Most Helpful Customer Reviews
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13 of 13 people found the following review helpful:
3.0 out of 5 stars
Beyond the Blood Type Diet, 4 May 2008
Having had good results with Dr. D'Adamo's diet and cookbook based on my blood type, I looked forward to this new book. When I got the book, I glanced through it . . . and was discouraged to see that I was going to need help to apply the measurements.
So the book sat there, and sat there, and sat there. Finally, I decided that I would try to do it on my own. It wasn't easy to do the measurements. But I was intrigued.
But I really couldn't finish the measurements without help. I talked my wife into helping me, and she had a hard time figuring out the answers.
In several of the measurements, there was essentially no difference between measurement A and measurement B and the ties went one way rather than the other. That seemed odd. I also found the directions to be ambiguous in several cases, but I did my best.
I was still looking forward to seeing what foods I should emphasize. Here is where the book threw me for a loop. Many of the items on the superfoods to emphasize were ones that I've never seen in a grocery store. Here are some examples: goat, rabbit, emu, ostrich, partridge, pheasant, quail, squab, bullhead, butterfish, carp, chub, croaker, cusk, drum, halfmoon fish, harvest fish, ocean pout, sucker wolffish, goose egg, quail egg, sailfish roe, paneer cheese, Romanian urda, adzuki bean, chia seed, lotus root, lotus seeds, moth bean, sapodilla, hard-long bean, babassu oil, camelina oil, chia seed oil, grape seed oil, hemp seed oil, oat oil, perilla seed oil, shea nut oil, tea seed oil, amaranth, fonio, Job's tears, teff, kanpyo, oyster plant, acai berry, canistel, carissa, cherimoya, cloudberry, feijoa, goji, mamey sapote, konjac.
The list of foods to avoid was equally obscure. I'm sure I won't have any trouble missing those.
There were a few foods I've avoided because they are high glycemic that this book promotes for me (honey, watermelon, etc.). Since I have trouble keeping the weight off, I'm not so sure what to do in those areas.
The main encouragement is that the book's description of my health was pretty accurate (lots of undiagnosed illnesses that puzzle doctors, extreme sensitivity to environmental pollution, lots of allergies, gallstones, liver problems, etc.).
Unless I wanted to read an awful lot of scientific articles, I just have to take it on faith that the work is accurate. That leaves me feeling uncomfortable.
I'll probably mainly use this book to add a few more items to avoid. So I'm not so sure how much it helped me to have read it. The supplements list wasn't well explained so I doubt if I'll use those.
So am I better off for having read the book? I don't know. That's why I gave the book three stars.
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3.0 out of 5 stars
Too complicated - and where's the scientific evidence, 18 Jan 2009
The science behind the lists of recommended foods and foods to avoid is not explained. How has the author discovered which foods benefit each genotype and which do not? And I could not understand why, for example, peanut butter might be good for a particular genotype, whereas peanut oil was to be avoided by the same genotype.
Also, this diet is so complicated it would be very difficult to remember when shopping or eating out what to buy and what to avoid.
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