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Yogi in the Kitchen [Paperback]

Elaine Gavalas (Author)
4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)


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Book Description

January 13, 2005
Savory recipes to nourish the body and soul.

Yoga isn't just about exercise. For many, it opens the door to healthier living. Now, from yoga instructor and nutritionist Elaine Gavalas comes a complete guide to cooking and eating for yoga lovers. Yogi in the Kitchen features a full range of recipes that complement one's yoga practice. This down-to-earth cookbook offers advice on how to tailor your diet according to your dosha (mind-body type); how to stock your pantry with nutritious foods; and how to prepare them in mindful yet delicious ways. There's even a chapter on yoga poses that you can do while you're cooking!

The centerpiece of the book is the more than one hundred mouthwatering recipes that nourish the mind, body, and soul. With such tantalizing offerings as Buddha Rolls, Gazpacho Rainbow Soup, Sunflower Salad, and Pasta with Roasted Vegetables and Goat Cheese, Gavalas shows that mindful eating can make your yoga practice-and your mealtimes-more satisfying than ever.

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Editorial Reviews

About the Author

Elaine Gavalas is an exercise physiologist, yoga instructor, and nutritionist and weight-management specialist. She has written four other books on yoga and on healthy eating, and writes regular columns for Rx.com, BeautyWalk.com, and Veggie Life and Delicious! magazines.

Product Details

  • Paperback: 240 pages
  • Publisher: Avery (January 13, 2005)
  • Language: English
  • ISBN-10: 1583332022
  • ISBN-13: 978-1583332023
  • Product Dimensions: 9 x 7.4 x 0.8 inches
  • Shipping Weight: 11.2 ounces
  • Average Customer Review: 4.5 out of 5 stars  See all reviews (2 customer reviews)
  • Amazon Best Sellers Rank: #1,733,176 in Books (See Top 100 in Books)

More About the Author

ELAINE GAVALAS is an acclaimed author and yoga, cooking, weight loss and natural health expert. She's been featured on the TODAY Show, Martha Stewart Living Today, PBS, CNN, and numerous radio programs, podcasts, videos, magazines, and newspapers worldwide. Elaine's an exercise physiologist, nutritionist, yoga therapist, weight management specialist, recipe developer and author of six health books. She received her Master's degree and Certification from Columbia University, New York. A highly sought after speaker, Elaine gives yoga, weight management and healthy cooking lecture events for media, corporations and universities.

Elaine's latest news, blog, articles, recipes, videos, podcasts, lectures and books are available at:
Website: http://elainegavalas.com
Natural Health Blog: http://elainegavalas.com/blog.htm
Twitter: http://twitter.com/elainegavalas
Facebook: http://www.facebook.com/elaine.gavalas
YouTube: http://youtube.com/ElaineGavalas 
Huffington Post Blog: http://huffingtonpost.com/elaine-gavalas

Elaine's books:
Yogi in the Kitchen
The Yoga Minibook For Weight Loss, Kindle Edition and Paperback
The Yoga Minibook For Stress Relief
The Yoga Minibook For Longevity
The Yoga Minibook For Energy and Strength
Secrets of Fat-Free Greek Cooking

Elaine's books have been translated into Spanish:
El Pequeno Libro de Yoga Para Adquirir Fuerza Y Energia
El Pequeno Libro de Yoga Para Aliviar el Estres
El Pequeno Libro de Yoga Para Alcanzar la Longevidad
El Pequeno Libro de Yoga Para Perder Peso
El Yogui en la Cocina

Coming Soon by Elaine Gavalas:

The Kindle Edition of THE YOGA MINIBOOK FOR LONGEVITY, THE YOGA MINIBOOK FOR ENERGY & STRENGTH and THE YOGA MINIBOOK FOR STRESS RELIEF!

Elaine's Podcasts are available at: http://elainegavalas.com:
Elaine's yoga podcasts qualify towards Yoga Alliance Continuing Education credits for yoga teachers.

Yogi in the Kitchen Podcast Series:
Elaine's 3-part podcast series offers a complete eco-friendly guide to yoga diet, foods, cooking, recipes, mindful eating and poses for digestion.

Yoga for Weight Loss Podcast Series:
Elaine's 2-part podcast series offers a complete guide to yoga diet, cooking, and exercise for permanent weight loss and weight management.

Elaine's videos are available at: http://elainegavalas.com:
Elaine's videos include yoga cooking, chair yoga and interviews about her books and the health benefits of the yoga diet and the Greek Mediterranean rural diet.


 

Customer Reviews

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Average Customer Review
4.5 out of 5 stars (2 customer reviews)
 
 
 
 
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9 of 11 people found the following review helpful:
4.0 out of 5 stars Quick taste of Ayurvedic nutrition and Yoga. Still Hungary, March 8, 2005
Amazon Verified Purchase(What's this?)
This review is from: Yogi in the Kitchen (Paperback)
`Yogi in the Kitchen' by Elaine Gavalas, M.A., M.S. is a great little mish mash of culinary doctrine, mystic lore, yoga exercises, and recipes from around the world in a fun little book which has the power to get you interested, but drops the ball in the end.

