scholarship.  But I did not see any defense of Peter being the first pope in Misfit Faith , or any criticism of Sola Scriptura, or an explanation and defense of the Catholic understanding of justification. Instead, I read the story of Stellman's own spiritual journey.  From the opening confession that Stellman had flirted with Christian universalism, I knew this wasn't going to be a Catholic apologetic.  I wouldn't even characterize Misfit Faith as an apologetic at all.  Because if there's one thing Stellman isn't sure on...