While the Greeks and Romans were inventing mathematics, medicine, philosophy of knowledge, and science in the Mediterranean wild west, the Indians and Chinese were mapping the relation between body, soul, and mind in a way which has never quite been matched by Western thinkers until the advent of modern clinical psychology, which could do nothing more than affirm that the eastern mystics knew a thing or two about cultivating a healthy body and mind.

This book by a talented dabbler in both eastern lore and western nutritional science is a very nice introduction into all these matters. Ms. Gavalas manages to turn a very loose presentation into a virtue in that she does not bore us with dozens of pages on arcane Sanskrit derived words for the eastern version of a form of astrology.

For those who may be buying this book for recipes, know that in these 230 pages, 60 are devoted to the light introduction to the four different doctrines the author throws together into a mix of healthy eating regimens. These doctrines are vegetarianism, the Mediterranean diet, the Asian diet, and the ayurvedic diet. These first three are pretty well known to the average Western foodie, although the `Asian Diet' has gotten much less press and scientific review as a healthy regimen than the `Mediterranean diet'. The Ayurvedic diet is a development of Hindu doctrines and Yoga. The author describes it as `Yoga's sister science, ... a five thousand year old Indian holistic healing system for the body, mind, and spirit. The goal of Ayurveda, which means "the science of life" in Sanskrit is to achieve balance, vitality, energy, and perfect health through proper nutrition, exercise and meditation'.

The Ayurveda doctrine states that there are three basic body types, for which there are three recommended diets. A quick look at the description of the body types gives one a jolt of recognition when you recognize a distinction between the modern `apple' and `pear' shaped body types, plus a corresponding set of emotional and intellectual dispositions which will almost invariable describe one which fits you better than the other two. But then, most people get the same reaction when they read a description of their astrological sign. The descriptions of the three body / personality types are so general that confirming this lore using scientific techniques is almost impossible, which means the doctrines are so general as to be empty. And yet, they do seem to have some grounding in common sensical observations, and the Indians who groom this doctrine have spent the last 5000 years refining the empirical observations which have gone into the doctrine, so the odds are pretty good that they have gotten some things right.

On several points, I give Ms. Gavalas high points for avoiding some common errors. One small point is that she differentiates the Indian preparation, ghee, from the much less well-defined western notion of clarified butter. While they are very similar, ghee goes one step beyond separation to a cooking of the butterfat to a light brown color and a slightly stronger flavor. A much more important opinion is her not embracing the doctrines of those who advocate a purely raw cuisine. She quite correctly points out that cooking above the magic temperature defined by the raw advocates has many good things to offer.

Ms. Gavalas offers, in chapter 3, `the yoga pantry', and a very nice little overview of the benefits and dangers of a wide range of foods important to her four inspiration sources cited above. The very odd thing about this chapter is that although her four doctrines, but her recommendations set her agenda and conclusions are based on modern nutritional research. For example, while soy and its derivatives are cited as something just short of the fountain of youth, the author is careful to give us a sidebar on some dangers of eating too much soy. But, like virtually all nutritional research, some of these warnings are inconclusive and most are outweighed by benefits and called into question by the fact that populations which rely most on soy products have fewer problems which plague western populations.

If you are waiting for the recipes, we aren't there yet. The fourth chapter, with the same name as the title of the book, is a primer on simple yoga exercises, all of which are of the simplest sort. No joint twisting lotus positions on the kitchen linoleum today.

After all of this interesting run-up, Part 2, with the recipes, is an anticlimax. The very first recipe is for baba ghanoush, the Middle Eastern eggplant dip for which I have already a half dozen recipes, including some from some culinary heavyweights such as Claudia Roden, Clifford Wright, and Joyce Goldstein. In fact, about a third of the recipes in Ms. Gavalas book can be found in much more authoritative books by these and other authors. And, you can get the straight scoop on Indian recipes from Madhur Jaffrey and the skinny on Far Eastern recipes from Barbara Tropp.

The biggest disappointment with this book is that after giving us a very nicely balanced survey of Yogi doctrines, yoga exercises, and various healthy eating regimens, there is nothing to tell us where to get more information on either traditional doctrines or modern nutritional research. I am not an expert on these areas, but if you were looking for a book of exciting new healthy recipes, I suggest Nina Simonds' new `Spices of Life' which includes a great bibliography and other sources for follow-up study. Ms. Gavalas' book is excellent reading, but just a little thin on original recipes for $18 list.
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2 of 2 people found the following review helpful:
5.0 out of 5 stars More than 100 wonderfully presented recipes, May 11, 2005
This review is from: Yogi in the Kitchen (Paperback)
For Yogi In The Kitchen, author Elaine Gavalas draws upon her years of experience and expertise as a yoga instructor, exercise physiologist, nutritionist, weight-management specialist, and kitchen cook to provide more than 100 wonderfully presented recipes for dishes that are as good for the soul as they are nourishing for the body. Embracing the philosophy that Yoga is about healthier living in general, not just exercise, Yogi In The Kitchen begins with advice for eating the Yoga way, including how to stock one's pantry and seek balance in one's diet, as well as tips for staying healthy when eating out. Sample recipes include Baked Tofu and Vegetables, Garden de Vida Smoothie, Fresh Fruit Sorbet, and more. An excellent resource for making light, healthy, and fitness-promoting foods for oneself and one's family.
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